place

Carbis Cottage

Grade II listed buildings in the London Borough of Waltham ForestGrade II listed houses in LondonLondon building and structure stubsUnited Kingdom listed building stubs
Carbis Cottage 02
Carbis Cottage 02

Carbis Cottage is a Grade II listed house at The Green, Chingford, London, E4 7EN.It was probably built in the 17th century.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Carbis Cottage (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Carbis Cottage
The Green, London Chingford (London Borough of Waltham Forest)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Carbis CottageContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.631635 ° E 0.002146 °
placeShow on map

Address

The Green
E4 7EN London, Chingford (London Borough of Waltham Forest)
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Carbis Cottage 02
Carbis Cottage 02
Share experience

Nearby Places

Waltham Forest Festival of Theatre

Waltham Forest Festival of Theatre is an amateur drama festival of one act plays that takes place each year in the London Borough of Waltham Forest. It is the only amateur theatre festival in East London. The patron of the festival is actor Derek Jacobi. Waltham Forest Festival of Theatre serves as a first round festival in the Eastern District of the All England Theatre Festival (the AETF), and is affiliated to the National Drama Festivals Association (NDFA). The winners of the Waltham Forest Festival of Theatre may be invited to perform at the NDFA British All Winners Festival that takes place each year in July. Each year the Waltham Forest Festival of Theatre has entries from adult amateur drama groups, amateur theatre companies, youth theatre clubs and school and college drama clubs and classes. The Festival is organised into both adult and youth sections and each competing team presents a one-act play. Two or three one-act plays are performed at each evening or matinee session of the Festival. The Festival takes place across a week, so often there are between 15 and 18 different theatre companies performing a play on stage during the week of the Festival. Festival rules state that plays must be more than 20 minutes and no more than 55 minutes long to be performed at the Festival and there must be more than one speaking part in any play. A professional adjudicator from the Guild of Drama Adjudicators sits in the audience and judges each play on its merits. The Adjudicator takes to the stage at the end of the session and comments on each play, the acting, its staging, costumes, lighting and set. The Adjudicator's marks are added up on the final night to decide who has won the Festival. The winning team is then eligible to enter succeeding rounds of the knockout competition, which culminates in the All-England Final in June and the British Final in July. There are also awards for best actor, best actress, best performer under 18 years of age, best new writing, best comedy.