Self-Entitlement

Mahmoud El Haddad is an Egyptian actor and dancer, based in Paris since 2018. Inspired by the artist’s own experiences moving from Egypt to France, Self-Entitlement questions how intersectional identity shifts between different cultures, and the problems of categorising people using often prejudiced labels.

Both challenging and comedic, this intimate performance is a UK premiere.

Mahmoud is a founder of Liberacts for Arts, a non-profit organisation based in France that aims to create an artistic bridge between East and West by creating, developing and promoting art projects in all forms.

 

Reginald D. Hunter: The Man Who Could ...

In these supercharged socio-political times the challenge is more and more becoming separating what’s true and what’s real.

Lucille Hunter proudly proclaimed “It’s easy to see through shit, the hard part is pretending you haven’t.” Join Reginald D. Hunter for an hour of exploring this phenomena in this progressive work in a pre next-variant world.

As seen on Live at the Apollo, Have I Got News For You, and 8 out of 10 Cats Does Countdown.

★★★★★
“This is comedy of a rare scope”
The Times

“Stand-up comedy’s coolest customer”
The Telegraph

Nabil Abdulrashid: The Purple Pill

A show about trying to be a good person while staying a badman. Join the star of Live at the Apollo for this “unapologetically funny” (Telegraph) exploration of empathy, morality and political contradiction.

As seen on Live at the Apollo, Have I Got News for You, The Big Narstie Show, 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown and Unapologetic.

Rose Matafeo: Work in Progress

Rose Matafeo is working on stuff and you’re more than welcome to witness.

As seen on Taskmaster, Would I Lie to You, Big Fat Quiz of the Year, QI, Have I Got News for You, 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown, Conan, The Great British Bake Off and Horndog, her own special for HBO Max.

The Brain Charity – Midsummer Po...

Shortlisted Liverpool Poetry Prize entrants will read their poems at this event and the winning entry in each category will be announced on the night – with the overall winner receiving a prize of £1,000.

Ticket price includes nibbles and a welcome drink. There will be a bar available on the night too.

The Brain Charity are not issuing paper tickets for this event, but will be operating a guest list system on the door.

All profits support The Brain Charity’s front-line work.

Julia Masli – Choosh!

One of the best-reviewed and most in-demand debut shows of this year’s Edinburgh Fringe, from the award-winning Julia Masli.

An absurd homage to migration, in which a hungry Eastern European clown voyages to America for a hot dog. Choosh, by the way, means ‘bullshit’ – of all kinds. Julia Masli is an Estonian-born, London-based clown. She trained at the Ecole Philippe Gaulier, and now is a visiting teacher there.

The Varnishing Days

The Varnishing Days is the heart-stopping, glasses-dropping, hard-rocking, wig-shaking, levothyroxine-taking, knee-knocking, boot-licking, justifying, teeth rattling, digressing new show from stand up comedian to the stars John Kearns.

Go silent as I walk on! Acknowledge when something funny happens! Leave discussing dinner plans! Others will be implicated. Points will be circled and missed. Hell, it’s a man trying his best! When I visit your town dogs will start barking, as will clergy. Your microwave will go haywire.

The lights in your vestibule will flicker and the Bank of England will nervously look at interest rates. On the day I write this, the pound has hit an all time low against the dollar. Mark my words. This show will break that record again and again and again.

DIVE – A night of new female wor...

Physical Fest is Tmesis Theatre’s international festival of physical theatre, celebrating the world’s most exciting, contemporary physical theatre by bringing a variety of new work to the north for the first time.

DIVE is Physical Fest’s night of new female work.

In Bloom by Aline Costa (Female Bursary award 2023)

A mesmerising dance performance that challenges your perception and leaves you with a sense of wonder. Drawing inspiration from Butoh techniques, the piece features slow, deliberate movements and powerful imagery that evoke mystery and intrigue, an unforgettable journey into the unknown. Aline is a Swiss performer and choreographer based in Liverpool.

Look After Your Knees by Natalie Bellingham

A show about the pain and beauty of love, what it is to both connect and unravel.

It’s a celebration of being human in all its banality, sprinkled with joy and ridiculousness. Performed by a clown delving into the space inside us left behind by loss.

Natalie is theatre maker, performer and physical comedian.

Wet Dream with Jesus by Alice Way (Female Bursary award 2023)

Louisiana, home of Mardi Gras, southern hospitality, and raging purity culture. This is an autobiographical one-woman comedy investigating the wonders and pitfalls of growing up in the Bible Belt of America. The show explores Alice’s conservative, Christian led education in public high school while navigating teenage social politics and pending sexual identity. Alice, LIPA graduate, is the artistic director of Dragonfly Performance which explores social issues through thought provoking comedic theatre.

Jam and Chemicals by Dora Colquhoun

A show about Home. Carl Sangan described Earth as a fragile dot ‘A mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.’ Earth is our collective home. But what is home? Is it a place? A feeling? People? Dora is on a quest to find out.

She is a Neurodivergent theatre maker with a passion for storytelling using humour and absurdity, she is working with international theatre and clown Jamie Wood and composer Luke Thomas.

 

Jordan Gray: Is It A Bird?

Fresh off a sold out run at the Edinburgh Fringe, a historic performance at The London Palladium and a game-changing set on Channel 4’s Friday Night Live, the UK’s premier transgender comedian returns to take on babies, boobies, bigots and Batman in this blistering music and comedy show.

After 10 years in the music biz (and a memorable run on The Voice), Jordan Gray has suddenly become one of the UK’s most exciting and celebrated rising comics, recently winning the Channel 4 Comedy Breakthrough Star Award.

Jordan has been featured on the BBC, ITV, Sky and Comedy Central, and recently had ITV commission a pilot alongside Simon Pegg and Nick Frost.

Poets of Ukraine

Get ready to immerse yourself in the rich poetry of Ukraine upstairs at Leaf on Bold Street with Liverpool Dead Good Poets. Mid-Eurovision, the event promises to be an unforgettable experience that celebrates the present and past of Ukraine’s poetic traditions.

Join us as we showcase recorded performances of some of Ukraine’s leading contemporary writers, including Yuliya Musakovska, Lyuba Yakimchuk, and Khrystia Vengryniuk.

Local poets will then take the stage, reciting their works in both English and Ukrainian, followed by performances by Ukrainian poets and singers currently residing in Liverpool.

To top off the night, we’ll also feature readings of the poetry of Ukraine’s National Poet, Taras Shevchenko, translated by Vera Rich. You won’t want to miss this exceptional celebration of Ukrainian poetry, which is a part of Writing on the Wall’s Annual WoWFest.

Yaryna Chornohuz is a poet who is also a combat medic in the Ukrainian Marines. She is currently serving on the frontlines and defending Ukraine against the Russian invasion. Her debut poetry collection Як вигинається воєнне коло (How the Military Circle Bends) was released by Folio Publishers in 2020. 

Ostap Kin (translator) is the editor, and co-translator with John Hennessy, of Babyn Yar: Ukrainian Poets Respond (forthcoming from HURI/Harvard University Press), editor of New York Elegies: Ukrainian Poems on the City (Academic Studies Press, 2019), which was awarded the 2018–2019 Prize for Best Translation from the American Association for Ukrainian Studies, and the co-translator, with John Hennessy, of Serhiy Zhadan’s A New Orthography (Lost Horse Press, 2020), finalist for the PEN America Award for Poetry in Translation and co-winner of the Derek Walcott Prize for Poetry. He also co-translated, with Vitaly Chernetsky, Yuri Andrukhovych’s collection of selected poems Songs for a Dead Rooster (Lost Horse Press, 2018). 

Khrystia Vengryniuk is a poet, author, literary historian, and painter who lives in Chernivtsi, Ukraine, where she serves as editor-in-chief of Chornivivtsi, the country’s top publisher of children’s books. She is the author of essay collections and volumes of poetry, as well as the co-author of several anthologies. She works in poetry in multiple genres, including film and video, and has participated in various literary festivals with her multimedia poetry. She is currently volunteering in local efforts to aid the Ukrainian army and refugees. 

Dmytro Kyyan (translator) is a writer, editor, and translator. In the 1990s, he became the editor-in-chief of Foto & Video magazine in Moscow. During his time at the magazine, he published and interviewed legendary photographers such as Richard Avedon, David Bailey, and Irving Penn. He also published many rising stars from across Eastern Europe. Originally from Kharkiv, he currently resides in New York City. 

Lybua Yakimchuk is a poet, playwright, and screenwriter. Her two collections of poetry ,iak Moda (2009) and Abrykosy Donbasu (2015) won prestigious awards, including the International Slavic Poetic Award (Ukraine) and the International Poetic Award of the Kovalev Foundation (USA). Since 2019, her play The Wall has been running at the Ivan Franko National Academic Drama Theater, the largest in Ukraine. She also authored the script for the film The Slovo House: An Unfinished Novel, reflecting on the literary life in the 1930’s Kharkiv. Born and raised in a small town near Luhansk, Yakimchuk now lives in Kyiv, Ukraine.  Translated by Oksana Maksymchuk, Max Rosochinsky, and Svetlana Lavochkina 

Natalya Hovist was born and lived before the war in the beautiful and UNESCO heritage city of Lviv. She graduated from the medical college in Lviv and received a degree in nursing, then studied in Lublin at the Faculty of Philosophy of Theology. On completing her studies in moral theology, she worked as a nurse in a hospital in Lviv and as a teacher in a private school. Her hobbies are poetry and singing. She has written a number of poems and songs under the pseudonym Nata Svitla, and sang in church choirs in my hometown.  Natalya presently lives in Liverpool.  @Nata Svitla 

 To make this event possible, we’re raising funds to cover the cost of the venue, a technician, and a projector, as well as to compensate the poets both in Ukraine and Liverpool.  

Any donations are greatly appreciated and can be made through our GoFundMe page 

Don’t miss this opportunity to experience the beauty and depth of Ukraine’s poetic culture!  

A donation of £5 is great, while £10 is simply brilliant. Donate now.

*These are difficult times. We know some people may struggle to afford full price tickets. If you would like to attend this event but can’t afford to, please contact info@writingonthewall.org.uk.  All queries will be treated in confidence.  If you would like to purchase a gifted ticket for someone who can’t afford it, please buy directly from the event page and we will offer your ticket out.  https://www.facebook.com/writingonthewall.liverpool