Alma Mater
By Kendall Feaver, Directed by Polly Findlay
Event details
Tue 11 Jun - Sat 20 Jul 2024
Unfortunately, Lia Williams has withdrawn from Alma Mater, due to ill health. The role will now be played by Justine Mitchell.
★★★★★
“Theatre’s most thoughtful take on the culture wars yet”
The Telegraph
★★★★★
“Brave and electrifying”
The Sunday Times
It’s a culture that begins with a joke, a gesture, a throwaway word or a game between friends, and it ends in an act of violence.
Following an allegation of sexual assault, a university campus becomes rife with speculation, mistrust, and anger. Jo, the first ever female master of her college comes head-to-head with Nikki, a student impatient for justice.
With the college polarised and both sides doubling-down, will anyone emerge unscathed?
Award-winning playwright Kendall Feaver’s “excellent new play” (The Telegraph) offers a pin-sharp new look at the ever-growing generational divide between feminists that is “gripping and fiercely topical” (Financial Times).
Polly Findlay directs the “electrifying” (The Guardian) Phoebe Campbell and “extraordinary” (WhatsOnStage) Justine Mitchell in this “genuinely brave” (The Sunday Times) production. Alma Mater will ignite discussion on the right way to create change.
Running Time
Approx. 2 hours & 30 mins, incl. an interval
Evenings 7.30pm
Matinees 2.30pm
Access Performances
Book our access performances by calling Box Office on 020 7359 4404 or email boxoffice@almeida.co.uk.
Audio Described Sat 13 Jul 2.30pm (Touch Tour 12.50pm)
Captioned Tue 2 Jul 7.30pm
Relaxed Environment Wed 10 Jul 2.30pm & 7.30pm
Content Warnings Read more about our production guidance and warnings>
Audience Reactions
“I’m gonna be thinking about it for a really long time”.
Find out what audiences are making of Alma Mater.
Cast & Creatives
-
Cast
Nathalie ArminNathalie Armin
Nathalie Armin
For the Almeida: The Doctor; Machinal.
Theatre includes: A Little Life (West End); Force Majeure; Limehouse (Donmar Warehouse); Anna; Another World: Losing Our Daughters to Islamic State; The Motherf*cker with the Hat; Dara; Behind the Beautiful Forevers (National Theatre); Ralegh: The Treason Trial (Shakespeare’s Globe); The Complaint (Hampstead Theatre); The Bomb/First Blast (Kiln Theatre); Lidless (HighTide/ West End); Arabian Nights; Othello (RSC/ West End); Damascus (Kiln Theatre/ 59E59 Theatres, New York); Crazy Black Muthaf**kin’Self; Local (Royal Court).
Film includes: Anna; The Batman; Final Score; Denial; Grow Your Own.
Television includes: Showtrial; Juice; Treason; The Flatshare; Magpie Murders; Too Close; Home; Marcella; Electric Dreams; Vera; Unforgotten; Humans; Maigret; The Lost Honour of Christopher Jefferies; Little Crackers; The Fixer; Being Human; The Omid Djalili Show; The English Harem; Spooks; Derailed; William and Mary; The Jury; Deep Secret.
Phoebe CampbellPhoebe Campbell
Phoebe Campbell
Phoebe trained at RADA.
Theatre includes: Hamnet (West End); The Importance of Being Earnest (ETT, Black British Theatre Award for Best Non-Binary Performer in a Play).
Television includes: House of the Dragon; Midsomer Murders.
Liv HillLiv Hill
Liv Hill
For the Almeida: The Doctor (Adelaide Festival).
Theatre includes: The Jungle (St Ann’s Warehouse, New York); Glee & Me (Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester); Top Girls (National Theatre).
Film includes: The Little Stranger; The Fight; Jellyfish.
Television includes: Miss Austen; Disclaimer; The Serpent Queen; Elizabeth Is Missing; The Great; Snatches: Moments from Women’s Lives; Three Girls.
Liam Lau-FernandezLiam Lau-Fernandez
Liam Lau-Fernandez
Theatre includes: A Playlist for the Revolution (Bush Theatre); The Will (Edinburgh Fringe); Witness for the Prosecution (County Hall); Hotel Paradiso; The Strip; Twelfth Night; Rocket to the Moon; The Rivals; Hindle Wakes (Drama Centre London); The Horses (The Cockpit Theatre).
Film includes: Ozi; Aryglle; School’s Out Forever.
Television includes: Strike.
Justine MitchellJustine Mitchell
Justine Mitchell
For the Almeida: Shipwreck; Mr Burns.
Theatre includes: Faith Healer (Lyric Hammersmith); Dancing at Lughnasa; Rutherford and Son; The Plough and the Stars; Detroit; Children of the Sun; The White Guard; The Hour We Know Nothing of Each Other; Philistines; The Coram Boy; The House of Bernarda Alba; Night Season (National Theatre); The Way of the World; The Resistible Rise of Auturo Ui; King Lear (Donmar Warehouse); Beginning (National Theatre/ West End); Bodies; Gastronauts; The Stone (Royal Court); Wild Honey (Hampstead Theatre); For Services Rendered (Chichester Festival Theatre); Love for Love; Twelfth Night (RSC); Man: Three Plays by Tennessee Williams; Uncle Vanya (Young Vic); The Rivals (Arcola Theatre); Boston Marriage; Nocturnal; Hedda Gabler; Footfalls (Gate Theatre); Three Sisters; Aristocrats; Shape of Metal (Abbey Theatre, Dublin).
Film includes: The Mauritanian; The Stag; I Want Candy; A Cock and Bull Story; Imagine Me and You; Inside I’m Dancing; Citizen Verdict; The Honeymooners; Goldfish Memory; Conspiracy of Silence.
Television includes: Conversations with Friends; Derry Girls; A Spy Among Friends; Smother; Maryland; Trying; Finding Joy; Cheat; Pure; The Suspicions of Mr Whicher; Harry and Paul; Amber; Afterlife; Doctors; Joyball; New Tricks; Sleep with Me; The Painted Lady; Waking the Dead; Wild at Heart; Your Bad Self.
Nathaniel ParkerNathaniel Parker
Nathaniel Parker
Theatre includes: The Mirror and the Light (West End, Oliver Award nomination for Best Actor in a Supporting Role); An Ideal Husband; This House; Speed The Plow (West End); Wolf Hall & Bring Up the Bodies (RSC/ West End/ Broadway, Olivier Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Actor in a Play); The Merchant of Venice (West End/ Broadway); Rock ‘N’ Roll (Hampstead Theatre).
Film includes: Stardust; The Haunted Mansion; T.I.M; The Last Duel; Swimming with Men; Swords and Sceptres; The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader; The Perfect Host; St. Trinian’s.
Television includes: The Inspector Lynley Mysteries; Vanity Fair; The Beast Must Die (also producer); The Vineyard.
Susannah WiseSusannah Wise
Susannah Wise
Susannah trained at LAMDA.
Theatre includes: Three Sisters; Life After George; When Harry Met Sally; Festen (West End); Ah, Wilderness!; A Doll’s House (Young Vic); Blurred Lines; The Hush; The Holy Rosenbergs; Sanctuary; The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (National Theatre); Hero; Seven Jewish Children; Where Do We Live (Royal Court); Featuring Loretta (Hampstead Theatre); Rabbit (Old Red Lion Theatre/ West End/ Brits Off Broadway, New York); Soho Streets (Soho Theatre); Three Sisters; Heartbreak House (Chichester Festival Theatre); The Candidate; The Dispute/The Critic (Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester); The Faerie Queen (Glyndebourne/ Royal Albert Hall).
Film includes: Billionaire Ransom; Britannic; An Ideal Husband; Hymn; That Woman; Wonder; Charity.
Television includes: Trying; Roadkill; The Split; Call the Midwife; Defending the Guilty; Press; Marcella; Collateral; Chewing Gum; Lucky Man; Toast of London; The Enfield Haunting; Camp X; Babylon; PhoneShop; Quick Cuts; Jo; Derek; Doctors; Law and Order UK; Freddi; U Be Dead; EastEnders; The Complete Guide to Parenting; Holby City; The IT Crowd; Secret Smile; Soundproof; Vital Signs; Midsomer Murders; Kavangh QC; In a Land of Plenty; Staying Alive; The Tenant of Wildfell Hall; Interview Day; The Bill; Casualty.
-
Creatives
Kendall FeaverKendall Feaver
Writer
Kendall Feaver
Kendall is a London-based playwright, screenwriter and lyricist from Australia/New Zealand.
Theatre includes: The Almighty Sometimes (Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester, Judges’ Award for the Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting, UK Theatre Award for Best New Play, NSW and Victorian Premier’s Prizes for Drama); My Brilliant Career (Belvoir St Theatre, Australia); Ballet Shoes (National Theatre).
Kendall has worked on invited attachments at the National Theatre and Bush Theatre, was awarded the 2019/20 Philip Parsons Fellowship at Belvoir St Theatre, and was part of the inaugural Genesis Almeida New Playwrights, Big Plays Programme in 2019/20.
Polly FindlayPolly Findlay
Director
Polly Findlay
Theatre includes: Grayson Perry: A Show All About You; Grayson Perry: A Show For Normal People (UK tour); Assassins (Chichester Festival Theatre); Beginning; Middle; Rutherford and Son; As You Like It; Protest Song; Treasure Island; Antigone; Double Feature (National Theatre); White Noise; A Number (Bridge Theatre); The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; Limehouse (Donmar Warehouse); Ghosts (HOME, Manchester); The Alchemist; The Merchant of Venice; Arden of Faversham (RSC); Frøken Julie (Aarhus Theatre, Denmark).
In 2012, she was the joint winner of the Olivier Award for Best Entertainment. She won the JMK Award for Young Directors in 2007, the Bulldog Bursary at the National Theatre and was recently made an honorary fellow of Exeter College, Oxford.
Polly has just directed her debut feature film, Midwinter Break, for Focus Features and Film4.
Vicki MortimerVicki Mortimer
Set Designer
Vicki Mortimer
Vicki is an award-winning set and costume designer. She has designed extensively for theatre, opera and dance, including work for the National Theatre, Royal Opera House, the West End, on Broadway and internationally.
For the Almeida: Oil; Heartbreak House; 1953; The Master Builder.
Theatre includes: The Budha of Suburbia; The Winter’s Tale (RSC); Nye; Our Generation; Normal Heart; The Visit; When We Have Sufficiently Tortured Each Other; Follies (Critics’ Circle Award for Design, Olivier Award for Best Costume Design); The Plough and the Stars; The Threepenny Opera; The Silver Tassie; Othello; Ivanov; A Woman Killed With Kindness; Beauty and the Beast; Burnt by the Sun; Pains of Youth (National Theatre); Bluebeard (UK tour/ Battersea Arts Centre); Medea; GOOD; The Glass Menagerie (West End); Wuthering Heights (National Theatre/ UK tour/ North American tour); Bach and Sons (Bridge Theatre); Wise Children (The Old Vic); The Meeting (Chichester Festival Theatre); The Little Match Girl (Sam Wanamaker Playhouse/ Bristol Old Vic/ UK tour); Jumpers (National Theatre/ West End/ Broadway); Fiddler on the Roof (Broadway); The Seagull (Theatre Royal Bath RSC); Uncle Vanya (Young Vic); The Mysteries (Barbican); Nine (Broadway/ Theatre Project Tokyo); The Real Thing (West End/ Broadway).
Fay FullertonFay Fullerton
Costume Designer
Fay Fullerton
Fay trained in fashion design and period costume at London College of Fashion. She joined the Royal Opera House costume department as a costumier in 1977, was promoted to Head of Production Costume in 1999, and then appointed Head of Costume in 2013.
Theatre includes: Just For One Day (The Old Vic); The Little Big Things (@sohoplace); In Dreams (Leeds Playhouse); Mandela (Young Vic); Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (West End); The Drifters Girl (Newcastle Theatre Royal/ West End/ UK & Ireland tour).
Dance includes: Elizabeth; Circular Ruins; Two Sides Of; Everyone Keeps Me (Royal Ballet).
In 2007, Fay won the Kulture2Couture Trailblazer Award, an initiative of the Mayor of London, and in 2008 received an Honorary Fellowship from Exeter University. In 2010, Fay was awarded an MBE for her services to dance and opera.
Jessica Hung Han YunJessica Hung Han Yun
Lighting Designer
Jessica Hung Han Yun
Theatre includes: My Neighbour Totoro (RSC/ Barbican, Olivier Award and WhatsOnStage Award for Best Lighting Design); Minority Report (Nottingham Playhouse/ Birmingham Rep/ Lyric Hammersmith); Lyonesse (West End); The Mirror and the Light (RSC/ West End); Once On This Island (Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre); The Good Person of Szechwan; The Band Plays On; She Loves Me (Sheffield Theatres); Straight Line Crazy (The Shed, New York/ Bridge Theatre); The Glow; Pah-La; Living Newspaper (Royal Court); seven methods of killing kylie jenner (Royal Court/ Public Theater, New York/ Wooly Mammoth Theater, Washington); Anna X (West End/ The Lowry); Marys Seacole; Blindness (Donmar Warehouse); Out West (Lyric Hammersmith); The Odyssey (Unicorn Theatre); Inside (Orange Tree Theatre); Dick Whittington (National Theatre); Rockets and Blue Lights (Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester); Faces in the Crowd; Mephisto; Dear Elizabeth; The Human Voice (Gate Theatre, Dublin); Equus (Theatre Royal Stratford East/ ETT/ West End/ UK tour, Knight of Illumination Award for Plays, Offie Award for Best Lighting Design).
Ian DickinsonIan Dickinson
Sound Designer
Ian Dickinson
Ian has extensive sound design credits to his name both domestically in the UK and internationally. He was the recipient of both Olivier and Drama Desk awards for The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, which played at National Theatre and subsequently toured venues worldwide. He has also received numerous Olivier and Tony nominations for his work in London and on Broadway, most notably for Company, Angels in America, Rock & Roll, 2:22 A Ghost Story and Jerusalem. He was also nominated for the LA Drama Critics Circle Award for his work on 2:22: A Ghost Story.
Theatre includes: The Witches; Translations; Small Island; Husbands and Sons (National Theatre); Boys on the Verge of Tears (Soho Theatre); 42nd Street (UK tour); The Pillowman; Shirley Valentine; Cock; Uncle Vanya (West End); 2:22 A Ghost Story (West End/ Ahmanson Theatre, Los Angeles/ UK tour); Rock Follies (Chichester Festival Theatre); The Ocean at the End of the Lane (UK tour/ West End); A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Shakespeare North Playhouse); Angels in America (Broadway); Company; Hangmen (Broadway/ West End).
Alev LenzAlev Lenz
Composer and Vocal Artist
Alev Lenz
Alev is a singer, songwriter, composer and producer based between London and Germany.
Film includes: Downhill; All About Me; A Year Ago in Winter; The Lost Girls; Against the Ice; Stowaway; The Old Guard.
Television includes: Dark; Black Mirror; Whitstable Pearl; Funeral For A Dog; The Rain; Room 104.
Music includes: Alev Lenz (Kings Place/ Kaufmann Music Center, New York); Roomful of Teeth (Barbican/ The Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art); Anoushka Shankar (Southbank Centre/ Elbphilharmonie Hamburg); Brooklyn Youth Chorus (Lincoln Center, New York); Albums: Storytelling Piano Playing Fraeulein (2009); Two-Headed Girl (2016); 3 (2020).
She is currently one of the first-ever composers in residency for the Brooklyn Youth Chorus’ 2023/24 season. Her previous commissioned pieces for the chorus have seen performances, among others, at the New York Philharmonic Open Weekend and the United Nations. Alev has contributed to several Grammy-nominated records in her role as producer, songwriter and singer.
Toby HigginsToby Higgins
Musical Director
Toby Higgins
Toby trained at Trinity College of Music and Royal Academy of Music (DipRAM). He is also an Associate of the Royal Academy of Music.
For the Almeida: The Secret Life of Bees.
Theatre includes:
As Musical Supervisor: Oliver! (Leeds Playhouse); Clueless: The Musical (as associate) (Churchill Theatre); Tina: The Musical (UK tour).
As Musical Director: Rock Follies (Chichester Festival Theatre); The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe; Tina: The Tina Turner Musical; Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (West End); Clueless: The Musical (Churchill Theatre); Oliver! (West End); Calendar Girls; Avenue Q (UK tour); Sunshine On Leith (West Yorkshire Playhouse); The Wind in the Willows (West End/ UK tour); The Wizard of Oz (Sheffield Theatres); Little Shop of Horrors (Menier Chocolate Factory/ UK tour); The Braille Legacy (Charing Cross Theatre).
As Associate Musical Director: Little Shop Of Horrors (West End).
As Assistant Musical Director: Les Misérables (West End); This Is My Family (Sheffield Theatres); Mamma Mia! (International tour); Tracy Beaker Gets Real (UK tour).
Other work includes: Cover conductor/ Keys 4 for Mamma Mia! (West End); A series of symphonic concerts with Joss Stone.
Shelley MaxwellShelley Maxwell
Movement Director
Shelley Maxwell
For the Almeida: The Secret Life of Bees.
Theatre includes: Love’s Labour’s Lost; Tartuffe (RSC); Starter For Ten (Bristol Old Vic); Shifters; August in England (Bush Theatre); Macbeth (Donmar Warehouse); Best of Enemies (Young Vic/ West End); The Time Traveller’s Wife: The Musical (Storyhouse/ West End); Milma’s Tale (Kiln Theatre); Untitled F*ck M*ss S**gon Play (Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester/ Young Vic); Get Up, Stand Up! The Bob Marley Musical (West End); J’Ouvert (Theatre503/ West End); After Life; Hansard; Antony and Cleopatra; Twelfth Night (National Theatre); Nine Night (National Theatre/ West End); Equus (Theatre Royal Stratford East /West End); Macbeth (Shakespeare’s Globe); Faustus (Headlong/ Lyric Hammersmith); Cinderella (Lyric Hammersmith); Grey (Ovalhouse); King Hedley II (Theatre Royal Stratford East); Cougar; Dealing with Clair (Orange Tree Theatre); Winter; Why It’s Kicking Off Everywhere; Beneatha’s Place (Young Vic); Cuttin’It (Young Vic/ Royal Court); A Streetcar Named Desire (Nuffield Southampton Theatre/ Theatr Clwyd/ ETT); Rules for Living (Royal & Derngate, Northampton/ Rose Theatre, Kingston/ ETT); Apologia (English Theatre Frankfurt).
Film includes: The Marvels; Romeo and Juliet.
Television includes: Ear for Eye; Anansi Boys.
Shelley won the award for Best Choreographer at the inaugural Black British Theatre Awards in 2019 for her work on Equus.
Amy Ball CDGAmy Ball CDG
Casting Director
Amy Ball CDG
For the Almeida: The Years; Alma Mater; Cold War; Portia Coughlan; Women, Beware the Devil; “Daddy” A Melodrama; Albion; The Hunt; Shipwreck; Dance Nation; Boy.
Theatre includes: Hamnet (RSC); Lyonesse; The Hills of California; Jerusalem; Leopoldstadt; Uncle Vanya; Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf; The Night of Iguana; Rosmersholm; True West; The Goat, or Who is Sylvia?; The Pillowman (West End); The Son (Kiln Theatre/ West End); Sweat (Donmar Warehouse/ West End); The Ferryman (Royal Court/ Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre/ West End); The Moderate Soprano (Hampstead Theatre/ West End); The Birthday Party; Consent (National Theatre/ West End); Hangmen (Royal Court/ West End/ Atlantic Theater Company); Berberian Sound Studio (Donmar Warehouse); Stories; Exit the King (National Theatre); White Noise; A Very Very Very Dark Matter (Bridge Theatre); The Brothers Size (Young Vic); Maryland; ear for eye; Girls & Boys; Cyprus Avenue (Royal Court).
Kate HemstockKate Hemstock
Costume Supervisor
Kate Hemstock
Kate has worked in West End theatre for over 25 years.
Theatre includes: The 24 Hour Musicals Celebrity Gala; The Greatest Wealth; Monstrous Tales; The Divide (The Old Vic); We Will Rock You (Royal Arena, Copenhagen); Mother Christmas; Sea Creatues (Hampstead Theatre); Great Apes (Arcola Theatre); Rosenbaum’s Rescue; Building the Wall (Park Theatre); The Language of Kindness (Shoreditch Town Hall/ UK tour); Happy Days (Riverside Studios); Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeare’s Globe).
Salvatore SorceSalvatore Sorce
Dialect Coach
Salvatore Sorce
Theatre includes: For Black Boys Who Have Considered Suicide When The Hue Gets Too Heavy; The Old Man and the Pool; A Little Life (West End); 42nd Street (Sadler’s Wells); Black Superhero (Royal Court); Best of Enemies (Young Vic); Moby Dick (Royal & Derngate, Northampton/ UK tour); In Dreams (Leeds Playhouse/ UK tour); The Boy at the Back of the Class; Minority Report; The Two Popes; Girl from the North Country (UK tour).
Film includes: Silver; A Bit of Light.
Television includes: Paris Has Fallen; The Mallorca Files; Transatlantic.
Wabriya KingWabriya King
Production Dramatherapist
Wabriya King
Wabriya is a qualified dramatherapist (Roehampton University), actress (The Oxford School of Drama), creative facilitator and Reiki practitioner. She combines her experience to support creatives alongside the rehearsal and performance period.
For the Almeida: Alma Mater; Romeo and Juliet; The Secret Life of Bees.
Theatre includes: Shifters; August In England (Bush Theatre); Samuel Takes A Break (The Yard); Beautiful Thing; Tambo & Bones (Theatre Royal Stratford East); A Strange Loop (Barbican); Cowbois; Falkland Sound; The Empress; Julius Caesar (RSC); School Girls; or, The African Mean Girls Play (Lyric Hammersmith); Matthew Bourne’s Romeo & Juliet (International tour); Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead (Complicité); For Black Boys Who Have Considered Suicide When The Hue Gets Too Heavy (New Diorama Theatre/ Royal Court/ West End); Blue (ENO); Further than the Furthest Thing (Young Vic); Family Tree (Actors Touring Company); Bootycandy (Gate Theatre); Blues for an Alabama Sky (National Theatre); Hamilton; Moulin Rouge (West End).
Connie TrevesConnie Treves
Assistant Director
Connie Treves
Connie trained as a director on the MFA at Birkbeck, University of London. Between 2020 and 2024, she was an Associate Artist at the award-winning Good Chance Theatre, where she worked across new productions and large-scale community projects. From 2019 to 2020, she was the Resident Assistant Director at Sheffield Theatres. She holds a Developing Your Creative Practice grant to explore adapting novels and works in translation for the stage and is currently developing a new play with Olivier-nominated playwright Liv Hennessy, exploring care, violence and rural farming. She is also developing new work with novelist, Yara Rodrigues Fowler and artist, Majid Adin.
Theatre includes:
As Director: Image of an Unknown Young Woman (Mountview); The Walk with Amal; Conference of the Trees (Good Chance Theatre); Blood Wedding (East 15 Acting School); The Enchanted (The Bunker Theatre).
As Assistant Director: Henry VIII (Shakespeare’s Globe); Coriolanus; Guys and Dolls (Sheffield Theatres).
Introducing the play
Find out more about this UK premiere from Almeida Artistic Director Rupert Goold as he introduces Kendall Feaver‘s sharp new play.
Access Performances
Audio Described Sat 13 Jul 2.30pm (Touch Tour 12.50pm)
Captioned Tue 2 Jul 7.30pm
Relaxed Environment Wed 10 Jul 2.30pm & 7.30pm
For full information about how to book for our access performances please visit our Access For All page.
Concessions
All concession tickets are limited and subject to availability. Proof of eligibility is required. More info
Deaf and disabled patrons and a companion can buy discounted tickets by calling the Box Office on 020 7359 4404 or email boxoffice@almeida.co.uk.
£5 tickets will be available to those aged 25 and under for performances from Tue 11 Jun – Mon 17 Jun. Enter code 25UNDER when selecting your seats. Tickets go on sale at 4pm on Wed 22 May. More info
If you are aged 30 or under, over 65 or are unemployed you can book tickets at a discounted rate. Not applicable on Fri or Sat evenings.
If you live or work in the Islington area you can book best available seats for £25 for performances from Tue 11 – Mon 17 Jun and Wed 19 Jun, subject to availability. Enter promo code ISFIRST when selecting your seats. Find applicable postcodes here.
Talks & Events
Talkback
After Mon 8 Jul performance
A post-show talk with members of the company. Free to same-day ticket holders.
Almeida For Free
Thu 27 Jun 7.30pm
A free performance for those aged 25 and under. More info.
You might also like…
Kendall Feaver was part of the inaugural Genesis Almeida New Playwrights, Big Plays Programme in 2019-20. This programme is made possible with support from the Genesis Foundation.
An earlier version of this play was performed at Griffin Theatre Company in November 2021 at the SBW Stables Theatre.
Artwork photography by Zeinab Batchelor. Concept by Studio Doug.