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Connections 2025: Brain Play

by Chloë Lawrence-Taylor and Paul Sirett

Six young people stand in a circle in a theatre auditorium with red seats. Five, dressed in white, encircle one person dressed in black, touching their shoulders. They are all lit in a spotlight with the rest of the auditorium in darkness.

Booking and details

7pm on Saturday 28 June
The event location is

Dorfman Theatre

National Theatre
South Bank
London SE1 9PX

£5 for one performance
£8 when you book for Brain Play and YOU 2.0 by Alys Metcalf in the same order

Public booking opens at midday on 20 May

Performed by Chatham and Clarendon Grammar School (Ramsgate)

When Mia’s dad suffers a traumatic brain injury and struggles to leave the house, she makes it her mission to find the cure for his symptoms.

Delving deeper and deeper into the world of neuroscience, Mia is desperate to make him better, but first she must contend with her own brain.

Chloë Lawrence-Taylor is s a playwright from Oxfordshire. She is on attachment at the National Theatre Studio and is a member of the Royal Court Theatre’s Long-Form Playwriting Group having previously taken part in their Intro Group (2022/2023).

She has been commissioned by Women & Theatre (Birmingham) and has worked with Clean Break Theatre Company as a Lead Artist. She is an alumnus of the Royal Court Theatre, the North Wall’s Catalyst Residency, the Old Fire Station, Broken Silence Theatre, and Pentabus’ National Young Writer’s Programme.

Chloë’s play When the Head Became a Cage, The Heart Took Flight was longlisted for the RSC’s 37Plays in 2023 while her play True Cry was longlisted for the Bruntwood Prize in 2022.

Her plays have been performed at Camden People’s Theatre (If We Ended This, 2021) and the North Wall (Hereafter, 2018) and read at RADA (When the Head Became a Cage, The Heart Took Flight, 2023).

Paul Sirett is an award-winning, Olivier-nominated playwright, dramaturg, and musician.

Paul has written over 25 stage plays and musicals which have been produced in the UK and around the world. 11 of these were first produced at Theatre Royal Stratford East, most notably The Big Life (Stratford East & West End).

Other notable productions include Rat Pack Confidential (Nottingham Playhouse & West End); and Reasons to be Cheerful (Graeae).

Paul has also won awards for his radio plays and has worked extensively as a dramaturg for companies including: the Royal Shakespeare Company, Soho Theatre, the Royal Court, National Theatre, and West End & Broadway producers.

Paul’s book, The Playwright’s Manifesto, was published by Bloomsbury/Methuen in 2022.

Paul has also toured and recorded extensively as a guitarist.

Suitability

Content guidance:

  • Strong language.
  • Discussion of brain injury and the associate affects.
  • Discussion of anxiety, PTSD, obsessive compulsive disorder and mental health.
  • References to blood.
  • Discussion of hearing loss.
  • References to agoraphobia.
  • At one point a character says “take him out and shoot him”, in jest.

Access

This performance will be Captioned

 

Connections 2025

Supporters

The Mohn Westlake Foundation supports nationwide Learning programmes for young people.

BNP Paribas is proud to be Headline Partner of Connections 2025 through their BNP Paribas AccessArt25 programme.

Connections is also supported by The Mohn Westlake Foundation, Buffini Chao Foundation, The EBM Charitable Trust, Andrew Lloyd Webber Foundation, Katie Bradford Arts Trust, Susan Miller & Byron Grote, Mulberry Trust, Tuixen Foundation, The Peter Cundill Foundation, The D’Oyly Carte Charitable Trust, The Woodward Charitable Trust and The John Thaw Foundation.

Nationwide learning is also supported by Buffini Chao Foundation, Clore Duffield Foundation, Tim & Sarah Bunting, MFPA Trust Fund for the Training of Disabled Children in the Arts, Behrens Foundation, Cleopatra Trust, and The Andor Charitable Trust.

Find out more about supporting our work