Punchdrunk have made a triumphant return to London theatre with their newest production, The Drowned Man: A Hollywood Fable. I saw it during preview week, and now, 24 hours later, I am still delightfully turning the events over and over in my head and analysing every last bit of the production. The event is described […]
Monthly Archives: June 2013
This week’s theatre adventure took place at CLF Art Cafe in Peckham, with a performance entitled ‘Midnight at the Rue Morgue: The Madness of Edgar Allen Poe,” which was put on by Ba-laylah Productions. The event is described as follows: The event takes place in a darkly lit room, with four carnival type set ups […]
This week I was very kindly given free tickets to see Bill Bailey’s #qualmpeddler at the Hammersmith Apollo. It was my first Apollo experience and also my first Bill Bailey experience. Bailey opened with a brief social commentary video (that would not be out of place tacked on to the “because I read it in […]
A pinterest pin designed for a work promotion. Some foot facts: A human foot & ankle is a strong, mechanical structure that contain 26 bones, 33 joints, and more than 100 muscles, tendons & ligaments. The 52 bones in your feet make up one quarter of all the bones in your body. When they are […]
The Senningen Zoo was opened in 1968 in Senningen, Luxembourg. Despite its extremely remote location, it is reported that in it’s first year of business it was host to 125,000 visitors. There is almost nothing available online that describes the Zoo, or its operation, until we hit the mid-seventies- when the zoo was hit with accusations […]
The Killers were meant to play a show in Luxembourg in March but, fortunately for me, they had to cancel through illness, meaning that tickets were readily and cheaply available for the replay on 6th June. (Whoa whoa did you just travel to another country to see a rock show? Yes, and I’m very glad […]
Following on from the paper fruits (which you can also see here) I’ve recently been doing a bit more design work on the theme of creating things out of paper, and then transferring them digitally. Here is some work I’ve done for a project at work! The first thing was to cut out the individual […]
Last Sunday I had the pleasure of seeing Jeremy Herrin’s adaptation of The Tempest of London’s Globe Theatre. I previously had seen both Tim Carroll’s and Lenka Udovivki’s versions of the Tempest, both excellent productions, so approached the show thinking it would be hard for Herrin to top the previous versions. The truth is, he […]