During Monday night's performance of The Tempest at Theatre Royal Drury Lane in London, star Sigourney Weaver was interrupted by Just Stop Oil activists wielding a confetti cannon and an orange banner,
The actress plays the magician Prospero in this version of William Shakespear’s The Tempest. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Protesters from the environmental group Just Stop Oil interrupted a performance of The Tempest starring Sigourney Weaver in London’s West End on Jan. 27, with the audience responding with boos and jeers.
Two Just Stop Oil supporters have disrupted a West End performance of The Tempest starring Sigourney Weaver. In a video shared on social media by the climate protest group, Hayley Walsh, a mother of three, and Richard Weir, a mechanical engineer, could be seen walking onto a stage where Weaver, 75, was performing.
Two climate activists disrupted a London stage performance of William Shakespeare's "The Tempest", starring Hollywood actress Sigourney Weaver, on Monday.
Two members of the campaign group Just Stop Oil have been charged with aggravated trespass after disrupting a performance of Sigourney Weaver’s West End play.
A 42-year-old woman and a 60-year-old man were arrested on suspicion of aggravated trespass after the protest disrupted a West End performance and have since been charged
Two Just Stop Oil protesters have been charged following the disruption of a West End production of The Tempest, starring Sigourney Weaver. Richard Weir, 60, of Hotspur Street, Tynemouth, and Hayley Walsh, 42, of Grantham Road, Radcliffe on Trent, were charged with aggravated trespass on Tuesday, according to the London Metropolitan Police.
Two Just Stop Oil activists have been charged after a West End production of The Tempest starring Sigourney Weaver was disrupted.
Just Stop Oil interrupted a recent performance of The Tempest on the West End, starring Sigourney Weaver. Now, two people have been charged. Learn more here.
Sixteen environmental activists who were jailed for actions including stopping traffic, blocking an oil facility and splashing a van Gogh painting with soup went to a London court Wednesday to challenge their sentences.