We love celebrating our brilliant Educators successes both in and out of the Bigfoot world! We are therefore thrilled to tell you about not one, but THREE shows that our Bigfooters are part of. We look forward to supporting them!
Marshall Stay
We are SO proud of our Bigfooter extraordinaire, Marshall, who has been working exceptionally hard as part of the video team in Dracula, starring Cynthia Erivo (playing 23 roles!) in the West End. Well done Marshall!
For more information read HERE
Nomakhwezi Becker
Nomakhwezi Becker is a super talented Educator who has most recently been enthralling pupils with our brilliant storytelling programme Africa; Reborn. We are delighted to share that Khwezi has written and is starring in Holding Ground at Camden People’s Theatre in May!
Holding Ground is a multilingual live performance weaving story-theatre, song, and poetry to explore home, memory, and connection across distance. Rooted in Khwezi’s South African–German heritage, the work reflects on life between languages, homelands, and generations through the material practices of quilt-making and beadwork.
At its centre is a patchwork of modern-day “love letters” — WhatsApp messages, voice notes, screenshots, and music links — transformed into quilted squares that form a soft archive of care. Drawing on research into German Blaudruck/Isishweshwe textiles and Southern African beadwork love letters, the performance invites audiences into a shared act of “holding ground.”
For more information read HERE
Charlie-Ann Bruce
Chaz is one of Bigfoot’s most versatile Educators most recently starring as the Big Bad Wolf in Wolf on Trial for World Book Day!
As well as being a wonderful and hard working Bigfoooter, Chaz also has her own Community Theatre Company, Astraea Theatre and we are thrilled to share their upcoming show, Rajiv’s Starry Feelings at Camden People’s Theatre on the 7th, 8th, and 9th April.
Rajiv’s Starry Feelings is a gentle storytelling experience that follows Rajiv and his Dad as they map their emotions across the night sky. Along the way, families will encounter ducks, stars, and a warm story about understanding feelings and a brilliant example of a supportive father–son relationship within a South-Asian household.

