Twisted Cabaret: $25 for one ticket on May 19 or 20 at 8 p.m. (up to $41.75 value)

Today’s Groupon Vancouver Daily Deal of the Day: Twisted Cabaret: $25 for one ticket on May 19 or 20 at 8 p.m. (up to $41.75 value)

Buy now from only $25
Value $41.75
Discount 40% Off

What You’ll Get

The Groupon Deal

  • $25 for one ticket for Zone A seating (up to $41.75 value)
  • When: Friday, May 19, or Saturday, May 20, at 8 p.m.
  • View the seating chart.

This is a limited time offer while quantities last so don’t miss out!

Click here to buy now or for more details about the deal.

The Fine Print
Expiration varies. Limit 8/person. Valid only for option purchased. Redeem on day of show for a ticket at the venue box office. Refundable only on day of purchase. Must redeem together to sit together. Merchant is issuer of tickets – discount reflects current ticket prices, which may change. ADA seating cannot be guaranteed; contact box office prior to purchase for availability. Ticket value includes all fees. Recommended for ages 12 and older. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.

Twisted Cabaret
https://www.vancouvercabaret.com/twisted-cabaret/
Norman Rothstein Theatre 950 West 41st Avenue, Vancouver, BC V5Z 2N7 (2 miles)

The Hungarian knife-thrower Frankonovitchski hurls daggers at his wife, Natasha, missing every time; the French mime Francel Franceau has been pulling invisible ropes for more than 25 years; and the Great Frankini can crush his head and plump it back again. The kicker? These performers all inhabit the same body. Aided by his MC, the hunchbacked Flinch, Frank Olivier changes costumes and genders, performing 16 acts, each with its own character who has its own over-the-top story, unique talents, and deeply buried reason why it’s uncomfortable around hippos. Sometimes Olivier even manages to multiply himself—donning a blond wig and high-kicking between two shoddy puppets to become the Frankettes.

When he was just 11 years old, watching a fireman juggle in his elementary classroom, the desire to perform struck Frank Olivier hard. So hard, in fact, that he began piecing together his one-man show right then, and it’s obvious in every scene—not just in the effortless ease with which he shows off his tricks but also in the anarchic, delightfully crude energy that fuels the show. Throughout, a clownish, bumbling clumsiness lends his act an unpredictable chaos, with Olivier telling the San Francisco Chronicle “it makes it funnier, things go better when everything is falling apart.”

Click here to buy now or for more information about the deal. Don’t miss out!