Jan 18th

Theatre Tickets - SALE NOW ON

By Douglas McFarlane
Backbeat
Don’t miss your chance to catch the final weeks of Backbeat – must end 18 February!

Hot Offer: 2 for 1 tickets
Normally: £55
Valid: Mon–Thurs and Sat mats until 13 Feb

Buy Tickets
Blood Brothers
Now starring Amy Robbins as Mrs Johnstone in London's legendary smash hit musical!
Hot Offer: £17.50 tickets
Normally: £65
Valid: Wed mats until 30 Apr.
Strictly limited availability
.

Buy Tickets
     
Legally Blonde
Winner of 7 awards in London. Starring Carley Stenson and Natalie Casey

Hot Offer: £35 tickets
Normally: £66.50
Valid: All perfs except 13–18 Feb
.

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Absent Friends
Stars Katherine Parkinson, Reece Shearsmith and Kara Tointon

Hot Offer: Top price for £35
Normally: £49.50
Valid: Mon-Fri perfs 26 Jan – 2 Mar
.

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Aida
Royal Albert Hall. No opera matches the grandeur and spectacle of Verdi's Aida.

Hot Offer: £5 off circle seats
plus free programme
Normally: £39
Valid: All perfs


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Crazy for You
Don't miss the opportunity to witness this 'glorious' (Daily Telegraph) musical.

Hot Offer: 2 for 1 tickets
Normally: £59.50
Valid: Mon-Thurs perfs until
29 Feb, excludes 13–17 Feb


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Oct 25th

Les Miserables - At The End Of The Day

By Douglas McFarlane
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For tickets and showtimes, please click here.


Jun 2nd

WE WILL ROCK YOU - 2 FOR 1 ON TOP PRICE TICKETS

By Douglas McFarlane

 

2 FOR 1 ON TOP PRICE TICKETS

 

WE WILL ROCK YOU

THE MUSICAL BY QUEEN AND BEN ELTON

WINNER - OLIVIER AUDIENCE AWARD 2011

In a future age of mindless manufactured music, where everyone dresses the same, thinks the same, is the same, hope of breaking free rests with an unlikely resistance - an alliance of rebel Bohemians deep below Planet Mall, waiting for a hero to bring the power of Rock back to the people. And in Galileo they may just have found their man… that is, unless the terrifying Killer Queen gets to him first, or even worse, he’s actually found somebody to love…

The spectacular musical phenomenon WE WILL ROCK YOU, winner of the Olivier Audience Award 2011, is now into its 10th rocking year and still as fresh, funny and fantastically entertaining as ever. Written by
legendary comedian and author Ben Elton and with a score of killer Queen tunes such as Radio Ga Ga, I Want to Break Free,
Bohemian Rhapsody
and of course We Will Rock You, it’s the champion of all musicals, so book your tickets now!


2 FOR 1 ON TOP PRICE TICKETS!
(USUALLY £60)
If you wish to buy more than 2 tickets you can at £30

Monday - Friday evenings and Wednesday Matinees

TO BOOK CALL 020 7907 7000
or CLICK TO BOOK ONLINE
Please enter promo code LTCD when booking online


Group rate valid Monday - Friday evening and Wednesday matinee.
Subject to availability and exclusion dates may apply.
A booking fee will apply.
Additional tickets may be purchased at the £30 rate at the time of booking.


The cast of We Will Rock You
Dominion Theatre

 

Jun 2nd

London's West End - Two for one and discount ticket offers

By Douglas McFarlane

Being Shakespeare : Trafalgar Studios 1 - 14 Whitehall, London, SW1A 2DY

Being Shakespeare

Trafalgar Studios 1 - 14 Whitehall, London, SW1A 2DY

15 June - 1 July 2011 - Top Price tickets for £29.50 (Mon-Fri)

Star of stage and screen, Simon Callow brings to life Shakespeare's unforgettable characters and the real man behind the legend in this triumphant one-man show. Callow joins forces with Jonathan Bate (Shakespeare biographer and editor of the RSC's Shakespeare: The Complete Works) and director Tom Cairns (Old Vic's All About My Mother, National Theatre's Aristocrats) to fill the stage in an extraordinary theatrical event. Following a hugely successful national tour, Callow's magnificent performance sets the West End alight for a strictly limited summer season.

**** 'Callow and Shakespeare: A brilliant combination' 
The Times No 1 Critic's Choice

Theatre Offer
Ticket
£29.50

Butley : Duchess Theatre - Catherine Street, London, WC2B 5LA

Butley

Duchess Theatre - Catherine Street, London, WC2B 5LA

31 May - 19 June 2011 - £29.50 for Top Price tickets (All performances)

Ben Butley is having a monumentally bad day. So bad, he's making sure everyone else has a worse one. His estranged wife has taken up with the most boring man in London. His beloved protégé has found a new benefactor. And in an unprecedented act of betrayal even the English department's resident failure has a book deal. 

Butley's trusty arsenal – mischievous irony and gleeful troublemaking – have never failed him yet. Might they finally prove to be the weapons of his own self-destruction?

Theatre Offer
Ticket
£29.50

Flying Karamazov Brothers : Vaudeville Theatre - 404 The Strand, London. WC2R 0NH

Flying Karamazov Brothers

Vaudeville Theatre - 404 The Strand, London. WC2R 0NH

9 - 10 June 2011 - Sneaky Previews £10 Offer

Take four entertainers who are musicians, comedians, acrobats, dancers, jugglers and philosophers. Add kilts, moustaches, musical instruments, two thousand cardboard boxes, tutus, topical satire and the ability to juggle anything. 

Who are they? The Flying Karamazov Brothers.

They don't fly, they're not Russian and they're not brothers. But they are the funniest, most thought-provoking, kilt-wearing, clever idiots in town. Direct from Broadway, this multi-faceted, mischievous and marvellous show at the Vaudeville Theatre in London's West End from June 9th, their first visit back to London for 17 years. For a strictly limited run you'll be entranced by the wit, comedy and virtuoso skills of these world renowned maverick masters of new-vaudeville in their new London home.

Theatre Offer
Ticket
£10

Lend Me A Tenor The Musical : Gielgud Theatre - Shaftesbury Avenue, W1V 8AR

Lend Me A Tenor The Musical

Gielgud Theatre - Shaftesbury Avenue, W1V 8AR

2 June - 31 Aug 2011 - £30 for Top Price tickets (All perfs)

Set in Ohio in 1934, where the failing Grand Opera Company is about to be saved by the arrival of the world's greatest tenor Tito Merelli.

When he is unexpectedly incapacitated, it falls to the director's meek assistant to find a replacement, a task made more difficult by a scheming soprano, a tenor-struck ingénue, a jealous wife and the Cleveland Police department.

Theatre Offer
Ticket
£30

Stomp : Ambassadors Theatre - West Street, London, WC2H 9ND

Stomp

Ambassadors Theatre - West Street, London, WC2H 9ND

4 Apr - 22 Jul 2011 (Sun - Fri, excl. 22/04/11- 02/05/11)

This multi-award winning show has a universal language of rhythm, theatre, comedy and dance. Eight performers use everything from Zippo lighters, plastic bags, bin lids and even the kitchen sink to hammer out an explosively feel good rhythm.

Buy 2 for 1 Tickets
Ticket
Various Prices

The 39 Steps : Criterion Theatre - 2 Jermyn Street, London SW1Y 4XA

The 39 Steps

Criterion Theatre - 2 Jermyn Street, London SW1Y 4XA

1 Mar - 30 Sept 2011. 2-4-1 on Top Price tickets (All perfs)

John Buchans the 39 Steps - memorably filmed by Alfred Hitchcock in 1935 - continues its sensational run at the Criterion Theatre.

Literally nothing has been cut from this hilarious and spectacular version of Britains most spell-binding thriller - legendary scenes include the chase on the Flying Scotsman, the Escape on the Forth Bridge, the first theatrical bi-plane crash ever stage, the rather provocative 'bedroom' sequence and the death-defying (or nearly!) finale at the London Palladium! 

With four actors playing a minimum of one hundred and thirty-nine roles, the 39 Steps proves to be the most astonishing theatrical tour de force of this, or any other, decade.

Buy 2 for 1 Tickets
Ticket
Various Prices

The Woman In Black : Fortune Theatre - Russell Street, London WC2B 5HH

The Woman In Black

Fortune Theatre - Russell Street, London WC2B 5HH

7 Mar - 30 Sept 2011 (Mon - Fri, inc. Sat Matinee only)

The most terrifying live theatre experience in the world! The unanimously acclaimed, The Woman in Black, combines the power and intensity of live theatre with a cinematic quality inspired by the world of film noir. It gives audiences an evening of unremitting drama as they are transported into a terrifying and ghostly world.

Celebrating over 21 years in the West End with over 7 million people having lived to tell the tale The Woman in Black is of one of the most exciting, gripping and successful theatre events ever staged.

"The most brilliantly effective spine chiller you will ever encounter... if you haven't seen this show yet you are missing a treat" Daily Telegraph

Buy 2 for 1 Tickets
Ticket
Various Prices

Yes Prime Minister : Apollo Theatre - 31 Shaftesbury Avenue, London. W1V 7DH

Yes Prime Minister

Apollo Theatre - 31 Shaftesbury Avenue, London. W1V 7DH

6 - 29 July 2011 - 2-4-1 on Top Price tickets (Mon - Fri only)

The original writers of the classic BBC TV series, Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn have reunited for this anniversary production and now the Prime Minister Jim Hacker, his Cabinet Secretary Sir Humphrey Appleby and his Private Secretary Bernard Woolley are back in this hilarious new play.

In a world of spin, Blackberrys and 'sexed up' dossiers, the PM is staring disaster in the face. The country is on the brink of financial meltdown and the Government's only apparent salvation comes from a morally dubious deal with the Foreign Minister of Kumranistan. Will Jim Hacker and his team of advisors be able to rescue the country from the edge?

Richard McCabe will be playing the role of Jim Hacker in the tour of Yes, Prime Minister with Simon Williams (Upstairs, Downstairs, Don't Wait Up, Holby City) as Sir Humphrey Appleby.

Yes, Prime Minister is a Chichester Festival Theatre Production.

Buy 2 for 1 Tickets
Ticket
Various Prices
May 7th

War horse: Much more than just a puppet show By Emily Bear

By Douglas McFarlane

 

I went to see a puppet show last week, now I know this may conjure up images of seaside Punch and Judy or a muppet show spectacle but although the show, War Horse, does feature puppets it’s certainly no joke on the stage.

War Horse, an adaptation of the novel of the same name by Michael Morpurgo, is currently showing at New London Theatre in the West End and is the latest in a line of National Theatre productions that have earned the company a reputation for producing some of the best family shows on the stage. 

Previous shows have included the popular shows of His Dark Materials, an adaptation of Phillip Pullman’s trilogy, and Coram Boy which both received positive reviews. Having seen a National Theatre production before, let us say that War Horse certainly had a lot to live up to.

War Horse tells the story through the eyes of Joey, a horse who is shipped off to work for the cavalry division in the First World War, and his master Albert who enlists in the army in order to find his beloved horse.

 Of course you may have spotted a small flaw in adapting this for the stage. Surely it is impossible to put a fully grown horse on the stage and have it as the central character? Putting an actual horse on the stage would likely be a fiasco and this is where the puppetry comes in, but this is no ordinary puppetry, this is a puppet from the Handspring Puppet Company.

The horse puppet for War Horse does not aim for realism but instead features a wooden framework with a translucent skin that manages to capture the energy and gracefulness of an equine entity. The mobility in the puppet is fantastic and the character is entirely believable.

The performances in the show were absolutely stellar and really brought the whole story to life, and although we went to see it so that our boys could have a trip to the theatre, it was completely enjoyed by all which just goes to show that this is more than just a puppet show for kids; it’s a highly powerful and emotive story that captures the entire audience.



Now showing at New London Theatre in the West End. 

Feb 13th

UK Theatre Network - Happy Valentine's Day

By Douglas McFarlane
 
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UK Theatre Network

www.uktheatre.net

Happy Valentine's Day

From all of us here at UK Theatre Network, to all theatre lovers, we hope you receive lots of lovely Valentine's cards. If not don't worry, cause you can get passionate about theatre by reading our magazine and connect with others online. Click more...

more

 

Traces By Sue Marks


Flying Music, Robert Jolley and Michael Boersma present The Les 7 Doigts de la Main production of

Traces

Reviewed by Sue Marks at Milton Keynes Theatre on Monday 8th February 2010.

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The show features five young people occupying a makeshift shelter from an unspecified impending disaster that lurks outside. In the belief that creativity is the antidote to destruction, the characters aim to make the most of what little time is left by using various means of expression to leave behind some traces of themselves. They tell their stories through a variety of genres which includes speech, music, dancing and breath taking acrobatics.  As their stories unfold the audience gains an insight into the performers’ real lives.

The performers are five young French-Canadian artistes; Antoine Auger, Antoine Carabinier-Lepine, Genevieve Morin, Philip Rosenberg and Jonathan Causaubon, who were all students of Montreal’s National Circus School. They have a wide range of performing experience and skills honed in circus schools and companies worldwide.

Featuring a pulsating soundtrack throughout, which ranges from rock ‘n’ roll to blues to hip hop, this production mixes acrobatics with theatre, urban and contemporary dance styles, skateboarding and basketball.

The acrobatics are amazing, they balance on each other’s heads, leap up high poles without using their hands and fly through hoops. I particularly enjoyed the incredible performance of the acrobat using the large metal hoop.

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Early in the show they introduce themselves individually by name, using a suspended microphone, together with three keywords which define them. This is followed by an amusing sketch where they swing the microphone calling out a name or keyword as it passes. Later in the first half of the show they take turns playing a piano which sounds remarkably good, particularly since it has been given the appearance of having been made from scraps of wood roughly cobbled together.  An old box serves as a piano stool. One of the group also plays guitar and performs a song. There is some basketball and skateboarding.

After the interval the pace of the show speeds up with the exhilarating acrobatics. Whilst I enjoyed the show I think the first half could be improved by being a little sharper in places. There were times I found myself more interested in the soundtrack than what was happening on stage. However the second half was brilliant. This is an innovative show that is worth seeing.

It is perhaps a sign of the times that world class acrobatics does not constitute a show in its own right. This show has clearly taken circus skills and made something more out of them but what really excites me is the show this is going to be in a few more years’ time because I believe it is still evolving.

Traces plays Milton Keynes Theatre from Monday 8th February to Wednesday 10th February 2010. Milton Keynes Theatre Box Office 0844 871 7652 (bkg fee).

The tour then continues playing Alhambra Theatre Bradford from Thursday 11th February to Saturday 13th February.

www.miltonkeynestheatre.com www.flyingmusic.com

Reviewed by Sue Marks at Milton Keynes Theatre on Monday 8th February 2010 on behalf of Catherine Brian.

FEB9th

Waxing Lyrical - The Story of Madame Tussaud

By Carolin Kopplin

Death_heads.jpg

The Rosemary Branch Theatre in Islington - winner of „Best Theatre“ in the 2010 Fringe Report Awards - presents a solo performance by Judith Paris about the life of Madame Tussaud. Although her name graces one of the main tourist attractions in London little is known about the life of Marie Tussaud.

 

Aptly directed by Ninon Jerome, Judith Paris recounts the story of this remarkable woman who was arrested as a royalist during the horrors of the French revolution and barely escaped the guillotine. Marie Tussaud tells her younger son the story of her life before the opening of her new show. Now aged 72 she has been working hard since she was a child to become a gifted artist as well as a successful business woman. She describes how she was taught the art of waxwork by her uncle Philippe Curtius against the explicit wishes of her mother who saw her daughter in a more traditional role. Marie eventually married but left her husband and her younger son to tour the towns of Britain with her wax cabinet, fighting off competition against a background of fire, riot, shipwreck, and betrayal. Madame Tussaud became one of the greatest showpeople along with P.T. Barnum - which makes one wonder: How much of her story is really true? 

 

Judith Paris, who has also written the play, gives a beautiful performance as the admirable Marie Tussaud.

 

9 – 14 February 2010, Tue – Sat 7.30 pm, Sun 3 pm

Tickets: £ 12 / £ 10 (concessions)

BOX OFFICE: 020 7704 6665 

The Rosemary Branch, 2 Shepperton Road, London N1 3DT

FEB9th

Travels with my Aunt.

By kelly potter

Travels 



THE QUEEN'S THEATRE.  HORNCHURCH


Travels with my Aunt

By Giles Havergal

Adapted from the novel by
Graham Greene

Directed by Liz Marsh
Designer: Rodney Ford
Lighting Designer: Chris Howcroft


This production of Havergal's adaptation of Graham Greene's novel was fast moving, fast speaking, action packed, but simply staged. All elements that I found made it a success.

As an audience member taking your seats, you were mildly aware of a character, sweeping and setting up a minimalistic stage, lined with high cupboards and drawers. Once the audience were seated, this stage manager, played by Simon Jessop, introduced us to Henry Pulling.  Three characters identically dressed in plain grey suits entered the stage, all introducing themselves as Henry Pulling, a retired bank manager with hardly any interests apart from growing dahlias who, at his mother's funeral, was reunited after many years with his mother's sister, Aunt Augusta. Each Henry (Elliott Harper, Sam Pay and Marcus Webb) took turns addressing the audience.  Full attention was needed in order not to miss anything from this story, narrated by the character of Henry. Each character and scenario was played out by him, with the help of the stage hand who ran around the stage opening draws to reveal beds, graves, hotels suites, taxis and trains. Henry relays the story of his dreary life until meeting his aunt after many years at his mother's funeral.  He forges a new friendship with this relative and follows her in her desire to revisit her younger, more colourful years of travelling the world surrounded by smugglers, war criminals and con men. Each actor plays numerous characters on a journey that takes us from Brighton to Paris, the Orient Express to Istanbul and a final trip to Panama.   Each time a new character was introduced, one of the three Henries would simply put on a hat or different coloured shirt or hold a prop.  The mannerisms were enough to be able to visualise each character and was powerful and effective.  I could actually empathise with each character.  One member of the audience let out a gasp when the gruesome fate of one of the characters was revealed, we'd become that close to them, there were almost tears at the end.  

The pure wordiness of the play and the faultless performances of the cast, switching characters with ease while keeping the pace constant, made this a thoroughly engaging production.  Witty, fast, timed to perfection, especially Simon Jessop's background antics as the stage manager messing up his sound effects and costume preparations,  this was something I'd see again.

Showing 5 -27 February

FEB8th

A Midsummer Night's Dream at Bolton Octagon

By Caroline May


Shakespeare’s magical comedy A Midsummer Night’s Dream is the latest play in the Octagon season to be directed by the Artistic Director, David Thacker, who won a brace of Olivier Awards for his RSC production ofPericles twenty years ago.

The Sergeant Pepper-influenced publicity flags up a Swinging Sixties theme, so it’s surprising to find the auditorium initially awash with sombre army uniforms and Che Guevara-style propaganda posters - a nod to the very un-swinging military dictatorship which seized power in Athens in 1967.

Rob Edwards (eponymous hero of that 1990 Pericles) doubles the roles of Theseus, head of Athens’ repressive jackbooted regime, and Oberon, the equally cruel despot of fairyland.  Paula Jennings is Theseus’ black-veiled spoil-of-war Hippolyta who becomes translated into a white mini-dressed, sexually liberated Titania. 

Designer Ashley Shairp’s acid-coloured playground of a forest, teeming with bouncing balls and magic lanterns, seems to unleash the potential in every character, including a quartet of mismatched lovers fleeing from the city, and a weaver with a thespian bent and an ass’s head.

Vanessa Kirby’s heart-broken Helena sets the stage alight with her passion, energy and comic timing - no wonder Rob Edwards’ magisterial Oberon is so visibly taken by her.  Compassion for the young mortal melts his hard heart and leads to a sequence of reconciliations, including his own with Paula Jennings’ luscious and uninhibited Titania.

Kieran Hill makes an unusually good-looking Bottom and is beautifully rigged out for his Act V turn as Pyramus, but Russell Dixon’s Peter Quince runs off with the comedy honours for a spot on portrait of a fruity old-school actor in a classic piece of character acting.

The handling of the verse is uniformly excellent, and David Thacker’s inspired use of the entire auditorium really brings the show alive, ably assisted by music director Carol Sloman’s trippy score and Wayne Dowdeswell’s hallucinogenic lighting.

The production could benefit from being played at a much faster pace as its current running time is more akin to Hamlet than a comedy which I once saw performed in ninety minutes flat.  Nevertheless this is a colourful, energetic and lucid production of the original rom-com.

 

A Midsummer Night’s Dream is on at Bolton Octagon until Saturday 6 March 2010 

Tickets: from £9.00

Eves: Mon-Sat @ 7.30

Matinees: Friday 5, Saturday 6, Monday 8, Wednesday 17 and Sat 27 Feb @ 2pm

Box Office: 01204 520661

www.octagonbolton.co.uk

FEB6th

The Machine Gunners

By Steve Burbridge

The Machine Gunners.JPG
The Machine Gunners

The Customs House, South Shields

The themes of love, loss, loyalty, friendship, childhood and warfare are skilfully interwoven into a musical that tells the tale of a group of teenagers growing up on Tyneside during the Blitz.

Robert Westall’s The Machine Gunners was published in 1975 and won the Carnegie Medal for Children’s Literature, became a set text in schools, a million seller and a classic BBC TV series. This musical adaptation, written by Ken Reay and Tom Kelly with music by John Miles, was first staged at The Customs House in 1998 and then spent a month at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival where it received rave reviews. It returns to The Customs House, with a stellar cast, as part of the venue’s fifteenth anniversary season.

Fourteen-year-old Chaz McGill (played by James Baxter) is an avid collector of shrapnel and other forms of wartime memorabilia, which he finds amongst the debris of the bombsites in his home town, Garmouth. One day, he stumbles across the tail-end of a German fighter, its machine gun and its pilot.

Together with his gang of mates, Chaz decides to keep the German airman as a prisoner of war and he is secreted in a disused garden shed. Soon, though, the teenagers grow fond of Rudi and a set of unlikely friendships are formed.

The Machine Gunners is a piece of theatre that succeeds on every level. As dramatic as it is comedic, you cannot help but get caught up in the adventures of the youngsters, whilst also empathising with the fears and concerns of the adults.

Director Gareth Hunter has gathered together a cast comprising much of the best of North East talent. James Baxter’s portrayal of Chaz is carefully crafted and utterly believable. The relationship between Chaz and the other members of his gang, played by Tom Booth (Cem), Steven Stobbs (Clogger), Jamie Hannon (Nicky) and Rachel Teate (Audrey) is extremely convincing. Wayne Miller and Charlie Richmond also deliver great performances as Bodser the bully and John, respectively.

Neil Armstrong and Tracy Gillman strike up a great rapport as Chaz’s parents, whilst Annie Orwin maximises the comedy in her role as nosey-parker Mrs Spalding. Jamie Brown as Rudi, the German air-gunner, puts in a fine performance, as does Louis Roberts in the slightly limited role of Sergeant Green. Donald McBride and Tony Neilson complete the line-up as members of the Garmouth Home Guard.

Some of the songs stand up better than others, with ‘Gossip’, ‘F.R.I.E.N.D.S’ and ‘He Will Need You’ being the showstoppers. However, it is the story that completely sweeps you up and makes The Machine Gunners memorable for all the right reasons.

Steve Burbridge.

The Machine Gunners runs until Saturday 13th February 2010.

 

FEB5th

Salt by Fiona Peek at Manchester Royal Exchange Studio

By Caroline May
SaltS.jpg

Fiona Peek’s new play Salt was co-winner of the Royal Exchange’s Bruntwood Playwriting Competition in November 2008, and the premiere of this sophisticated social comedy has been eagerly anticipated.  

The action takes place between July 2007 and March 2008 during the course of five dinner parties in Simon and Amy’s beautiful basement kitchen.  Simon’s stable law firm salary and Amy’s chic little gallery job provide them and their children with a lifestyle straight out of a weekend colour supplement.  However their two child-free friends Rachel and Nick (Amy’s old flame from college days) are struggling with debt now that his freelance journalism commissions are drying up and RSI has ended her orchestral career.

Fiona Peek’s debut play, with its skilfully interwoven themes of debt, fertility, work/life balance and food porn, thoroughly nails the late-noughties zeitgeist.  The other unacknowledged but ever-present problem plaguing the middle-classes is excessive recreational drinking - a vice which does more than its fair share to inflame the situation here.

Even if external circumstances didn’t play a part, the chemistry between Amy and Nick and their uninhibited flirting has “slow-motion car crash” written all over it.  Beth Cordingly’s smug Amy is still proprietorial of her ex, constantly reminding Rachel (and Simon) of how long they’ve known each other and therefore how much better she understands him than his wife does.

Simon Chadwick plays her husband as an uptight conformist pretending to be a laid back peacemaker.  He tries to remain aloof from the emotional maelstrom but this diplomacy only masks his diffidence towards the other couple.  You form the impression that if he and Amy were to divorce, she would get Rachel and Nick in the settlement.

Kevin Harvey’s slightly-scouse and immature Nick, one of those nightmare guests who can’t distinguish between a dinner party debate and a stand-up row, is stuck in the laddish culture of the 1990s, and Esther Hall’s brittle Rachel is as highly strung as her own violin when confronted with the dilemma of treating her immature husband as a child or making him face up to his responsibilities.

Ben Stones’ sleek set is like watching the window display in a designer furniture shop coming alive, and Jo Coombs’ fluid and fast-paced production captures the authentic tone of entitlement of the (apparently) affluent professional classes.

My only quibble is that the bombshell dropped in the dying moments is treated with such brevity and underplaying as to be almost subliminal - if this was on DVD you’d frantically rewind it trying to work out exactly what happened.  But even without a freeze-frame facility the first-night audience was highly appreciative of this witty and clever new play.

 

Salt is on until Saturday 20 February 2010 

Prices: £4 (conc)-£9.50

Evenings: Mon-Sat @ 7.30

Matinees: Wed & Sat @ 2.30

Box Office: 0161 833 9833

www.royalexchange.co.uk




FEB4th

Never Forget

By Steve Burbridge

Philip Olivier in NEVER FORGET - Photo credit Paul Coltas.jpg
Never Forget

The Tyne Theatre & Opera House

IT seems that the future of musical theatre is heading in the direction of the ‘juke-box’ musical. With a plethora of productions based on the back catalogue of groups such as ABBA, Queen and Boney M, it was a sure bet that one featuring the music of Take That would pop up.

‘Never Forget’ tells the story of five young men who enter a talent competition to form a Take That tribute band. Along the way, they discover that fame comes at a price but friendships last forever.

The ladies were out in full force, no doubt attracted as much by the physique of former Brookside and Hollyoaks star, Philip Olivier, as the hits penned by Gary Barlow. There was a huge scream upon his first appearance, followed by wolf-whistles and calls of ‘Get your kit off!’

The show isn’t exactly Ibsen or Chekhov – nor does it claim to be. It’s as camp as a row of pink tents and as cheesy as a Quatro Formaggi pizza, but the songs are fabulous and the choreography is breathtaking and the special effects are impressive, too.

‘Never Forget’ is an uplifting show that positively exudes the feel-good factor and makes for a great evening’s entertainment. Well worth a visit.

Steve Burbridge.

Runs until Saturday 6th February 2010.

FEB4th

Blood Brothers (2 – 13 Feb 2010, Kings Theatre, Glasgow)

By Cameron Lowe

Blood BrothersHave you heard the story of the Johnstone twins? If not, you have missed what has become a classic of British musical theatre and now is your chance to hear the tale! Willy Russell’s Blood Brothers is on tour - follow a trail of tears and snotty handkerchiefs all the way to the King’s Theatre, Glasgow until 13 February 2010.


Glasgow-born songstress, Vivienne Carlyle, stars as Mrs. Johnstone, a 1960s Liverpudlian mother of seven who is just about making ends meet, until her husband leaves and the twins arrive. Reluctantly she makes a deal with Mrs. Lyons (Tracy Spencer), her well-to-do employer, to give one of her twins away. And so, irresistible and tragic wheels are set in motion as the twins are destined to be born and then to die on the self same day.


The story is largely light hearted and entertaining despite the tear-streaked faces that have famously been leaving performances of this musical all over the world. It follows the growth of the boys from childhood to adulthood and the script is bursting with the gritty Liverpool humour that made the writer famous. The humour is also observational and sucks the audience into a real bond with the characters as we sympathise with their poverty and remember schoolboy fun that helped to lighten the mood in difficult times. The tragedy, when it falls, feels very personal. The musical score, in isolation, seems almost unremarkable but together with the on-stage drama it adds great depth to the contrasts of mood that are the bedrock of this musical’s success. The audience can even take a few tunes home with them “My Child”, “Easy Terms” and “Tell Me It’s Not True” being eminently hummable.

 

The production has changed very little over the years, but the talented cast add their personal nuances to the timeless story.  Vivienne Carlyle took the role of Mrs. Johnstone (previously played by such well known actresses as Stephanie Lawrence, Kiki Dee, Lyn Paul and four of the Nolan sisters) in her stride, never over dramatising, never over cooking the accent.  She took a nightmare narrative and made it real.  The combination of Sean Jones and Paul Davies as the twins, Mickey and Eddie, was the perfect mix.  I’ve had the pleasure of being entertained by Sean Jones in a previous tour and he is definitely my favourite Mickey.  His transformation from carefree seven-year-old to drug-dependant adult is heartbreaking in itself.  Chemistry with his on-stage sibling as well as his childhood sweetheart (Linda, played by Kelly-Anne Gower) was wonderful. Finally, Robbie Scotcher’s menacing portrayal of the Narrator was the ideal balance of singing talent and threatening demeanour.

 

No other musical can take you through the entire spectrum of human emotion like this. Book your ticket today.

Listings Info: 

Blood Brothers 
King’s Theatre, Glasgow
 
Tue 2 – Sat 13 Feb
 
Mon – Sat eves 7.30pm
 
Wed & Sat mats 2.30pm
 
Thu 4 Feb mat 2.30pm 

Audio described performance 11 Feb 7.30pm 
Signed performance 12 Mar 7.30pm 

Tickets: £11.50 - £30 
Box Office 0844 8717 648 (Bkg fee)
 
www.ambassadortickets.com/glasgow (bkg fee) 

FEB4th

Crying Out Loud presents WHAT IF, created and performed by Layla Rosa, Jacksons Lane Theatre, Highgate.

By Nicola Hollinshead
Layla Rose.jpg

WHAT IF...is a stunning new piece of work by artist, theatre maker and SHUNT director Layla Rosa & company. There is a simplicity of imagery from the opening that is compelling and is enhanced by a hypnotic soundscape, setting the atmosphere of the journey to come.

A lone rope hangs down at one end of the stage and on the other, a pair of glittery, silver high-heel shoes are bathed in light. TV screens on either side display looped images of women in veils and images of hands veiling and unveiling different women's heads.

The figure swathed in black and veiled who sits and on a high stool and sings to us is enigmatic and mysterious. Because of the veiling and complete covering of the body our focus goes to the expressive movements of her hands and feet in order to try to understand the feeling and meaning of the song. In fact, there is a strong emphasis throughout the show on hands and feet, as if the extremities are the only 'free' parts available to really express themselves until the final 'reveal' at the end, where it appears a transformation has taken place for the main protagonist of the piece.

The semi-autobiographical journey is never over-stated or explained, but instead we are left to make up our own minds about what the piece of work is saying and what we each take from it.

The aerial work in itself is simply outstanding. The fact that the performer is blindfolded makes the routines even more impressive how she literally 'feels' her way up the rope with her feet and lets herself drop back down from held positions to within inches of the floor.

Beautiful images remain long afterwards in your mind; the swing sequence is both exhilarating and poetic, and the mirroring dance with the 'Western' counterpart is inspired.

Imaginative, haunting and expertly constructed, it is a unique combination of disciplines that results in an independent and innovative voice, WHAT IF is one of a number or performances at Jacksons Lane coming up this season to celebrate these art forms.

For further information on future tour dates of WHAT IF : 

www.cryingoutloud.com

Jacksons Lane theatre in Highgate has also just launched a brand new website www.jacksonslane.org.uk which is now live and means that Jacksons Lane’s audience can now book tickets online directly through the box office system at a reduced booking fee of only £2.

 


Dec 10th

UK Theatre and Film Network - Last Newsletter 2009

By Douglas McFarlane
HELLO THERE UK THEATRE AND FILM NETWORKERS

BAFTA

The BAFTA movies have been filling my post box on a daily basis, as the awards season starts to heat up and voting kicks off over the Xmas and New Year period.  This year as usual, BAFTA members receive complimentary copies of Hollywood Reporter and Screen International. In order for these publications to include major adverts from the top films they need to justify to their advertisers that their publication will land in the hands of voters, in order to help influence a vote in their direction.  

Among the many films that are catching my attention are this little lot:-

It's Complicated (Meryl Streep, Alec Baldwin, Steve Martin)
Quentin's Inglorious Basterds, Peter Jackson's District 9, Public Enemies with Johnny Depp (enjoyable), the Coen's A Serious Man (an interesting film), George Clooney's Up In The Air (dull, don't go there), An Education (Peter Sarsgaard and Rosamind  Pike are superb), Lovely Bones, The Hangover (very funny), and Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince.

I've chosen a few to see on the big screen, tomorrow night is AVATAR, the $250million digital extravaganza from Titanic-man James Cameron and on Monday it's NINE, the sexy, sassy musical with the all singing all dancing talents of Penelope Cruz and Kate Hudson. 

AUSTRALIA

I'm spending Xmas and New Year in Australia for the first time. I'm really looking forward to it as I'll be switching off from work, technology, blogs, the internet, facebook, twitter and all forms of digital communication. But don't worry, it'll all happen automatically. When a anyone publishes a review to the magazine, a link to it appears on Twitter and Facebook shortly after. So join me at www.twitter.com/ukfilm  or www.facebook.com/douglasmcfarlane

And I'll try and bring back some sunshine.


TEDDINGTON

In late January I'll be moving from the lovely views of Tower Bridge, to the tranquil suburb of Teddington. On the same street as Teddington Studios and the plush Lensbury Club. It'll be a nice change from living in the city. 

INTERNET BANKING

Finally, as if that wasn't keeping me busy enough, I was successful this week in getting a 6 month assignment to project manage the launch of the world's largest Internet Bank, which was rather fortunate given the current climate in the banking industry.

So, all in all, a fantastic end to 2009 and some very bright beginnings in 2010. I'd also like to wish you and your family a wonderful time over the festive season and a very happy new year.

See you in 2010.

Douglas McFarlane
Editor, UK Theatre and Film Network
www.uktheatre.net
www.ukfilm.tv


DEC 10th

Aladdin

By Steve Burbridge
Aladdin images 019.jpg

Aladdin

Darlington Civic Theatre

They say that you should never judge a book by its cover – well, if that’s the case, then you should also never judge a panto by its headliners.

I must admit that I initially turned my nose up at the prospect of reviewing a production starring The Grumbleweeds and X-Factor’s Chico, expecting it to be a bit of a Z-list celebrity affair. The taste of a large portion of humble pie is not a pleasant one, let me tell you, but I must swallow it nevertheless!

Aladdin is everything a good panto should be – frothy, frivolous fun – and this is largely due to Chico, who plays the title role. A natural extrovert, he throws himself wholeheartedly into delivering a performance that is so energetic and physically demanding that it must, surely, be powered by a plentiful supply of ‘the batteries with the copper coloured top.’

The Grumbleweeds – well, two of them anyway – step into the shoes of the Chinese policemen to provide much of the trademark slapstick. Robin Colvill, as Pc Wishee, and Graham Walker, as Pc Washee, are true masters of their art and delight the audience with a brilliant mix of comedy, music and impressions. Their instant rapport with the children in the audience is phenomenal, especially considering that none of the youngsters are old enough to remember them from their 1980s heyday.

Max Somerset is fantastic as the evil Abanazar, convincing the kids that he really is a sorcerer with his magic tricks and flame-throwing staff, whilst Bobby Bennett, a seasoned ‘dame’, treats us to a kind and cuddly Widow Twankey.

Sarah Brown is a quintessential Princess Jasmine and she shines brightest of all during her musical numbers, in which she proves that a petite princess can still produce a powerhouse performance.

There are some amazing circus acts within the production, encompassing juggling, plate-spinning and acrobatics. Yu Yin as So-Shy astonishes young and old alike with her incredible skill and dexterity – the act involving the Chinese parasols is absolutely breathtaking. Bubu Endresz, who doubles-up as The Emperor and The Genie of the Lamp, is equally as impressive.

The talented ensemble of six adds colour and movement to the musical numbers, whist performing Sarah St George’s slick and stylish choreography with precision and panache.

Director David Fleeshman ensures that the action crackles along at a pace that retains the attention of children with even the shortest of attention spans and the script, by Jon Conway, includes plenty of opportunity for audience participation and contains all the required elements to qualify this as a good old-fashioned traditional panto.

Indeed, this production of Aladdin enchants the audience with some real treasure of the Orient and has spirits soaring even higher than a magic carpet.

Until Sunday 17th January 2010

 0 Comments


DEC 8th

Darker Shores by Michael Punter directed by Anthony Clark

By Katherine Hayes
Darker Shores a new play by Michael Punter is a festive treat for theatergoers this December. 
The modern stage at Hampstead has been transformed into a Victorian Gothic parlour. Here is  where spirits abound. Man of science Professor Gabriel Stokes ( Tom Goodman-Hill) enlists American spiritualist Tom Beauregard ( Julian Rhind-Tutt) to investigate  the strange phenomena he encountered in a seaside house in Sussex. 

This is a thoroughly entertaining play that keeps up the suspense and momentum till the very end. The story begins with Beauregard and Stokes discussing the happenings in Sussex, echoes of the Woman in Black. However the similarities end there as a plot driven by the passions of one man and the determination of another take us on a journey into the unkown world of the other side. 

At times darkly comic, at others sensitve, with wonderful effects by magicians and illusionists to boot, whats not to like about this production?

Standout performances from Vinette Robinson as Florence the housemaid and Pamela Miles as Mrs Hinchcliffe the housekeeper with a desperate secret. Though Rhind-Tutt's southern accent is at times uneven, both he and Goodman-Hill make a great pair to accompany on their mission to discover the supernatural.
Not to be missed!
Darker Shores 
Hampstead theatre 
3 December - 16 January

DEC 8th

Sleeping Beauty

By kelly potter
3 December - 16 January 


Sleeping Beauty
   


The Queen's Theatre, Hornchurch

by Nicholas Pegg

music and lyrics by Carol Sloman

Directed by Matt Devitt
Sleeping Beauty


“Don’t be silly, Silly Billy!” still rings in my ears after this thoroughly enjoyable performance of Sleeping Beauty by cut to the chase accompanied by children from local stage schools at the Queen’s Theatre, Hornchurch.

The tone was immediately set by Simon Jessop as William Sillium, otherwise known as Silly Billy, bearing a vague resemblance to Frank Spencer.  Jessop did a good job of warming up the audience, instructing on when and what to shout.  There was no lack of audience participation, first on the agenda was to single out an unsuspecting adult to harass, the participant was a very willing John, who was given a pink fluffy headband to wear and some lines to shout, to the squealing joy of all children in close vicinity.

Chris MacDonnell’s Nanny Clutterbuck was a delight in an assortment of outrageously ridiculous costumes.  She delivered one-liners and song intros that only a pantomime dame can get away with.  She occasionally threw one up for the adults; you had to be pretty sharp to catch them, but when they landed, they landed well, along with the handfuls of sweets thrown into the audience.  The kids were in a frenzy before the second scene.

Participation was encouraged throughout and this performance fulfilled all the requirements of a good pantomime.  Calls of, ‘Behind you!’ And  ‘Oh no it isn’t.’ were not just limited to the younger audience as plates were dropped and smashed, and faces landed in cakes.  The good Fairy, Forget-Me-Not (Lucy Thackeray) was gladly helped in her need to remember names. Tom Clutterbuck (Elliot Harper), the thigh slapping love interest of the sleeping princess, Aurora (Sarah Scowen) performed a heroic sword fight sequence with the bad Fairy Carabosse (Jane Milligan) over her spell book.  The audience were employed as allies of the brave group who were crossing oceans and mountains in order to find a way of waking up the princess from her hundred-year sleep.  The spell book was passed between the audience as Carabosse fought to get it back. The intrepid group were eventually rewarded for their efforts, as they found the spell and were helped back to the castle by an extremely impressive dragon, (I was almost frightened). The boos and hisses and overwhelming heckling helped to rid the world of the evil Carabosse.  I was enchanted by the puppet show, illustrating the characters’ journey back to the castle on the blackened stage and stunned by the flying dragon as it passed overhead, carrying the characters on its back.

This is truly where cut to the chase shine, using their musical experience and sense of fun  Jane Milligan’s powerful voice carried along a great number, backed by the children and Sarah Scowen and Elliot Harper performed a couple of coming of age duets beautifully. The dance routines, especially King Boris’s Tango style dance with Nanny Clutterbuck in his attempts to woo her, were highly entertaining.


The Queen's theatre showed their commitment to and their familiarity with their audience.  Children from  the local schools were mentioned as well as individuals who were celebrating birthdays.

This was a fun filled evening that was certainly not just for the kids, as long as you unleash the inner child and lose your inhibitions and have a go at screaming at the top of your voice…’Don’t be silly, Silly Billy!’ you’ll have a ball…go on.

 

Sign Language Interpreted performances - Wednesday 16 December and Thursday 7 January at 6.30pm - Interpreted by Shaun Hunsley
Audio Described performance - Thursday 7 January at 2pm - Described by Jon Polden 



Sleeping Beauty homepage info@queens-theatre.co.uk

 

 

0 Comments


DEC 8th

Peter Pan

By Steve Burbridge
peter&wendy.jpg

Peter Pan

Northern Stage, Newcastle upon Tyne

Northern Stage’s Christmas productions are, traditionally, presented as an alternative to pantomime. Last year’s excellent production of Hansel and Gretel was the perfect example of how to re-tell a well-loved tale without slapstick, audience participation and double entendres – and it worked.

This year’s presentation of Peter Pan claims to ‘rediscover the charm of the original story that has enchanted children for nearly 100 years.’ In doing so, the auditorium has been redesigned and the traverse stage means that the use of scenery and dropcloths is out of the question. However, some inventive use of props sees the beds of the Darling children being adapted to recreate Neverland and the deck of The Jolly Roger, Captain Hook’s ship.

Not all the changes are as effective as this, though, and I was left wondering as to why Tinkerbell has been transformed into a size-zeroTeletubby with the voice of Sweep from The Sooty Show.

The decision to distance the production from all elements associated with pantomime seemed slightly half-hearted in certain respects. Personally, I’d have preferred it if they’d gone the whole nine yards and included a ‘dame’ or avoided the cross-dressing completely. Either way, it would have been better than Thomas Dyer-Blake’s cringingly embarrassing performance as Annabelle the nanny, which was mediocrity in a mob-cap.

I also found the image of the two mermaids, played by Caroline Reece and Juliet Thompson, caressing each other and stroking one another’s hair to be gratuitously homoerotic, rather disturbing, and totally inappropriate for a children’s production.

Much of the magic of the tale has been destroyed by the obsession to be innovative and avant-garde and the few opportunities to enchant and enthral were shamefully squandered: the fantastic sparkling clockwork crocodile was only required to trundle from one side of the stage to the other on a couple of occasions, whilst the flying scenes were devoid of any magic at all – how can a child engage with the story and really believe that Peter Pan can fly if they are subjected to watching the actors fastening themselves into the harnesses first?

Stephen Sharkey’s script is laden with great chunks of verbose dialogue which, I would imagine, might be quite difficult for children to penetrate and comprehend. He might have been wiser to cut some of the dialogue in favour of a few more swashbuckling scenes, of which there was a distinct lack.

Credit must be given to Louis Roberts, who gave an energetic and engaging performance in the title role. Christian Bradley as Captain Hook, Micky Cochrane as Smee and Tilly Gaunt as Wendy all did their best to inject some excitement into the piece.

Sadly, the pursuit of style over substance has resulted in a production that has no magic, no heart and no soul.

Steve Burbridge.

Peter Pan runs until Saturday 9 January 2010.

 0 Comments


DEC 6th

Sleeping Beauty

By Steve Burbridge
Cast Shot 1.JPG


Sleeping Beauty 

THE CUSTOMS HOUSE, SOUTH SHIELDS

There are many aspects of the festive season that I always really look forward to: a turkey dinner; parties; catching up with friends . . . the list goes on. And somewhere near the very top of that list is going to see ‘the little panto with the big heart’ at The Customs House in South Shields.

It’s one of those things that, for me, makes Christmas – along with the Queen’s speech, Bing Crosby singing ‘White Christmas’, mulled wine and mince pies.

Following on from the phenomenal success of Goldilocks and the Three Bears, the cast – a mixture of familiar and new faces – are treating audiences to the tale of Sleeping Beauty.

Ask anyone in the country to list the essential elements of a good old traditional panto and they might come up with a list as long as your arm. However, ask anyone in South Tyneside the same question and you’ll probably get only one answer – Dame Dotty and Tommy.

Ray Spencer (Tommy) and Bob Stott (Dame Dotty) are, without any shadow of a doubt, the basis of The Customs House panto and the reason for that is evident – their sheer enjoyment of playing opposite each other in addition to their propensity to deviate, expertly, from the script and indulge in a spot of ad-libbing, which results in a performance that is fresh and spontaneous.

I’m sure that to explain the plot of a story that is as well-known and well-loved as Sleeping Beauty would be superfluous, so it seems more appropriate to focus on the performances.

Peter Darrant’s villain is a stalwart of this particular venue’s panto . This year, as the Evil Chancellor Lord Darling, he elevates campness to a new and previously unchartered level. To say that his performance contained more ‘mince’ than a butcher’s shop window would be erring on the side of understatement. Yet, much to his credit, it is done in a way that goes over the kids’ heads but is not at all lost on the adults.

Darrant’s master of malevolence is joined by Helen Embleton’s fiendish fairy, Narcissis. Making her panto debut in style, Embleton marvellously milks the role for all it is worth, positively relishing the deafening boos that she received.

Lucy Rafton once again occupies the title role and she gives an assured performance as Princess Primrose of Jarra. The Prince, Walter of Howden, who she meets and falls in love with, is played by newcomer Afnan Ifitkhar and he looks every inch the romantic hero. His singing voice has the clarity and distinction which, unfortunately, his dialogue lacks and some of his lines were, to me, inaudible.

Graham Overton, another regular at The Customs House, gives an endearing performance as the bumbling King Street, whilst Rachel Teate (Fairy Cake), Rebecca Currie (Fairy Lights) and Lindsay-Anne Dagg (Fairy Nuff), who all graduated from drama school only this year, spread more than just a little magic as Princess Primrose’s Fairy Godmothers.

Not to be outdone by splashier, flashier pantomimes, The Customs House also has its fair share of technical wizardry in the form of a delightful little animated dragon named Derek and his much larger, fire-breathing uncle, Archimedes.

The script, as it should, has more corn than the Jolly Green Giant on harvest day and it’s great fun to groan along at the predictable puns.

Once again, The Customs House has come up trumps with a sensational seasonal show that is full of festive frolics – I can’t wait for next year!

Steve Burbridge.

Sleeping Beauty runs until Sunday 3 January 2010.


DEC 6th

Cinderella

By Steve Burbridge
Cinders and her Prince.jpg

Cinderella

Theatre Royal, Newcastle upon Tyne

It isn’t only the Prince who is charming in Newcastle Theatre Royal’s stunning production of Cinderella – everyone and everything else is, too.

Never before have I seen such a lavish, spectacular pantomime and I wouldn’t even like to attempt to guess at the amount of work, time and money that has been invested into making it happen.

Of course, audiences at the Theatre Royal are now used to getting the very best in seasonal entertainment – for the last five years each of the panto’s written, directed and produced by Michael Harrison have broke the previous year’s box office records. And each of them has been bigger and better than the last.

It is probably no coincidence that, for the last five years, the cast has been headed by father and son double-act, Clive Webb and Danny Adams. The audiences, especially the kids, absolutely worship them and erupt into rapturous cheers and applause as soon as they make their first stage entrance.

This year they are co-starring with Roxanne Pallett, formerly of Emmerdaleand Dancing on Ice fame, who plays a spirited Cinderella. Although she isn’t given many opportunities to sing, when she does the hairs on the back of your neck stand up - who knew she could sing like that?

Newcastle’s very own panto dame, the inimitable Chris Hayward, makes a welcome return (it’s his third consecutive panto at the Royal) as Baroness Rita and, as usual wows the audience with a succession of fabulous costumes. What is equally as impressive is the fact that he designs and creates them all himself!

Also making a return this year is local actor Phil Corbitt, from Cullercoats, who teams up with Whitley Bay’s Steve Arnott to play Smelly and Nelly, the ugly sisters. The pair are brilliantly bad, entertainingly evil and wonderfully wicked, really making the most of being mean to poor old Cinders. The partnership works well and who’s to say that panto hasn’t found itself the new, definitive pair of Uglies?

Scooch’s David Ducasse is an affable Dandini, whilst West End musical theatre performers Matt Rawle and Donna Steele play Prince Charming and Fairy Godmother. It would have been great if the characters of Dandini and Prince Charming had been fleshed out a little more, as I felt that Ducasse and Rawle are slightly under-utilised. Steele, on the other hand, has been given a gem of a role as the ditzy, dotty newly-qualified Fairy Godmother and she grabs, with gusto, every opportunity to shine.

It isn’t only the casting of Steele and Rawle that brings a touch of West End sophistication to the proceedings – the production values are outstanding, too. Stunning sets, exquisite costumes, and a great musical score all contribute significantly to the overall effect.

Without wishing to be a killjoy and spoil the many other wonderful surprises that drew ‘oohs’ and ‘aahs’ aplenty on press night – and, without a doubt, will during the rest of the run – the transformation scene is particularly spectacular.

This production has raised the benchmark for pantomimes, not only in the North East but all over the country and I defy anyone, young or old, to leave the theatre without being completely enchanted. You’d be mad to miss it!

Steve Burbridge.

Cinderella runs until Saturday 16 January 2010.


DEC 6th

Oliver Twist at Bolton Octagon

By Caroline May
Octagon_Theatre_Bolton,_Oliver_Twist_-_Production_photo_1[1].jpg

If you think you’ve seen the definitive musical version of Dickens’ novelOliver Twist, think again.  Like Lionel Bart's classic version, the production at Bolton this festive season is laced throughout with catchy songs and dances.  However the Octagon’s new adaptation, with a cast playing multiple roles as well as all the instruments, is very much in the Northern Broadsides tradition - hardly surprising, as writer Deborah McAndrew and composer Conrad Nelson are both veterans of that company.

The narrative is stripped down to about two hours, so out go various sub-plots, but the old favourites are all present and correct.  Robert Pickavance is an oleaginous and sycophantic Fagin; Tim Frances is excellent comic value as Mr Bumble, the cruel and cowardly beadle; Esther Ruth Elliott is Nancy, the tart with a heart; and a rotating cast of talented and enthusiastic children play Oliver Twist, the Artful Dodger and all the assorted urchins.

Dawn Allsopp’s impressive set, an imposing urban sprawl of brick walls, rackety bridges and dirty cobbles, spans the whole width of the auditorium and soars to the ceiling.  Director Josette Bushell-Mingo’s production makes the most of the huge playing area, with great choreography and energetic ensembles.

This version of Oliver Twist is sweet without being saccharine, and addresses the iniquities of Victorian England without being too scary for a younger audience.  Judging by the reaction from the stalls on Friday night, this is a really excellent Christmas show for the whole family.

 Oliver Twist is on at Bolton Octagon until Saturday 23 January 2010

Tickets: £8.50 - £15.95

Shows: Mon-Sat at 10.15am, 2.15pm & 7.15pm (performance schedule varies - see website)

Box Office: 01204 520661

www.octagonbolton.co.uk


DEC 2nd

An Evening of Sophisticated Jazz Cabaret with Hope Augustus

By Carolin Kopplin
Fresh from her West End success playing Ella Fitzgerald in Marilyn and Ellathe superb Hope Augustus returns to The Rosemary Branch Theatre where she launched her career exactly twenty years ago. 

The charming singer presents a programme of unforgettable songs by Cole Porter, George Gershwin, Leonard Bernstein, Noel Coward, and other greats. Tom Scott does not simply accompany Hope, he is a jazz piano virtuoso! I was especially impressed by Tom's improvisation of It's All Right With Me and Hope's interpretation of Skylark. There are many highlights in this show and Hope brings so much joy and pure energy to it that I had problems staying in my seat - I wanted to swing with Hope and Tom!
    
Go see the show if you love jazz. Only two days left! 

The Rosemary Branch Theatre
Dec. 2-4, 8.00 pm
020 7704 6665

DEC 2nd

Thomas Spencer-Wortley

By Steve Burbridge

Celebrate Christmas

With

Thomas Spencer-Wortley

www.thomasspencerwortley.com

 

****

"We are so excited about the upcoming concerts. As we are coming into our fourth Winter season, we can't wait to pull together all our experiences of live performances over the years help to create a really brilliant show with the wonderfully talented Thomas Spencer-Wortley”…..All Angels

 

“The Drop-dead, Sinatra-eyed quintessential Englishman made the hairs on my neck stand up when he sang his self-penned track ‘Credere’.....Lesley-Ann Jones, Sunday Express

 

Thomas Spencer-Wortley- an exceptional young tenor who possesses talent, looks, integrity and the drive to continually push musical boundaries- will be bringing his spectacular Christmas concert to London, Birmingham and Harrogate. The evenings will include popular classics to songs from the shows and festive favourites.

 

Thomas will be joined by Platinum & Classical Brit nominated ‘All Angels' as special guests alongside- Natalie Hope– direct from the UK Tour of Evitaand soprano Mairead Carlin. He will also be accompanied by Thomas’ own quartet- ‘The Midnight String Quartet’ and a number of past and present students of the Royal Academy of Music. Details of his tour are below:

 

Celebrate Christmas with Thomas Spencer-Wortley Tour dates:

 

December:

20th      London           St John’s Smith Square, Westminster                     7.30pm

                                    (Feat. the Fulham Camerata)

 

21st      Birmingham   Town Hall, Birmingham                                          7.30pm

                                    (Feat. West End Academy Chorus)

 

22nd     Harrogate       Harrogate International Centre                              7.30pm

                                    (Feat. Leeds Philharmonic Chorus / West End Academy Chorus)

  

Thomas’ debut album Credere is out now and contains self-penned songs such as lead-off track- Credere’- a beautifully arranged song with haunting vocals and a soaring melody- a song so brilliant it could stand alongside those of any of the great master works. Other songs present on the album include his take on classics such as -‘Ave Maria’‘The Prayer’ and ‘You Raise Me Up’, and it marks the introduction of a major new voice in music. With his English charm, Italian style and world-class voice, Thomas Spencer-Wortley is destined for great recognition. 

 

To date, Thomas has been described as ‘The English Josh Groban’, the ‘solo version of Il Divo’ and the UK’s answer to Andrea Bocelli but to those who know him, he’s just Thomas...

 

Thomas lives and works with his younger brother, composer & arranger, Oliver Spencer-Wortley. Between them they set out to create a sound, and one which is becoming clearly recognisable, where the excitement of the modern era meets the classics yet retaining all of the beauty and artistry of the original composition. 

 

Thomas was born and raised in Derbyshire and then moved to study voice at Trinity College of Music, going on to gain a post graduate diploma and LRAM at the Royal Academy of Music.  After working in music theatre it was evident that Thomas’ classical sound was individual, a real blend of the operatic world and the ‘West End’.  This left Thomas with an apparent decision to make, although now it would appear an obvious step, he chose to combine the best of both and become a solo classical cross-over artist.

 

For more information, please visit:

www.thomasspencerwortley.com


Nov 21st

Weekly Newsletter

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

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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.

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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.

 



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Oct 9th

Avenue Q - Fantastic Autumn Offer

By Douglas McFarlane

5 stars image

Avenue Q image

Avenue Q Fantastic Autumn offer

Absolute Genius. If iT can run for three years it can run for ten

AVENUE Q is now in its 4th sensational year as London’s funniest show!

With its hugely talented cast of performers and puppets - you’ve never seen a show like AVENUE Q before! So don’t let your life suck - book your tickets today!

Best Available seats only £27.50!


Click to book now

GIELGUD THEATRE
Shaftesbury Avenue, London

*There will be a £1.75 booking fee per ticket