- Location
- Balham
- Pronouns
- he/him
Alternate history theatre is a rare find, and even rarer is the chance to immerse yourself in a piece of immersive theatre set in an AH world - yes, this is not a conventional play, but one where you, the audience, are treated as characters in the show and invited to make important decisions that will genuinely affect the outcome of the evening. It's already a great fun way to spend a few hours, but what makes this particularly exciting for us here on the SLP Forum is that the decisions the audience are making in this show relate to the invasion and liberation of Britain in the Second World War.
Yes, For King & Country is a show all about Operation Sea Lion. The original show premiered last year and ended this summer. Thanks to huge success, the company is about to launch a sequel, all about Operation Emperor (the fictional liberation of Britain in 1944, still nicknamed D-Day for ease of memory). I should state for the record that I am part of this company, and have been intimately involved with writing the AH backstory for the 1944 show (with a lot of help from the excellent @Mumby).
The show is set in a bunker that used to be used by the British government as a back-up for the Cabinet War Rooms, but got taken over by the OKW and SS after the fall of London. Now, on the eve of D-Day, Resistance leaders from around the country must congregate in this recently abandoned bunker and use it to co-ordinate the liberation of Britain. American, British and Empire forces are boarding ships from Ireland (which fell to a bloodless American 'invasion' in 1943) but the Atlantic Wall awaits them. Heydrich is Reichskommisar Grossbritannien, David Lloyd George leads a hated government of collaborators in Buxton, and the feared Dreizack missile system threatens to annihilate the invasion fleet before it even makes landfall. There is much to be done.
Actors play resistance leaders (the same characters who assisted the government in the Operation Sea Lion version of the show 'four years ago' have gone underground or hidden in plain sight) and guide you through a series of objectives where the audience genuinely has control over the priority and method assigned to each one. Upstairs, the show's director answers phones and radios, making decisions for how the Allies, Germans, and anyone else you wish to talk to reacts. You're playing against a real person, not a pre-set simulation.
I know what you're thinking: we all know Sea Lion is impossible. And, to its credit, the show acknowledges it's something of a stretch. I won't give away what exactly the show does to make Sea Lion just about feasible if you squint, but it's a credit to the original team behind it that it's not completely ridiculous, and it certainly isn't a Wehrmachtwank. The new show, which is all about D-Day, is simultaneously less and more of a stretch, with a lot more AH in it, for obvious reasons. It's been really fun finding the balance between hard AH that people like us would respect, and something non-AH fans will understand and, crucially, enjoy.
I'll be doing a full article on this for the site shortly, but I know some SLPers are already booked to attend this week, so if people would like to find out more, discuss their experiences, or arrange a visit, here's a thread for it.
The show officially starts on Wednesday 21st November and runs until 9th December. The plan is for the D-Day show to run in tandem with the Sea Lion one in the new year, with the timeline remaining consistent - if you attend the Sea Lion show and then the D-Day show back to back, things you and the actors did in Sea Lion will impact D-Day.
Oh, and to assuage any fears you may have that it's a nice idea but a bit crap: reviews for the original have been universally positive, most of them extremely so. We're just getting going with the second but the feedback so far is very good again.
Tickets are available here.
You can see the trailer for the original Sea Lion-based show here. I'll upload more pics and videos when I can.
Yes, For King & Country is a show all about Operation Sea Lion. The original show premiered last year and ended this summer. Thanks to huge success, the company is about to launch a sequel, all about Operation Emperor (the fictional liberation of Britain in 1944, still nicknamed D-Day for ease of memory). I should state for the record that I am part of this company, and have been intimately involved with writing the AH backstory for the 1944 show (with a lot of help from the excellent @Mumby).
The show is set in a bunker that used to be used by the British government as a back-up for the Cabinet War Rooms, but got taken over by the OKW and SS after the fall of London. Now, on the eve of D-Day, Resistance leaders from around the country must congregate in this recently abandoned bunker and use it to co-ordinate the liberation of Britain. American, British and Empire forces are boarding ships from Ireland (which fell to a bloodless American 'invasion' in 1943) but the Atlantic Wall awaits them. Heydrich is Reichskommisar Grossbritannien, David Lloyd George leads a hated government of collaborators in Buxton, and the feared Dreizack missile system threatens to annihilate the invasion fleet before it even makes landfall. There is much to be done.
Actors play resistance leaders (the same characters who assisted the government in the Operation Sea Lion version of the show 'four years ago' have gone underground or hidden in plain sight) and guide you through a series of objectives where the audience genuinely has control over the priority and method assigned to each one. Upstairs, the show's director answers phones and radios, making decisions for how the Allies, Germans, and anyone else you wish to talk to reacts. You're playing against a real person, not a pre-set simulation.
I know what you're thinking: we all know Sea Lion is impossible. And, to its credit, the show acknowledges it's something of a stretch. I won't give away what exactly the show does to make Sea Lion just about feasible if you squint, but it's a credit to the original team behind it that it's not completely ridiculous, and it certainly isn't a Wehrmachtwank. The new show, which is all about D-Day, is simultaneously less and more of a stretch, with a lot more AH in it, for obvious reasons. It's been really fun finding the balance between hard AH that people like us would respect, and something non-AH fans will understand and, crucially, enjoy.
I'll be doing a full article on this for the site shortly, but I know some SLPers are already booked to attend this week, so if people would like to find out more, discuss their experiences, or arrange a visit, here's a thread for it.
The show officially starts on Wednesday 21st November and runs until 9th December. The plan is for the D-Day show to run in tandem with the Sea Lion one in the new year, with the timeline remaining consistent - if you attend the Sea Lion show and then the D-Day show back to back, things you and the actors did in Sea Lion will impact D-Day.
Oh, and to assuage any fears you may have that it's a nice idea but a bit crap: reviews for the original have been universally positive, most of them extremely so. We're just getting going with the second but the feedback so far is very good again.
Tickets are available here.
You can see the trailer for the original Sea Lion-based show here. I'll upload more pics and videos when I can.