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Shoreditch Town Hall

  • Art
  • Old Street
  • price 0 of 4
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Time Out says

Shoreditch Town Hall is a grand old 1865 building that fills its capacious rooms with a determinedly experimental collection of performance art and theatre shows. You never quite know if you'll end up in the cavernous main space, the ritzy ballroom, or one of the many tucked-away spaces that lurk off its long corridors. But Shoreditch Town Hall's charm is in its slightly scruffy, improvised approach - and the pop-up bars that are always on hand to make for cool post-show hangout spots.

Details

Address:
380
Old St
London
EC1V 9LT
Transport:
Tube: Old Street
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What’s on

1884

  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Immersive

In 1884 a group of countries (Britain included) came together to divvy up Africa between them. The Berlin Conference is the inspiration for this very sharp, very clever game-theatre show from the masters of the form, Coney.  Warning: you will have to talk to strangers, and you will have to do stuff. This isn’t a sitting in the dark kind of evening at the theatre. We all go into a big room and split ourselves into groups of seven, our little gangs sitting around a plywood table on which is a blank plywood floor plan. The table is strewn with little plywood props and pens and other things, a beautiful custom made board game designed by Chloe Mashiter and Jacob Wu.  A story starts to unfold with the help of some deliberately over the top acting. Our tables are our new communities. We’re asked to design a house logo, create a house knock, draw items that we’d like to include in our house. We’re encouraged to discuss and chat – and it’s really kind of awkward, coming to collective decisions with complete strangers about a space we’re meant to call our home. One of my group wants to put a shrine in our home, another wants his PlayStation.  As the games continue, we start to settle into it: bonds form, everyone relaxes a bit. And then it all starts to go wrong.  The fun of it, really, is not knowing what’s coming – so that’s about as much as I’ll give away but writer Rhianna Ilube, who was behind the brilliantly, bitingly satirical play ‘Samuel Takes A Break’ recently, has created w

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