

Something For Now
Live At Bristol Old VicSOLD OUT
We're thrilled at the response to this show. If you've missed out on a ticket this time, check out what else we've got on.
Impermanence return with Something for Now - the first dance performance at Bristol Old Vic since March - and they will be joined by Lucy McCormick, 'The Queen of Performance Art'.
The evening will include a dance-film adaptation of Wyndham Lewis’ play The Enemy of the Stars, alongside live work by Impermanence inspired by Getrude Stein, Lou Reed, Leonard Bernstein and Vera Lynn.
Lucy McCormick will be joining them with an excerpt from her show Post Popular. Lucy’s work marries together interests in absurdity, feminism and the grotesque. Her practice is cross-genre, taking inspiration from theatre, performance art, comedy and dance.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★Gloriously messy and outrageously funny
The Independent
Pay what you choose:
So everyone can access tickets to our Live At Bristol Old Vic programme, we're introducing a flexible pricing scheme for a number of events. Find out more about it here.
Impermanence: Something for Now prices per table:
Table for 2 - £10 (Concession) / £20 (Standard) / £30 (Pay It Forward)
Table for 4 - £20 (Concession) / £40 (Standard) / £60 (Pay It Forward)
Table for 6 - £30 (Concession) / £60 (Standard) / £90 (Pay It Forward)
Single perch seat - £8
About Impermanence
Co-Directed by Roseanna Anderson & Josh Ben-Tovim, Impermanence was set up in 2011 with Alessandro Marzotto Levy and other graduates from the Rambert School.
Work for the stage includes: Baal (Bristol Old Vic, The Place, Jakarta Theatre Platform), Sexbox (British Council Edinburgh Showcase), Da Da Darling (Guardian top 10 Dance Productions) and The Major Arcana (Mayfest 2020 - postponed).
Work for film includes: The Ballet of the Nations (Best Art Film - New Renaissance Film Festival, Amsterdam), Blast (Commissioned by BBC Arts), and Park Wanderings (created during lockdown with Corali Dance Company - commissioned and exhibited by Southwark Park Galleries).
Impermanence have been curating a programme of dance for The Weston Studio at Bristol Old Vic, and are set to open a new venue, The Mount Without, dedicated to dance in Bristol later this year.
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Ongoing thanks to: the Cohan Collective, Arts Council England, Duncan Wood, Freya Billington, Steve Winter, Jan Winter, Norman Routledge, Kennedy Junior Muntanga, Evan Schwarz, Jake Duncan, Michele Jetzer, Bristol Old Vic, Lawrence Batley Theatre, Zannah Chisholm, Duckie, Israel Aloni, Dan Broadbent, Jasmin Greenland, Hollie Harding, Ben Oliver, Alison Hargreaves, Paul Mellon Centre, Corali, Andy Balcon, Jackie Shemesh, Jasmina Cibic, Will Kinnell, Harry Humberstone, Tom Marshman, Alex Brown, Julie Cresswell Buck, Grace Brockington, Sonya Cullingford, Pam Tait and all friends and families everywhere, past future and present.
Photography: Jake Duncan (Camera); Kennedy Junior Muntanga and Evan Schwarz (Dancers)
Download the freesheet for the show here.
- Venue
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