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''You Me Bum Bum Train'' is an interactive performance devised by Kate Bond and Morgan Lloyd in 2004. The pair met as art students in Brighton, where they were studying illustration and film.〔(''Evening Standard'' interview, 11 August 2015. )〕 ''You Me Bum Bum Train'' gained critical acclaim in the United Kingdom when it was awarded the Oxford Samuel Beckett Theatre Trust prize〔()〕 while showing in a disused office in London. In 2010 it won the Evening Standard Theatre Award for outstanding newcomer. It returned in 2011 in a former postal depot in Holborn, and a new version of the show – at Empire House in Stratford, east London in 2012 – was nominated for an Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in an Affiliate Theatre.〔()〕 In 2015 the show was mounted again, this time in a disused bookshop on London's Charing Cross Road. ==Overview== Visitors to the performance pass through a series of scenes, such as a funeral and a hair salon, where they must improvise a part without any foreknowledge or preparation. Hanna Hanra, writing for ''Vice'', described it as a series of "highly detailed, absurd real life scenarios following one another on a nonsense high-paced narrative".〔(''Vice'' interview, 19 June 2014. )〕 The entertainment magazine ''Dazed & Confused'' reported; "What was one of London's more obtuse treasures is set to become one of Great Britain's proudest moments." ''The Times'' said; "It leaves you questioning everything, and it's lots of fun." Time Out magazine wrote; "My highlight of 2008 was You Me Bum Bum Train, if only real life were that interesting." 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「You Me Bum Bum Train」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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