Action, protest, campaigns, demos and issues magazine features, photos, articles, stories photos of London, New York, Wales, England and photography features music, parties, clubs, events, records, releases drug information, harm reduction, no-nonsense guide punch a celebrity football, features, issues, cardiff city games, useless games and diversions technical info, web authoring, reviews and features site news, updates and urban75 blog urban75 community news and events urban75 bulletin boards join the chatroom search urban75 back to urban75 homepage
London features, photos, history, articles New York features, photos, history, articles Brixton features, photos, history, articles panoramas, 360 degree vistas, London, New York, Wales, England Offline London club night festival reports, photos, features and articles urban75 sitemap and page listing about us, info, FAQs, copyright join our mailing list for updates and news contact urban75

urban75 blog

...rainy streets, neon signs, disused stations and broken lines...

Monday, April 06, 2009

Amazing Feats Of Loneliness, Jonathan Richman

Last week we went to the Soho Theatre to see Edward Gant's Amazing Feats of Loneliness - and loved every minute of it.

A bit like Ripping Yarns meets the Mighty Boosh meets The League of Gentlemen, the show is set as a Victorian travelling sideshow, with Mr Gant recalling fantastic tales from his travels.

Here's how the press blurb describes the show: 

In 1881, one of the Victorian theatres most enigmatic impresarios, Mr Edward Gant, presented his famed travelling show for the very last time. In 2009, Anthony Neilson and Headlong Theatre are proud to present a reconstruction of this historic and extraordinary evening of mystery and magic, spectacle and strangeness. Behold . . . The Amazing Feats Of Loneliness!

Anthony Neilson is one of Britain's most acclaimed playwrights, creating pioneering, taboo-breaking new work in a bold and compassionate way. Edward Gant's Amazing Feats of Loneliness is a beautiful and very funny exploration of performance and performers, of sadness, mortality and wonder.

It's a wonderful, funny and entertaining show with quite a dark twist at the end - if Victorian melodrama is your thing, get down to the Soho Theatre before the run ends!

Jonathan Richman at the Borderline

Last Tuesday, I was lucky enough to be offered a ticket for Jonathan Richman at the small west end venue of the Borderline (thanks ianw!).

Once again he put in a superb show, stuffed full of wit, humour and youthful enthusiasm - it really is hard to believe that he was born just six years after the end of World War 2!

Labels: ,


This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?



Links
Archives