14 Dec 2012

The Magic of Trestle Workshops


Our Associate Director, Oliver Jones, muses on the enduring success of Trestle masks and the enjoyment he takes from delivering Trestle workshops and training.
‘Delivering a mask workshop is very much like being Santa Claus delivering presents at Christmas. You are pretty much guaranteed that the young people are going to love it. Their faces light up with delight and their laughter fills whichever classroom, gymnasium or studio theatre you are freezing in. A Trestle workshop certainly warms the heart, the soul, and the rehearsal room!

It is no secret that Trestle Masks are a hugely significant tool in the teaching of drama predominantly in the UK, but increasingly overseas as well. Teachers find them thoroughly engaging with multiple uses across all aspects of the curriculum, from exploring physical theatre, to teaching Greek chorus, to devising through character. It is also exciting to be able to plot a journey with the masks, through basic, intermediate and advanced stages, witnessing students growing in confidence and ability. Recently I have been working out in Saudi Arabia, where the masks proved a huge hit. There is little culture of physical performance over there, and the masks really helped the participants that I was working with to explore using their bodies, and to find tangible ways into creating character. Similarly, Emily Gray (Trestle’s Artistic Director) has been spending time out in India, working with teachers to introduce them to our mask work. She has found again that they provide an engaging, immediate tool for exploring physicality and character. The masks cross cultures and borders and really highlight the universality of the human experience.

Having delivered hundreds of Trestle mask workshops and trained a plethora of teachers and practitioners in Trestle mask techniques, I often ask myself why their appeal is so enduring, and why they are as successful as they have been. They work. They always work. But why, and how? Firstly, I think it is the inherent nature of masks. They both hide and reveal simultaneously. They hide the face, yet they reveal the thoughts and emotions so clearly. They are both simple, and incredibly complex. They are safe, but also very exciting. This duality makes them so fascinating to watch and to wear. Secondly, Trestle Masks are very well designed. They are archetypal, instantly recognisable characters. They are very funny to watch, with the Basic Set being cartoonish, but you can also develop very serious and moving mask work with them especially with Intermediate and Advanced Sets. Thirdly, Trestle has such a strong track-record that the games, exercises and techniques we use are incredibly well honed, and offer students of all abilities and experience a genuine grasp of working in mask. They are in this way, very democratic, enabling ALL students to be able to have a degree of success in their work.

I am sure that Trestle masks will continue to be a popular and integral part of drama teaching in the UK and abroad, and very soon we will be launching a new half-mask set. Watch out for details! I will continue to immensely enjoy spreading the Trestle magic to schools, colleges, universities and theatre companies alike.’

Oliver’s simple tips for creating great mask work:
  • Keep actions simple
  • Keep contact with the audience, but remember that the mask needs to inhabit a world which is entire within itself for stories to remain believable- waving, giving thumbs up to the audience, etc. can jeopardise this.
  • Transfer expression and energy from the face to the body (normally we look at the eyes and interpret the face, in mask we look at the face and interpret the body)
  • Be aware of and observe body language
  • Stay focused
  • Remember that the angle of the mask as you present it will have an effect on how its expression is read.

For information about our training and workshop programmes click here

22 Nov 2012

Introducing Trestle Half Masks


We are excited to announce our new half mask set and accompanying workshops, available to book now! Fun, enthusiastic and a great new experience

Trestle’s new half mask set and workshops, which have been developed with Sandringham School in St Albans, bring the additional element of speech to Trestle’s mask training and we have chosen eight varied half masks to become a playful set of characters.

The half masks help transform performers into vivid archetypes such the Child, the Hero, the Mother and the Devil and are a fantastic starting point for devising physical performance. Trestle has developed a workshop that prepares participants physically and vocally to improvise and devise in half mask using the archetypal characters and can be adapted to cover the following:
  • Character half mask
  • Commedia dell'arte
  • Greek gods and goddesses
  • Greek chorus work
  • Devising from archetypal characters
This really allowed some of the less confident students to blossomFor more information about our Half Mask Workshops and to download a workshop booking form, click here. For details about our new Half Mask Set, click here

Email takingpart@trestle.org.uk or call 01727 850950

Why not contact us about a half mask residency leading to a devised performance?

Below are Greek god and goddess half masks created with sixth form students and teachers at Sandringham School for a week long Olympic Arts project in July 2012.

For details about our full masks sets and all our workshop programmes and training, please click on the links below. If you would like to speak one of the Trestle team please call us on 01727 850950.

Visit the Trestle Mask Shop / Find out more about Trestle Workshops

29 Oct 2012

The Election: Giving Local People a Voice







Trestle’s intergenerational project, The Election, kicked off last week with workshops in schools and a tea party at Trestle to give local people of all ages an opportunity to have a say about issues they care about by creating political parties and promoting their policies in a fun and engaging way.

Project leaders, Oliver Jones and Anna Reynolds, have been working with local schools to find out what young people think about national and local policies and explore how much they know. We’ve been very impressed so far by the young people’s ideas and desire to have a voice and we look forward to working creatively with these young people to have their say:

“The Election got off to a good start with some lively ideas coming from a year 7 class at Samuel Ryder Academy. Key ‘policies’ from the 11 and 12 year olds included; ‘Be less selfish’, ‘More things for young people to do, skate parks’ … the class were interested in creating their own political party, most felt that young people don’t have a voice or a say in politics” said Anna. “The Trestle Tea Party also gathered lots of young people and their ideas for new policies … looking forward to seeing the year 7′s again and taking things up a level, and starting work with year 5 groups at primary level”
We’d love more adults from the local community to join The Election to bring people of all ages together, understand the issues affecting different generations and to share skills and ideas through drama, digital media or other creative forms. Don’t miss this exciting opportunity to ‘Create, Debate and Have Your Say!’


If you or a group of friends would like to be involved, we are holding open workshops at Trestle Arts Base on the following dates:-

Wednesday November 21st, 6-8pm
Wednesday December 5th, 6-8pm

If you’d like come along, please call us on 01727 850950 / emailtakingpart@trestle.org.uk / Tweet @trestletheatre or just turn up! #TrestleTheElection

The Election is supported by St Albans City & District Council

24 Oct 2012

Trestle to Tour ‘The Snow Queen’ in 2013

Trestle is delighted to have been awarded ‘Grants for the Arts’ Funding from Arts Council England to tour The Snow Queen across the UK in 2013.


Following a successful Summer 2012 run in India, where the show performed to over 3,500 people, we are proud to announce that this beautiful Indian retelling of the well loved Hans Christian Andersen story shall journey around the UK from April to June next year.

Trestle’s Artistic Director, Emily Gray says “This is a great opportunity to take a very special piece of theatre for all ages to audiences across the country. The Snow Queen was dreamed up by an Indian writer, created in London, taken to India and now it will tour England; have a look at the colourful trailer to get a flavour of the show!”

‘Brilliant! Fantastic! Very fun!’ – audience comment, 2012 tour

Check out our promo video above. More details about the tour and venues coming soon! #SnowQueenUK
The Snow Queen was originally commissioned and produced in 2011 by Unicorn Theatre, now a Trestle touring production.

www.artscouncil.org.uk.

18 Oct 2012

Trestle’s Big Draw Competition Winner Announced


We’re very pleased to announce that a winner has been chosen from our Big Draw Mask Design Competition. Congratulations to budding young artist Isabel whose design has been chosen by professional artist Elaine Johnson. ‘I really like the cheerful use of colour and attention to detail‘ explains Elaine. Isabel’s entry will be recreated by our professional Mask Maskers on one of our unique hand-made Trestle Masks. It shall be awarded to Isabel at Trestle Arts Base where she can see how the mask was created.

Well done Isabel and a big thank you to everyone who entered the
competition and created wonderful designs. Above is a picture of Isabel’s original winning design that will be transferred on to a Trestle Mask – the only one of its kind!
Don’t forget! All the brilliant artwork from The Big Draw can be seen in our Gallery Cafe until November 8th. Come and see the enchanted tree, mini self portraits, film strip storyboards in our glass elevator, wonderful drawings and much more, all created by children and adults from the local community. #BigDrawExhibition #Free

5 Oct 2012

Trestle Masks Go Global!



Trestle is proud to have emerged stronger than ever this past year. We have had an incredibly exciting and active 12 months taking our mask sets and mask workshops all over the UK and worldwide. Our team of professional practitioners have delivered workshops for an International School in Switzerland, worked for the National Youth Theatre on a project for young males in Saudi Arabia and run a summer school residency for Youth Arts Leaders in Cork, Ireland. These workshops, in addition to a training programme delivered for teachers and businesses in India, has really put Trestle on the map as an international leader in mask and physical theatre training.

‘…the three day workshop was a hugely beneficial and transformative experience’ - National Youth Council of Ireland


(Mumbai 2012)

Trestle mask sets continue to sell globally, reaching Italy, Norway, Brazil, Singapore, Hong Kong, Thailand and India in the past six months. We were therefore thrilled to win an award for Cultural Innovation earlier in the year, recognising Trestle’s work in delivering such a unique product across the world. It’s always great to hear where and how our masks are being used and we love receiving pictures showing the cultural diversity of the masks!
(Saudi Arabia 2012)


‘They are perfect for our needs’ – King George V School, Hong Kong (2012)

‘Thank you for a wonderful workshop. Am taking back a lot to share with the little ones at schools.’ – Workshop participant, Bangalore, India

If Trestle Masks haven’t reached your part of the world, be the first to order your set today and send us a picture! Email masks@trestle.org.uk or click on Mask Shop

27 Sept 2012

Trestle Wins Grant for New Community Project




We are delighted to announce that Trestle has been awarded Community Grants Funding from St Albans City & District Council, to deliver an exciting intergenerational project for people of all ages and from all backgrounds to have their say about local issues. Earlier this year, Trestle won the Mayor’s Pride Award for Cultural Innovation and this project continues the Company’s innovative approach to unique arts projects for local people, led by professionals. The Election will be launched on 22nd October at Trestle Arts Base with a Trestle Tea Party for all; come along and find out more… The Election

Create, debate and have your say!

17 Aug 2012

The Snow Queen Opens The MetroPlus Theatre Festival






The Snow Queen’s India tour commenced with it’s first shows opening the prestigious Chennai MetroPlus Theatre Fest at Sir Mutha Venkatasubba Rao Concert Hall on the 10th August.

‘We had 875 in our first night audience…’ reports Trestle’s Artistic Director, Emily Gray ‘…so amazing, welcoming Trestle Theatre to open the festival in front of nearly 1000 people!!! I was quite overwhelmed, Trestle goes BIG internationally. An audience of families, school children and regular theatre going adults’. The show received amazing feedback from the audience* and the cast and creative team were truly welcomed by the people of Chennai:

‘Thanks for [a] Great show and Jam-Packed performance ‘ (sic)

‘What a spectacular & energetic production! Witty dialogue, powerful performances’


There was a preview show in the morning for 150 children who had participated in workshops and they loved it. They described the show being about revenge and friendship and one child said their favourite moment was when the Snow Queen was able to forgive – ‘they completely got it!’ exclaimed Emily.

A sharing of work by the children followed - with wonderful gestures and music inspired by the workshops - beautifully performing the traditional Japanese story of the The Samurai and Tea Master.

The show performs in Mumbai on Tues 14th - Thurs 16th at NCPA’s Experimental Theatre and in Bangalore on Tues 21st, Wed 22nd at Ranga Shankar Theatre on it’s final leg of the tour.

*audience feedback from Twitter @trestletheatre

For details about The Snow Queen tour in India, click here

UK show dates on 30th Aug, 1st & 2nd Sept.
For info & bookings click here

For all our latest tour news and updates, follow us on

10 Aug 2012

From Chennai to Mumbai: ‘How Theatre Can Help Train People Across Sectors’ Day 3







Workshop Chronicles: 

More from Emily Gray‘s engaging blog as she reports from Mumbai on her pioneering workshops in India.

Day 3

‘…the freedom to be playful, open and exploratory’

The BC (British Council) alumni workshops have brought together professionals from the Arts and Corporate world - across both Mumbai and Chennai I met people from the finance, HR, teaching, marketing, airways, film, visual arts and digital industries. All came with a curiosity about how theatre can help to train people across sectors; a number declared how theatrical Indians are and therefore how appropriate this training is.

The groups were new to each other but all had one element in common – they had studied at some point in the UK, from Aberdeen to Liverpool, Bristol to London. Once again, the Trestle masks gave the participants the freedom to be playful, open and exploratory. Many commented on how quickly they had played against their type in a mask and how fascinating and liberating it is to see a different perspective. Many scenes involving the undermining of hierarchy and rebellion against the norm ensued and much laughter was shared as participants surprised themselves with their ability to dance, to be aggressive, to be gentle in a mask. The feedback included discussion on the need to align body language and facial expression and whether “actions speak louder than words”.

These workshops felt like the beginning of a process as we touched upon the power of masks to develop physical awareness and liberate performance qualities. The Chennai group used masks from all three sets, rapidly grasping the different ways the masks can work and allow wonderful scenarios to develop, such as the worker who wants to set their boss alight and the safety conscious co-worker standing by with a fire extinguisher which is eventually used to hit the over confident bully of a boss; the father and his two daughter who struggle to get along until they are left a small fortune, which develops new problems in the relationships. The personal worlds collided with the corporate and we debated and enjoyed the results.

I hope to return for more of this work as the masks have loved India and vice versa!

More to follow as The Snow Queen opens to a rapturous reception at the MetroPlus Theatre Fest back in Chennai.

Trestle’s outreach programme in India
is delivered in partnership with:

For details about The Snow Queen tour in India, click here
For info about UK show dates at the end of the summer, click here
For all our latest tour news and updates, follow us on

9 Aug 2012

Storytelling Trestle Style: Chennai Day 2




Workshop Chronicles:

Emily Gray continues her adventure in India, preceding The Snow Queen tour.

Day 2

‘…experiencing the elements of the story’

We revisited our introductions and today there were relaxed smiles; Shaili [Sathyu of Gillo Theatre Repertory] inspired the group to become shapes that they chose, such as a rainbow, and animals. Each person introduced their chosen object by saying, “this is a (box of sweets) and what you don’t know about it is (that even the most unexpected of boxes may contain some sweetness)”. We all became curious about the stories the teachers had brought.

We didn’t start at the beginning of any of the stories, but rather asked the group to look for the moment when the story really takes off. Our first brave teacher began to introduce her story telling us it is Christmas and Santa receives no present for himself. Here were three elements which could be experienced by a group of children rather than told to them. We asked the group, as if they were school children, to enact preparations for a festival. Someone then entered with a “ho ho ho” and all became aware it was Christmas we were preparing for. Each person was asked to express their preparations in one word and then their feelings in one word – sparkling/ happiness, decorations/anticipation. We then closed our eyes and imagined a gift we would like and mimed it in our hands. When we opened our eyes we were asked to give that gift to Santa; many in the group gave but did not receive gifts, which gave the facilitator, in this case Shaili, the opportunity to point out that Santa got no gift and we all felt so sorry. Here was an example of experiencing the elements of the story rather than being told them.

The teachers now felt prepared to introduce their story moments through experiential exercises and most then took us through their sequence and we commented on the strengths and how they might improve their delivery. We moved onto using music to explore and create a moment in a story which could be expressed through music and enjoyed a beautiful choral sequence where individuals searched for their lost sister, gathered to taste magical waters and transformed into birds. We also discovered the calm to be found in doing daily chores to music to calm down from within; the feeling gained by a japanese tea master before he confronts a samurai warrior. The end of the day brought feedback from the teachers, with each one offering us the element of the workshop that had the greatest impact for them:

‘[It] Will make the class experience more rich and interesting’

‘Silence is powerful’

‘…drama can be created with collective effort and not just by the teacher’s ideas and instructions’


Follow Emily’s inspiring journey as she travels to Mumbai & welcomes The Snow Queen cast & crew back in Chennai!

Trestle’s outreach programme in India is delivered in partnership with:

For further details about The Snow Queen tour in India, click here
For info about UK show dates at the end of the summer, click here
For all our latest tour news and updates, follow us on

8 Aug 2012

Chennai Meets Trestle Masks



Workshop Chronicles: 

Emily Gray, Trestle’s Artistic Director, describes her experiences of delivering workshops to teachers in India with Shaili Sathyu of Gillo Theatre Repertory, preceding The Snow Queen tour. Look out for further blogs about her trip!

Day 1

”Is the mask becoming you or are you becoming the mask?”

I was both daunted and delighted by the sari clad circle of charming Indian teachers, who greeted the first morning of my first day back in India. I have visited Indian schools in the past, but not worked specifically with teachers. Here were 18 teachers from 9 different schools from across the city and across the range of private and state education. There was one drama teacher in the group, the rest were English teachers with some duty to fulfil a drama remit within their schools.

A simple name game brought out some beautiful mudras and gestures and we were off; of course saris allow for movement and the teachers were soon using their physicality in preparation for full mask work. They started engaging with the audience, making funny images full of character and grasping the need for a gestural language in mask.

When the full masks were put on, the group worked well, daring to become physical characters and work beyond the boundaries of their experience of educational drama. Everyone tried at least two masks and improvised, observing and learning from each other how some masks can handle minimal movement and be most effective, whilst others cry out for large gestures. We worked on counter mask and discussed playing stereotypes and working against them, in response to Meenaksi’s question, ” is the mask becoming you or are you becoming the mask?”

After lunch we reflected on the discipline that mask can bring when using this work as a tool for exploring audience contact, focus in a scene, physical clarity of characters, interpretation of images, inner monologue, non verbal drama.

It was time to look at applying these tools to a devising process and we used the Snow Queen story as inspiration; the group identified how they might approach a story through dialogue, character, setting. We asked them to consider context, archetype and storytelling through tableau. The environment of the Snow Queen play was created through an exercise which took the group from warm Kanyakumari in the south to the ice of the north, through fiery desert and peaceful back waters. The teachers made the connection with the five elements and how these might be taught through such an exercise.

The teachers responded well to the archetypes of the child, the devil, the mother, the trickster, the hero etc. They then created and brought to life images of the Snow Queen story, with some becoming the icy palace and others finding the physicality of the friendship between the children in the play.

Throughout the day very few words were spoken in performance; our workshop world was visceral and visual. We asked the teachers to prepare for Day 2; a story told through 7 phrases, an image, a piece of music and an object all connected to their chosen tale. We promised the group we would explore how to apply the techniques we worked on today to large groups of children.
More to follow….

Trestle’s outreach programme in India
is delivered in partnership with:

For further details about The Snow Queen tour in India, click here
For info about UK show dates at the end of the summer, click here
For all our latest tour news and updates, follow us on

3 Aug 2012

Trestle’s India Adventure Begins…

The Snow Queen cast and creative team fly out next week for our first tour of India.

Trestle’s Artistic Director, Emily Gray, has already spent a week visiting Chennai, Bangalore and Mumbai ahead of the tour introducing Trestle’s unique mask and physical theatre story-telling styles, influenced by The Snow Queen, to Indian teachers and professionals. Through her delivery of workshops she has experienced some ‘brilliant and revolutionary work’.


‘For the [first] time ever [Trestle] masks arrive in India. Masks in saris work a treat. Wonderful day at Hari Shree Vidyalayam, Chennai’ - Emily Gray

The Snow Queen’s premiere tour performances take place at The Hindu MetroPlus Theatre Fest in Chennai on 10th August; an established event offering ‘a sampling of great national and international theatre’ [http://www.thehindu.com/arts/theatre/]. The show then travels to Mumbai and on to Bangalore for its final tour performances.

Follow the all latest tour news on Twitter @TrestleTheatre #SnowQueenIndia & Facebook/TrestleTheatre

August Tour Dates & Venues:


Chennai
Friday 10th (2 shows)
The Hindu MetroPlus Theatre Fest
Sir Mutha Venkatasubba Rao Concert Hall
www.sirmuthamemorial.com

Mumbai
Tues 14th, Wed 15th, Thurs 16th (2 shows per day)
NCPA’s Experimental Theatre
www.ncpamumbai.com

Bangalore
Tues 21st, Wed 22nd (2 shows per day)
Ranga Shankar Theatre
www.rangashankara.org

Don’t forget … The Snow Queen returns for 3 exclusive post-tour UK performances at:

Canada Water Culture Centre, London, SE16 7AR.
Thurs 30th August, 4pm
canadawaterculturespace.org.uk/events/snow-queen

Trestle Arts Base, St Albans, AL4 0JQ.
Sat 1st & Sun 2nd September, 2.30pm
trestle.org.uk/the-snow-queen

See you there!

25 Jul 2012

Exclusive UK Dates For The Snow Queen Announced


Hot on the heels of our Indian tour, Trestle’s production of The Snow Queen returns to the UK for 3 exclusive dates in London & St Albans at the end of the summer.

Don’t miss this stunning and unique adaptation by Anupama Chandrasekhar of a well loved story.

After a freak snowstorm on the southern tip of India, Kumar disappears. Gowri, his best friend, discovers that he has been captured by the formidable Snow Queen, and embarks on a journey across the length and breadth of the continent to save him.

From the burning heat of southern India, through lush backwaters, glitzy Bollywood and desolate bandit country, our brave heroine strives to bring the warmth of friendship to the icy north.

Will Kumar be trapped forever in the deathly cold of everlasting winter? Or can his closest friend find a way of melting the Snow Queen’s frozen heart?

Join us for a brand new version of Hans Christian Andersen’s magical tale, transported to a land rich in colour, music and unforgettable imagery.

‘Rosamunde Hutt’s production is acted with flair and humour and can hold an audience of schoolchildren rapt from start to finish’

**** 4 star review, Financial Times

Suitable for ages 6+ / Runtime 2 hrs (incl. interval)

Thurs 30th Aug, 4pm
Canada Water Culture Space, Canada Water Library,
21 Surrey Quays Rd, London SE16 7AR
Tickets £8 / Family £28
Book via the Albany Box Office: 020 8692 4446
Click here to book online @ canadawaterculturespace.org.uk

Download the flyer for Canada Water here

Sat 1st & Sun 2nd Sept, 2.30pm
Trestle Arts Base, Russet Drive, St Albans AL4 0JQ
Tickets £12 / conc £10 / Family £40
Box office: 01727 850950
Click here to book online @ www.allaboutstalbans.com

Download the Trestle flyer here

5 Jul 2012

Trestle Welcomes The Olympic Torch In St Albans On Sunday 8th July






11 Jun 2012

It’s official: Trestle are going to India!



Trestle are delighted to confirm that we will be touring The Snow Queen, originally produced by the Unicorn, across India this Summer and the new casting is now complete! Our partners, The British Council in India have been working hard to secure some of the most prestigious festivals and venues for the production; the final tour schedule will be available soon.

We are overjoyed to welcome back Amaka Okafor as Gowri, the brave and intrepid heroine of the Snow Queen story. Pooja Ghai will again play Patti, the Grandmother of the piece whose warmth and belief in Gowri beat at the heart of the play. Asif Khan will return to the company to give his hilarious and touching portrayal of KiKi, the crow rickshaw driver of Mumbai. These three will be joined by Eric Nzaramba (also known as Ery) who developed the play in its early stages as part of the Unicorn Ensemble; he will become Bobby the Bollywood villain. Balvinder Sopal will play the Snow Queen, a tortured soul who presides over the northern lands of Indian with an icy grasp and Jaz Deol will play Kumar, the boy who is entranced by the Snow Queen and taken captive in her ice palace. Shalini Peiris completes the cast, playing Neelima, the glamorous Bollywood star, and Asha the bandit girl.


Photo of the original cast and production team meeting Indian producer Preeti Gonakor at the Alchemy Festival 2012, when the tour was a possibility; Now it is confirmed!

The actors are all ensemble players who will create the worlds of the production, as the story travels from the southernmost tip of India, the seaside town of Kanyakumari, up through Kerala, to Bombay and the Chambal Hills before reaching the Himalayan mountains in the North. Designer Sophia Lovell Smith is re creating the design of the piece, taking into account the varied spaces we will perform in when we reach India. Anupama Chandrasekhar, who is based in Chennai, will be welcoming the production into her home city to open the prestigious The Hindu Metroplus Theatre Festival on August 10th. The Snow Queen will then continue its tour through Bangalore, Mumbai, and Delhi.

Trestle’s Emily Gray will travel out to India the week before the actors arrive there to run workshops in each of the cities we will be performing in. She will work with all ages, encouraging schools and families to come and see this gorgeous production. The Snow Queen will not only celebrate a highly successful theatrical collaboration between Indian and UK artists, but will also introduce Indian audiences to the high quality theatre for young people for which both Unicorn and Trestle are renowned.

You can follow the all the action of the tour as it unfolds by following @TrestleTheatre searching #SnowQueenIndia on Twitter

11 May 2012

A Special This is a That Workshop to help support the Bailey Sarwa Appeal




We hope you can join us on Sunday 3 June at 2.30pm for a magnificent, magical, physical, musical journey about a father and daughter who let their imagination run away with them. This is a That is a unique fusion of dance and theatre for children aged 4+ and their grownups.

In an apartment in Paris where nothing is quite as it seems, join Josette and her Papa as they dance with their ears, eat a piece of the moon, and meet a toy soldier called Jacqueline.

Inspired by the stories (les histoires) that French Absurdist playwright Eugène Ionesco wrote for his young daughter (sa petite fille), international theatre collective Peut-être Theatre present an intriguing and innovative play (pièce) that will capture the imaginations of everyone (tout la monde). The show was developed with the help of many children through an innovative workshop programme. The children helped us to design the costumes and the set and contributed lots of very good ideas for how to tell our stories.

A special This is a That Workshop will take place at 1pm in the Studio, places are strictly limited to 20 and cost just £3 when booking a ticket for the show. Workshop places can only be booked directly through the Box Office on 01727 850950. All proceeds from the workshop will go to the Bailey Sarwa Appeal; you can find more information about Bailey at www.baileysarwa.co.uk

‘The stories are rendered with a childish joy and exuberance by Peut-ȇtre Theatre.’ - Slough Observer

Tickets are £10 / £8 / Family £32 (4 Tickets) and you can book them by calling the Box Office on 01727 850950 or online at www.allaboutstalbans.com.

We look forward to seeing you soon at Trestle Arts Base!

2 May 2012

Cable theft leaves Trestle off the grid







At approximately 1pm on Monday afternoon, Trestle’s Internet and phone systems went down. After investigation we discovered that over 200 meters of cable had been stolen from across a number of local exchange boxes, the result of which is that Trestle Arts Base could be off the grid until Tuesday 8th May.

The team at Trestle has been working tirelessly to regain some connection and have a temporary divert in place so that we can still receive phone calls on the main Box Office number (01727 850950) but will be unable to connect to the internet, receive emails or take card payments until our service is reconnected… Oh the joys of the modern world!

With two fantastic shows, Kate Tempest and Paines Plough’s Wasted on Saturday 5 May, 7.30pm and Cube Theatre’s stunning new adaptation of Pinocchio on Sunday 6 May, 2.30pm coming up at the weekend we are obviously very concerned that people will have trouble purchasing tickets. If you call the main number we are able to reserve tickets for you and are more than happy to accept payment (cash/cheque only) on the day of the performance, alternatively you can still purchase tickets online via www.allaboutstalbans.com.

If you have tried to contact us via email or phone and received no response, please accept our apologies and please keep trying – If you leave us a message we will get back to you.

Thank you for your patience.

- All the Team at Trestle

29 Mar 2012

Shows keep Trestle Arts Base Alive: New Professional Performance Programme funded by St Albans’ District Council



In Autumn 2011 a new programming partnership began, with St Albans City and District Council and Trestle Arts Base working together to bring the best of small scale, high quality, innovative performances from across the UK into Trestle Arts Base.

Lucy Godfrey from the Council works with us at Trestle to create a mix of art forms and voices within the programme. Running through all the shows is a passion for bringing in new audiences to professional touring work that is the best of its kind.

We began the new programme with the wonderful Just So Stories, brought to us by Red Table Theatre, which sold out at Christmas, bringing over 600 audience members to Trestle. Since then, all our work for children and their families has sold out. On the first Sunday of every month there is a children’s show and although we now recognize many of the children who come back and back for more, it’s always lovely to welcome new families to Trestle.

On the first Saturday evening of the month there are performances for young people and adults and so far we have enjoyed compelling dance theatre in The Falling Man by Smallpetitklein and brilliant physicality inThirsty by the Paper Birds. We are looking forward to welcoming a physical piece from Idle Motion, a fantastic new play, Wasted, from Paines Plough and hilarious dance comedy from the renowned New Art Club.

Soon it will best Albans’ Festival time and there’ll be a feast of new work at Trestle Arts Base, Trestle community performances at The Verulamium Museum and storytelling in the strangest of places…

India calling: will Trestle be touring the Unicorn’s stunning Snow Queen to India this Summer?




I had a delightful time, as Movement Director, collaborating with director Rosamunde Hutt on the Unicorn’s 2011 Christmas show, The Snow Queen, set in India. Trestle has developed an Indian influenced physical theatre language, following our Indian/UK collaboration in 2006-7. Rosamunde asked me to bring my experience of interpreting classical Indian movement into contemporary character work and physical storytelling to the Unicorn process.

Drawing on Indian dance (mudra hand gestures), martial arts (kalaripayattu), rasas and archetypal characters, we created a world for The Snow Queen in which a contemporary teenager could exist alongside a classical goddess and an ancient tree.

Indian based writer Anupama Chandrasekhar created a compelling version of the Hans Christian Anderson tale translated into an epic journey from the southern most tip of India up to the Himalayan Mountains. The British Council’s ‘Connections through Culture’ scheme made this commission possible. I first met Anupama in Chennai, her home city, in 2002, when I was researching young people’s theatre in India for the Unicorn (at the time I was Unicorn’s Associate Director). Anupama shared a spark of interest in writing for children and families and I was so pleased to work with her a decade later on her fabulous first script for young audiences.

Ten thousand people saw the production at the Unicorn Theatre, which was a resounding success, and there has been great interest in touring the show to India. The leading South Indian Hindu Metro Plus Theatre Festival has invited the production to Chennai and Coimbatore in August 2012. There is also the possibility of touring to Mumbai and Bangalore.

Trestle, with our experience of touring and international collaboration, has become the leading UK partner for the potential tour. We are planning, fundraising and negotiating along with the British Council in India & the UK and the creative team to make this adventure possible; taking the piece to the writer’s home would complete this cultural connection. The production really could encourage new writing for young audiences in India and inspire more touring of thrilling young people’s theatre internationally. Soon we will know if it is going ahead…..

Emily Gray



15 Mar 2012

New focus for Trestle: Expansion of mask work and emphasis on youth provision



Trestle, the St Albans based mask and physical theatre company, is to expand its highly acclaimed mask making business, backed by a programme of workshops and performances. Participatory and performance work for 11 to 25 year-olds will be Trestle’s priority. A year of consultation, reflection and restructuring followed Arts Council England’s decision not to award National Portfolio funding to Trestle.

The Company has reviewed its mask making business and will be taking the creative stimulus of Trestle’s work with young people and physical storytelling theatre into its mask resources and workshops. Driven by the last five years of international influences and cross-cultural collaboration, Trestle aims to take the masks in a new direction, with the offer of digital and live resources to support training, participation and performance.

Emily Gray says:

It was tough losing Arts Council subsidy, of course, but focusing on what we do well, and what our stakeholders would like us to offer, has driven a creative process which has been liberating and fruitful. In the past year, with a reduced, but highly effective staff team, we toured three productions, developed arts programmes for young people at Trestle Arts Base and Platform, and continued our workshops and training across the UK and abroad.Looking forward, we will launch a new website, deliver work with and for young people which responds to our masked and unmasked performance and continue collaborating with our partners and supporters.’

In the next year, Trestle will enjoy working with its new partners, looking for innovative ways to fund new performances and inviting young people to experience and shape the Company’s work. Trestle continues to have a good relationship with the Arts Council, who have a vested interest in the lottery funded Trestle Arts Base.

In the past year, Trestle has consolidated a number of strong international and local partnerships and been nominated for two awards; the Peter Brook Empty Space Award for Collaboration and the St Albans Mayor’s Pride Award for Cultural Innovation. Trestle has also been successful in securing funding from two Local Councils; St Albans District and Islington, where Trestle is in a partnership developing Platform, the new youth arts hub at Hornsey Road Baths.