THE DAY HEAP AND PEBBLE TOOK ON THE WORLD AND WON
vendredi 16 janvier 2009
lundi 12 janvier 2009
First day at the BAC
We started our work on Ice Skates at the BAC today.
We are working in two rooms, the Members' Bar and an adjoining room which are turning into an office so we can write stuff down and have cups of tea and do proper business.
Today was the first day of getting back into a show that we started starting three months ago and are now starting starting for real, having had the time in between to get really excited and stew over ideas.
If you want to come and see how the play is progressing, please come and see us on the open weekend (30th, 31st January), where we will be doing something. Though what that something is we don't know yet.
lundi 8 décembre 2008
moving on...
Last night was the final night of our run at the Camden People's Theatre. We would like to thank everyone who came, and even more those who told people about it afterwards. We sold way beyond our expectations, which has encouraged us to try and tour the play around the UK and beyond...! Dancing Brick is returning in the new year with a new show Ice Skates (working title) which she will be developing at the Battersea Arts Centre in January as part of the New Year, New Spaces festival. She hopes to see you all there.
vendredi 5 décembre 2008
Sold out
Just a warning to say that the first three nights of 21:13 hve all sold out, without any tickets left to buy on the door, so if you are still thinking of coming, try to book ahead.
21:13 at CPT
Thanks to everyone who's already come to see 21:13 this week. We've been really enjoying performing the show again, having tried to rework bits of it, and tighten up the ending. We've been rehearsing over the last two weeks with Tamsin Clarke giving us the external eye and we think we've definitely got somewhere. Even if it's not 100% successful, we feel that we're at least trying to push the chaos, the haphazard style that was there in the original run to a more climactic conclusion.
mardi 25 novembre 2008
At the November Fletton Shuffle...
Little Bulb Theatre performed their latest piece, Help; Sasha Milavic Davies and Lucy Railton played and moved 2 pieces to cello, by Matt Shlomowitz; Luke and Nadia were The Behemoth; Remote Control got badly Burnt; Aitherios ran their Rat Race; Tiani Ghosh and Raph Shirley performed Stockbroker; Wig Industry went Back to Old Kent Road, and Theo Bard sang.
Dancing Brick would like to thank all the artist who participated. She hopes to give you more Fletton Shuffles, more opportunities to show-off your latest work, and be inspired to do more. The first shuffle at the Museum in Docklands was a lovely evening of entertainment which perhaps started too late and ended too soon. But there will be more, so watch this space!
jeudi 16 octobre 2008
Thursday 'Late' at the Museum in Docklands
Dancing Brick are curating the first of our Fletton Shuffles, an evening of haphazard gatherings of sketchy theatre, theatrical sketches, music and comedy. The Fletton Shuffles will provide a platform for young theatre makers to try out new work in front of an informed, informal audience.
Each night will be loosely themed around something that's interesting us at that moment and seeing as how the first is at the Museum in Docklands, in the heart of the city, we're putting on work that deals with commerce, crashes and the city. It's on the 6th November from 6-9pm at the Museum in Docklands, part of the Museum of London, right by Canary Wharf DLR.
Blurb:
Dancing Brick and her Friends present an evening of theatrical upstarts crunching the problems of the city in the jaws of the Docklands. Enjoy some sketchy theatre, some theatrical sketches, some music and some comedy from the best of London’s new theatre makers.
Each night will be loosely themed around something that's interesting us at that moment and seeing as how the first is at the Museum in Docklands, in the heart of the city, we're putting on work that deals with commerce, crashes and the city. It's on the 6th November from 6-9pm at the Museum in Docklands, part of the Museum of London, right by Canary Wharf DLR.
Blurb:
Dancing Brick and her Friends present an evening of theatrical upstarts crunching the problems of the city in the jaws of the Docklands. Enjoy some sketchy theatre, some theatrical sketches, some music and some comedy from the best of London’s new theatre makers.
Inscription à :
Commentaires (Atom)