Tag Archives: London International Mime Festival 2016

Stereoptik - Dark Circus - Photo by JM Besenval

Stereoptik: Dark Circus

February 9th, 2016 by

It’s a minimalist scene on entering: an empty stage, with a large projection screen at the back and projector centre stage. To the left a sound desk, anglepoise lamp, and a couple of guitars. Opposite, on the far right of the stage, is the animation table, a camera on a rostrum, paper and art materials […]

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Svalbard - All Genius All Idiot

Svalbard: All Genius All Idiot

February 7th, 2016 by

The great joy of the Mime Festival is that whilst a stripped back, poetic meditation on the human condition such as Yoann Bourgeois’s He Who Falls is playing in one venue, across town in another space a dense and anarchic circus show such as Svalbard’s All Genius All Idiot is also playing. And what a contrast these […]

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Compagnie Yoann Bourgeois - He Who Falls - Photo by Géraldine Aresteanu

Compagnie Yoann Bourgeois: He Who Falls

February 7th, 2016 by

Making his British debut, young circus director Yoann  Bourgeois’s He Who Falls (Celui qui tombe) is as intelligent, inquisitive and, most importantly, deftly-pitched a performance as you’ll find in any British theatre this year. These are the kind of performances that the London International Mime Festival is for, and, in the absence of a French level of […]

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The Wrong Crowd - Kite

The Wrong Crowd: Kite

February 1st, 2016 by

After a number of successful touring shows, including a contemporary opera for young people (last year’s Swanhunter), the Wrong Crowd have made a new piece, again for young people, which has no words at all. They say in the programme notes that ‘this suits us well as visual theatre makers,’ and you can feel the […]

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Vamos Theatre - The Best Thing - Photo by Graeme Braidwood

Vamos Theatre: The Best Thing

February 1st, 2016 by

Inspired by the true stories of women in the 1960s forced to give up their children under pressures from the church, family, or community, Vamos Theatre present a visual narrative of one woman’s journey to discover her birth mother, beginning at her funeral. An organ laments, an elderly gentleman enters. The stiff back and rigid […]

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