Andrew Lloyd Webber has warned his 'Cinderella' cast that "nobody has a right to be on stage".

Andrew Lloyd Webber had a word of warning for his cast

Andrew Lloyd Webber had a word of warning for his cast

The 73-year-old musical theatre icon has denied claimed he berated his young cast members over poor reviews for his latest musical, but he urged them to realise they work in the "service industry".

He told BBC Radio 4: "What I was saying to everybody is... the younger cast don't really realise all the time that we are actually a service industry and nobody has a right to be on the stage.

"I don't have a right to have my musicals in the theatre. What we have to do is try to give the best performances possible.

"All I was saying is that that's what we have to do and the cast we've got at Cinderella are a really, really wonderful cast who are well capable of doing that. But this has been wildly exaggerated."

He insisted his comments had "nothing to do with" a review by the New York Times newspaper's theatre critic Johnny Oleksinski.

Re-rehearsals - which involved the full cast and creative team - are set to start next week, and they will incorporate "adjustments" to the production.

In a statement from the production, the team said: "Andrew is really proud of Cinderella and its entire cast and crew.

"He is absolutely passionate about each and every performance. And the audience reaction continues to be terrific."

'The Crown' star Emerald Fennell has worked with Lloyd Webber on the production and previously said she relished the "challenge" of finding the character's personality in her writing.

She explained: "Who was Cinderella exactly? Arguably the most famous heroine in literature, and I could hardly think of a single personality trait. She was very good at housework, very good at singing to small animals, very good at being meek and quiet and forbearing, but she wasn’t exactly a thrill-ride of charisma.

"After centuries of sweeping the chimney, she’d been reduced to little more than a bottle blonde with a martyr complex. Luckily, it takes one to know one so I was up for the challenge."