Hulme based Z-arts in Manchester are to offer children in the care a visit to the theatre this Christmas, with Manchester poet and playwright with experience of being in care, Louise Wallwein leading the campaign to raise just £6 per child.

It’s a show with a difference, as Hans Christian Andersen’s SNOW QUEEN becomes a meddling online virus and the heroes; Kai and Gerda are brought together within the care system. A modern story of friendship triumphing against the odds, Manchester arts venue, Z-arts wants to offer children in care FREE tickets this Christmas – but, they need help.

There are 794 children in care in Manchester between the ages of 5 – 15 and the Z-arts theatre team believe that a trip to the theatre this Christmas can not only offer respite from daily routines and challenging times for them and their carers, but also kick start a lifetime of inspiration. With a donation of just £1 buying an interval ice cream and £60 bringing a group of 10 children, every large or small gift will count.

Liz O’Neill, Z-arts Artistic Director, said: “We know from in depth studies that access to the arts can give young people of all backgrounds inspiration that informs their personal lives, education and career prospects, and that can begin with a trip to the theatre. Snow Queen has been made with the widest variety of modern families in mind, and for Looked After Children to miss a show that is written and performed for them would be a huge shame. Together, we can give an amazing gift.”

The crowd funding campaign reflects on the venue’s commitment to engaging with families that come in all shapes and sizes, while their modern staging of a classic tale aims to tell a story that is more familiar to today’s children than those of the Victorian era that first heard Danish writer, Andersen’s original, snow-swept Snow Queen.

A spokesperson for Manchester’s Looked After Children Services, Emergency Team, said: “This opportunity from Z-arts is really important. Children who are under the care of residential services have unsettled home lives and often have to be very adult. At the festive time it’s important to let a child be a child.” 

Louse Wallwein, has spoken out for almost 800 children in Greater Manchester’s care system and called on them to be given the opportunity of a life-changing trip to the theatre this Christmas. Wallwein, a former Queensland Poet in Residence, appears in a video for Manchester’s specialist family arts venue, Z-arts as they seek to raise just £6 per child.

Wallwein, a poet and playwright whose work has also been commissioned by the BBC, staged at Sydney Opera House and at the Royal Exchange and Contact Theatres in Manchester, has first-hand experience of the care system and was adopted as a child. She appears in a special campaign video to say that the public would feel a ‘golden glow’ that they had done something fabulous this Christmas by offering just one child the opportunity of theatrical escape.

The show runs between Thu 3 – Sun 13 December 2015 and themes of gaming, online safety, puppetry, fostering and adoption all become part of the updated story. Audiences, young and old are promised an experience that combines the everyday miracles of technology with puppetry and spirited human performances, providing an innovative and dynamic festive theatre experience.

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