Me & ROBIN HOOD

Thu 2 Nov to Sat 4 Nov 2017

EVERYMAN

£12

Me & Robin Hood is Hoipolloi’s brand new show about Shôn Dale-Jones’s longstanding relationship with his favourite fictional friend that seeks to raise money for Street Child United, a charity that uses the power of sport to change the way the world negatively sees and treats street-connected children.

Shôn first met Robin Hood in the autumn of 1975, as a seven-year-old-boy and they have been good mates ever since. Robin’s been going crazy recently about the direction our world is heading. This show is his idea. He’s convinced we need to change the story of money if we really want to do something about inequality and the growing gap between the rich and the poor. Will you join us? And don’t forget to bring cash, we have more work to do to change this story

Please bring cash to the show, we have more work to do to change this story…

Me & Robin Hood
Change The Story
Supporting Street Child United World Cup 2018
A Hoipolloi & Royal Court co-production in association with Pleasance, PBJ Management and Theatre Royal Plymouth

www.hoipolloi.org.uk

Me & Robin Hood // reviews

★★★★★
"With so little needed to say so much, there is no doubt that Shon Dale-Jones is one of the best living storytellers in the world today." The Outlier

★★★★
"He has captured, brilliantly, the moment at which the gap between rich and the poor starts to widen in post-war Britain... " The Scotsman

★★★★
"A gifted storyteller with a palpably important story.” Three Weeks

★★★★
"What is most impressive is the delicate writing of the piece that constantly plays with the lines between what is right and wrong" Ed Fringe Review

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Me & ROBIN HOOD // reviews

"Mixing self-effacing charm and his trademark dalliance with fact and fantasy, Dale-Jones slyly reveals the fiction we all live our lives by.”
The Stage

Press // Me & ROBIN HOOD

"He is so brilliant in terms of the way he changes pace and tone. And he sticks with the story, allows it to lead him, even though it’s hard to figure out where it begins and ends, and it’s always looping in time."

Historian and novelist Rebecca Stott, talking to The New York Times about Shôn Dale-Jones
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