.Reviews.

Road Show, Feb 3 - Mar 5 2016
The Phil Willmott Company, The Union Theatre

Joshua LeClair is also excellent as the vulnerable, gullible Hollis. Just when you think the show isn’t going to show any emotion, LeClair pulls it out of the bag and tears at your heartstrings. His face-off at the end with Jenkins is genuinely moving – for me, the highlight of the show.

~Craig Glenday, Musical Theatre Review

The ensemble cast are uniformly excellent with Andre Refig… as Willie and Joshua LeClair's naïve Hollis the standouts.

~Gary Naylor, Broadway World

Joshua LeClair as the fresh-faced idealist Hollis makes for an engaging… third-wheel in the tricky relationship.

~Paul Vale, The Stage

Joshua LeClair finds light and shade in Hollis and delivers an honest rendition of a particularly intricate character, and his rendition of 'Talent' is the closest the production gets to a showstopper.

~Dom O’Hanlon, LondonTheatre

Joshua LeClair, impressive in last year's She Loves Me, does it again as Addison's effete "mark" Hollis, his big number Talent proving a treat.

~Jonathan Baz, Jonathan Baz Reviews

Joshua LeClair is amusingly temperamental but ultimately touching as the sensitive rich kid…

~Alun Hood, Whats Onstage

Hello Again, Oct 20 - Nov 7 2015
Play Pen Productions, The HOPE Theatre

I developed a great amount of respect for the multi-rolling cast of this production, which was reduced to five... all of whom played two characters each.

~Leto Dietrich, Everything Theatre

A youthful Joshua LeClair slips easily into the role of the College Boy and Young Thing, while performing a nice sideline in triple harmony... for the Andrews Sisters pastiche ‘Zei Gezent’. Western and LeClair negotiate the horror and humour of ‘Listen to The Music’ with spellbinding intensity.

~Paul Vale, Musical Theatre Review

The cast is superb. Adam Colbeck-Dunn’s Writer, Isabella Messarra’s Nurse, Joshua LeClair’s Young Thing, Thea Jo Wolfe’s Whore and Miles Western’s Husband are particular highlights.

~Richard Kindermann, West End Wilma

Joshua Leclair’s instant switch from third class Titanic passenger to 70s gay clubber is wryly done.

~Ian Foster, There Ought To Be Clowns

The excellent cast comprises just five actors, each of whom takes on the role of two characters. Particularly stellar performances are from Miles Western as the Husband, Thea Jo Wolfe as the Whore and Joshua LeClair as the Young Thing.

~Elizabeth Gear, The Camden Review

This revival is perfectly cast and a delightful success, and it’s great to be able to say ‘hello again’ to Hello Again.

~Chris Omaweng, LondonTheatre1

The Theory Of Relativity, May 26 - June 13 2015
Relative Motion, The Drayton Arms Theatre

Apples and Oranges… is pretty much worth the admission fee thanks to LeClair and Curtis Brown.

~Ian Foster, There Ought To Be Clowns

I was pleased to see Joshua LeClair, who impressed as Arpad in She Loves Me back in February. [H]e performs the hell out of it, crowbarring every nugget of emotion and personality he can.

~London City Nights

Joshua LeClair's humorous and warm rendition of 'Apples and Oranges' was the highlight of the show.

~Breeze Barrington, LondonTheatre1

Joshua LeClair has two lovely songs "Footprint" and "Apples and Oranges" which he delivers with sensitivity, wit and charm.

~Derek Benfield, UK Theatre Web

And there's a sweet duet between the two Canadian members of the cast who took part in the original production, Joshua LeClair (so good recently in She Loves Me at the Landor) and Curtis Brown, who play gay men drawn to each other because of their love of oranges and hatred of apples! …LeClair also does really well with the reflective 'Footprints' and is a name to watch out for.

~Jeremy Chapman, Musical Theatre Review

My favourite moments include... Apples & Oranges, led by Joshua LeClair.

~Ruthie Luff, West End Wilma

She Loves Me, Feb 4 - March 7 2015
Theatrica Ltd, The Landor Theatre

The stand-out performance here comes from Joshua LeClair, whose Arpad is effervescent, energised, and totally convincing throughout. Everything LeClair does is finely judged, impeccably thought-through, full of heart and shimmering with talent. Each time he appears in a scene, he lifts proceedings. His voice is true and sweet and his acting honest and perfectly suited to the intimacy of the surroundings. His relationship with Ian Dring's Mr Maraczek is beautifully portrayed and he kicks Act Two off to a great start with an excellent rendition of Try Me.

Without ever doing anything to pull focus or grandstand, LeClair refashions Arpad into one of the cornerstones of the success of this revival. It's a winning, triumphant performance in every way – and LeClair is surely a talent to keep a lookout for.

~Stephen Collins, British Theatre.com

Equally impressive is Arpad, played by Joshua LeClair, who's rendition of Try Me is both engaging and endearing.

~Richard Brownlie-Marshall, Huffington Post

An enthusiastic Joshua LeClair brings some much needed energy to second act...

~Paul Vale, The Stage

Arpad Laszlo (Joshua LeClair) is a relentlessly perky delivery boy.

~Carole Gordon, What's OnStage

Joshua LeClair was adorable as Arpad Laszalo, so sweet that I wanted to put him in my pocket and take him home.

~West End Wilma, West End Wilma.com

Other stand out performances come from... Joshua LeClair as loveable Arpad

~Andrew Tomlins, West End Frame

There is nice work from Joshua LeClair as the office boy, with all the charm and engaging smiles of a young Tommy Steele.

~William Russell, Reviews Gate

Joshua LeClair as perky, peppy delivery boy Arpad is a smiling delight

~Karl O'Doherty, The Public Reviews

Joshua LeClair wins a lot of laughs as the loveable Arpad

~Greg Jameson, Entertainment Focus

Joshua LeClair's Arpad, the delivery boy desperate for a job in the store itself, sheds the years brilliantly to play the keen teenager.

~Jonathan Baz, Jonathan Baz Reviews

See Rock City & Other Destinations, Aug 15 - 30 2014
Aria Entertainment, The Union Theatre

Joshua LeClair impresses mightily with his engaging performance as a UFOlogist whose obsession with looking to the skies is both a reason for, and escape from, his failed relationship...

~Scott Matthewman, Music Theatre Review

Joshua LeClair is gorgeous as sci-fi geek Evan, searching for extra-terrestrials in a bid to prove his disbelieving ex-girlfriend wrong. There's a wonderful quirkiness in the way he acts, his wide-eyed optimism incredibly infectious, but shatters as the hours of waiting wear on. The character himself might be a bit of a cliché, but there's something just a little bit magical in LeClair's delivery, that meant I just couldn't keep my eyes off him.

~Ginger Hibiscus

Most stimulating is a runner about UFO-obsessed Evan, who's swapped job and relationship security for a minute chance of revelation at Roswell. Offbeat "We Are Not Alone", strongly delivered by LeClair, has a wistful quality and marginally subtler subtext that suggest real potential for this song cycle.

~Marianka Swain, The Arts Desk

Joshua LeClair creates a gloriously dotty soul who is doomed to fail.

William Russell, Reviews Gate

Joshua Leclair as Evan is an adorable dweeb waiting for an alien invasion to back up his research...

~James Moore, So So Gay

Joshua Leclair as the alien hunting Evan in Roswell has a great geeky, boyish enthusiasm.

~Christopher Hong, The Public Reviews

Joshua LeClair's recently-dumped UFO-hunting geek finds a real emotional punch...

~Ian Foster, There Ought To Be Clowns

This segment was so well acted, and transported me back to my younger days watching Peanuts when Linus annually spent Halloween in the Pumpkin Patch waiting for the Great Pumpkin to arrive.

~Terry Eastham, London Theatre 1