“Murder On The Orient Express” Rolls Into Budapest

Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express dazzles Budapest at Thalia Theatre—Ken Ludwig’s stage adaptation with immersive “3D cinema live” visuals. Limited dates; book tickets now for a thrilling whodunnit.
when: 2026.01.03., Saturday - 2026.01.04., Sunday
where: 1065 Budapest, Nagymező u. 22-24.

Poirot just wants a comfy ride home on the glittering, legendary Orient Express. Instead, a blizzard hits, a scream cuts through the night, a shot rings out—someone very suspicious turns up dead. The killer is among the passengers, ladies and gentlemen… and might not stop at one victim. Agatha Christie – Ken Ludwig’s Murder on the Orient Express arrives with a “3D cinema live” punch: a classic whodunnit reimagined with an overwhelming, one-of-a-kind visual world on a Hungarian stage. Book fast—Poirot needed connections just to board.

Run, Venue, Tickets

On the Thalia Theatre (Thália Színház) main stage, Budapest: 2026.01.03–2026.01.04; 2026.01.06; 2026.03.18; 2026.03.20–2026.03.22. Running time: 170 minutes with one intermission. Tickets from $24.80 to $29.20. Address: 1065 Budapest, Nagymező St. 22–24.

Creative Team & Cast

Translated by Kornél Hamvai. Directed by Tamás Szirtes. Scenery: Tibor Német. Costumes: Nóra Rományi. Visual design: Tímea Papp. Visuals: Freelusion. Cast includes Tibor Szervét, Csaba Pindroch, Gabi Gubás, Eszter Tóth, Júlia Virginia Mentes, Piroska Molnár / Anna Udvarias, Adrienn Mórocz, András Mózes, Péter Vida, Márk Ember, Zoltán Tamási, Milán Ikotics, Lilian Kollár / Maja Roxána Prokopius.

2025, adrienne

Pros
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Familiar, crowd-pleasing story: Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express is internationally famous, so you’ll know the plot beats even if this is your first Hungarian theater outing
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Big visuals: the “3D cinema live” staging promises a slick, one-of-a-kind production you won’t easily find back home
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Central location: Thália Színház sits in Budapest’s theater district near Andrássy Avenue—easy to combine with dinner and sightseeing
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Wallet-friendly: tickets around $25–$30 are a bargain compared with U.S. theater prices
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Easy access: simple metro/tram options nearby (M1 Opera/Nyugati, trams on Teréz körút), and rideshare/taxis are plentiful; driving/parking possible but not ideal
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Short run with multiple dates: several performances across January and March 2026 make planning flexible for tourists
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Family-friendly-ish: classic mystery without graphic gore, fine for teens and older, with an intermission for a break - Performed in Hungarian: non-speakers won’t get the nuances unless supertitles or English synopsis are provided (not mentioned)
Cons
170 minutes may feel long if you’re jet-lagged or traveling with younger kids
Thália isn’t as internationally iconic as, say, London’s West End or Broadway, so bragging rights are more “local gem” than bucket list
Compared with immersive mystery shows in the U.S./UK, audience interaction is limited—this is a traditional play despite the high-tech visuals

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