Just off Bang Pho’s busy stretch, an old sawmill swaps sawdust for stage lights. What once housed timber and machinery now hosts a short play tour that turns the building itself into the main character. Five rooms, five performances and a format that keeps you on your feet from start to finish.
The transformation matters. The shift from industrial workspace to T Namcharoen Playhouse adds a fresh cultural note to a neighbourhood already known for its design crowd and easy-going nightlife. The structure helps: a clean 11-by-20-metre span, high ceiling, no columns blocking sightlines. It’s unmistakably a theatre, yet keeps the rough edges of its past life.
Here’s how it works: you move in small groups from room to room, catching five short works back to back. Each space resets the mood, and the shift keeps things brisk.
- Living Room – The Uninvited Living Room
House of Mask & Mime opens with a rare take on mask theatre. Light, playful, slightly offbeat, with movement doing most of the storytelling. Domestic details turn oddly entertaining. - Storage Room – Mess You
Bad Posture Ensemble shapes a piece around memory. What stays, what repeats, what gets pushed aside. Sound leads the way, creating a hazy, reflective atmosphere. - Kitchen – Boiled Chicken with Tamarind Leaves
A shared meal without conversation. A mother and child circle each other through action rather than speech. Tension simmers under the surface. - Basement – Closet Staircase
A darker turn. Spider imagery threads through a story about fear and withdrawal, with sharper social commentary than expected. - Prayer Room – The Lady’s Visit
The final stop lands on dark comedy. Sharp, witty and unafraid to poke at class, belief and social structure, with plenty of laughs along the way.
Shows run May 14-17 and 21-24, starting 7.30pm-9.30pm, with the full loop clocking in at one hour 45 minutes. Tickets sit at B650, or B600 for students. Get the tickets via here.
