Shultz's A BRIEF HISTORY OF HELEN TROY Closes At BATS 3/28

By: Mar. 16, 2009
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

Mark Shultz's A Brief History of Helen of Troy is currently being performed at the BATS Theatre. The Heather O'Carroll-directed show will be performed until Saturday 28 March (there are no shows on Sundays or Mondays). Performances are at 6:30 pm. Tickets cost $16/$13 (concession and groups of 10+). To order tickets email: book@bats.co.nz.
 
Charlotte is fifteen, fat and ugly. Her beautiful mother is dead, her dad won’t even talk to her and her best friend’s a faggot. In escaping to a dream world of power, fame and sex, she begins to destroy the lives of the few who care about her. After all, life can be so tragic if you just let it. In this hard-hitting, hilarious and horrifying new American script fantasy and reality blur to explore female sexuality and all its contradictions. Starring Erin Banks, Matthew Chamberlain, Esther-Rose Green, Rowan Bettjeman, and Eli Kent. Produced by Eleanor Bishop. Designed by Tureiti Nelson and Rachel Marlow. Image: Robin Kerr

Come reminisce on your teenage years. Weren’t they shit?

BATS Theatre is a intimate venue located in the Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffaloes building at 1 Kent Terrace. The venue itself has had a long and varied life, starting originally in the 1930s as The Savage Club, a dance hall and venue for amateur theatre. From the late 60s until 1975 Unity Theatre was in residence, a society with a tradition of left-wing political affiliations and a penchant for work by obscure European dramatists. Unity had a strong core membership which went on and contributed to the growth and success of Downstage and Circa theatres.



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.

Vote Sponsor


Videos