The following year, the show's regular dates in Minehead were supported with additional performances throughout the South of England, including Butlins in Bognor Regis and the Portsmouth Pyramids Centre in Southsea.
After the recruitment in 1995 of West End-based promoter Derek Block, the latter half of the 1990s saw That'll Be the Day playing increasingly larger theatres and concert halls, as well as the smaller venues in which its reputation had been built.
[4] In the noughties, That’ll Be the Day continue to perform in excess of 210 shows a year throughout the United Kingdom and Europe, including three tours of Denmark (in 2003, 2007 and 2008) and a week-long residency at a theatre in Munster, Germany (in 2005).
[1] Audiences are encouraged to sing along to hits by artists such as Elvis Presley, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Cliff Richard, Tina Turner, and Whitney Houston.
[1] In 2010, a review in The Citizen Gloucestershire called the show an evening of "unashamed nostalgia" that brought many famous artists back to life to "an enthusiastic and responsive audience" at a "brisk pace".
[5] The Citizen also praised the "clever impersonation" of Bruce Forsyth by Gary Anderson, and noted that "Trevor Payne, Julia Greenham and Nikki Renee Hechavarria stood out in a generally splendid, dynamic team full of talent and energy, where the nostalgia and humour combined to delight a large audience.