The record-breaking West End show Horrible Histories - Barmy Britain is charging up to the Pleasance Courtyard for the Edinburgh Festival Fringe this summer. This special Edinburgh production introduces William Wallace and Burke and Hare into the horrible history of Britain and will run from 3rd - 26th August 2012.
From today, May 9, Neal Foster and Alison Fitzjohn will take over the roles of Rex and Queenie in HORRIBLE HISTORIES - BARMY BRITAIN at the Garrick Theatre.
Horrible Histories creator Terry Deary will be in London this Easter for two post-show book signings on Wednesday 4th and Thursday 5th April. Signings will take place at the Garrick Theatre immediately after performances of Birmingham Stage Company's Horrible Histories - Barmy Britain written by Terry Deary, Neal Foster and Ciaran McConville of Rose Theatre, Kingston.
Horrible Histories creator Terry Deary will be in London this Easter for two post-show book signings on Wednesday 4th and Thursday 5th April. Signings will take place at the Garrick Theatre immediately after performances of Birmingham Stage Company's Horrible Histories - Barmy Britain written by Terry Deary, Neal Foster and Ciaran McConville of Rose Theatre, Kingston.
In Skellig by David Almond, Michael, a good-natured 10-year old with more on his plate than the average boy, discovers a grouchy yet strangely mystical vagabond with a taste for brown ale and Chinese take-out hiding out in his family's garage.
In Skellig by David Almond, Michael, a good-natured 10-year old with more on his plate than the average boy, discovers a grouchy yet strangely mystical vagabond with a taste for brown ale and Chinese take-out hiding out in his family's garage.
Neal Foster, the actor who plays the title character in the stage adaptation of David Almond's award-winning children's novel, Skellig, by The Birmingham Stage Company, relishes the challenge of becoming someone -- or is it something? -- who is as down-and-out as he is enigmatic.
In Skellig by David Almond, Michael, a good-natured 10-year old with more on his plate than the average boy, discovers a grouchy yet strangely mystical vagabond with a taste for brown ale and Chinese take-out hiding out in his family's garage.