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When

Occurs on Saturday February 29 2020

Approximate running time: 1 hour and 30 minutes

Venue

Key City Theatre
20 14th Ave North
Cranbrook BC V1C 6H4

Event Notes

× Saturday February 29 at 7:30 pm
Featured Actor: Nicole Jung
Tickets $25 Regular | $19 Big Ticket | $15 Big Ticket PLUS
Recommended Ages 16+

No rehearsals. No director. No set.
A different local actor reads the script cold for the first time at each performance.
A theatre experience unlike any other.
Will you participate? Will you be manipulated? Will you listen? Will you really listen?


With no rehearsals, no director, a different actor each night, and a script waiting in a sealed envelope on stage, internationally acclaimed White Rabbit Red Rabbit, by Iranian writer Nassim Soleimanpour, is an audacious theatrical experiment and a potent reminder of the transgressive and transformative power of theatre.


Forbidden to leave his native Iran, Soleimanpour wrote a play which travelled the world in his place. The audience joins each different performer on a journey into the unknown; stumbling upon the personal and profound, the limits of liberty and ultimately where theatre can take you. Since its joint premiere in 2011, the play has been translated into over 25 different languages and has been performed over 1000 times by some of the biggest names in theatre and film, including actors Whoopi Goldberg, Nathan Lane, John Hurt, Simon McBurney, Stephen Fry, Sinead Cusack, Marcus Brigstocke and Ken Loach.


NICOLE JUNG
Nicole Jung has been actively involved on stage and off in the community theatre scene in Cranbrook since 2018 where she debuted in the Neil Simon's play Plaza Suites, winning the coveted Buddy award for Favorite Newcomer. She played a role in the smash hit musical Chicago and the recent local hit musical Anything Goes. Nicole enjoys the theatre community and spends her time supporting local arts, hiking, kayaking and enjoying the outdoors. While she is mostly ambivalent about rabbits, considering them a great alternative to chicken, she is excited and slightly freaked out about what this rascally red/white rabbit might have in store for her. She thanks her family and friends for their support as she heads into this brand new adventure.


Note: This play is NOT overtly political. It operates on a deeper, metaphoric level, and very expressly avoids overt political comment.

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