Category: CULTURE

  • Christmas at Hackney House – everything you need to party with cheer and spirit

    Christmas at Hackney House – everything you need to party with cheer and spirit

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    Get festive in ‘urban style’ this Christmas, located on Curtain Road right in the heart of Shoreditch Hackney House is offering a cool urban & versatile space to do Christmas your way!

    Full of Christmas cheer and spirit, our packages can be adapted to suit your style & number of guests, from intimate parties of up to 30 people to a full house of 450 people, the 3 floors of flexible space has a Christmas grotto just right for all.

    These inclusive packages start from £48 per person and if you’re up for a Monday – Wednesday night party we’ll treat you to a glass of welcome prosecco on us!

    Includes:

    • Venue hire (6.30pm – midnight)
    • Drinks package for up to 5 hours with unlimited beer, wine (mulled too) & softs
    • Christmas menu – from one of the following menu styles:
      • Bowl Food (based on 3 savoury & 1 sweet bowl per person)*
      • Hot Buffet (based on 2 mains, 2 sides & 1 dessert)*
      • Canapes (based on up to 10 bites per person savoury & sweet canapes)
        *served from eco friendly disposables & street food boxes
    • In house AV Equipment: projector, screen, 2 x corded mics, sound system for playlists
    • All staff & security required

    You can also add some extra little touches like Photo booths, live entertainers, comperes or even a nitrogen ice-cream bar….


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    Check out our Christmas page

    To find out more or book your party get in touch with our team on 020 3289 7859 or email info@hackneyhouse.london


     

  • Enter a secret world at the Museum of London’s week-long Night Museum

    Enter a secret world at the Museum of London’s week-long Night Museum

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    Enter the secret world of The Night Museum — an unmissable week-long exploration of the hidden, the illicit and the lost.

    Coinciding with Museums at Night, join us in and around the Museum of London for a free after-dark mini-season of late-night parties, ghost clubs, dark electronica, dystopian visions, lost sounds, night voices, drinking dens, walks into darkness and mythical creatures of the night.

    Events include the museum of lost sounds (29 October), the museum of dark places (2 November) and on 4 November, dress up to dance the night away and celebrate the history of nightclubbing in the museum of last parties.

    Book now – Only a few tickets left!

    The Night Museum
    Museum of London
    29 Oct – 4 Nov

  • Winterville to make welcome return to Victoria Park

    Winterville
    Horse-drawn frolics at Winterville. Photograph: Winterville

    The seasonal town of Winterville is set to descend upon Victoria Park once more, with this year’s festival promising more attractions and good times than you can shake a multi-coloured candy stick at.

    Winterville takes place from 26 November to 23 December, and will see ten acres of Victoria Park transformed into a winter town, centred around a clock tower festooned with festive lights.

    Combining Christmas classics with a contemporary twist is a big part of Winterville’s appeal. Amongst a snowstorm of activities and events, pleasure seekers can parade their skating skills on a 600-square-metre ice rink, or enjoy Winterville’s own circus featuring dare devil feats from the world famous Moscow State Circus.

    Proving the entertainment isn’t just for grown ups, there’s a chance to experience a reimagined Santa’s Grotto designed by interactive events specialists Bearded Kitten, as well as a Snow White pantomime within the dedicated Kids’ Quarter.

    Perhaps the only known Dutch Spiegeltent in East London makes a welcome return, housing comedy, cabaret, theatre, DJ sets, live music and more, and for those in need of liquid refreshment after almost certain stimulatory overload, there’s Winterville’s very own local ‘Bar Humbug’ pub, and (naturally, given this is East London) street food galore in the artisan festive markets.

    Organisations and acts from all over East London are included in the programme, such as Backyard Cinema, who will be curating a five-week season of films inside an enchanted forest called ‘The Winter Night Garden’, only accessible via a secret tunnel of trees.

    Winterville takes place in Victoria Park from 26 November to 23 December and is free to enter. Ticketed events available include the Ice Rink, Circus, Backyard Cinema and Spiegeltent. To buy tickets and for more information see www.winterville.co.uk.

  • Winterville festival reveals more programme details

    Lucy Benson-Brown in Cutting Off Kate Bush
    Lucy Benson-Brown in Cutting Off Kate Bush

    Those who missed out on seeing Kate Bush live can take solace in the line-up for Winterville, the winter festival set to take over part of Victoria Park this December.

    Cult tribute act Fake Bush will perform a comic tribute to the singer, and the programme also includes the one-woman show and Edinburgh Fringe sell-out play Cutting Off Kate Bush, which charts the plight of a woman’s personal crisis through the medium of Kate Bush.

    The Festival organisers are aiming to provide something for everyone at the month-long event. The town itself is free to enter with a selection of ticketed attractions available to buy from the Winterville website.

    Scottish songwriter James Yorkston will be taking to the stage for his annual Christmas performance, while the Winterville bespoke spiegeltent is set to host two shows by one of London’s finest burlesque cabaret companies, Cirque du Cabaret.

    With club nights, street food markets, an ice rink and fairground rides, Winterville is covering all the bases when it comes to winter-themed entertainment.

    Grown ups and children should be equally at home. The Winterville’s Kids’ Quarter will be graced by artists Gavin Turk and Deborah Curtis and their travelling arts circus House of Fairy Tales, while Big Fish Little Fish will be hosting family-friendly dance parties complete with pro DJs, glowsticks, bubble machines and glitter.

    There’s even going to be a pantomime of Robin Hood, produced by Hackney-based theatre company Tour de Force. The daily hour-long show will feature pupils from schools across East London and will be packed with traditional slapstick humour and live music.

    Winterville will be running throughout December with an extended day of celebrations on New Year’s Day. The launch on 2 December will take the form of a ‘Winterville Revue’ featuring highlights from the programme – a good way for the uninitiated to learn more about what’s in store.

    Winterville is at Victoria Park, E3 5TB from 2 December – 1 January
    www.winterville.co.uk

  • Parkour life – opening of new academy in Docklands

    Alex Pownall at the London Parkour Academy. Photograph: Eleonore de Bonneval
    Alex Pownall at the London Parkour Academy. Photograph: Eleonore de Bonneval

    As a kid, I used to climb trees, swinging from the branches and jumping off. Sometimes I’d fall, sometimes not. But after encountering parkour, I realise that such physical interactions with the environment can just as easily happen on the streets of London.

    Parkour is an athletic activity in which practitioners traverse a usually urban environment in the most efficient way possible. Originating in France, this non-competitive ‘sport’ can include running, jumping, climbing or any other form of movement.

    Walking out of Trinity Buoy Wharf’s newly opened London Parkour Academy, the UK’s first purpose-built indoor parkour and functional fitness facility, all perceptions of my direct environment changed drastically. Stairs and ramps became, in my imagination, something I could use to move in unique and challenging ways.

    Apparently that is how you become a ‘freerunner’. Francois Mahop, alias Forrest, director of the academy, explains that with parkour “your perception starts to change and you realise that everywhere can be a potential spot to train. There are no more obstacles, only resources to help you move forward.”

    With training, the brain of a freerunner becomes accustomed to look at the physical environment and question how it can optimise movement. The beauty is that you need only a few minutes of mind-mapping before being able to operate in the space in exactly the way you had imagined. It is all about problem-solving skills.

    Parkour has a strong code of conduct. “It isn’t a chaotic sport,” says Forrest. “The first rule is to respect yourself, you need to be physically strong.”

    For this reason the Parkour Academy has an area dedicated to fitness, strength and conditioning. Rule number two is “to respect your environment. It is your playground and you don’t want to damage it.” The final rule is to respect other people and to steer clear of private property.

    That final instruction presents a challenge, for doesn’t the adrenaline gained from parkour not at least partially come from the ability to access unique places? On this point Forrest makes himself clear: “The real practitioners like the challenge of a new space but respect the environment and do not trespass,” he says.

    This doesn’t make parkour any less interesting; I quickly realised that you don’t need the space to be particularly complex to push yourself hard both physically and mentally.

    Parkour is a sport that develops your balance; you learn to be precise in your movements, take controlled risks and to be creative with the way you move. And crucially it forces you to be more observant of your surroundings.

    Chainstore Parkour Academy, Trinity Buoy Wharf, 64 Orchard Place, E14 0JY