UK Theatre Weekly Newsletter
Hi there
There’s lots as usual going on in the world
of theatre and film. I’m personally preparing for lots of
networking at Sheffield Documentary Festival in 2 weeks when
Making It In Hollywood screens to interested delegates. I’ve
already had requests for advanced screeners from Austrian and
French Film Sales and Acquisition companies.
It’s also starting to get into BAFTA voting time. The competition
for BAFTA members to get a seat where there’s a Q&A with top
directors and actors, is fierce and you have to plan ahead and be
quick to RSVP to the publicists. However I managed to get invited
to new Coen brothers film A Serious Man.
I’ll keep you posted on all those, in the meantime I hope you
enjoy all the colour pictures with snippets from the reviews.
Simply click on a title you like and you can read the full
magazine article online.
Enjoy your week of theatre and film.
Douglas McFarlane
editor@uktheatre.net
To get this newsletter in colour send a blank
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Now showing in the VIDEO section this
week
Secrets The
Play
http://www.uktheatre.net/videos/view/secrets_the_play_959.html
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In the EVENTS diary this week
1867
Mad Kings And Englishmen: History Hung, Drawn And Quartered
aje @ GoMA
Perseus and the Gorgon's Head
Romeo and Juliet
http://www.uktheatre.net/events.html
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With Reviews from around the UK
We are always looking to increase our team of volunteer
reviewers. If you have theatre or writing experience, email
editor@uktheatre.net
The Gift
Published by: Douglas
McFarlane on Thursday 22nd October
2009 06:10pm
An elderly farmer and what looks
to be either his young wife or his daughter are in a shabby
living room. I am assuming they are
related because he is a curmudgeon and I cannot think why she
would be there otherwise. But why does
she seem so at ease and why is she wearing that old-fashioned
dress?
THU22nd
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (Kings Theatre, Glasgow 20 October – 14 November, 2009)
Published by: Cameron Lowe on Thursday 22nd October 2009 05:10pm
It is difficult for me to articulate just how good Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is … because my jaw dropped while watching the show and it hasn’t fully recovered! WOW! Even if the car had been a huge disappointment, the show would have proved itself as an excellent piece of musical theatre. Every element screamed quality.
THU22nd
The Great Extension, Theatre Royal Stratford East
Published by: James Martin Charlton on Thursday 22nd October 2009 12:10pm

Anyone who nostalgically misses the heyday of 1970s ITV race comedy – epitomised by Love Thy Neighbour and Mind Your Language – should hurry themselves down to the Theatre Royal Stratford East for the new play by Cosh Omar, whose Battle of Green Lanes proved such a critical success at the same venue in 2004. The first act of the play, at least, will satisfy a demand for guffaws at broad comic situations, vulgarity, farcical argy-bargy and a dramatis personae in which racial, sexual and cultural stereotypes abound.
WED21st
Timing by Alistair McGowan
Published by: Elspeth Rae on Wednesday 21st October 2009 08:10pm
Timing, set in a trendy Soho sound studio is the first play written by impressionist Alistair McGowan. He bravely opts for fixed time and place, never leaving the studio, and plays on form by splitting scenes in two, the actor couple with a past on one side of the invisible glass, the producers and their angst on the other.
WED21st
Kes
Published by: Steve Burbridge on Wednesday 21st October 2009 05:10pm

Kes
Beautifully staged and beautifully acted, ‘Kes’ is one of the most haunting and thought-provoking plays I have seen in a long while.
Steve Burbridge.
Photo: Robert Day
WED21st
Steve Burbridge In Conversation With . . . Bernie Nolan
Published by: Steve Burbridge on Wednesday 21st October 2009 05:10pm

AS lead singer of The Nolans for thirteen years,
Bernie Nolan travelled all over the world and enjoyed
phenomenal success with her sisters. The group’s global record
sales topped 25 million and earned them more than twenty gold,
silver and platinum discs. After pursuing a successful solo
career, Bernie is back with Linda, Coleen and Maureen on a
sell-out UK Tour, which comes to The Metro Radio Arena on
Friday. Ahead of the gig, she tells STEVE BURBRIDGE why
she’s really in
the mood for dancing.
WED21st
The Pitmen Painters
Published by: Louise Winter on Wednesday 21st October 2009 01:10pm
classes. Initially he showed the men slides of
Renaissance art.
This approach did not engage the men so a more practical
approach was suggested; the men were to start making images
themselves. Lyon first encouraged them to try linocuts and then
to start painting..
Each member of the exemplary cast must be mentioned Deka Walmsley, David Whitaker, Michael Hodgson, Brian Lonsdale, and Lisa McGrillis. Performances are faultless and this is no doubt due, in part, to the fact that this remains the original cast from the premiere in 2007.
Hall intimately understands his subjects and the
community about which he writes but never resorts to
sentimentality. Nor is he patronising to us or to them.
MON19th
PAPER FLOWERS, written by Egon Wolff.
Published by: TREMAYNE (Potter) on Monday 19th October 2009 05:10pm
Both actors did a good job but I was drawn especially to the
fragility laid bare
in Eva’scharacter. It
is not an easy thing to do as an actor, to show your
vulnerability and actress Laura
Menendez managed to do this
very convincingly.
SUN18th
Enron - West End booking now open
Published by: Douglas McFarlane on Sunday 18th October 2009 10:10am
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