Tag: Hoxton Hall

  • Recovering addicts among stars of cabaret about crack cocaine

    Members of the cast of Rockston Stories: An Addictive Cabaret
    Members of the cast of Rockston Stories: An Addictive Cabaret. Photograph: Siva Zagel

    A cabaret about crack cocaine addiction performed by a cast including recovering addicts is coming to Hoxton Hall this month.

    Rockston Stories: An Addictive Cabaret is a play about a cabaret singer who becomes addicted to crack, using the testimonies and stories of people researched locally.

    The play is set in ‘Rockston’, apparently a reference to Hoxton’s nickname among crack cocaine users.

    Told through the singer’s perspective, the play travels through time and space back to when Hoxton Hall was a music hall and temperance society meeting house.

    The cast are nearly all in different stages of recovery from addiction, and the play includes some of their live testimonies, as well as characters from Hoxton’s historical past and present.

    The production is by Outside Edge Theatre, a theatre company that produces work about addiction. It aims to help people affected by chemical addiction to achieve their potential by building skills and confidence.

    Rehearsals for Rockston Stories
    Rehearsals for Rockston Stories. Photograph: Siva Zagel

    Outside Edge was founded in 1998 by Phil Fox, an actor and former addict who died last year.

    The play is dedicated to his memory, and devising it has made his successor Susie Miller realise that death and grieving are things most addicts are familiar with.

    “We also had another cast member who passed away in April,” says Miller. “His actual words are in the script within the play, his final lines that he shared in our rehearsal are actually spoken. Grief is an everyday emotion because it’s a common occurrence for people in recovery to pass away.”

    In the play the main character, Thalia, reaches ‘rock bottom’ and is faced with a decision.

    “In terms of recovery they call it the jumping off point,” says Miller. “It’s the point where you either make a decision to change and step into recovery or often people will die through suicide or accidental death.”

    Aside from the serious business of addiction, but as a cabaret Rockston Stories aims to entertain too. There are musical numbers with singers and instrumentalists, performing a mixture of classic songs and others written by cast members.

    The cast ranges from professionals who have been in West End shows such as Cats and Les Miserables to amateurs, and Miller says this shows how addiction reaches all spectrums of society.

    “Some have been in recovery for over 20 years, some just a few months, and some are professionally trained actors and directors and others have very little performance experience. It makes it very lively and vibrant to work with them.”

    Rockston Stories: An Addictive Cabaret is at Hoxton Hall, 130 Hoxton Street, N1 6SH from 29 September to 17 October.

  • Hoxton Hall celebrates 150 years

    Burlesque: performer Immodesty Blaize
    Burlesque: performer Immodesty Blaize

    Hoxton Hall, one of the last surviving music halls in East London, is this month celebrating its 150th birthday with a series of fundraising events.

    Having provided entertainment and support to the local community since the days of Queen Victoria, the hall is now in need of critical repairs and is looking to raise £30,000.

    Headlining the celebrations will be international burlesque star Immodesty Blaize, whose first solo performance in London was held on stage at Hoxton Hall back in 2004.
    
    The anniversary festivities also include a vintage variety day which incorporates live music, a ballroom tea dance and a market at which treasures unearthed from the hall’s wardrobe department will be sold.

    Hayley White, Group Director of Hoxton Hall, says: “Over our history we have presented an array of talent, often those starting out.
    “It is a delight to celebrate the history of the building with a diverse and stunning showcase of events presenting our past alongside our future ambitions for the space.”

    In Victorian London, often dubbed ‘the music hall era’, Shoreditch boasted more than ten music halls. But over the years these numbers dwindled and now there are just two remaining in East London.

    Hoxton Hall first opened its doors to the public in 1863, hosting its first entertainment evening in the November of that year.
    The year 1878 saw the site offer an entirely different service, when Quaker W. I. Palmer bought the hall and used the space to house and clothe local women and children, as well as to provide the period’s equivalent of Alcoholics Anonymous meetings.

    The hall was then used as an air raid shelter during the Second World War, once more highlighting the crucial role it has played in the community over the years.

    Hoxton Hall, 130 Hoxton St, N1 6SH