Sam Ward’s We Were Promised Honey! returns to Soho Theatre from November

Sam Ward’s We Were Promised Honey! returns for a limited run at London’s Soho Theatre from November.

Fresh from running at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, award-winning artist Sam Ward (Verity Bates Awards finalist 2022; Five Encounters on a Site Called Craigslist; YESYESNONO) will present the piece from 22 November – 3 December 2022.

We Were Promised Honey! will immerse audiences in the experience of what it means to tell a story when we’ve already been told how it ends. The show is a joyful and apocalyptic exploration of the future in which Sam Ward interrogates our generation’s collective feelings of uncertainty with a lyrical script.

Award-winning theatre company YESYESNONO brings a show of a hopeful and hopeless prophecy for earth and humankind. We Were Promised Honey! is a story of us, our future, of paradise and how we get there in the end. From the makers of Five Encounters on a Site Called Craigslist and The Accident Did Not Take Place this act of communal storytelling tells the future of the audience, what will happen to them in the minutes, centuries, and millennia after the end of the show.

We Were Promised Honey! invites audiences to participate; by reading lines, playing parts, and singing along. There’s a tree planted inside a theatre; a man on fire in the middle of the desert; two lovers reunited in a flooded city; a spaceship on the edge of a black hole. There’s hope, despair, and everything in between.

Sam Ward, performer and writer, said: “The show is an attempt to try and communicate how it feels to be living towards an inevitable end. We wanted to make something which felt accessible to everyone, whilst still exploring some experimental storytelling techniques, bringing the entire audience into the process of telling their own story.

“Ultimately we didn’t want to tell a story about the future which simply tells the audience that everything will be okay; rather we wanted to ask: how do we live when we know that things won’t be okay? The story of the future of the audience, what’s going to happen to them in the years, decades and centuries after the end of this show. These are fables of desperate hope in the face of overwhelming despair, bringing the audience together on a quest towards catastrophe.”

For more information and tickets, visit sohotheatre.com

About the author: Josh Darvill

Josh is Stageberry's editor with over five years of experience writing about theatre in the West End and across the UK. Prior to following his passion for musicals, he worked for more than a decade as a TV journalist.

 

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