Immersive theatre experience at Brighton Dome takes you into a digital world

A new immersive theatre experience that uses Virtual Reality (VR) technology is being presented at Brighton Dome by leading site-responsive practitioners dreamthinkspeak and Access All Areas, a company of learning disabled and autistic artists.

Using mixed reality together with live acting, unReal City explores what personal connection means in a world that is becoming increasingly digital. In a 40-minute performance, an audience of two people at a time are given Oculus headsets which take their avatar characters on a journey to a fictional city. Guided through a series of scenes in their virtual world, including a block of apartments, cinema and cafe, the guests can meet and interact with other residents and each other. At key moments, audiences will come back into the real world to find themselves re-located in an unexpected twist of circumstances. 

 

unReal City is a work-in-progress production between two of the UK’s most innovative performing arts companies. Brighton based dreamthinkspeak are renowned for bringing interactive performances to a range of buildings and locations, including disused shops and factories, while Access All Areas are leading the way in supporting the artistic development of learning disabled creatives and performers to champion their inclusion in the sector. Their immersive events create intimate moments of interaction between performers and audiences in public spaces.

 

Tristan Sharps, Artistic Director, dreamthinkspeak commented:

“As an associate artistic company of Brighton Dome, we’re thrilled to be bringing unReal City to this iconic venue and to be collaborating with Access All Areas and their incredible performers. As we stand on the verge of a new Metaverse, we wanted to ask vital questions about how we relate to each other in our increasingly virtual world and how digital connectivity is radically changing our sense of reality. Now that the current pandemic has continued to drive us towards online platforms to communicate from the comfort of our own home, these questions feel more urgent and relevant than ever.”

 

Nick Llewellyn of Access All Areas said:

“We are thrilled to bring unReal City back after we all moved to a life online halfway through the first run. The eight Access All Areas artists have each created their own unique response to the themes around creating safe and truly inclusive virtual communities in which to meet new friends. We can’t wait to bring it to Brighton and invite new audiences to experience the show. 

 

Associate Artist Kirsty said she is ‘so glad to be doing it again after so long’. We’ve added a few new elements now we’ve all had the experience of being confined to our homes accessing the world only through virtual means. As Associate Artist DJ said, ‘it’s been really good to come back and recreate unReal City once again. Amazing to be back in the space and continue our creativity’.”

 

Following its premiere at Battersea Arts Centre in 2020 and its run at Brighton Dome, both companies will continue the project further as they test out new uses for the technology developed with Brighton-based technology designers Piotr Nierobisz of Munchingsquare and Andy Baker of Ixxy, with sound design by Gareth Fry.

 

unReal City is on from 21 Jan to 5 Feb 2022 at Brighton Dome Founders Room with performances running throughout the day and evening.

 

Book via brightondome.org or Brighton Dome ticket office.

 

unReal City is supported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council England and The Foyle Foundation. 

 

Ends

 

High-res images can be downloaded via Dropbox: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/dxqfxzpxglm4aez/AAAil6dnfyuv_cPdV58FXF0ia?dl=0

 

For more information, please contact:

 

Katie Fowler, Senior Press Officer – [javascript protected email address]

Sue Bradburn, Head of Press & PR – [javascript protected email address] | 07954587099 

 

From 10 January 2022 please contact press@brightondome.org

 

NOTES TO EDITORS

 

Access All Areas

Access All Areas makes disruptive performance by learning disabled and autistic artists.

Our immersive performance events create intimate moments of interaction between performers and public, occupying unexpected spaces in venues, on the streets, and in public buildings. 

 

Through our performance company, we support the artistic development of some of the world’s leading learning disabled creatives. Our award-winning Performance Making Diploma, a collaboration with the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, is breaking new ground in training for emerging learning disabled performance makers.

 

We also run consultancy with arts organisations on inclusive practice, creating space within our industry for learning disabled artists and audiences to flourish. 

 

accessallareastheatre.org  

@AAATheatre

 

dreamthinkspeak

Created in 1999 by artistic director Tristan Sharps, dreamthinkspeak is internationally recognised as a key practitioner of site-responsive performance. Their work blends live performance with film, installation and a range of new technologies to create extraordinary journeys that are ambitious in scale, visually layered and popular with audiences wherever they are performed. Previous works have taken place in a variety of physical and architectural contexts from an underground abattoir in Clerkenwell, to the vast Zuidas office-complex in Amsterdam, to the Old Treasury Building in Perth, Australia.

 

Key productions include Who Goes There? (2000 - 2002), Don’t Look Back (2003 - 2008), Underground (2005), Before I Sleep (2010 - 2011), The Rest Is Silence (2012), In The Beginning Was The End (2013), Absent (2015/16), One Day, Maybe (2013- 2017), unReal City (2019 – 2022). The company’s work has been recreated to great acclaim around the U.K. and in Australia, Holland, Japan, Malaysia, Romania, Russia, Slovenia, South Korea and Syria.

 

dreamthinkspeak.com

@dreamthinkspeak

 

Brighton Dome & Brighton Festival

 

Brighton Dome & Brighton Festival manage a year-round programme of events across three venues - the Concert Hall, Corn Exchange and Studio Theatre; the annual Brighton Festival in May; and music education services (Brighton & Hove Music & Arts and East Sussex Music), teaching children and young people across the region.

Located on the Royal Pavilion Estate, the venues have a rich history spanning over 200 years (starting life as the Prince Regent's stables and riding house), providing an extraordinary space in which to bring the arts alive. The Corn Exchange and Studio Theatre are currently closed for a major capital refurbishment project.  

As a registered charity, we aim to champion the power of the arts, to enrich and change lives, and to inspire and enable artists to be their most creative. We commission and supports both emerging and established artists and companies, enabling them to develop, take risks and deliver work of the highest quality. 

 

brightondome.org / brightonfestival.org