Crowdfunding success for Silent Approach

We did it! Our upcoming project, Silent Approach – on which we’ll be collaborating with mental health organisation S.I.S Strength in Struggles – has achieved its crowdfunding target on Spacehive. This means that work can now begin on bringing it to life!

Our heartfelt thanks go out to all the wonderful people and organisations who donated in support of this really exciting project.

Silent Approach is a play based on the true story of Rebecca House, the founder of S.I.S and a former police officer who was sectioned under the mental health act. It explores the treatment of – and attitude towards – those in mental health crisis, and makes a powerful case for empathy and reform.

We’ll be touring Lancashire and Greater Manchester this autumn, so please watch this space for creative team and cast announcements, tour dates and much more! You’ll find all information and updates via the project’s dedicated Linktree:

SILENT APPROACH LINKS

Crowdfunding success for Silent Approach

Please help bring our next project to life

Plus: just a few tickets remaining for On Me 2025!

We only have 100 days to raise just under £30,000 to take Silent Approach on tour – and that’s not long at all! As we already have over 20 backers, this particular crowdfunding platform will consider matching 50% of our total – but it’s certainly not guaranteed.

Silent Approach presents the true story of Rebecca House, author of the book Police to Paranoia, and explores our treatment of individuals in mental health crisis. It also discusses how none of us are immune to mental health struggles. As part of our planned tour, we’ll be presenting wraparound activities and partnering with changemakers in a bid to make a real, positive impact on the current system.

If you possibly can, please donate to our crowdfunder to make this ambition a reality. You can give as little as £2 to help support an independent creative company and get this vital project in front of audiences. Please also share across your socials. Anything and everything you can do will give us a better chance of success!

READ MORE AND DONATE HERE

Last few tickets for On Me 2025

In other news, our Off West End award winning play, On Me, is SOLD OUT at the Octagon Theatre, Bolton next month. If you’re a ticket holder for this event and you find you are unable to attend for any reason, please contact the Octagon’s box office to release your ticket, as there is now a waiting list!

HOWEVER, tickets remain for our 5th March performance at the Martin Harris Centre in Manchester, so grab them while you can! They are available on a Pay What You Can basis, starting from £5.

READ MORE & BOOK HERE

Our post-show panel discussion features some extremely exciting voices, including Greater Manchester’s Deputy Mayor Kate Green and representatives from Greater Manchester Rape Crisis and The Pankhurst Trust/Manchester Women’s Aid.

Don’t miss out!

Please help bring our next project to life

New project in the pipeline: Silent Approach

DONATE TO THE SILENT APPROACH FUNDRAISER NOW

New project in the pipeline: Silent Approach

⭐⭐⭐⭐.5 stars for On Me!

Fantastic news on the reviews front: our performance of On Me at Waterside Arts in Sale – which took place on 2nd May 2024 – has been awarded 4.5 stars from The Reviews Hub!

FIND THE ORIGINAL REVIEW HERE

Written by Helen Jones, the write-up reads as follows:

“Dangerous To Know Theatre Company have brought their award-winning Manchester Fringe play On Me back into production and landed at Waterside Arts, Sale for one night before performing for two nights in Bolton later in the month.

On Me tackles the very current issues around gender-based violence, female safety and the difficulties in forming relationships in the post #MeToo era. Shona and Christian are actors employed for a docu-drama about a true crime abuse case. Christian plays the cruel abuser who turns killer later while Shona is his surviving victim. Together they play out the scenes of the relationship which turns violent, while dealing with the impact the subject matter has on them personally. Attraction grows between them but the situations they play out affect their off screen emotions.

Leah Eddleston portrayed the role of Shona in the original Manchester production and returns to it here, creating a confident and outgoing woman who hides her past. But her past rears its head during filming and makes her vocal when her sister is in a vulnerable situation. But the past becomes the present as she is vulnerable too. Alexi Papadopoulos is the less confident Christian, a nice guy but the actions of his character make him question both men in general and his own role in relationships with women. Papdopoulos is excellent, showing that men can also have that vulnerable side. The cast is made up of Trevor Dwyer-Lynch as the film director and John Joyce O’Keeffe as the clapper loader. Writer Caroline Lamb appears on film as the original victim.

Credit ©Shay Rowan 2022

The set is simple but effective with a sofa centre stage and the green room and a bar as minor areas each side. A backing screen allows for both the backdrops for the staging and an impactful place to show the real story behind what the two actors are filming. There is a slight technical issue when the pre-recorded sections of filming are broadcast and are less audible than everything else.

Caroline Lamb has taken a difficult subject, but one so relevant to many young people today, and developed a thought-provoking short play. It is entertaining and often funny, but the underlying message is clearly carried throughout leaving nowhere to hide from it. While established director Helen Parry makes sure it gives the punch the subject matter deserves.

The play is followed by a Q&A session with local professionals who deal with the issues raised on a day to day basis.

On Me is just an hour long, but it is an important hour for the woman and men out there affected by the issues in the play. You won’t be able to catch it in Sale but it is well worth making the trip to Bolton for and hopefully it can gain longer runs to bring to more areas it’s very important message.”

Don’t forget to book for our performances in Sale on 16th and 17th May 2024! You can find tickets right here: https://business.fatsoma.com/business/pages/dangerous-to-know/events

⭐⭐⭐⭐.5 stars for On Me!

On Me is back!

We’ve been working our socks off for just under two years to bring award-winning play On Me back to the stage – and now, thanks to the support of Trafford Council and their Community Safety Partnership, we’ve landed a date at the wonderful Waterside Arts in Sale.

We’ll be there on 2nd May 2024 from 7.30pm.

Tickets are available on a Pay What You Can basis, with £5, £10 and £15 options available, and they’re already selling – so grab yours while you can!

BOOK HERE

or call the box office on 0161 912 5616

TRIGGER WARNING: On Me deals with themes of s*xual assault/r*pe, domestic violence, stalking and femicide

About the play

On Me by Caroline Lamb is an hour-long play focusing on the challenges of being a role model, ally, spontaneous romantic and potential victim all at once when chasing love in the post #MeToo era. The piece follows Shona and Christian, two up-and-coming actors who have been hired to work on a true crime docudrama. As filming progresses, their feelings for each other grow – along with fear, self-doubt, frustration and a creeping sense of danger.

In 2022, our production of On Me won the Off West End “OFFfest” award for its run on the Greater Manchester Fringe. The play was also shortlisted for the Write for the Stage prize for New Writing and the Greater Manchester Fringe award for Best Drama.

Upcoming event

Our performance at Waterside Arts in Sale will be followed by a short break, after which we will host a panel discussion featuring academics and frontline charity workers, as well as members of our creative team. The discussion will focus on the impact of Gender-Based Violence on communities and the work that is currently being undertaken to combat this very urgent issue. There will also be an opportunity for audience questions.

In order to provide support and signposting to audience members who have been affected by the themes of the play – and to highlight their vital work in the local community – representatives of Trafford-based charities will also be in attendance. Audience members will have the option to donate to these charities when booking tickets, or in person at the venue on the night.

We’re absolutely thrilled to be back with this exciting piece. Grab tickets while you can!

On Me is back!

Dangerous To Know Wins Off West End Award!

The DTK team have been handed the Offie/Off Fest/Off West End Award for our July production of On Me on the Greater Manchester Fringe!

Credit: Shay Rowan 2022

We were also shortlisted for the Greater Manchester Fringe Award for Best Drama and playwright Caroline Lamb was shortlisted for the Write for the Stage Award for New Writing!

Find out more about the event right here!


Dangerous To Know Wins Off West End Award!

On Me News

On Me: OffFest Award Nomination

Just days after finishing our run on the Greater Manchester Fringe, we’re thrilled to announced that On Me has been nominated for an OffFest – or Off West End – award for Best Short Run!

We’ll find out the results of this nomination at the Greater Manchester Fringe Awards, which are taking place on the 7th August.

Wish us luck!


On Me News

Work in development: The Dissolution of Percy

Branwell has tried and tried and tried. He has missed his calling and his genius has faded. He drinks too much, maybe, and can’t quite shake himself free from his own imagination. But he still has Lydia.

Lydia has had enough. Gnawed by loneliness and physical frustration, immobilized by her station, companionship and release must be had, and soon. An afternoon or two in the company of her son’s young tutor might be enough.

Charlotte has a plan. Her younger sister stays up late into the night, hunched over papers. If this is what she thinks it is, something might be beginning. But perhaps it is of no importance.

A searing critical exploration of the cruel gender politics that destroyed a man, made a villain of his lover and chained his sisters to a life they despised, The Dissolution of Percy tackles the controversial events surrounding the final few years in the life of Branwell Brontë. Reflecting on our surprising lack of moral evolution between the nineteenth century and the modern day, the play plunges its audience into a world balanced in stark counterpoint between high, violent passions, steady, grim pragmatism and gallows humour.


Work in development: The Dissolution of Percy