FLOWERS OF THE FOREST

FLOWERS OF THE FOREST

The Flowers of the Forest

http://www.flowersoftheforest.co.uk

Reviews and related sites

Flowers of the Forest | WeAreWaterloo

Flowers of the Forest, Borough, London, SE1 7QX - pub details ...

About Us - Jermyn Street TheatreJermyn Street Theatre

Review analysis
drinks   food  

The space was converted into a theatre by Howard Jameson and Penny Horner in the early 1990s and Jermyn Street Theatre staged its first production in August 1994.

Gene David Kirk, accompanied by Associate Director Anthony Biggs, became Artistic Director in the late 2000s and reshaped the theatre’s creative output with revivals of rarely performed plays including Charles Morgan’s postwar classic The River Line, the UK premiere of Ibsen’s first performed play St John’s Night, and another Ibsen: Little Eyolf starring Imogen Stubbs and Doreen Mantle.

The theatre’s founders, Howard Jameson and Penny Horner, have continued to serve as Chair of the Board and Executive Director respectively, and the generous donors, front of house staff, and tireless volunteers all play their parts in the Jermyn Street Theatre story.

Arthouse Theatre in the Heart of the West End Tom Littler is re-launching Jermyn Street Theatre as a full-scale producing theatre, creating around eight to ten productions every year.

Through a major fundraising campaign, and co-productions with prestigious venues and companies throughout the UK and Europe, Jermyn Street Theatre will spread its work further afield, and become an intimate home for entertaining, intelligent drama.

Flowers of the Forest, 14 Westminster Bridge Road SE1 7QX

Flowers Of The Forest, 14 Westminster Bridge Road, Lambeth ...

Flowers Of The Forest is a pub with a strong traditional Irish theme.

In true Irish style, they provide a range of entertainment including a big screen TV showing Sky Sports and nights of Irish music.

They serve traditional pub grub.

Review of Steven Berkoff's East at the King's Head Theatre

Review analysis
food  

This being the East End a generation ago, there’s a certain amount of fighting (which, to be honest, could have been performed more convincingly) and generous dosages of profanity – I didn’t keep a tally, but East felt like it was up there with The Book of Mormon with the strong language.

Sylv (a sharply compelling Boadicea Ricketts) fights back as best she can against an almost overwhelming masculinity, embodied in Mike (James Craze) and Les (Jack Condon), whose singing voices are a delight, by the way, during a song in the second half, but there’s a metaphor in the two women on stage being outnumbered by three men.

Full of wit, lust, and fury, East remains a startlingly original and influential piece of theatre – a triumphant shout of youth and energy.

Bringing East to life at the King’s Head Theatre will be Russell Barnett (Hamlet, The Riverside Theatre; The Tempest, The Drayton), Jack Condon (Housed, The Old Vic; Clybourne Park, RADA; Scuttlers, RADA), James Craze (The Beginning of the End, Hull Truck Theatre and Theatre N16; Home Theatre, Theatre Royal Stratford East; Ernie – a One Man Play by James Craze), Debra Penny (Our Country’s Good, National Theatre; Flowers of the Forest, Jermyn Street Theatre; Martha Josie and the Chinese Elvis, Bolton Octagon and tour) and Boadicea Ricketts (professional debut).

East by Steven Berkoff Performance Dates Wednesday 10th January – Saturday 3rd February 2018, 7pm Tuesday – Saturday, 7pm Sunday matinees, 3pm Extra matinee – Saturday 3rd February, 3pm No performances on Mondays Running time 2 hours (including interval) Location King’s Head Theatre, 115 Upper Street, Islington, London N1 1QN

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