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Polka Theatre

  • Theatre
  • Wimbledon
Polka Theatre, 2021
Photo by Hufton+Crow
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Time Out says

This exceptional young person’s theatre has earned its place in generations of young hearts since it launched in 1979. The Wimbledon theatre stages in-house productions, workshops and storytelling sessions for families and schools – look out for literature events featuring children’s authors such as Jacqueline Wilson. An £8.5m revamp – which handily coincided with the coronavirus pandemic – has vastly upgraded it, with many more facilities including a sensory play area added when it reopened in 2021.

Details

Address:
240 The Broadway
London
SW19 1SB
Transport:
Tube: South Wimbledon
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What’s on

The Colour of Dinosaurs

  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • Children's

Just when you think you’ve seen everything in kids’ theatre, here comes a palaeontologist with his own five-piece backing band. In fact Dr Jakob Vinther gives something more like an extended guest appearance in ‘The Colour of Dinosaurs’, which is directed by Dom Coyote – who also fronts the band – with music by Lloyd Coleman (also in the band) and text by Malaika Kegode (not in the band).  Songs and gentle audience interaction help sugar an introduction to Vinther’s studies, which in a nutshell come down to the fact that he’s managed to determine the actual colour of dinosaurs (well, one psittacosaurus) by observing the shape of its fossilised melanin cells  (which hasn’t retained its colour per se but you can tell what colour it was from its shape). Alongside that, there’s an agreeable, very Polka Theatre-ish thread about the band members discussing their own melanin levels - the word ‘race’ is absolutely never spoken, but it’s a nice, gentle way into describing why humans have different skin tones. The band are on the whole seasoned performers – ie they can sing, they can act, they can play musical instruments – and while I probably wouldn’t say that about Vinther, he is very game, even doing a little dance at one point.  It’s a really interesting idea for a show and one I’d say doesn’t entirely work. The age advice is six to 12 and I think ‘The Colour of Dinosaurs’ has a little something for everyone without triangulating any particular age entirely convincingly: my younge

Handa’s Surprise

  • Children's

Handa is taking a range of seven different types of exotic fruits to a friend – but she soon discovers that seven different types of animal have very different ideas what to do with them. This half-hour show incorporating Swahili rhythms captures the gentle wit of Eileen Browne's popular picture book. Age 2-5.

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