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Matt Miller - Fixing (photo credit Tom Platinum Morley)_1.JPG
Matt Miller & Peader Kirk presents 
Fixing

Friday 27th & Saturday 28th February 2026

Show starts:                        19:30

Run Time:                             75 mins approx.

Tickets:                                  General Admission (£15)

Concession (£7.50)

Suitable for Over 65, Student, Artist, Unemployment Benefit, Disability Benefit. Please note proof of concession eligibility may be asked for upon arrival at the box office. Complimentary tickets are available for PAs supporting those with access requirements.

No Questions (£3) If you can't afford any of the other tickets categories but still want to see the show then please purchase this one – no questions will be asked. (Limited to 7, in advance and online only 

 

Age Rec:                                14+

                                                   Sexual references/innuendo, references to                                                             divorce, reference to child going missing

Can something broken ever truly be mended?

When Matt was little, their dad bought a classic car. A 1952 Sunbeam Talbot Mark II. Dad had ideas that he and Matt would do it up, repair, rebuild together. They never did, and the car festered in a garage.

 

I mean, Dad had just been through a divorce.

 

Now in their 30’s, Matt would like to learn how to fix a car engine. They’d like to learn a bit more about Dad, and that time, when Dad and Mum split up. The time when Matt and Dad were closest.

 

Matt can’t do this alone, which is tricky for a solo show. That’s where Matt’s drag alter-ego Natalie Spanner comes in. She knows all about things that girls like Natalie know about. Like how to build an engine. About maintenance, care and repair.

 

Together, Matt and Natalie will try to ask, in an increasingly broken world, how might we repair ourselves, together?

Artist Bios

Matt Miller:

Matt Miller is a theatre maker, director and poet based in Nottingham who makes work about place, identity and ways of belonging.

In 2014, Matt was selected as one of BBC Radio Three’s Verb New Voices and their poem River Monster, charting their history growing up in Tyneside, was broadcast on The Verb, and praised for ‘powers of urban storytelling’ (Ian McMillan)

Through this program, Matt started working with Peader Kirk and they have since made two shows together. ‘Sticking’ (2016) performed to sold out audiences in Newcastle, Manchester and Durham, and Fitting (2018-2021) toured nationally.

As a director, Matt has worked with UK theatre makers Louise White, Kieran Spiers and with Neal Pike on R&D and National Tour of Five Years.

Much of Matt’s work, both as a writer and a director is rooted in autobiographical material.

They have been an artist in residence at Alphabetti Theatre, was one of Live Theatre’s inaugural Live Lab Artists, and is a current member of Nottingham Playhouse’s Artist Development Programme Amplify.

They also regularly engage in theatre and poetry education, and have worked with The Mighty Creatives, Writing East Midlands, University of Bedfordshire and others in this capacity.

 

Peader Kirk:

Peader Kirk is an Artist and Director working internationally in the fields of Performance and Sound Art.

His work has recently been shown at The Southbank Centre and The Institute of Contemporary Arts in London, The National Theatre of Greece in Athens, Academy of Fine Arts in Turin and The Hong Kong Repertory Theatre.

Peader makes work that engages directly with communities to ask questions about how we meet amidst difference and how we create change. The scale of the work ranges from encounters in small rooms to large-scale public works in the urban environment.

Peader trained as a director with Robert Lepage at the National Theatre, London and with Eugenio Barba at CPR, Wales. Peader works with The BBC as a part of their development programme for new writers and as a mentor for emerging artists with hÅb, Manchester and Arts Captiva Italy.

His most recent academic publication was The Performative Museum and the site constructive work of Mkultra in Performance Research Journal published by Routledge.

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Opening Hours 
We are open 11am - 10pm Wednesday - Friday and 6pm-10pm on Saturdays
 

Address
Alphabetti Theatre, St James Boulevard, Newcastle Upon Tyne, United Kingdom NE1 4HP

 

Click Here to View Map and Directons on how to get here.

Get in Touch

Phone 
0191 261 9125. Our phone lines are open Monday-Tuesday: 10 - 6
Wednesday - Friday: 10 - 10
Saturday: 6 - 10

 

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Good Boy Rex the Theatre Dog
Arts Council England
Community Foundation, Newcastle Culture Investment Fund Supported by Newcastle City Council
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The Barbour Foundation
Esmee Fairburn Foundation

With thanks to the
Fagus Anstruther Memorial Trust

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