The immersive experience 'David Bowie: You’re Not Alone' opens to the public today at Lightroom near King's Cross in London. Produced in collaboration with the David Bowie Archive, it features rarely seen footage, personal notes, and audio narrated entirely in Bowie's words. Executive producer David Sabel described it as a thematic journey blending concert highlights with insights into the artist's creative mind.
'David Bowie: You’re Not Alone' runs from April 22 to October 10, with tickets available via Lightroom’s website. Written and designed by Mark Grimmer, creative director of the V&A’s David Bowie Is exhibition, and Tom Wexler, the 360-degree show uses projections across 11-meter-high walls and floors, enhanced by spatial audio and live music interpretations. It draws from thousands of hours of archive material, including previously unseen footage from tours like 1976's Isolar and 1978's Earl's Court, as well as reconstructed performances such as a 1976 rehearsal of 'Stay' and recut clips from D.A. Pennebaker's Ziggy Stardust film. The presentation loops through thematic chapters, tracing Bowie's path from his South London childhood to his final album 'Blackstar', touching on influences, failures like his 1972 Rainbow Theatre gig, and personal themes of spirituality and theatricality. Bowie's voiceover reflects on his early life: “Where we were in the suburbs... We just opted for some kind of colour and exhilaration in our lives.” David Sabel told NME during a preview that the show stitches together over 500 hours of interviews into a non-chronological narrative told solely in Bowie's words, capturing his humor and humanity. “There’s a sense of being at a gig, but you’re also time-travelling,” Sabel said. The experience coincides with 'Bowie Nights' events featuring Anna Calvi, Adam Buxton, and Carlos Alomar, plus a November charity reunion by guitarist Earl Slick's Glastonbury 2000 band at Loch Lomond in Scotland.