Brighton Festival
The three-week-long Brighton Festival, one of England's biggest and liveliest arts festivals, takes place every May in venues around Brighton. The more than 600 events include drama, music, dance, and visual arts.
We've compiled the best of the best in The Southeast - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.
The three-week-long Brighton Festival, one of England's biggest and liveliest arts festivals, takes place every May in venues around Brighton. The more than 600 events include drama, music, dance, and visual arts.
One of the largest fringe festivals in the world—and second only to the Edinburgh Fringe in the United Kingdom—this four-week-long arts extravaganza sees hundreds of stand-up, sketch comedy, music, dance, and circus acts descend on the city every May.
Nestled beneath the Downs, 2½ miles east of Lewes, this world-famous opera house combines first-class productions, a state-of-the-art auditorium, and a beautiful setting. Tickets are very expensive (the cheapest start at around £100, though for many productions it's twice that), and you have to book months in advance. But it's worth every penny to aficionados, who traditionally wear evening dress and bring a hamper to picnic on the grounds. The main season runs from mid-May to the end of August. Save money by booking standing-room tickets. Look out for special nights when adults under 30 pay just £30.
This popular festival presents dramatic productions, classical and pop concerts, and a few more locally centered fun and games, such as a rubber duck race. Most events take place in and around the grounds of Arundel Castle for 10 days in late August.
West of the Royal Pavilion, the Brighton Dome was converted from the Prince Regent's stables in the 1930s. It includes a theater and a concert hall that stage classical and pop concerts, plays, and stand-up comedy.
Kent's biggest international arts festival fills the town with music, dance, theater, and other cultural events for two weeks every October (and sometimes early November).
Classics and modern plays are presented in this modernist, hexagonal theater from May through September, and it's a venue for touring companies the rest of the year. Opened in 1962, it now has an international reputation for innovative performances and attracts theatergoers from across the country.
One of the oldest cinemas in the world, the elegant Duke of York's Picturehouse dates back to 1910 and shows an eclectic range of art-house movies and also hosts film-related discussions and events. It's a 10-minute walk north of the main train station.
Outside the town center, the Gulbenkian mounts all kinds of plays, particularly experimental works, as well as dance performances, concerts, and comedy shows. It also screens films.
This impressive modern performance space showcases Shakespeare productions, contemporary theater, music, dance, and comedy. It is also a venue for popular touring shows, including West End musicals.
The town of Rye has long been a chosen residence for arty types, from Henry James and Anthony van Dyck to Paul McCartney and Spike Milligan. So it makes perfect sense that, for two weeks every September, the town hosts this excellent art festival, filled with literary talks, film screenings, concerts, and theater performances.
With a gem of an auditorium, the theater has been a favorite venue for shows on their way to, or fresh from, London's West End for more than 200 years. It's close to the Royal Pavilion.
This horseshoe-shape theater on an island in the River Wey frequently previews West End productions. The smaller Mill Studio showcases more intimate productions.