Jump to content

Alice's Adventures in Aerialand - Saturday 17 June - Brixton Windmill


Recommended Posts

Join us in Windmill Gardens SW2 for an open-air, aerial circus theatre production adapted from Lewis Carroll’s classic tale, “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland”.

Outdoor aerial theatre from The Dot Collective 

Saturday 17 June, 2pm and 6pm
Tickets £12 Adults / £10 Concessions / £8 Under 16s
BOOK via https://www.brixtonwindmill.org/product/alices-adventures-in-aerialand/

The Dot Collective’s adaptation is for all ages and abilities and has been developed to be accessible to all, including those living with dementia and PMLD.  Bring a picnic blanket or camping chair to sit on and you are welcome to bring a picnic too!  Our cafe will also be open for drinks and snacks on the day.

A story of wonder and nonsense laced with lethal wit, of games, of riddles and conundrums, of questions with no answers, but above all of magic and adventure in which everyone can lose themselves and revel in nonsense.

The show must go on….
We’ll be keeping our eye on the weather – the show will continue unless there is extreme weather (high winds or thunder/lightening).

Find out more about The Dot Collective’s production and their work here.

Instagram 2023 Alice theatre.png

  • 3 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...
On 29/06/2023 at 11:38, clarinet52 said:

Hi there - sorry you missed this at Brixton Windmill. Dot Collective will be performing at other venues across the summer - dates on their website dotcollective.com

Great, thanks. I also would like to join. 

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Latest Discussions

    • I am struggling to understand how Green policies translate to local issues? The Southwark Greens leaflet I received reads like a general wish list but is not locally specific. I know the same can be said of other political parties. What specifically are Greens plans for housing, protecting local parks, council tax, transport and roads/ pavement upkeep, CPZ/LTNs?
    • Politician's moving from one party to another, especially when local is worth discussing. You have to wonder what they are driven by, and particularly in this instance, as their new party is moving in strange directions.
    • To be fair to Sue, she doesn't have to explain or justify why she supports or wants to vote for any party. That is the same for everyone. We are free to decide which party best reflects what we think is important to us. Discussing the stances/ policies of parties, in a general discussion, can be done without targetting anyone commenting here. Politics is just a point of view at the end of the day.  Different things are important to different people, often for very valid reasons. Let's be respectful of that.  My opinion is that if say the Labour Party wants to understand why it is losing supporters to the Greens, it needs to listen to and understand the reasons why. That theme has been explored in this thread a little through the discussion around councillor McAsh. The same is true of the Tories losing support to Reform and the Libdems. Let's not also assume that every member of every party is completely on board with every policy of the leadership of that party either. You only have to look at how backbenchers have forced u-turns from Starmer's cabinet on things like Welfare Reform and WFA to see that. 
    • As a compromise I'd be prepared to trial the reintroduction of dog licensing. The annual licence fee would be the same as road tax for Range Rover (same carbon emissions as a dog) and would require owners to pass a responsible dog ownership exam, the dogs would need to pass training and a behaviour exam and their DNA would need to be kept on record to identify the owners who leave dog shit all over the pavements, so that they can be jailed.  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...