
What does summer have in store? On Pentecost Monday Boys & Girls aged 5-13 can get a taste of our football camps!
For just CHF10, spend 90 minutes with some of our best bilingual coaches, learning techniques, playing mini matches and having tons of fun… just like in our real Summer Camps! To register, book online, select ‘Program’ – any region, then ‘Special events – InterSoccer Open Day 10 June’.

Can’t keep your distance? Feeling the need to reach out and get your monthly improv fix? We’ve got your back.
Come on down and watch some improv. We make funny stuff up based on your suggestions, while you direct the show from the comfort of your chair. Come on down – bring a friend – and prepare for some belly laughs.
As always, we’ll be at Mr Pickwick’s pub:
– Tickets go on sale from 19h00 just outside of the room
– Doors open at 19h30
– Show starts at 20h00
– Tickets are 10CHF at the door (cash only)

GAOS is proud to present it’s Christmas Show; “The Wind in the Willows” by Kenneth Graham. One of the best-loved works of children’s fiction which follows the adventures of Mole, Rat, Badger, Toad, and their friends. Follow the animals on this comical modern-day production, scripted by Alan Bennet, where their adventures and misadventures populate the entire story. From an idyllic riverside picnic to a snowy encounter in the Wild Woods, and from poop-pooping in Toad’s shiny new motor car to escaping jail! But watch out for the weasels who plot to take down the protagonists and take over Toad Hall. Will they succeed or does good overcome evil?
Save the date! We would love you & your family to join us.
On Fri 6th, Sat 7th, Sun 8th Dec, or Fri 13th, Sat 14th, Sun 15 Dec at the Theatre de Marens, Nyon.
Tickets from 25 CHF!
Ticket sales open Saturday 2nd November through: TheatreinEnglish.ch and GAOS.ch

Join us for a exceptional standing acrobatics fun group!
Please sign up by sending a message.
No prerequisites, open to regular sport practitioners.
Progressions for Standing shoulder stand, high flying bird, two-high and flying flip and much more. All in safety and with spotters.
Contribution: 25 chf
Looking forward to seeing you!

A Christmas Carol
By Charles Dickens
Directed by Claude-Inga Barbey
From Tuesday 3 to Sunday 22 December 2019
Surtitled in French and English on Friday 6, Sunday 8, and Wednesday 11 December 2019
La Cuisine, main stage auditorium
PERFORMANCE TIMES
TUESDAY-FRIDAY: 19H30 SUNDAY: 17H
SPECIAL PERFORMANCE TIME: SATURDAY 17H
DURATION: 1H30 (IN DEVELOPMENT)
AGE: 8 AND OVER
On Christmas Eve – a celebration he detests above all others and happily qualifies as “humbug” – Ebenezer Scrooge, an avaricious moneylender – is visited by three ghosts…
The first one takes Scrooge back in time to past Christmases. The second one takes him on a journey through the present, showing him the poverty that surrounds him and which he does nothing to combat. And the third takes him to an incredibly bleak future, where a helpless Scrooge witnesses his own death, alone and reviled by all. Overwhelmed by these revelations about himself and the world around him, Scrooge performs a last minute act of redemption, just moments before the joyous bells ring out for Christmas…
“I remain convinced that all the evils committed by individuals on this Earth come in large part from the evils previously suffered by those same individuals. And nowhere has anyone more clearly expressed this in a simple story than Charles Dickens in A Christmas Carol.” Claude-Inga Barbey

A Christmas Carol
By Charles Dickens
Directed by Claude-Inga Barbey
From Tuesday 3 to Sunday 22 December 2019
Surtitled in French and English on Friday 6, Sunday 8, and Wednesday 11 December 2019
La Cuisine, main stage auditorium
PERFORMANCE TIMES
TUESDAY-FRIDAY: 19H30 SUNDAY: 17H
SPECIAL PERFORMANCE TIME: SATURDAY 17H
DURATION: 1H30 (IN DEVELOPMENT)
AGE: 8 AND OVER
On Christmas Eve – a celebration he detests above all others and happily qualifies as “humbug” – Ebenezer Scrooge, an avaricious moneylender – is visited by three ghosts…
The first one takes Scrooge back in time to past Christmases. The second one takes him on a journey through the present, showing him the poverty that surrounds him and which he does nothing to combat. And the third takes him to an incredibly bleak future, where a helpless Scrooge witnesses his own death, alone and reviled by all. Overwhelmed by these revelations about himself and the world around him, Scrooge performs a last minute act of redemption, just moments before the joyous bells ring out for Christmas…
“I remain convinced that all the evils committed by individuals on this Earth come in large part from the evils previously suffered by those same individuals. And nowhere has anyone more clearly expressed this in a simple story than Charles Dickens in A Christmas Carol.” Claude-Inga Barbey

A Christmas Carol
By Charles Dickens
Directed by Claude-Inga Barbey
From Tuesday 3 to Sunday 22 December 2019
Surtitled in French and English on Friday 6, Sunday 8, and Wednesday 11 December 2019
La Cuisine, main stage auditorium
PERFORMANCE TIMES
TUESDAY-FRIDAY: 19H30 SUNDAY: 17H
SPECIAL PERFORMANCE TIME: SATURDAY 17H
DURATION: 1H30 (IN DEVELOPMENT)
AGE: 8 AND OVER
On Christmas Eve – a celebration he detests above all others and happily qualifies as “humbug” – Ebenezer Scrooge, an avaricious moneylender – is visited by three ghosts…
The first one takes Scrooge back in time to past Christmases. The second one takes him on a journey through the present, showing him the poverty that surrounds him and which he does nothing to combat. And the third takes him to an incredibly bleak future, where a helpless Scrooge witnesses his own death, alone and reviled by all. Overwhelmed by these revelations about himself and the world around him, Scrooge performs a last minute act of redemption, just moments before the joyous bells ring out for Christmas…
“I remain convinced that all the evils committed by individuals on this Earth come in large part from the evils previously suffered by those same individuals. And nowhere has anyone more clearly expressed this in a simple story than Charles Dickens in A Christmas Carol.” Claude-Inga Barbey





























