It’s raining……nothing

Philippa Davis’s clients have a frustrating but very well-fed week in Scotland SKIING, when snowfall has been poor, gets rather tricky. Beach holidays without the sun are pretty miserable. Camping in torrential rain is not much fun (well actually camping in any weather is not my idea of fun) and fishing weeks without water are…

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Tastes of the South West at the Queens Arms

THE Queens Arms at Corton Denham has launched a new menu, featuring selected produce from across the region, to mark the owners’ eighth anniversary at the helm. Reflecting changing tastes and evolving approach to eating out, the menu is a collaboration between owners Gordon and Jeanette Reid, and new head chef, Steven Mesher. Many of…

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Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Wells Theatre Company at Bishop’s Palace

IT’S hard not to be impressed by the sheer chutzpah of deciding you’re going to play Shakespeare’s greatest (and longest) role, forming a theatre company to allow you to do it, losing three stone in weight and learning the 1,422 lines that make up the Bard’s Hamlet. But that’s just what Edgar Phillips has done,…

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Racing Demon, Theatre Royal Bath

THERE is a speech at the end of David Hare’s Racing Demon, the opening play of Jonathan Church’s first summer season at Bath’s Theatre Royal, that talks about the eradication of certainties. It was relevant when the play opened in London in 1990, but goodness it is even more relevant now! Racing Demon – named…

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The Barber of Seville, Iford Festival

ROSSINI’S The Barber of Seville, the “prequel” to The Marriage of Figaro, is widely regarded as the greatest opera buffa of the genre, bringing broad comedy into the operatic repertoire. It lends itself to a variety of settings, and Charles Court Opera’s at the Iford Festival is perhaps the most ingenious to date. Here the…

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On a salt trail

by Simone Sekers WHY it should be that this summer we have been trailing salt is just one of those coincidences. Salt is the one condiment I couldn’t do without and we eat far too much of it in this house. I don’t know if this is why we chose to go to two centres…

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Twelfth Night, Watermill Productions, Salisbury Playhouse

 NEVER before have the eight and ninth words of this particular Shakespeare comedy meant quite so much. As the band in the Elephant Jazz Club prepare us for a night of prohibition-era entertainment, we are not bothered about music being the food of love, we just want the band to “play on”. Two of the…

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While We’re Here, Salisbury Playhouse Salberg Studio

A SENSE of home and belonging is something we inc­reasingly think about in the light of Brexit, the horrors of Grenfell Tower and the international dismantling of certainties. Barney Norris’s new play While We’re Here, set in present-day Havant, is all about longing for attachment and fearing that its inevitable consequence will be unhappiness. Former…

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Julius Caesar, Bristol Old Vic

SHAKESPEARE’S Julius Caesar, in the news recently for a New York production depicting President Donald Trump as the model for the title role, comes to Bristol Old Vic, with three seasoned actors leading a cast of beginners from the graduating class of Bristol Old Vic Theatre School. The collaboration, directed by Simon Dormandy, is played…

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The Addams Family, Theatre Royal Bath and touring

MY knowledge of The Addams Family is based mainly on the TV series which I enjoyed in the 1970s, some ten years after it was made. I have not seen any of the recent films, or the newspaper cartoon by Charles Addams that the TV series was based on, so I come to this musical…

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