Hoipolloi


Hoipolloi are a British touring theatre company committed to creating new work for theatre that imaginatively engages their audience and makes them laugh. Their work includes ensemble shows such as The Doubtful Guest and My Uncle Arly, and collaborations with fictional Welsh artist "Hugh Hughes", including the shows Floating and Story of a Rabbit.

History

The company was founded in 1994 by Shôn Dale-Jones and Stefanie Müller. Dale-Jones and Müller met at the International Theatre School Jacques Lecoq, and initially worked with other performers they had met at the school. The Lecoq approach to theatre remains a large influence on the company’s work.
Since 1994, Hoipolloi have created and toured 18 new shows.

Productions

All Hoipolloi productions are devised by the company's core artistic team, led by Artistic Director Shôn Dale-Jones, including input from the performers, with improvisation playing a large role in the creation of each show. Hoipolloi shows are often highly theatrical and humorous. Shôn Dale-Jones’ interest in nonsense literature is reflected in Hoipolloi’s last two ensemble shows, The Doubtful Guest, inspired by the book of the same name by Edward Gorey, and My Uncle Arly, which was inspired by the work of Edward Lear.
Past Hoipolloi productions
Since 2005, Hoipolloi have purported to have collaborated with the fictional Welsh artist Hugh Hughes, whose shows Floating, Story of a Rabbit and Hugh Hughes in... 360 have brought Hoipolloi success, each winning an award at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe: Floating won a Total Theatre Award in 2006, Story of a Rabbit was awarded a Fringe First in 2007 and 360 received a Three Weeks Editors' Award in 2009.
Hughes’ theatrical style is unusual, often involving flip-charts and power-point presentations, and sometimes resembling a lecture more than a play. In 2010, the Barbican Centre commissioned Hugh and Hoipolloi to turn all three shows into a residency called The Wonderful World of Hugh Hughes.
In September 2011, BBC Radio 4 broadcast Floating as an afternoon play.