|
Post by aspieandy on Apr 25, 2024 10:28:18 GMT
... a Hong Kong originated production on European tour, and 90-minutes straight through. From 2nd May for about 10 days only.
Probably sits firmly in the *art* and *bold* categories.
£15 a seat - what's to lose with Ikea around the corner and a lovely river walk difficult to ignore (south side to Putney recommended) >>
|
|
|
Post by mrnutz on Apr 25, 2024 13:16:46 GMT
Tang’s King Lear is a non-verbal theatre transcending the boundaries of Shakespeare’s plays but remains quintessentially Shakespearean. Twaddle.
|
|
|
Post by aspieandy on Apr 25, 2024 21:34:10 GMT
Their choice. Unlike the Lyric Hammersmith - which bagged £1.1 million of ACE funding this year - I can't see that Riverside took any.
Up the road, The Bush received £2.3 million for what looks like a capital project.
I suppose there maybe local authority money. Otherwise, art for art sake, etc.
|
|
|
Post by oxfordsimon on Apr 25, 2024 21:35:29 GMT
It is a very short run.
So it might attract enough.
I won't be making the effort. I like Shakespeare because of the words!
|
|
|
Post by aspieandy on Apr 25, 2024 21:43:26 GMT
Also different East Asian communites that side of London. The Coronet at Notting Hill has long been doing a range of programming with similar cultural origins.
|
|
|
Post by Jan on Apr 26, 2024 6:05:14 GMT
Their choice. Unlike the Lyric Hammersmith - which bagged £1.1 million of ACE funding this year - I can't see that Riverside took any. Up the road, The Bush received £2.3 million for what looks like a capital project. I suppose there maybe local authority money. Otherwise, art for art sake, etc. The Riverside Studios are bankrupt (since March 2023) and is being run by the administrators while looking for a buyer, they won't be putting any money into this, simply hiring out the venue.
|
|
|
Post by elizk on Apr 26, 2024 10:24:39 GMT
Would be a shame if Riverside Studios went under, I saw Lisa Dwan in Happy Days there a few years ago and it was absolutely brilliant.
|
|