Lisbon Events Calendar

Do you like to read, drink, and hate on the latest Star Wars?
We thought you might.
Menina e Moça is a dope little bookshop and bar with a piano in the back.
Mr. Joaquim’s Video Club is a hub for nerds and weirdos that serves sheep cheese and sausage and also allows members to rent multimedia items (DVDs, books, Blu-Rays, etc.) before purchasing them.
The latter has recently released its second annual yearbook, and to celebrate it invites you to Menina e Moça for the sexiest Sunday of the decade.
Here’s how they describe it:
“After the success of the release of the 2018 yearbook at Cinema Monumental, let’s risk a new encounter, this time with alcohol and serious literature added to the mix. Autographs, dedications, and spankings will be free. Bare-ass photographs with the authors only in return for a Mojito.”
You’re welcome.
FREE ENTRY.

Teatro Thalia is a small but historically significant Portuguese theater that dates back three centuries. It has been sold, bought, and restored many a time, including by Spaniards, who happen to not be fans of the Portuguese.
Therefore, throughout its existence, it has united many a side, sense, and desire, housing, for example, lions, tigers, panthers, a navy museum, and, more recently, the Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education.
This weekend, in this spirit, the theater hosts a multimedia art exhibit, Reverso (“Reverse”). Here’s how the organizers describe that:
“Reverso.
The opposite of what you see, a whispery invitation: hey, babe, take a walk on the wild side. Between light and dark, to reverse is to discover the hidden matter that separates and unites sides, senses, desires.
It is to exercise the muscle of stubbornness, to exchange the said for the unsaid, with the feeling free and unpunished. Reverse is the place where opposites smell, touch, and finally exchange, in search of new truths, new versions. After all, who defines which side is right?
To invent the reverse is to dig the back of what one reads, to create the image of the word, the word of the image. Imagine worlds like dancing in silence. Reverse is weaving, with the rebel line that spins and unravels, the reverse of poetry.”
Illustrations by Alice Prestes.
Poetry by Luciana Soares.
Curated by Patrica Ferreira.
HOURS: 9h-20h, through Jan 6 (closed Sunday).
INAUGURATION: Saturday, Jan 4, 15h-19h.
FREE ENTRY.

Johnny Depp (god bless his soul), The Matrix, and LSD have made two things painfully clear.
First, that more and more people know and talk about Alice in Wonderland (actually entitled Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland).
And second — that less and less people have or will read the actual book. This Atlaser happens to be guilty as charged too.
Bookshop Tigre de Papel (“Paper Tiger”), however, believes that, despite all evidence to the contrary, people will read again.
Or maybe they’re just jumping on the proverbial bandwagon…
Whatever the case may be, they invite you and yours to — forgive us — go through the rabbit hole and discover the original story of Alice this Sunday at 18h30.
FREE ENTRY.

Teatro Thalia is a small but historically significant Portuguese theater that dates back three centuries. It has been sold, bought, and restored many a time, including by Spaniards, who happen to not be fans of the Portuguese.
Therefore, throughout its existence, it has united many a side, sense, and desire, housing, for example, lions, tigers, panthers, a navy museum, and, more recently, the Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education.
This weekend, in this spirit, the theater hosts a multimedia art exhibit, Reverso (“Reverse”). Here’s how the organizers describe that:
“Reverso.
The opposite of what you see, a whispery invitation: hey, babe, take a walk on the wild side. Between light and dark, to reverse is to discover the hidden matter that separates and unites sides, senses, desires.
It is to exercise the muscle of stubbornness, to exchange the said for the unsaid, with the feeling free and unpunished. Reverse is the place where opposites smell, touch, and finally exchange, in search of new truths, new versions. After all, who defines which side is right?
To invent the reverse is to dig the back of what one reads, to create the image of the word, the word of the image. Imagine worlds like dancing in silence. Reverse is weaving, with the rebel line that spins and unravels, the reverse of poetry.”
Illustrations by Alice Prestes.
Poetry by Luciana Soares.
Curated by Patrica Ferreira.
HOURS: 9h-20h, through Jan 6 (closed Sunday).
INAUGURATION: Saturday, Jan 4, 15h-19h.
FREE ENTRY.

Teatro Thalia is a small but historically significant Portuguese theater that dates back three centuries. It has been sold, bought, and restored many a time, including by Spaniards, who happen to not be fans of the Portuguese.
Therefore, throughout its existence, it has united many a side, sense, and desire, housing, for example, lions, tigers, panthers, a navy museum, and, more recently, the Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education.
This weekend, in this spirit, the theater hosts a multimedia art exhibit, Reverso (“Reverse”). Here’s how the organizers describe that:
“Reverso.
The opposite of what you see, a whispery invitation: hey, babe, take a walk on the wild side. Between light and dark, to reverse is to discover the hidden matter that separates and unites sides, senses, desires.
It is to exercise the muscle of stubbornness, to exchange the said for the unsaid, with the feeling free and unpunished. Reverse is the place where opposites smell, touch, and finally exchange, in search of new truths, new versions. After all, who defines which side is right?
To invent the reverse is to dig the back of what one reads, to create the image of the word, the word of the image. Imagine worlds like dancing in silence. Reverse is weaving, with the rebel line that spins and unravels, the reverse of poetry.”
Illustrations by Alice Prestes.
Poetry by Luciana Soares.
Curated by Patrica Ferreira.
HOURS: 9h-20h, through Jan 6 (closed Sunday).
INAUGURATION: Saturday, Jan 4, 15h-19h.
FREE ENTRY.

Teatro Thalia is a small but historically significant Portuguese theater that dates back three centuries. It has been sold, bought, and restored many a time, including by Spaniards, who happen to not be fans of the Portuguese.
Therefore, throughout its existence, it has united many a side, sense, and desire, housing, for example, lions, tigers, panthers, a navy museum, and, more recently, the Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education.
This weekend, in this spirit, the theater hosts a multimedia art exhibit, Reverso (“Reverse”). Here’s how the organizers describe that:
“Reverso.
The opposite of what you see, a whispery invitation: hey, babe, take a walk on the wild side. Between light and dark, to reverse is to discover the hidden matter that separates and unites sides, senses, desires.
It is to exercise the muscle of stubbornness, to exchange the said for the unsaid, with the feeling free and unpunished. Reverse is the place where opposites smell, touch, and finally exchange, in search of new truths, new versions. After all, who defines which side is right?
To invent the reverse is to dig the back of what one reads, to create the image of the word, the word of the image. Imagine worlds like dancing in silence. Reverse is weaving, with the rebel line that spins and unravels, the reverse of poetry.”
Illustrations by Alice Prestes.
Poetry by Luciana Soares.
Curated by Patrica Ferreira.
HOURS: 9h-20h, through Jan 6 (closed Sunday).
INAUGURATION: Saturday, Jan 4, 15h-19h.
FREE ENTRY.

Teatro Thalia is a small but historically significant Portuguese theater that dates back three centuries. It has been sold, bought, and restored many a time, including by Spaniards, who happen to not be fans of the Portuguese.
Therefore, throughout its existence, it has united many a side, sense, and desire, housing, for example, lions, tigers, panthers, a navy museum, and, more recently, the Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education.
This weekend, in this spirit, the theater hosts a multimedia art exhibit, Reverso (“Reverse”). Here’s how the organizers describe that:
“Reverso.
The opposite of what you see, a whispery invitation: hey, babe, take a walk on the wild side. Between light and dark, to reverse is to discover the hidden matter that separates and unites sides, senses, desires.
It is to exercise the muscle of stubbornness, to exchange the said for the unsaid, with the feeling free and unpunished. Reverse is the place where opposites smell, touch, and finally exchange, in search of new truths, new versions. After all, who defines which side is right?
To invent the reverse is to dig the back of what one reads, to create the image of the word, the word of the image. Imagine worlds like dancing in silence. Reverse is weaving, with the rebel line that spins and unravels, the reverse of poetry.”
Illustrations by Alice Prestes.
Poetry by Luciana Soares.
Curated by Patrica Ferreira.
HOURS: 9h-20h, through Jan 6 (closed Sunday).
INAUGURATION: Saturday, Jan 4, 15h-19h.
FREE ENTRY.

Teatro Thalia is a small but historically significant Portuguese theater that dates back three centuries. It has been sold, bought, and restored many a time, including by Spaniards, who happen to not be fans of the Portuguese.
Therefore, throughout its existence, it has united many a side, sense, and desire, housing, for example, lions, tigers, panthers, a navy museum, and, more recently, the Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education.
This weekend, in this spirit, the theater hosts a multimedia art exhibit, Reverso (“Reverse”). Here’s how the organizers describe that:
“Reverso.
The opposite of what you see, a whispery invitation: hey, babe, take a walk on the wild side. Between light and dark, to reverse is to discover the hidden matter that separates and unites sides, senses, desires.
It is to exercise the muscle of stubbornness, to exchange the said for the unsaid, with the feeling free and unpunished. Reverse is the place where opposites smell, touch, and finally exchange, in search of new truths, new versions. After all, who defines which side is right?
To invent the reverse is to dig the back of what one reads, to create the image of the word, the word of the image. Imagine worlds like dancing in silence. Reverse is weaving, with the rebel line that spins and unravels, the reverse of poetry.”
Illustrations by Alice Prestes.
Poetry by Luciana Soares.
Curated by Patrica Ferreira.
HOURS: 9h-20h, through Jan 6 (closed Sunday).
INAUGURATION: Saturday, Jan 4, 15h-19h.
FREE ENTRY.

Teatro Thalia is a small but historically significant Portuguese theater that dates back three centuries. It has been sold, bought, and restored many a time, including by Spaniards, who happen to not be fans of the Portuguese.
Therefore, throughout its existence, it has united many a side, sense, and desire, housing, for example, lions, tigers, panthers, a navy museum, and, more recently, the Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education.
This weekend, in this spirit, the theater hosts a multimedia art exhibit, Reverso (“Reverse”). Here’s how the organizers describe that:
“Reverso.
The opposite of what you see, a whispery invitation: hey, babe, take a walk on the wild side. Between light and dark, to reverse is to discover the hidden matter that separates and unites sides, senses, desires.
It is to exercise the muscle of stubbornness, to exchange the said for the unsaid, with the feeling free and unpunished. Reverse is the place where opposites smell, touch, and finally exchange, in search of new truths, new versions. After all, who defines which side is right?
To invent the reverse is to dig the back of what one reads, to create the image of the word, the word of the image. Imagine worlds like dancing in silence. Reverse is weaving, with the rebel line that spins and unravels, the reverse of poetry.”
Illustrations by Alice Prestes.
Poetry by Luciana Soares.
Curated by Patrica Ferreira.
HOURS: 9h-20h, through Jan 6 (closed Sunday).
INAUGURATION: Saturday, Jan 4, 15h-19h.
FREE ENTRY.















