Award-winning performance poet Chris Parkinson brings his second full-length solo show to the Brighton Fringe from this Thursday. The three-night run of ‘Apostrophe’s’ addresses the treacherous realms of party politics and grammatical pedantry via the surreal backstory of Parkinson’s recent foray into Hollywood.
A Brighton fringe favourite since his 2007 hit with the world’s first ‘Poetry Brothel’, Chris Parkinson’s events – not to mention his public hoaxes – have a life extending far beyond the city. We are hoping that the man described by FringeGuru as “the best kind of situationist” will go deeper into his tales of internet-troublemaking – most especially the subject of ‘walrus fetishism’ that became the inspiration for Kevin Smith’s 2014 movie Tusk…
“He changed my life.” Kevin Smith, director of Clerks, Dogma and Tusk.
Apostrophe’s takes place at Village, 129 Islington Road from Thursday 26th to Saturday 28th May, beginning at 7pm. Tickets are £5 – for more information or to purchase, click here.
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