Saturday, December 21, 2024
ReviewsTheatre

Here’s something not to miss: Passionate Machine by Rosy Carrick

An outstanding play filled with originality, humor and inspiration.

Passionate Machine by Rosy Carrick had its London premiere on Thursday 14th March at Draper Hall, in Elephant and Castle, where it will be performed until Saturday 23rd March.

Everyone writes instructions to their future selves. But what happens if the future starts writing back? Rosy Carrick is about to find out…

Rosy Carrick has to build a time machine – because her future self has already done so and is now stuck 100 years in the past. Given that her knowledge of quantum physics is limited to the works of Arnold Schwarzenegger, Rosy must summon the help of science’s greatest minds if she is to rewrite history and save herself…

Darting playfully between multiple narratives, this complex and emotional performance explores the realities of time travel and self-determination – taking in Bowie, motherhood and some most heinous hangovers along the way.

Winner of Brighton Fringe’s Best New Play Award 2018 and The Infallibles Award for Theatrical Excellence, Passionate Machine is a hilarious and searingly honest story about obsession, salvation and finding yourself – literally.

Info and tickets: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/passionate-machine-theatre-at-draper-hall-london-premiere-tickets-54885791881

Doors open 6.30 pm, play starts at 7.30 (1 hour), refreshments and drinks available.
WINNER: INFALLIBLES AWARD FOR THEATRICAL EXCELLENCE 2018
14-15-16 & 21-22-23 March 2019

Location
Draper Hall
Hampton Street
junction with Newington Butts
London
SE17 3AN

Watch How to get to Draper Hall from Elephant & Castle Station: https://youtu.be/FJNA3rHAaqs

Theatre @DraperHall is curated by its Artistic Director Stefania Bochicchio, CEO of Infallible Productions, member of the EdFringe society and UK co-director of the ITI (International Theatre Institute), the largest arts organisation in the world.

ITI was created on the initiative of the first UNESCO Director General, Sir Julian Huxley, and the playwright and novelist, JB Priestly in 1948, just after the Second World War, and at the beginning of the Cold War, when the Iron Curtain divided the East and the West. Its aim is to promote communication and understanding between people though the practice and performance of the Arts.