Rose, a play by Isabelle Hubert directed by Mario Borges and Carol Cassistat, delves into the wounds of adolescence. It will be staged at Théâtre Paris-Villette from January 28 to February 7, 2026.
The play Queen Kong, directed by Géraldine Pochon, will be performed at the Théâtre Paris-Villette from March 24 to April 3, 2026. Inspired by Hélène Vignal's novel, it gives voice to a rebellious teenager caught between online harassment, free sexuality, and militant activism.
Between chivalric fiction and family reality, Papy Quichotte depicts a grandfather who dreams of being Don Quixote. A sensitive and inventive play to be discovered at the Théâtre Paris-Villette from February 19 to March 8, 2026.
The Théâtre Paris-Villette welcomes "3 Plumes," a creation by Marina Montefusco combining visual theater, puppets, and live music in a delicate fable about difference and imagination, from February 19 to March 8, 2025.
The play Rose will be performed at the Théâtre Paris-Villette from January 28 to February 7, 2025. It is a story of adolescence, family memory, and emotional reconstruction, brought to life by sensitive and immersive staging.
Ce soir j’ai de la fièvre et toi tu meurs de froid, created by Julien Lewkowicz, can be seen at the Théâtre Paris-Villette from March 19 to April 4, 2026, following its previews at the Festival Impatience.
From November 18 to 23, 2025, À l'ombre du réverbère at the Théâtre Paris-Villette retraces Redwane Rajel's journey from prison to the stage, in an intimate, embodied theatrical narrative.
From November 14 to December 5, 2025, Collectif Bajour's L'Éclipse takes over the Théâtre Paris-Villette with a teenage fresco set in the Jura region of the 90s, a tale of initiation, desire and fragility.
Le Poids des Fourmis runs from March 7 to 15 at the Théâtre Paris-Villette. Between adolescent revolt, citizen resistance and the excesses of power, the play questions, with humor and bite, our ability to act in the face of the world's injustices.
From the end of May to the beginning of June, this is the show to go to with your teens, pre-teens, or children (especially if they already have a phone): Trigger Warning immerses you in the heart of the world of social networks, in a theatrical show, with a teenager at the forefront of the story.