Pinter 4: Moonlight/Night School Tickets
Book Pinter 4 tickets now to see Jessica Barden and Peter Polycarpou in the Pinter SeasonChildren under 5 will not be admitted.
Performance dates
1 November - 8 December 2018
Run time 2 hours and 30 minutes
Includes interval
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Pinter at the Pinter season tickets are now available! Book your Pinter 4: Moonlight/Night School tickets today!
The brutality of family life and the subjectivity of memory are explored in the emotionally raw and richly funny Moonlight, directed by Olivier Award winner Lyndsey Turner, in which the past haunts the dark, lonely recesses of a dying father’s bedroom.
An East End criminal returns home from prison to find his room has been occupied by a mysterious woman with a secret. Set in the sweaty nightclubs and claustrophobic boarding houses of 1960s London, this is a rare opportunity to see the brilliantly witty and vivid Night School, directed by the inventive young director, Ed Stambollouian.
Casting includes: Jessica Barden, Brid Brennan, Janie Dee, Abbie Finn, Robert Glenister, Isis Hainsworth, Peter Polycarpou, Dwane Walcott, and Al Weaver.
Do not miss your chance to see Pinter 4. Book your Pinter 4: Moonlight.Night School tickets at the Pinter Theatre now to ensure the best seats at the best prices.
The Pinter at the Pinter Season consists of 7 different productions, make sure you have tickets to all of the others as well!
Pinter 1: One For The Road/New World Order/Mountain Language/Ashes to Ashes
Pinter 2: The Lover/The Collection
Pinter 3: Landscape/A Kind of Alaska/Monologue
Pinter 5: The Room/Victoria Station/Family Voices
Pinter 6: Party Time/Celebration
Pinter 7: A Slight Ache/The Dumb Waiter
Also coming to the Pinter at the Pinter season is Betrayal starring Tom Hiddleston!
Recent Reviews
Loved it. Great acting. Thought provoking script. Plenty of discussion afterwards.
Great performance, especially combining the two was a great idea. Set design was marvelous as well
Excelent theatre vintage Pinter - very memorable, Glennister is on top form
Really enjoyed the Pinter experience, always thought provoking
I have enjoyed it. Only if it wouldnt be so cold in theater....
Enjoyable, amusing and thought-provoking
It was good fun. I suspect Pinter3 is better,
Totally convincing acting, interesting set, somewhat bewildering stories (typical Pinter!)
Second half was outstanding. Staging/acting. The only actor I struggled with was the young girl. She seemed very wooden and stiff and unable to create a rounded believeable character.
Really interesting evening. Not the best theatre, but worth seeing.
Excellent series of one-act plays by Pinter - great acting.
I was sitting with my friend in the back row of the dress circle. A woman with several books was sitting two seats away, flicking the pages and scribbling, for the whole of the time until the interval. This was immensely distracting and completely destroyed our concentration on the first play, Moonlight. When we pointed this out she said, in an aggressive tone, that she was the assistant director(?) and needed to continue the activity. There was a completely empty row on the other side of the dress circle but she refused to move there. In the interval we explained the situation to a theatre guide and asked to move to the empty area. She said it would be ok if nobody arrived late for the seats. We spoke to another theatre employee who said he was appraised of the situation and had come to reseat us. There was no apology from anyone. Neither of us has experienced such a situation in decades of theatre-going.
Latest Pinter 4: Moonlight/Night School News

Reviews
Mastering pace and delivering the playwright's signature punch – Pinter 4: Moonlight/Night School
Going to see a Pinter play is, of course, rather different from a night out at a showy West End Musical. One can expect thought-provoking theatre, exceptionally witty language and puzzling plots that never quite become totally clear in the end. Yet that is not to say that Moonlight and Night School did not enrapture the average theatre-goer simply seeking light(ish) entertainment. Indeed, the productions directed by Lindsey Turner (Moonlight) and Ed Stambollouian (Night School) as part of the Pinter at the Pinter series were accessible, pacey, and engaging – a great introduction for those new to Pinter’s work, yet still capturing the essence of a comedy of menace in a naturalistic and classic fashion.
14 Nov, 2018 | By Kay Johal
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