LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – More than 20 years after it first appeared as a Japanese manga, Death Note continues to reinvent itself. What began as a dark supernatural thriller by writer Tsugumi Ohba and illustrator Takeshi Obata has grown into one of the world’s biggest pop culture phenomena. Since its debut in 2003, Death Note has sold more than 30 million copies worldwide, inspired a critically acclaimed anime series, Japanese live-action films, television adaptations, novels, video games and even a Hollywood adaptation on Netflix.
Now, the global franchise is entering its next chapter with Death Note: The Musical, arriving at London’s Barbican Centre from 30 July to 12 September in a newly reimagined production that promises to introduce the iconic story to a whole new generation of theatre audiences
For fans unfamiliar with the stage adaptation, it may sound like an unlikely pairing. After all, Death Note is a psychological thriller built around mind games, moral ambiguity and supernatural consequences—not exactly the ingredients of a traditional musical
Yet somehow, it works. Originally written in English by Tony, Grammy and Emmy Award nominee Frank Wildhorn, with lyrics by Tony Award nominee Jack Murphy and a book by Emmy Award nominee Ivan Menchell, Death Note: The Musical first premiered in Tokyo in 2015 instead of Broadway or the West End. Since then, it has enjoyed sold-out productions across Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, winning Best Musical at the Korea Musical Awards and building a passionate following among both theatre lovers and longtime manga fans.
London audiences first got a taste of the score through record-breaking concert performances at the London Palladium in 2023. This summer’s production, however, marks a major evolution of the show—a fully staged reimagining featuring a revised script, newly written songs and an acclaimed creative team behind some of the West End’s biggest productions
Directed by Stephen Whitson, whose credits include Hamilton and Moulin Rouge! The Musical in the UK, the production also features choreography by Olivier Award nominee Fabian Aloise (Evita, Sunset Boulevard) and set and costume design by Emmy-nominated Jon Bausor (Spirited Away, Bat Out of Hell), promising a theatrical experience that matches the scale of the story itself
The enduring appeal of Death Note lies not in its supernatural notebook, but in the questions it asks. The story follows brilliant student Light Yagami, whose life changes forever after discovering a mysterious notebook capable of killing anyone whose name is written inside it. Believing he can create a better world by eliminating criminals, Light soon finds himself pursued by the enigmatic detective known only as L, sparking one of modern fiction’s greatest battles of intellect
What begins as a crime thriller quickly becomes something much more complex—a story about justice, power, morality and the dangerous belief that one person should decide who lives and who dies
Those questions have helped Death Note transcend cultures, languages and mediums over the past two decades. Whether experienced through manga panels, animated episodes, live-action films or now on stage, its central conflict remains as compelling as ever
For Singaporean audiences, this latest production carries an added point of pride. Leading the cast as Light Yagami is Singaporean actor Xander Pang, who takes on one of contemporary pop culture’s most iconic characters in what marks his biggest UK stage role to date
Pang has steadily built his résumé across theatre and film, with credits including The Lightning Thief: The Percy Jackson Musical, Macbeth, Rent and the Singapore feature film Dream Stall. Now, he joins a distinguished list of performers who have portrayed Light across different adaptations—including anime, film and television—as he makes his West End debut in one of musical theatre’s most demanding leading roles
Opposite him is British actor Colin Ryan as the eccentric detective L. Known for his work across theatre, television and voice acting—including voicing Alphinaud Leveilleur in the acclaimed online game Final Fantasy XIV—Ryan brings another fan-favourite character to life in a story defined as much by psychological tension as spectacle
Joining them are Stephanie Zaharis as Misa Amane, Telly Leung as Ryuk, Grace Mouat as Rem and Paolo Montalban as Soichiro Yagami, alongside a company bringing together performers from across the UK and Asia
Perhaps the most fascinating aspect of Death Note: The Musical is its own unlikely journey. Unlike many adaptations that travel from page to screen, Death Note has continued to evolve across entirely different artistic forms. A Japanese manga became a global anime phenomenon. That became films, television series and streaming adaptations. Then came a Broadway-style musical that premiered in Tokyo before finding devoted audiences throughout Asia
Now, ten years after its stage debut, the production returns to London in a bold new incarnation—one designed not simply to recreate the original, but to reimagine it for today’s audiences. For fans, it offers an opportunity to experience familiar characters through a fresh theatrical lens. For newcomers, it may be the most unexpected entry point into one of the defining stories of modern Japanese pop culture
Either way, Death Note: The Musical is shaping up to be far more than another adaptation. It is the latest evolution of a story that has spent more than two decades proving that great ideas—and great moral dilemmas—can thrive in almost any medium
Death Note: The Musical runs at the Barbican Centre in London from 30th July to 12th September 2026 for a strictly limited season. More information and information available here
