Ordinary people share their private stories at Berkeley's 'TILT'
Briefly

Ordinary people share their private stories at Berkeley's 'TILT'
"Most of the time, when you buy a theater ticket you know what you're in for. Not so with "TILT: Stories on the Edge," a production that relies on everyday people to step up and reveal their private reckonings. The stories might be funny, painful or poignant, but at the end of the night they're all meant to be unforgettable."
"Following a sold-out performance in L.A., "TILT" arrives in Berkeley on Feb. 12 at the Marsh Arts Center. Guiding the night's action is host Aaron Samson, a playwright and Moth StorySLAM champion who'll tell his own special story. The way it works is audience members send pitches to the organizers and, if selected, they get 5-7 minutes to do live storytelling on stage."
TILT: Stories on the Edge is a live production that invites everyday people to share true, first-person stories of humor, pain, or poignancy, meant to be unforgettable. Following a sold-out Los Angeles performance, the show will appear in Berkeley on Feb. 12 at the Marsh Arts Center with doors at 5 p.m. and show at 6 p.m. Host Aaron Samson, a playwright and Moth StorySLAM champion, will guide the evening and tell his own story. Selected audience members submit three-sentence pitches and receive 5–7 minutes onstage for live storytelling. The event raises funds for the Alex Manfull Fund supporting childhood neuroimmune disorders such as PANS; tickets cost $30–$200.
Read at The Mercury News
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