The Hong Kong Arts Festival is the one month a year when this city's stages feel genuinely connected to the rest of the world. For a few weeks each spring, theatre companies from Seoul, Dublin, Beijing and beyond touch down across Hong Kong, and the question stops being "is there anything good on?" and becomes "how much can I afford to see?" If you only commit to one cultural splurge all year, the festival's theatre programme is where I'd spend it.
This is my guide to the Hong Kong Arts Festival 2026 theatre highlights — the productions I'd prioritise from the 54th edition, with confirmed dates, venues and the all-important language and surtitle notes. The festival is a serious undertaking, so I've been picky: these are the shows worth planning an evening, and a booking, around.
The 54th Hong Kong Arts Festival runs from 27 February to 30 March 2026. Across roughly a month it presents more than 45 productions and over 1,100 international and local artists, plus several hundred education and outreach events under the "Festival PLUS" banner. Theatre sits alongside opera, classical music, Chinese opera and dance — see our companion guide to the festival's dance highlights for the movement side.
Performances are spread across the city's major venues: the Hong Kong Cultural Centre (香港文化中心) in Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong City Hall (香港大會堂) in Central, the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts (香港演藝學院) in Wan Chai, and venues at the West Kowloon Cultural District and the Fringe Club. Tickets are sold through URBTIX.
If you read one thing into your festival schedule, make it this. German theatre artist Sebastian Kaiser joins forces with the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts for a newly conceived adaptation of The Drunkard — the landmark stream-of-consciousness novel by the late Hong Kong writer Liu Yichang, often cited as Chinese literature's first modern psychological novel and an acknowledged influence on Wong Kar-wai's In the Mood for Love. To see a foundational Hong Kong text reworked for the stage, by a European director and a homegrown academy, is exactly the kind of cross-cultural collision the festival does best.
Adapted from the award-winning novel by Kim Young-ha — the writer some call the "Korean Kafka" — The Empire of Light follows a North Korean sleeper agent and his wife as their meticulously constructed life unravels over a single day. Directed by French director Arthur Nauzyciel, it's a co-production between the Théâtre National de Bretagne and the National Theater Company of Korea, starring acclaimed film actress Moon So-ri. Expect striking visuals, unconventional staging, and a psychological intensity that lingers. Note: it contains strong language, adult content and nudity, and is recommended for ages 16 and above.
Samuel Beckett's tragicomic masterpiece needs little introduction — two men, a country road, a tree, and the eternal wait for a Godot who never comes. MENG Theatre Studio's staging brings the play to Hong Kong City Hall's Theatre, a wonderfully intimate room for a work that lives or dies on the rhythm between its two leads. For anyone who studied Beckett on the page and never saw him live, this is the chance to feel why the silences matter as much as the words. Check the listing for language and surtitle details before booking.
Dublin's Dead Centre are among the most inventive theatre-makers working today — their pieces tend to play with the form itself, breaking the fourth wall and asking what theatre is even for. This collaboration with the Beijing Repertory Theater takes Bertolt Brecht's chaotic early play Baal as a starting point and runs somewhere unexpected. If you like your theatre clever, self-aware and a little destabilising, this is the festival pick that will give you the most to argue about over the drink afterwards.
| Production | Dates | Venue |
|---|---|---|
| Ontroerend Goed — Handle with Care | 27 Feb–29 Mar 2026 (across run) | The Jockey Club Studio Theatre, Fringe Club |
| Volcano (theatre/dance) | 13–18 Mar 2026 | Studio Theatre, HK Cultural Centre |
| The 7 Fingers — Duel Reality (circus theatre) | 20–22 Mar 2026 | See festival programme |
The Belgian company Ontroerend Goed's Handle with Care is an intriguing one-to-one or small-group interactive piece staged at the Fringe Club's Jockey Club Studio Theatre — a very different experience from the big-stage shows, and worth a look if you like theatre that involves you directly. The Canadian troupe The 7 Fingers bring acrobatic circus-theatre with Duel Reality, a Shakespeare-tinged crowd-pleaser that works well for mixed-age groups.
All festival tickets are sold through URBTIX (urbtix.hk) — online, via the URBTIX app, by phone, or at counters and self-service kiosks in major LCSD venues. You can also start from the official festival site at hk.artsfestival.org, which links straight through to the correct booking page. Be wary of any third-party reseller or any site presenting itself as a different "official" ticketer; URBTIX and HK Ticketing are the only genuine platforms in Hong Kong.
Make a full evening of it: most festival venues are a short walk from excellent food and bars. Our guides to the best jazz bars and clubs, the best stand-up comedy in Hong Kong, and a Hong Kong long weekend itinerary can round out the trip. Before the show, the free public art around West Kowloon and Tsim Sha Tsui is an easy afternoon.
From festival theatre to dance, galleries and public art — explore everything on Hong Kong's stages at YumChaNow.