facebook play-alt chevron-thin-right chevron-thin-left cancel location info chevron-thin-down star-full help-with-circle calendar images whatsapp directions_car directions_bike train directions_walk directions_bus close home newspaper-o perm_device_information restaurant school stay_current_landscape ticket train
The West End company in Come From Away at the Phoenix Theatre 2020. Credit Craig Sugden

The West End company in Come From Away at the Phoenix Theatre 2020. Credit Craig Sugden

London Theatre News Today: Wednesday 14 April

Published 14 April 2021

Come From Away returns to the West End from 22 July

The West End company in Come From Away at the Phoenix Theatre 2020. Credit Craig SugdenThe West End company in Come From Away at the Phoenix Theatre 2020. Credit Craig Sugden

The shutters of the Phoenix Theatre in London will lift on 22 July and welcome in audiences to the highly anticipated re-opening of international hit musical Come From Away.

Winner of every major Best Musical award when it opened in the West End in March 2019, Come From Away tells the remarkable and inspiring true story of 7,000 stranded air passengers during the wake of 9/11, and the small town in Newfoundland that welcomed them. Cultures clashed and nerves ran high, but as uneasiness turned into trust, music soared into the night and gratitude grew into enduring friendships.

GET THE FULL EXPERIENCE:

To see this content you’ll need to allow us to set some additional cookies!

Twenty years ago on 11 September 2001, the world stopped. On 12 September and in the years following, their stories of kindness, generosity and love have moved us all.

The international hit musical has celebrated sold-out, record-breaking engagements on Broadway, in Canada, throughout Australia, and on a 60-city North American Tour.

Producers of Come From Away, John Brant and Joseph Smith, say: t’s been too long since we were able to welcome people to ‘The Rock’ and we’ve really missed our audiences.  The resilience and kindness of Newfoundlanders is known the world over and constantly provides inspiration to us all in these challenging times. Theatre is integral to the vibrancy of the UK’s creative sector and we look forward to being part of welcoming people back to London’s West End. It’s now more than ever that we want to tell our story and give audiences the chance to see us live again.

GET THE FULL EXPERIENCE:

To see this content you’ll need to allow us to set some additional cookies!

Tickets for the four-time Olivier Awards-winning Come From Away at the Phoenix Theatre will be available to purchase on Official London Theatre on Monday 19 April – so mark your diaries and be sure to check back here.

 

Sour Lemons embarks on anti-racism partnerships with Royal Court Theatre and Young Vic

(Photo credit: Francis Augusto)

Sade Banks, CEO and Founder of Sour Lemons, today announces the April 2021 Big Squeeze collaboration with the Royal Court Theatre and Young Vic and respectively. They have both signed two-year strategic partnerships to identify and dismantle systemic racism within their organisations with social enterprise Sour Lemons.

Each organisation will have a dedicated team of Associates, led by incoming Director of Programmes, Shoomi Chowdhury, to interrogate internal structures that uphold systemic racism and create barriers for underrepresented communities.

Sour Lemons will work alongside each theatre to build awareness of how systemic racism manifests within their organisations. Each partner will establish two internal working groups who will be central to driving this work forward and developing a culture of accountability: an Anti-Oppression Group consisting of white senior leaders and an Accountability Group consisting of colleagues with mixed racial identities from across the organisation.

Each partner will be releasing their learnings and progress at the end of each six-month cycle, to share the challenges and opportunities created when dismantling systemic racism.

The Sour Lemons approach is adaptive – each programme evolves in response to the lived experiences of racism found in the organisations they work with.

Sade Banks, CEO and Founder of Sour Lemons said: “The commitment the Young Vic and Royal Court Theatre have made and continue to make, not just to the partnership but in creating a culture that is accountable and hostile to racism, sends a strong message to the rest of the industry. This work has been happening behind the scenes for the past year and Sour Lemons are excited now to announce it publicly.

“Our mission is to make the truth irresistible – if it becomes impossible to not be aware of how racism manifests, it’s impossible not to do something about it.

“The Sour Lemons model is unique because it responds directly to the lived experiences of racism within the organisation. By centering the needs of Black and Global Majority colleagues, it forces us to acknowledge that racism is happening over here – not ‘over there in America’ or in another institution – here, in the UK and in our sector. This is the opportunity to do something about it.”

Vicky Featherstone, Artistic Director of the Royal Court Theatre and Lucy Davies, Executive Producer said: “We have been looking for an exceptional external partner to collaborate with us on our Anti-Racism and Oppression work. This timely, critical and deep work will help us listen, reflect, learn, grow, be challenged, be visibly changed, and be held accountable. Our Board has been central to this process. We are all very honoured to be selected to be a strategic partner with Sour Lemons for the next two years to do this work, and to be alongside the YV to share and radiate across the sector how we change.”

Kwame Kwei-Armah, Artistic Director of the Young Vic and Despina Tsatsas, Executive Director said: “We could not be more honoured to have Sour Lemons join the Young Vic family as an Associate Company at this precise moment, and as we participate in their ‘Big Squeeze’ programme. Our conversations about working together began well before the 2020 summer of social justice, when we invited Sour Lemons to become an Associate Company, and so we are delighted our ideas are now a reality. Having Sade and her team’s expertise in-house to help the YV tackle the institutional problems that beset our country is an absolute asset. Conversation and learning is being fostered in all areas of our organisation, from our boardroom to our administrative, artistic and production spaces. We are proud to have Sour Lemons as part of the YV, and part of our sector.”

Click here to find out more about Sour Lemons.

Share

Sign up

Tagged:
come from away phoenix theatre royal court theatre young vic

Related articles

//