Graham Norton comes to your local | reviews, news & interviews
Graham Norton comes to your local
Graham Norton comes to your local
The London Chat Show is the brainchild of twentysomething arts journalist and broadcaster Amira Hashish. It’s a simple set-up - she interviews interesting cultural bods one evening each month at the Canal Café Theatre, above the Bridge House pub in London’s Little Venice. There’s music and comedy, and the cabaret-style seating and stage design - sofas and lamps - add to the intimacy. It feels like this is taking place in your living room.
Hashish has been inventive in getting the project off the ground - the set has been donated by Home Sense in return for a mention on the show’s website, and she has been assiduous in using her media contacts to attract a remarkable array of star names to her sofa, and certainly ones that you might normally expect to be gracing Graham Norton's. The first show in January featured restaurateur Aldo Zilli and club owner Peter Stringfellow, and this month’s - pegged to London Fashion Week - has top designer Paul Costelloe and celebrity hairdresser Trevor Sorbie. At March’s theatre-themed evening Howard Panter and Rosemary Squire, who recently bought Ambassadors Theatre Group and who rarely give interviews, will appear.
The London Chat Show is one among many inventive projects - from pop-up galleries and guerilla theatre to front-room restaurants - that young artists and performers are devising in a “Let’s do the show right here” attitude. More power to their elbow.
- The next London Chat Show is on 23 February. Book here
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