Star-Crossed | An original play at Plot 9 Maze Hill

Location:

Plot 9 Maze Hill
Leamington Court, Opposite, London, United Kingdom
London
SE3 7RD
United Kingdom

Access needs

  • Sadly Plot 9 is not (yet) wheelchair accessible. 

    Plot 9 is in east Greenwich, a few minutes walk from Maze Hill Overground Station which is served by Southeastern and Thameslink trains. You can catch a direct train to Maze Hill from any of: Greenwich, Deptford, London Bridge, Cannon St, Blackfriars, City Thameslink, Farringdon, St Pancras or West Hampstead.  

    VIDEO DIRECTIONS: It's a short route from Maze Hill station to Plot 9 but a little bit convoluted so please look at video directions here showing how to get there from Platform 2 of Maze Hill where you'll alight if coming from central London.

    It is also possible to travel via North Greenwich and get the 188 or 422 bus, alighting on Trafalgar Road or Woolwich Road and walking up Vanbrugh Hill, turning right onto Restell Close. The space is halfway down the hill on the right. Look for the bright green campervan and the entrance is 10 metres beyond it on the right.

    Google maps pin.

    If you're driving then there's usually plenty of free space on nearby Humber Road (free parking from 6:30pm). 

Next event date and time:

Saturday 26 October 2024 at 1pm to Sunday 27 October 2024 at 5pm

See more dates

Sunday 27 October 2024 at 1pm to Monday 28 October 2024 at 5pm

How to book:

Cast as star-crossed lovers, two hot-tempered leads find themselves alone waiting for their strangely absent director.

Star-Crossed is a new site specific play set in and hosted by Plot 9 Maze Hill with support from Greenwich Council. 

Two actors, Roland and Julia, have been cast to play Romeo and Juliet and the show is fast approaching. With the air between them sour and their chemistry more than flat, the director's called Roland and Julia to an emergency rehearsal.  Roland runs in late with a head full of lines and a heart full of turmoil. Julia's where she always is, her nose scanning poetry like an inkject printer. She pickes her nose off the page and sees the sorry face of the Romeo she's meant to love. Where, oh where, she asks herself, is their director?