Past Events Archive
Pride Event – We’re on the Telly! Television’s role in liberating LGBT lives
Fri 28 Jun 2019 @ 19:00 · Events
Terry Sanderson explores how LGBT lives were woven intrinsically into drama, soaps and reality TV, followed by a screening of 1984 BBC drama More Lives Than One.
Kennington Talkies presents Calamity Jane (1953)
Thu 27 Jun 2019 @ 19:30 · Events
Kennington Talkies continues the season of Doris Day films with Calamity Jane (1953), a musical directed by David Butler, and co-starring Howard Keel.
[Read more →]
French Sundaes: La Haine (1995)
Sun 23 Jun 2019 @ 14:30 · Events
French Sundaes presents La Haine (1995), about three young friends and their struggle to live in the banlieues of Paris.
[Read more →]
Mic Dixon presents War School (2018)
Fri 21 Jun 2019 @ 18:00 · Events
This documentary features Veterans for Peace, Quakers and Forces Watch and reveals how the British government is spending £100m of new public funding to promote military values to the public and entice children into the armed forces.
[Read more →]
Kennington Talkies presents Love Me or Leave Me (1955)
Thu 20 Jun 2019 @ 19:30 · Events
Kennington Talkies continues the season of Doris Day films with Love Me or Leave Me (1955), a musical drama directed by Charles Vidor, and co-starring James Cagney.
[Read more →]
Kennington Bioscope presents Lady Windermere’s Fan (1925)
Wed 19 Jun 2019 @ 19:30 · Events
Kennington Bioscope presents Ernst Lubitsch's film of Oscar Wilde's 1893 play, starring Ronald Colman as Lord Darlington, with May McAvoy as Lady Windermere.
[Read more →]
The Vito Project and PrEPster presents Nothing Without Us: The Women Who Will End AIDS (2017)
Sun 16 Jun 2019 @ 19:30 · Events
The VITO Project is partnering up with PrEPster to present a screening of Harriet Hirshorn’s 2017 documentary Nothing Without Us: The Women Who Will End AIDS, followed by a Q&A.
[Read more →]
Kennington Classics presents North by Northwest (1959)
Sun 16 Jun 2019 @ 14:30 · Events
A classic Hitchcock thriller, starring Cary Grant and Eve Marie Saint, with a perfect Bernard Herrmann score and iconic Saul Bass titles. Writer Ernest Lehman called it "the Hitchcock picture to end all Hitchcock pictures".