A Small House At The Edge Of The World

Forthcoming play about relationships, at the Tabard Theatre

Chiswick Events

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Box Office number: 020 8995 6035

7:30pm, 12-29 September

Saturday Matinees (22 & 29 Sept) 4pm

Tickets :£18 Full Price

£15 Concessions

The Tabard Theatre

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Laura Pradelska (Game of Thrones, Summit Conference) and Jaymes Sygrove (A Winter’s Tale – National & European Tour, Fallen Angels) reunite with Director Ken McClymont (Dogstar, Doig, Beak Street, Sherlock Holmes and the Invisible Thing, I Am Of Ireland) with a World Premiere of Award Winning writer Chris Lee’s exciting and poignant play.

A Small House at the Edge of the World (September 12th -29th) is the story of how one location captures and distills two lifetimes worth of love, joy and sorrow. A man and a woman fall in love, marry, have a child, drift apart, re-engage, haunt each other and become the dust of dreams.

The play’s lyrical but brutal power shows how relationships are fused, transformed and remade by passion, guilt and difficult truths.

About the writer Chris Lee: Chris is an Irish writer living in London. He has had over 20 productions of his plays in eight different countries. He has won the Stewart Parker Award, the Rondo Playwrighting competition, a Pearson Bursary and been Writer in Association with the Abbey Theatre Dublin. Ken has directed two of his plays (Hummingbird and Eat the Enemy).

In Chris Lee’s words, synopsis of the play: “I wanted to try and show how relationships can endure/suffer/disintegrate without there having to be a necessarily guilty person. I was also interested in the possibility of exploring a period of time that is longer than the one usually portrayed in plays.That’s when I came up with the idea of a single location, a point in space time, if you like, where all of the events shown have taken place, or possibly are still taking place, all at once if you will.

two actors in Small House at The Edge of the World

"The play tries to suggest that what we value should be relished at the time of its occurrence, that because one person has ceased to love another that does not negate the reality of that love at the time when it burned bright, that we are not summaries of anything, we do not arrive at an end point where our lives can be judged. We are rather, constantly flowing personalities that bind and part and rebind. Some of us are better at long term relationships than others.”

 

September 8, 2018

 

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