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HARMONY SAVES THE WORLD

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Runs 60mins.  Includes audience participation, dancing and some subjects that people may find triggering .  Suitable for 16yrs+
 

Photo credit - Jude Quinn

This work is currently in development and will be with you soon!

The world is sick!  Do you want to be part of the cure?  Then join Harmony’s revolution to save humanity.  Let her guide, embrace and transform you so that you too can love everyone, even the dicks.

 

This is a show about love and how we really feel about the people around us.  There's a lot of talk about our divided society, the establishment of equality, the concept of ‘wokeness’ but how does that actually express itself in our daily interactions with each other? 
 

Harmony skirts the line between clown and bouffon, playing with the audience and serving up some very loving critique. She's a wellness guru with a world-embracing message of change through love.  She knows the difficulty of ridding yourself from prejudice because she was once as hate-filled and bitter as you are.  Through Harmony’s transforming programme we explore our own prejudices and attitudes and become truly enlightened.
 

This show is all about laughing through some uncomfortable truths and hopefully, maybe being a bit kinder to each other.

See Harmony at the Comedy Kitchen

THE OLD CURIOSITY SHOW

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Future tour dates to be announced.

Amadan are back, scraping away the grease-paint with their fingernails to reveal The Old Curiosity Show.  John Patrick Higgins’ new play sees a thread-bare troupe of troubadours wrestle with three Victorian melodramas, with the shabbiness of their surroundings and finally with each other.

Expect buffoonery, slapstick, innuendo and dark humour as this show about a show slowly unravels revealing the bare bones treading the bare boards.

 

Cast - 

 

Countess Erzebet Battery, minor gentry from somehwere vageuly European - Gemma Mae Halligan

Sir Vere Vere de Vere, ageing juvenile lead - Jude Quinn

Anne Idiotte, an idiot - Helen Ashton

Written by John Patrick Higgins.

Photo credit - Neal Campbell

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