Dubai’s stand-up calendar for late March now includes Halki Halki Fati, the Vikas Kush Sharma show scheduled at the Dubai Performing Arts Auditorium, Dubai British School Jumeirah Park, Al Warood St 1, Jumeirah Park, Dubai, with the school reachable on +971 4 552 0247. Public ticketing pages currently show the event across Saturday, March 28 and Sunday, March 29, 2026, and one live listing specifically shows Sunday, March 29 from 7:00 PM onward, so buyers should confirm their selected date before checkout. Ticket prices currently start from approximately AED 99, which makes it one of the more accessible live comedy bookings on that weekend. This is a paid event and advance booking is the safer move. (suitable for couples, groups, solo; best for older teens and adults)
A Hinglish comedy night with broad appeal
Vikas Kush Sharma arrives with a format that leans on sharp everyday observations, clever storytelling and a crowd-friendly Hinglish rhythm rather than heavy production or theatrical spectacle. That matters in Dubai, because the city’s comedy audience often responds well to performers who keep the material relatable while still moving fast enough for a live-room atmosphere. The public event descriptions position Halki Halki Fati as a laugh-led night built for friends, date plans and casual weekend outings, and the language listing confirms it will be performed in Hinglish. Q-Tickets also shows Admission: All, although the tone of the show will likely land best with older teens and adults. If you want an easy-entry comedy plan without premium arena pricing, this sits in a comfortable middle ground.
Ticket choices and booking options
The current ticket structure gives buyers a few simple routes rather than a long seating maze. Platinumlist shows General Admission from approximately AED 99, VIP from approximately AED 199, and VVIP from approximately AED 249, while its broader event pages continue to list the show from AED 99. Q-Tickets is also actively listing the same event, so there is more than one reliable booking channel available at the moment. Because both platforms are already advertising the show publicly, price changes between now and the performance weekend remain possible depending on release stage and remaining inventory. The most reliable names to check for tickets are PLATINUMLIST and Q-TICKETS.

The venue setup changes the mood
Dubai British School Jumeirah Park is not a city-centre theatre district venue, and that gives this show a different feel from Downtown or Dubai Opera nights. The auditorium setting usually creates a more direct room connection between performer and audience, which tends to suit observational stand-up very well. At the same time, the Jumeirah Park location makes the night easier for audiences coming from Dubai Marina, JLT, Jumeirah Islands and the southern side of the city than for those crossing from the older parts of Dubai at peak evening traffic. The school’s official contact page confirms the campus address and phone details, which helps if guests want to verify location logistics before the event day. This is a neighbourhood-style performance setting, not a large entertainment district night out.
Arrivals from Dubai and nearby Emirates
If you are driving from central Dubai, the venue sits within practical reach through Sheikh Zayed Road, Garn Al Sabkha Street, Al Asayel Street, E6 Street and E23 Street, and both public listings strongly advise GPS navigation. Taxi and ride-hailing are straightforward options, especially for guests who do not want to navigate community roads after the show. Public transport is possible, although it is not seamless, because the nearest Metro access is Discovery Gardens Metro Station 2, roughly 2.6 kilometres away, with feeder links in the area including F31 and F43. If you are coming from Abu Dhabi, leaving in the late afternoon makes more sense than pushing close to showtime, and if you are coming from Sharjah or Ajman, an earlier departure helps avoid heavier cross-city evening pressure. The easiest version of this night is still car or taxi, not Metro-only travel.
Weather, parking and the smoother plan
At this stage, day-specific long-range certainty for Saturday, March 28, 2026 is still limited, but Dubai’s late-March outlook points to daytime temperatures around 31°C and evening conditions around 20°C, with generally dry weather and only light rain averages for the month. That means heavy mud is unlikely at this venue, although warm arrival conditions, mild late-night air and a bit of haze remain realistic. Light clothing works well for entry, but a thin outer layer can still help on the way back, especially if you are parking farther out or waiting for a car after the show. Because this is a school-campus venue inside Jumeirah Park, the final stretch before start time is the part most likely to feel tighter for drop-off and parking, so arriving early is the smart play. Ticket prices may change and remain approximately current, and the most practical booking names remain PLATINUMLIST and Q-TICKETS. Confirm your date before paying and get there early, because late arrivals usually create their own stress. For readers who follow Dubai event coverage through www.few.ae, this is the kind of smaller-format live night that rewards timing more than spontaneity.
