A bouquet for Normandy’s ‘Flowery Coast’

THE beaches of Normandy may resonate around the world with the history of the D-Day landings but before and since those momentous days of 1944, its sands have been associated with happier events. Just along the coast from the likes of Omaha and Sword, the little town of Trouville – correctly Trouville-sur-Mer – and its…

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Sherlock Holmes: The Final Curtain, Theatre Royal Bath

THERE was a time when Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes was not only the world’s most famous (fictional) consulting detective, but was also taken very seriously. You could call that multi-book-play-film version Sherlock Holmes Mk 1, pre-Moffat and Gatiss – but post-Moffat/Gatiss’s sexy, tousle-headed Sherlock with his swirling overcoat, quickfire dialogue and dazzling digital…

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The Whale, Ustinov Studio Bath

BATH’s Ustinov Theatre, under the artistic direction of Laurence Boswell, has been hailed as the country’s leading studio theatre, and the opening of Samuel D Hunter’s The Whale will undoubtedly underpin that well-deserved reputation. Running two hours without interval, it charts a week in the life of Charlie, a morbidly obese man who lives in…

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New woodland trail at Kingston Lacy

A NEW woodland trail for walkers, runners and cyclists has opened on the National Trust’s Kingston Lacy, near Wimborne, giving stunning views of the house and allowing visitors to discover previously inaccessible parts of the park. The trail passes through beautiful forest and along old carriage drives that were originally created by the Bankes family….

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Knickerbocker Glories, Street Theatre Company at Strode Theatre

THE Representation of the People Act which enfranchised British women over the age of 30 and with property rights had been passed in February 1918, but by Christmas 1918, the completed ballot papers for the first general election to include their votes lay uncounted. Progress had been, and many believe continues to be, astonishingly slow….

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The Vodka Hunters, Wickham Road, Boscombe as part of BEAF

IN a dilapidated former health service supplies depot behind Pokesdown Station, the BEAF festival 2108 took flight with The Vodka Hunters. The site-specific show – four solo plays directed by playwright and novelist Nell Leyshon and devised by her and the performers – is about parenthood, seen from the eyes of “outsiders”. Boscombe has been…

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The Lady in the Van, Frome Drama at the Merlin Theatre

MISS Shepherd is (possibly) the best-known inadvertent lodger in English literature, thanks to National Treasure playwright and actor Alan Bennett’s story, play and film The Lady in the Van. The then-young star of Beyond the Fringe moved into the then-affordable Camden in the 1970s, and soon afterwards allowed an eccentric woman who lived in a…

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