PRESENTING OUR NEW LATE SHOWS!
We are thrilled to announce that our late night programme is back and better than ever! From cutthroat photographers to queer mythology and everything in between, there’s something for everyone at KHT this May!
These new shows are part of King’s Head Theatre’s long-term commitment to supporting emerging creatives, reinvigorated this spring. This programme of late shows, which features debut playwrights and creatives, runs alongside our just announced As Yet Unscene script development programme, and the updated KHT Artists Club offering.
Read about our new shows below and book your tickets today so that you don’t miss out!
SNAP: A New Musical | 3 May - 25 May
In this bold and captivating new musical, the glamorous yet cutthroat world of photography becomes the backdrop for a tangled web of ambition, passion, and deception.Featuring an electrifying original score and razor-sharp storytelling, this thrilling musical will have you questioning—are we ever really in control of our own narrative?
Remythed | 9 May
Remythed delights in a joyful reimagination of what queer history could look like. Beginning life at VAULT Festival in London 2023 where it won Show of the Week. It is the debut show of Bet’n Lev Theatre.
Gratfers | 16 May
The most recent recipient of the Stella Wilkie Award for East 15 Acting School students, James Goodall's play is a taut three-hander unfolding in one hour, in one room. Grafters reveals the harsh realities of the drug trade and its devastating effects on three young men.
Have You Met Stan? - A New Musical | 26 May - 28 May
A story of coming out, Polish-Irish immigration, and bead-clenching Catholic mothers. Have you met Stan? follows the emotional journey of two young immigrants - Séan from Ireland, and Stan from Poland. Set in the early 2010s against a backdrop of “job stealing”, anti-immigration campaigns, and changing attitudes to homosexuality, the story explores themes of identity, trauma, and the immigrant experience.
Earworm | 29 May - 30 May
What is your ultimate break-up song? Guy and John's breakup is an anti-love story. The play explores themes such as queer relationships, the struggles of being queer within a heteronormative society and the constant yearning for a thrill in modern relationships.
And there's more!
Don't forget to book our other late shows, BROS and Diana: The Untold and Untrue Story!