insideKENT Magazine Issue 38 - May 2015 | Page 40

ARTS+ENTERTAINMENT Thursday 21st – Sunday 24th May at Folkestone Quarterhouse Normal? – Festival of the Brain at Folkestone Quarterhouse brings science and art together over three days to explore the brain. What happens when connections, chemicals and catastrophes send things off course, and is there such a thing as normal? Meet the archivists inside a brain, trying to keep dementia at bay whilst they sort through a lifetime of memories; meet the puppet learning to adapt to motor neurone disease; meet the boy who is making a list of every brilliant thing in the world for his mother to combat her depression. Participate in debates, daily mindfulness sessions, workshops and much more. You can enjoy as many Normal? events as you like by purchasing either a £15 day pass or a £40 four-day pass. The full programme is available at www.quarterhouse.co.uk or contact the box office on 01303 760750 for more info. After being diagnosed with motor neurone disease, Ted goes on the trip of a lifetime…and so does his pet fish. As the disease starts to cause his mobility to degenerate, Ted rushes towards experiencing a world that is outside of his comfort zone, from the streets of Lille to the romance of Venice. Humorous, heart-warming and hopeful, CELL features charming puppetry, physical theatre and an original musical score to tell the story of one man’s final adventure to create enough memories to last a lifetime. Crackpot Every Brilliant Thing Friday 22 May, 8.15pm // £6/ £5 concessions Thursday 21 May, 1.30pm & 7.30pm // £10/ £8 concessions, for ages 14+ You’re six years old. Mum’s in hospital. Dad says she’s ‘done something stupid’. She finds it hard to be happy. So you start to make a list of everything that’s brilliant about the world. Everything that’s worth living for: 1. Ice Cream; 2. Kung Fu Movies; 3. Burning Things; 4. Laughing so hard you shoot milk out your nose; 5. Construction cranes; 6. Me. You leave it on her pillow. You know she’s read it because she’s corrected your spelling. Soon, the list will take on a life of its own. A new play about depression and the lengths we will go to for those we love. Fake It ‘Til You Make It Saturday 23 May, 8.15pm // £6/ £5 concessions (work in progress performance) Bryony Kimmings is an outrageous, hilarious and fearless performance artist from London. Tim Grayburn is an outrageous, hilarious and fearless account manager at a top advertising firm. These two humans happen to be a couple. Bryony spends most of her life on tour trying her best to change the world. Tim spends most of his life at a desk trying his best to sell the world. Six months into their relationship, Bryony found out that Tim has severe clinical depression. Crackpot is a funny, bold, insightful show about a woman’s seven years working in an astonishing way with people experiencing dementia. One in four of us will suffer from mental health issues in our lifetime, up to 8% of us can be struggling on any one day, and 70% of patients in the doctor's queue are there for mental health reasons. It is estimated that half of