Manwatching with Christian Jegard
ArtHouse Jersey has announced two well-known local performers who will take on the internationally acclaimed theatrical phenomenon Manwatching this June at ArtHouse Jersey at Capital House as part of the arts charity’s upcoming Summer Series.
Part confession, part comedy and part social experiment, Manwatching is a funny, revealing and completely unpredictable night of theatre where a male performer walks on stage having never seen the script before.
Written anonymously by a woman and first developed by London’s Royal Court Theatre before touring internationally, the show offers a candid, sharp and often
hilarious exploration of heterosexual female desire, relationships and sex, all read aloud in real time by an unprepared man.

Taking on the challenge in Jersey will be comedian Christian Jegard on Friday 19 June, followed by writer and performer John Henry Falle on Saturday 20 June.
Because the performers encounter the script live on stage for the very first time, no two performances are ever quite the same.
Christian Jegard is a Jersey-born comedian currently based in Brighton whose growing national profile has recently seen him appear in the BBC New Comedy
Awards. He can also be heard on BBC Radio 4 Extra and has been recognised across the UK comedy circuit as runner up in the Leicester Square Theatre New Comedian of the Year competition, runner up in Leicester Mercury Comedian of the Year and a finalist in the Komedia New Comedy Award.
Critics have described Jegard as “witty, imaginative and different” (Steve Bennett, Chortle) and “charismatic, charming, awkward and incredibly funny” (Under the
Radar).
CEO for ArtHouse Jersey, Tom Dingle, said, “Part of the thrill of Manwatching is that audiences are discovering the piece at exactly the same time as the performer. It creates this brilliant tension between comedy, vulnerability and spontaneity where literally anything could happen. Christian and John Henry are both incredibly different performers with completely distinct energies and instincts, which means audiences can expect two genuinely unique nights.”
