The Comedy About Spies

Adelphi Theatre, London.

The Comedy About Spies
Tickets total -
Transaction fee £2.75
Ticket type Cost (face value)? Quantity
Upper Circle - G2 £24.00 (£20.00)
Upper Circle - F2 £36.00 (£30.00)
Upper Circle - E2 £48.00 (£40.00)
Dress Circle - D2 £60.00 (£50.00)
Upper Circle - D2 £60.00 (£50.00)
Dress Circle - C2 £72.00 (£60.00)
Stalls - C2 £72.00 (£60.00)
Upper Circle - C2 £72.00 (£60.00)
Dress Circle - B2 £84.00 (£70.00)
Stalls - B2 £84.00 (£70.00)
Dress Circle - A2 £102.00 (£85.00)
Stalls - A2 £102.00 (£85.00)
Dress Circle - PB2 £120.00 (£100.00)
Stalls - PB2 £120.00 (£100.00)
Dress Circle - PA2 £162.00 (£135.00)
Stalls - PA2 £162.00 (£135.00)
Tickets total -
Transaction fee £2.75
Adelphi Theatre

Where we provide a seating plan for events, every effort is made to show you correct information. However, we are unable to guarantee the accuracy of our seating plans in case of short term or venue specific changes due to production requirements. Seating plans are generally provided as a guide only and are not an exact representation of the seating layout at the venue.

More information about The Comedy About Spies tickets

Important Information

Age Recommendation 10 and over (Under 3's will not be admitted)
Performance Dates 1 Aug - 26 Sep 2026
Performance Times Tue - Sat 7:30pm, Sun 7pm, Sat & Sun 2:30pm
Content Warning TBC
Run time TBC
 

About The Comedy About Spies

MISSION RECOMMENCES THIS SUMMER IN LONDON

Mischief’s most critically acclaimed adventure The Comedy About Spies is back, "bigger, better and more brilliantly bungling than ever" (Daily Mail), with a limited 8-week mission recommencing this summer in London’s West End at the Adelphi Theatre.

Following a sold-out 2025 summer season, do not miss the award-winning Best New Play (WhatsOnStage Awards 2026) from the hilarious team behind The Play That Goes Wrong, Peter Pan Goes Wrong and The Comedy About a Bank Robbery.

When a rogue British agent pilfers plans for a top-secret weapon, CIA and KGB spies converge on London’s Piccadilly Hotel in pursuit of the elusive file. "abandon yourself to the madness" (The Times) and join a clueless young couple, a hapless actor angling for an exciting spy movie role, and enough double agents to confuse even the sharpest operative, in a mission that’s hilariously out of control.

This "breathlessly funny" (Time Out) and uproarious 1960’s spy escapade, bursts with enough confused missions, tangled identities, and miscommunication to "leave you crying helpless tears of laughter" (Guardian).