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Inter Alia Tickets

Rosamund Pike stars in the highly anticipated West End transfer

This production is recommended for ages 14+.

Performance dates

19 March - 20 June 2026

Run time: 1hr 45mins

No interval

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inter alia /ˌɪntər ˈeɪliə,ˈaliə/ adverb among other things.

Following an acclaimed, sold-out run at the National Theatre, Oscar-nominated Rosamund Pike (Saltburn, Gone Girl) brings her ‘transfixing shape-shifting performance’ (Telegraph) to the West End in a 'searing legal drama' (Guardian) from the writer and director of global phenomenon Prima Facie.

Jessica Parks is a maverick London Crown Court Judge; sharp, compassionate, and determined to change a system she knows isn’t always just. But her career exists inter alia (‘among other things’) as she balances motherhood, friendship and the elusive notion of ‘having it all’.

So, when an unthinkable event rocks her finely tuned life, can she hold her family together - or will everything fall apart?

Inter Alia reunites Olivier Award-winning writer Suzie Miller with BAFTA Award-winning director Justin Martin for a ‘swaggering epic’ (Independent) that is bold, witty and deeply human.

Playing a strictly limited run at London's Wyndham's Theatre from 19 March.

Upcoming Performance Times

Monday23 March 2026
Tuesday24 March 2026
Wednesday25 March 2026
Thursday26 March 2026
Thursday26 March 2026
Friday27 March 2026
Saturday28 March 2026
19:30
19:30
19:30
14:30
19:30
19:30
14:30

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Access

BSL Performance: 15 April 2026 at 7.30pm, Captioned performance: 29 April 2026 at 7.30pm, Audio Described Performance: 13 May 2026 at 7.30pm,

Latest Inter Alia News

Inter Alia Arrives in the West End — But Where Are the Other Female Playwrights?

News / Features / New Shows + Transfers / Lyn Gardner

Inter Alia Arrives in the West End — But Where Are the Other Female Playwrights?

When Suzie Miller’s Inter Alia arrives in the West End at Wyndham's Theatre this week, it will, at a stroke, double the number of plays written by women in the West End. The Mousetrap by Agatha Christie (whose Witness for the Prosecution also continues to thrive over the river at County Hall) will no longer be the only play written by a woman in the West End, although a trio of thumpingly successful musicals do boast female writers: Hadestown by Anais Mitchell, Six, which is co-written by Lucy Moss, and Operation Mincemeat, co-written by Natasha Hodgson and Zoe Roberts

Female directors and other creatives, particularly designers of all kinds, are no longer in short supply in the West End, and there are plenty of female theatre producers (Sonia Friedman, Nica Burns, Eleanor Lloyd and Ellie Keel, to name just a few), but women writers are still the exception rather than the rule. For decades there have been great swathes of time when Christie has been the only female writer represented in the West End. 

It appears we have forgotten that gender equality needs to be as much a part of theatre’s ongoing conversations around diversity as skin colour, disability and socio-economic factors, all of which can be a bar to access.

How is it possible in the 21st century, when women have cracked so many of the top jobs in politics, medicine, law, journalism and other professions, that they are still so ill-represented in the West End? Particularly when women purchase more theatre tickets than men. Could it be that women are just less good at writing plays? 

Or are other factors at play? Why do plays by men enter the canon so much more readily than those by women? Could lack of opportunity (plays written by women are seen as a harder sell, so they never make it through the hoops required for a play to make it to the West End) be preventing women from achieving equality in the commercial theatre sector? Is it that their plays are judged on different criteria or that when women playwrights write about female experience, that experience is perceived as narrow or dismissed as being somehow smaller because it often encompasses the domestic?

It puts me in mind of a quote from director Marianne Elliott, who was once told by a top theatre executive, "Oh Marianne, you just like stories about women having a hard time.” Elliott recalls laughing with everyone in the room at the time but says that afterwards she thought, "Isn't that what Hamlet is about? A man is having a hard time, isn’t he? So, what’s your problem with that?"

It’s a point magnified recently by Kristin Scott Thomas talking in The Stage about her experience of being in Penelope Skinner’s Lyonesse in the West End back in 2023. "The play was mostly hated by the critics. So why did people flock to the Pinter to catch it before we all vanished? A clue might be that many of the reviews were written by men who really didn’t understand what it is to be a working mother or a child-free actress."

19 Mar, 2026 | By Lyn Gardner

New Rehearsal Photos of Rosamund Pike and Cast for Inter Alia TransferSpotlight on: Rosamund Pike

News / Celebrities / Casting / New Shows + Transfers

Spotlight on: Rosamund Pike

Cool, commanding, enigmatic, and always compelling, if Rosamund Pike is in something, you know it’s going to be good. Whether she’s delivering razor-sharp wit in a black comedy like I Care A Lot, or chilling precision in a psychological thriller like Gone Girl, Pike’s performances consistently earn awards recognition and critical admiration. Throughout her career she has received major accolades including; a Golden Globe Award, a Primetime Emmy Award, and nominations for an Academy Award, BAFTAs. But we’re sure there are plenty more to come. 

Who is Rosamund Pike?

Born in London, Pike studied English Literature at Wadham College, Oxford, and during her time there trained and performed extensively with the university’s theatre groups. She began working professionally soon after graduating and quickly attracted Hollywood attention.

She is best known for roles in period dramas, psychological thrillers, literary adaptations, and darkly comic films, often portraying complex, morally ambiguous women with striking control and nuance.

Where have I seen her before?

Rosamund Pike made her screen debut as Bond girl Miranda Frost in Die Another Day. In the 2000s she became a go-to actor for prestige period drama, taking on supporting roles in Pride & Prejudice, An Education, and Made in Dagenham. These performances showcased her classical training and cool composure, marking her as a standout fixture of British film.

26 Nov, 2025 | By Sian McBride

Inter Alia, starring Rosamund Pike, heads to the West End

News / Features / Casting / New Shows + Transfers

Inter Alia, starring Rosamund Pike, heads to the West End

Rosamund Pike will lead the West End transfer of Inter Alia, Suzie Miller’s latest play following her international hit Prima Facie. After a sold-out run at the National Theatre’s Lyttelton Theatre earlier this year, the production will open at Wyndham’s Theatre for a strictly limited season from 19 March to 20 June 2026.

Inter Alia is a gripping study of power, justice and motherhood. Pike stars as Jessica Parks, a sharp, high-flying Crown Court judge whose personal and professional worlds begin to unravel after a single event sends her life spiralling off course.

20 Oct, 2025 | By Hay Brunsdon

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