Out of the Margins

A charity auction supporting Good Chance

  • Event date 9月15日 - 10月6日
  • Event location 倫敦
Christie’s is proud to support Good Chance, a Theatre of Sanctuary, and present an online charity auction of annotated first and special edition plays and scripts from the best of theatre, organised in collaboration with and hosted by The Auction Collective. Running from 15 September to 6 October, the auction, entitled Out of the Margins, brings together play texts, screenplays and musical scripts by 60 leading playwrights including Tom Stoppard, Inua Ellams, Wole Soyinka, Caryl Churchill, Tina Fey, David Hare, Jez Butterworth, Richard Curtis, Tony Kushner, Tanika Gupta and V (formerly Eve Ensler).

Out of the Margins provides an unprecedented record of the private thoughts and feelings of some of the world’s greatest living contemporary playwrights, covering some of the most significant moments in the last 50 years of theatre. This is a unique opportunity for members of the general public, theatre lovers and collectors alike to bid a piece of theatrical history.

Exhibition

Christie's London


Location
Christie’s London
8 King St., St. James’s
London, SW1Y 6QT

Viewing
21–28 September

Contact
Tel: +44 (0)20 7839 9060
info@christies.com

Highlights on view

About Good Chance

Good Chance


In 2015, two British playwrights Joe Murphy and Joe Robertson visited the Calais Jungle refugee camp. There they found a spontaneous international community on our doorstep, people living side-by-side, struggling for survival, waiting for their ‘good chance’. When the Joes realised something was missing — a space of welcome for people of all nationalities to come together to share stories and music, relax and make things — a different kind of Good Chance was born. Along with hundreds of the camp residents, they built the first theatre: a groundbreaking centre of welcome and creative expression.

Since it was founded, Good Chance, creators of The Jungle and The Walk with Little Amal has provided 250 refugee artists with 1-2-1 support in the UK as well as placing over 750 artists from refugee and migrant backgrounds in paid employment and training, including many people they originally met in the Calais Jungle, and with whom they are still making new work today. Good Chance runs several full-time programmes supporting migrants and refugees in the UK including the Good Chance Ensemble, a programme which tackles barriers to entry for refugee artists in theatre and art today.