Book After The Dance tickets at Lyttelton Theatre

After The Dance
After The Dance

Show Information

Running Time:

TBC

Booking From:

01-Jun-2010

Booking Until:

11-Aug-2010

Performance Times:

Evenings @ 7.30pm: 1 June, 2 June, 3 June, 4, June, 5 June, 7 June, 8 June (7pm), 9 June, 10 June, 16 June, 17 June, 18 June, 19 June, 21 June, 25 June, 26 June, 2 July, 3 July, 5 July, 9 July, 10 July, 12 July, 19 July, 20 July, 21 July, 27 July, 28 July, 29 July, 30 July, 31 July, 6 August, 7 August, 9 August, 10 August, 11 August 

Matinees @ 3pm: 20 June, 27 June, 4 July, 11 July, 1 August, 8 August 

Matinees @ 2:15pm: 10 June, 19 June, 26 June, 3 July, 10 July, 21 July, 31 July, 7 August, 10 August

Lyttelton Theatre Information

Address:

The South Bank, London, SE1 9PX

Seating Plan:

View Lyttelton Theatre Seating Plan

Google Map:

After The Dance Creative Team

Written:

Terence Rattigan

Author:

Terrence Rattigan

Director:

Thea Sharrock

Lighting:

Mark Henderson

Sound:

Ian Dickinson

Producer:

National Theatre

Casts:

Nancy Carroll (Joan Scott-Fowler), Benedict Cumberbatch (David Scott-Fowler), John Heffernan (Peter Scott-Fowler), Adrian Scarborough (John Reid), Faye Castelow, Pandora Colin, Giles Cooper, Jenny Galloway, Daniel Gosling, Juliet Howland, Nicholas Lumley, Laclan Nieboer, Leo Staar, Hannah Stokely, Giles Taylor, Richard Teverson, Charlotte Thornton

After The Dance

Lyttelton Theatre, The South Bank, London SE1 9PX

Call us on 0207 993 5322 for booking details!

As the world races towards catastrophe, a crowd of Mayfair socialites party their way to oblivion. At its centre is David, who idles away his sober moments researching a futile book until the beautiful Helen decides to save him, shattering his marriage and learning too late the depth of both David's indolence and his wife's undeclared love. But with finances about to crash and humanity on the brink of global conflict, the drink keeps flowing and the revellers dance on.

First staged in 1939, After the Dance, now often thought to be Terence Rattigan's masterpiece, offers a subtle, witty unmasking of the hedonistic 20s generation and a devastating study of repression and the human heart.
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