FamilyFestival 2024
Sat, 30.11. & Sun, 01.12. 2024
ehrenfeldstudios ...

Sat, 30.11. & Sun, 01.12. 2024
ehrenfeldstudios

We warmly invite you to the third edition of our FamilyFestival. Together with you – from big to small – we want to experience a whole weekend of dance. It’s going to be turbulent and chaotic on stage: dancer and choreographer Arthur Schopa is organising a real TOHUWABOHU with his two sons in his premiere. While Sonia Mota and Jörg Ritzenhoff set off into the paper jungle – where everything is made of paper and rustles, crackles and cracks. 

Before and after the performances, you are invited to get active yourself in our Paper Worlds and Knubbelsuppe workshops for children and accompanying adults. 

Join us for waffles and warm punch – and sing Christmas carols with sign language, workshop with ‘Singfinger – signing with fun for ALL!’ 

Programme overview 

Saturday 30.11.2024  

2 pm: Paper Worlds – Contemporary dance workshop from 0 years 
3 pm: PREMIERE: TOHUWABOHU  A family adventure in everyday chaos from 5 years  
4 pm: Knubbelsuppe – Contemporary dance workshop for ages 5 and up  

Sunday 01.12.2024   

1 pm: Knubbelsuppe – Contemporary dance workshop for ages 5 and up  
2 pm: TOHUWABOHU  A family adventure in everyday chaos from 5 years  
3 pm:  Christmas carols with sign language – workshop with ‘Singfinger – signing with fun for ALL!’  
4 pm: PIECE OF PAPER A dance concert for onlookers from 0-99 years 
5 pm: Paper Worlds – Contemporary dance workshop from 0 years 

Tickets: 

Online via rausgegangen.de
Via Mail to karten@ehrenfeldstudios.de
Children 6 € / performance
Adults 10 € / performance
For groups of 5 or more we charge: Adults 9 € and children 5 €
The workshops are free! 

Christmas carols with sign language – workshop with ‘Singfinger – signing with fun for ALL!’ 

Experience Christmas carol singing in a new way! 

Together with Meike Walcha-Lu from Singfinger (www.singfinger.club) we will learn Christmas carols with sign language (LUG) 

Singing with sign language is not only fun, it also enables people with and without disabilities to experience music together, and the ‘Singfinger’ project aims to break down barriers and promote inclusion by using LUG as a bridge between people. Signs support communication and create participation. Singfinger’s target group is primarily hearing people who are unable to use spoken language for various reasons: Children with speech development delays, hearing people with disabilities, people with a spoken language other than their mother tongue or people who can no longer speak as usual after an illness or accident. And of course their environment!