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    Preview: Don’t Forget My Face

    Lion and Unicorn Theatre

    30 November – 4 December

    I just don’t want to come back and you’re like, different. Like a different person.

    Do you know who you are?Rhea and Jack are twins. From the minutes they were born they’ve shared everything in their lives – birthday cakes, friends, clothes, flats, memories – however, as they approach their thirtieth birthday, the pressures of life and an opportunity of a lifetime separate them for the first time. Alone, they begin to question the faces they’ve always known.Critically acclaimed associate artists, Fight or Flight Productions, present Don’t Forget My Face – a brand new story about shared identity, failure of communication, the masks we hide behind, and whether we can ever truly know the people closest to us. Directed by Jess Barton, Don’t Forget My Face debuts at The Lion and Unicorn this December 2021.

    Fight or Flight Productions are Associate Artists of the Lion & Unicorn Theatre.

    WRITTEN BY: Jess Barton & Ross KernahanDIRECTED BY: Jess BartonRUNNING TIME: 70 Mins (No Interval)

    Playing at Lion and Unicorn Theatre, 30 November to 4 December. Tickets £14 via the below link.

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    Interview: David Brady tells us what he has been up to: Lately

    David Brady of Proforca on new play Lately

    LIsten back to our interview with David Brady from Proforca, whose play Lately, is on at Lion and Unicorn Theatre from 7 to 18 September.

    You can book tickets for the play here

    This interview was original broadcast on our Runn Radio show on 1 September 2021.

    Lately @ Lion and Unicorn Theatre

    The Monster Always Wins”

    Cal & Alf. Callum & Alison. They were supposed to be part of each other’s lives forever, if only the universe had let things happen the way they should. 

    But whoever they were before, they’re different people now, and the problem with living here is that is always pulls you back again, no matter how hard you try to get away. 

    And the universe that sent them spinning into free-fall throws them together again when the girl who ran away comes back to find out what happened to the boy who didn’t want to leave. 

    And the question that the universe needs to answer most of all now is – Whatever happens to those bits of us we leave behind and thought we’d lost forever?  More

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    Interview: Eve Lytollis on why Paperboy isn’t really an all boys affair

    Paperboy

    Two self-proclaimed “journalists”, Matt and Matthew, are the founders of newspaper The Desperate Times. Matt likes to think of himself as the top dog, saying and doing as he pleases, and hopefully making everyone else go wild with awe in the process; Matthew, meanwhile, is the beta male to Matt’s alpha, which in this case pretty much just means that he thinks a little more before he speaks (sometimes), and feels a little less compelled to constantly talk about his genitalia.

    Supported by their long-suffering assistant, Phoebe, they think they’re the dog’s bollocks – although she’d probably say that in itself is a load of bollocks… So when the effects of boys’ cheeky chat start to show, is it really all as harmless as they think?

    Written by Eve LytollisDirected by Amy Tickner

    Paperboy will be performing as part of Camden Fringe 2021. It plays at Lion and Unicorn Theatre from 5 – 7 August, 8.30 each evening. Tickets and further information via the below link.

    Eve Lytollis of Happy Happy Productions talked to us about Paperboy, and its themes of male toxicity and lad culture. This four part interview was first broadcast on our Runn Radio show on 21 July 2021. More