Weekly Newsletter

Published by: Douglas McFarlane on 21st Nov 2009 | View all blogs by Douglas McFarlane
LogoColorTextRight.jpg
Facebook and Twitter


I moved to Socialgo's software platform for the new UK Theatre Network in January and the network is growing from strength to strength. I'm delighted with the quality of their service and they've now brought out two new services to allow automatic login and sharing from Facebook and Twitter. I've got a bit of tweaking to do this week, but you will soon be able to easily share your favourite theatre and film articles across your social networks.

You can connect with me online at:-
http://www.facebook.com/douglasmcfarlane
http://www.twitter.com/ukfilm


Hollywood's Most Overpaid Stars

I enjoyed reading the most overpaid stars from Forbes. I wasn't too surprised with Will Ferrell being at the top, but Ewan McGregor was ranked second !  The challenges of Making It In Hollywood. Here's the article:-

http://www.forbes.com/2009/11/17/hollywoods-most-overpaid-stars-business-entertainment-overpaid-stars.html



West End Auditions for Children 
UK Theatre Network are supporting the casting of children in the West End. We receive casting information provided by the Youth Administrator. Read more....
http://www.uktheatre.net/forum/topic/56


Getting your tickets online

Here are UKTN, we work hard to bring you great ticket offers and we've teamed up with West End Theatre and Love Theatre to give you more choice. Remember you can click on 'tickets' on the main website too, and book in advance for those hard to get West End shows.


UK Theatre Network at West End Theatre
www.westendtheatre.com/uktheatrenetwork

We've added a special HAIRSPRAY competition to win two tickets to the show, plus there are new offers for Christmas including Peter Pan and The Snowman. 

UK Theatre Network at LoveTheatre
www.lovetheatre.com/uktheatrenet

Billy Elliot wins broadway awards. Griff Rhys Jones To Play Fagin in West End's Oliver! Kim Cattrall and Matthew Macfayden to Star in Noel Coward's Private Lives. Phill Jupitus, Belinda Carlisle and Sharon D Clarke To Join Cast of Hairspray. Former Spice Girl Melanie C to Star in Blood Brothers.  Whew, it's all happening in the West End.



The Actors' Society Christmas Party

http://www.theactorssociety.com/news

The Actors' Society is celebrating its launch with a Christmas Party on the River Thames. On boarding the boat complimentary wine and canapes, live music, a games room, a river boat tour of the Thames, and more...

The Actors' Society connects the actor with the industry in an atmosphere designed to support, educate and inspire professional actors in their career development.

On Wednesday, December 2nd, 7-11 p.m. we are celebrating our launch with a Christmas Party on the Thames.

- 100 Early Bird tickets at £17.50
- Standard tickets at £20

Tickets are limited and can be booked here: http://www.theactorssociety.com/news

      

 

FRI 20th

Werther

Published by: Steve Burbridge on Friday 20th November 2009 10:11am

Werther07.jpg
Werther

Opera North at Theatre Royal, Newcastle.

By no stretch of the imagination could I ever claim to be an opera buff. I always believed that a bunch of fat women warbling away in a foreign tongue wouldn’t be my cup of tea at all. It turns out my preconceptions were way off the mark!

Opera North’s stunning production of Werther, a rarely performed opera by Jules Massenet, was about as accessible as you could possibly get. It’s basically a story of unrequited love that ends in tragedy. Werther is a man who is hopelessly in love with a woman already promised in marriage to another.

Although it is sung in French it is easy to follow and compelling to watch. There are screens at either side of the stage, translating the wonderfully poetic dialogue into English.

The performances are exquisite. Paul Nilon and Alice Coote are brilliant as the star-crossed lovers, Werther and Charlotte. Both have powerful voices that are rich and full – perfect for delivering the emotion of the piece – although the swell of the huge orchestra sometimes engulfed and drowned out Nilon.

The sets, designed by Hildegard Bechtler, are simple yet effective, and the orchestra, conducted by Richard Farnes, wonderfully adds to the drama and intensity of the piece.

Highly recommended.

Steve Burbridge.

Performances: Wednesday 18th November 2009 & Saturday 21stNovember 2009. Both at 7.30pm

 0 Comments


WED 18th

'Collider' The Oxford Saturday Matinee Club

Published by: Ruth Curtis on Wednesday 18th November 2009 05:11pm

A complex scientific subject matter combined with theological debate was never going to be my first choice for a theatre experience. I did want to support this first venture of The Oxford Saturday Matinee Club but 'Collider' proved to be a very wordy piece and I often found it hard to believe in the ‘dialogue’ as much more than the four characters making speeches sometimes at rather than to each other or the audience. However, although it might not have been tremendous theatre and was over long (I was definitely clock watching towards the end), it featured some strong performances, especially from Steve Hay. The venue and staging did the play no favours. It was performed in the round but, with no raked audience seating, when actors sat down the sight lines were unforgiving. The friends who went with me (both of whom had stronger grasps of physics than me and one of whom is a devout Catholic) enjoyed the play far more than I did and it provoked some debate and discussion between them afterwards. They both declared it to be very good. I was unconvinced. The so-called vaudeville interludes did little to lift this from being effectively a difficult radio discourse and I may not know much about burlesque but found those elements some of the weakest. Hopefully The Oxford Saturday Matinee Club will provide greater entertainment with its future pieces. This one failed to move me and most of the information contained was too complex for me to retain on a Saturday afternoon.
WED 18th

Mark Morris Dance Group

Published by: Steve Burbridge on Wednesday 18th November 2009 11:11am

Mark Morris Dance Group

Theatre Royal, Newcastle

Friday 13th November 2009

INDIFFERENCE is probably the worst reaction that any performance can generate – it means that, for whatever reason, the production has not sufficiently engaged the watcher to provoke a more emotive response.

The Mark Morris Dance Group is renowned for its innovative contemporary dance performances.Indeed its namesake has been described as ‘one of the greatest choreographers of our time’ and his multi-award winning group – which started in 1980 in Brooklyn, New York – is now one of the world’s leading companies. Sadly, their latest repertoire, which played two nights at the Theatre Royal, failed to offer anything outstanding.

Although the auteur will always have a preferred meaning, often the individual will form their own interpretation of what is being performed on stage in front of them. Some may not even look beyond the aesthetics of the piece to find their enjoyment.

The programme comprised four different routines, each with a style, tone and mood of their own. The first, performed to Bach’s Italian Concerto, was perhaps the closest to what might be described as conventional dance.

Going Away Party, a camp, kitsch cowboy routine, entertained the audience with its swivelling hips and gyrating crotches. Personally, though, I felt that almost twenty five minutes of corny country and western was a tad too long.

Three Preludes, which replaced the billed Excursions, was a solo performed by Bradon McDonald to Gershwin’s Preludes For Piano. Costumed in black and white, presumably as a metaphor of the piano keys, the movements were Pierrot-esque.

The final piece, Grand Duo, was a spectacle of ritualistic fist-clenching, feet-stomping and body-writhing, in which the loin-clothed performers were almost tribal in their movement and expression.

What failed to impress me was the clumsiness with which some of the movements were executed. You don’t have to be an aficionado of contemporary dance to spot a wobbly landing or two.

Steve Burbridge.

TUE 17th

Dreamboats and Petticoats

Published by: Sue Marks on Tuesday 17th November 2009 04:11pm

Bill Kenwright and Laurie Mansfield in Association withUniversal Music

Present

Dreamboats and Petticoats

Book by Laurence Marks & Maurice Gran

Reviewed by Sue Marks at Milton Keynes Theatre on Monday 16thNovember 2009.

 6943.jpg

This show is a must for anyone who remembers the 1950s and ‘60s, but many of the songs featured are so well known it will appeal to anyone who loves these songs. Before the show started I wasn’t sure what to expect in terms of dialogue to music ratio. However, I was pleased to find that there was a good storyline woven around the songs. The show opens with an attic scene where a man shows his Granddaughter his old Fender guitar and says he will explain how he was once, very briefly, in a band. The attic disappears and the band explodes into the opening track, “Let’s Dance.” 

It is the early 1960s and most of the show is set in a youth club in Essex where some members have formed a band and some are attempting to write songs to enter a contest. There are a number of pretty young girls to distract them from their ambitions. There is romance, some of which is unrequited and teenage angst. Songs from the era are performed to a high standard throughout the show as the characters strive to fulfil their dreams. The dialogue is well written and amusing and the characters are believable and likeable. Everyone gave a good performance both in acting and singing. The musicians were also very accomplished.

The band was a permanent fixture on the stage and curtains were used to hide the band for scenes outside the youth club such as the attic or in people’s homes. A thick red curtain was used as a backdrop for the song contest which also served to obscure the band. When the youth club members went on a trip to Southend a couple of dodgems were used to create a fun fair and with a slight modification served as carriers on the tunnel of love. The furniture in the youth club was typical of that time.

The costumes reflected the era and were excellent. Some of the dresses were very colourful with frothy white petticoats underneath. The hair and makeup was also appropriate for the time.  The Teddy Boys’ outfits were particularly authentic.

This show is colourful and vibrant and certainly has a feel good factor. The audience must have enjoyed it as they were clapping in time with the music. Towards the end some people stood up to dance, I was pleased they had managed to resist doing this earlier in the show, as it obviously obstructs other people’s view of the stage. Fortunately those standing up didn’t block my vision of the last few minutes. If you want your spirits lifted go and see this show.

Dreamboats and Petticoats plays Milton Keynes Theatre until Saturday 21st November 2009. Milton Keynes Theatre Box Office 0844 871 7652 (bkg fee). The tour then continues playing New Theatre Hull from 23rd to 28th November 2009 and the Lyceum Theatre Sheffield from 01st to 05thDecember 2009.

www.miltokeynestheatre.com www.kenwright.com

Reviewed by Sue Marks at Milton Keynes Theatre on Monday 16thNovember 2009 on behalf of Catherine Brian.

 



To receive this by email, send a blank email to subscribe@uktheatre.net or join our social networking pages at http://www.uktheatre.net

 

Comments

0 Comments

     
Please login or sign up to post on this network.
Click here to sign up now.