Pop Tart Lipstick

This event has ended

Glass Mask Theatre, Monday 29th August - Saturday 3rd September

After it's sell out run at the Glass Mask Theatre Rex Ryan's ‘Pop Tart Lipstick' returns for one week only before embarking on a national tour!

Harris has been released from Mount Joy Prison. John has recently secured his first real job as a bus driver and is pursuing a new way of life.

Harris has an escape plan, some lipstick, a stash of stolen drugs and a ticket to Walt Disney World he can't use… The two men re unite on this one fateful night where they must make the biggest decision of their lives…and eat some Pop Tarts.


Date:
Monday 29th August - Saturday 3rd September
Time:
7.00pm
Price:
From €18
Address:
Glass Mask Theatre, Dawson Street, Dublin 2, Ireland

Google Map of Glass Mask Theatre, Dawson Street, Dublin 2, Ireland

You might also like...

What's on

Bealtaine Festival

Various Locations

Bealtaine is Ireland’s national festival which celebrates the arts and creativity as we age. The festival is run by Age & Opportunity, the leading national development organisation working to enable the best possible quality of life for us all as we age. This year Age & Opportunity unveils an all-new festival theme, ‘Lust for Life’, which reflects a familiar experience for many older people. To celebrate the theme Bealtaine Festival has commissioned a new essay, ‘Lust of Life’, by writer, former Labour TD and Bealtaine Festival ambassador, Liz McManus, which explores the n

What's on

Evening Lecture: The Life and Work of Edouard Vuillard with Christopher Riopelle

Hugh Lane Gallery

A focus on the life and work of Edouard Vuillard with Christopher Riopelle – the Neil Westreich Curator of Post 1800 Paintings, National Gallery London.

What's on

Of Night and Light and Half Light

SO Fine Art Editions

This three person show by award winning printmakers, Richard Lawlor, James McCreary and Lars Nyberg, explores the intricate nature of the fine art printmaking techniques; drypoint, etching and mezzotint. Richard Lawlor’s etchings delve into the sometimes chaotic world of relationships between men and women. Witnessed through the scope of classic cinema, spanning several different film periods, as well as a range of fictional fantastical characters that depict a dreamlike quality, yet capture this fractious tension through the contrast of light and dark. James McCreary’s mezzotints ex