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Park Theatre and Red Ladder Theatre Company celebrate Park Theatre's

2nd Birthday Party

Join us for a community celebration to mark our second birthday. Enjoy a double-bill of performances of our Hurling Rubble plays starting with Hurling Rubble At The Sun at 4pm, an opportunity between the shows to enjoy festive fare from our pop-up food stalls*, followed by Hurling Rubble At The Moon at 7pm. The bar will be open as usual for the purchase of drinks and beverages.

*Restaurants confirmed so far: Exeter Street Bakery, Osteria Tufo, Season Kitchen, My Cottage Cafe

 


4pm Hurling Rubble at the Sun

by Avaes Mohammad

That side of town. July 2005. One blistering night. One blazing day. T labours over hot-plates cooking up the final ingredients for his mission while his mother labours over a hot stove, cooking up his final meal. Wearied by staring into all-consuming retribution, T reaches out to her seeking fresh insight. Desperate to be folded into her bosom once again, instead he’s thrust onto a course of his own design, but with a force far greater than his alone.

"Sometimes all you can do is make them see what it is they're doing to you. What they've done to you. What they've turned you into. Sometimes that's all you have left to show."

 


5.30pm Celebratory Supper 

Enjoy a deliciously different interval supper from a range of pop up food stalls on all three floors of Park Theatre, supplied by the best restaurants and suppliers in Finsbury Park.

 


7pm ​Hurling Rubble at the Moon
by Avaes Mohammad

This side of town. The first years of the millennium and Skef’s dad is back. Reliving his glory days on the terraces, he stands shoulder to shoulder with his son for the first time as they give it to the Asians. For Skef this isn’t about reliving bygone glory but reclaiming all that’s fast being stolen by the new insidious scourge all around. But, committed to battling this enemy within, he’s in danger of soiling the very thing he’s fighting for by violating the very thing he loves.

"It's not about the Scousers, or the Geordies or even the Irish anymore. It's not even about the Blacks or the Asians. It's a new age with a new threat and you don't even know it."