The Royal Festival Hall’s Level 2 foyer spaces are currently being refurbished, as we work to bring you a brand new cafe, bar, shop and Ticket Office. Find out more

Common Ground: Friendship in the City of London

PAST EVENT
Thu 21 Oct 2021, 7.45pm
Purcell Room at Queen Elizabeth Hall
Literature & poetry
From £10
past event
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Caleb Azumah Nelson image
Stuart Simpson

Rising literary stars Caleb Azumah Nelson, Vanessa Onwuemezi and Naomi Ishiguro read from their work and reflect on friendships forged in London.

London is a city that can spark love, friendship and solidarity, but is also a place marked by isolation, loneliness and inequality.

The panellists explore the complexities of contemporary friendship through the lens of London. How are friendships and relationships forged in the city shaped or warped by the pressures of London life?

Caleb Azumah Nelson’s acclaimed debut novel Open Water movingly charts the faltering relationship of two young people who meet in a pub in south-east London, struggling to make their mark as artists in a city that alternately celebrates and rejects them.

Following her acclaimed short story collection Escape Routes, Naomi Ishiguro’s debut novel Common Ground tells the story of a friendship between two characters from very different backgrounds: a suburban boy fleeing from school bullies and a fiercely intelligent Romany boy with a nose for local history.

One of the most strikingly original new voices in contemporary fiction, Vanessa Onwuemezi presents a lyrical journey through a landscape of alienation, loss and shame in her debut collection of short stories, Dark Neighbourhood. With a detached eye and hallucinatory vision, these stories observe their own worlds as the line between dream and reality dissolves and they themselves begin to fragment.

Caleb Azumah Nelson is a British-Ghanaian writer and photographer. His writing has been published in Litro. He was recently shortlisted for the Palm Photo Prize and won the People's Choice prize. Open Water is his first novel.

Naomi Ishiguro’s first novel, Common Ground, was published by Tinder Press in March 2021. Her collection of stories, Escape Routes, was published in the spring of 2020.

Vanessa Onwuemezi is a writer and poet living in London. Her work has appeared in Prototype, frieze and Five Dials. Her story ‘At the Heart of Things’ won the The White Review Short Story Prize 2019.

Need to know

Age recommendation

For ages 16+

Dates & times

Thu 21 Oct 2021, 7.45pm

Price

  • Standard entryFrom £10*
  • Concessions25%**


* Excludes £3.50 booking fee.

Book as early as you can to ensure the best choice of tickets. Ticket prices may be adjusted without notice to reflect demand.

** Limited availability. Read about concessions.

Tickets can only be sold through the Southbank Centre and our authorised agents, and can't be resold. You can return your tickets to the Southbank Centre for a credit voucher up to 48 hours before the event. Tickets resold on any third-party platforms will become invalid.

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Venue

Purcell Room

Our number one priority is the health and wellbeing of our visitors and staff. 

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Open 90 minutes before an event until the end of the event. Closed at all other times.

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Our address is: Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX. The nearest tube and train stations within 5-7 minutes walk are Waterloo (Northern, Bakerloo, Jubilee and Waterloo & City lines) and Embankment (District & Circle lines). There are also lots of bus routes with stops 2-5 minutes from our venues. For more information on getting here by road, rail or river.

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Pre-booking online is recommended. Check our website on the day for returns. There’s no need to print your e-ticket – just show your phone to our Visitor Assistants on entry.

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More information

Find out all you need to know about tickets, including concessions, group bookings, returns, credit vouchers and more, via the link below.

Frequently asked questions

Get an overview of the seating layout of the Purcell Room by downloading our seating plan.

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Toilets

An accessible toilet is located in the foyer.

A Changing Places toilet is located on Level 1 Royal Festival Hall next to the JCB Glass Lift, for the exclusive use of disabled people who need personal assistance to use the toilet.

The facility includes a height-adjustable bench, tracking hoist system, a centrally-placed toilet, a height-adjustable basin and a shower. The phone outside the Changing Places toilet will connect you with a member of staff, who can provide you with the key. The facility is open daily 10am – 11pm.

Cloakroom

The Queen Elizabeth Hall and Purcell Room cloakroom is closed. You won’t be able to bring any bags over 40 x 25 x 25cm into the venues, so please leave large bags at home.

We're cash-free

Please note that we're unable to accept cash payments across our site. 

Purcell Room is located in Queen Elizabeth Hall. For step-free access please use Royal Festival Hall JCB glass lift to Level 2 and enter via Riverside Terrace.

Talk to a member of staff at the auditorium entrance if you have a disability that means you can’t queue, or you need extra time to take your seat. They can arrange priority entry for you as soon as the doors open.

Please bear with us while we update our access map to reflect the refurbishment of the Royal Festival Hall’s Level 2 foyer spaces. The step-free routes remain the same.

Download step-free access map

More about Access & facilities