A Passionate Woman, Yeovil Swan Theatre Company

IF you lose someone you love, can you wish hard enough to bring them back? That’s the premise of the wonderful film Truly Madly Deeply and for some of the time in A Passionate Woman you think that is what you are seeing. The award-winning playwright Kay Mellor (Band Of Gold, Playing The Field, Between…

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Great War/Cold War, Salisbury Studio Theatre

ALAN Bennett, JM Barrie and Lesley Bates share a birthday – 9th May – and now they are also linked in the production of two one-act plays entered by Salisbury Studio Theatre in the Totton and Woolstore Theatre festivals. The plays, Barrie’s rarely performed The Old Lady Shows her Medals, and Bennett’s An Englishman Abroad,…

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We are Bronte, Langton Matravers and touring

THE Bristol-based Publick Transport theatre company has jumped on the Bronte bandwagon, extracted the essence of the books the family wrote and their own life stories, distilled and sorted them and created that show that’s part lunacy and part brilliance. Isolation on the windswept Northern moors might not sound like a barrel of laughs, but…

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I Capuleti e i Montecchi, Pop-Up Opera at Port Regis and touring

POP-Up Opera made its Shaftesbury debut at Port Regis with the current touring production of Bellini’s I Capuleti e i Montecchi. Librettist Felice Romani used the same source as Shakespeare for his work, but for the Pop-Up version Harry Percival (philosopher, economist, computer scientist and stand up comedian) has provided a modern interpretation in surtitles,…

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Oranges are the only fruit

FRIENDS who have come to visit have twice recently brought pots of their own newly-made marmalade – quite the nicest present. What prat suggested marmalade was no longer a popular taste? Shaftesbury-based chef and cookery writer Philippa Davis bought her Seville oranges when they came into the shops in January and then got busy catching…

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Sunny Afternoon, Bristol Hippodrome and touring

JUKEBOX musicals tend to either use the songs of one artist or writer to tell a brand new story, as happens in Mamma Mia or Singing in the Rain, or to tell the story of the artist themselves, as with Twentieth Century Boy and Sunny Afternoon, which started a national tour as soon as its…

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The Verdict, Salisbury Playhouse

THE first stage adaptation of The Verdict, best known as a 1982 Sidney Lumet film, stops at Salisbury Playhouse until 11th March, the sixth venue of a 12-stop UK Middle Ground Theatre tour. This Margaret Mary Hobbs adaption of  Barry Reed’s novel, directed by Michael Lunney, keeps the audience holding its breath. It’s a story…

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Abigail’s Party, Bath Theatre Royal

HOW would it be, 40 years on? I was frankly curious to see if this play, that seemed so effortlessly to have skewered the social pretensions and fragile egos of the far from swinging 70s, had lasted the course? I wondered if it would seem dated, a period piece with pineapple and cheese on sticks,…

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William Barnes, The Dorset Poet, Broadmayne

FORGET Burns Night – we’ve got Barnes Night, and if the inaugural Supper Celebration of William Barnes, The Dorset Poet, was anything to go by it should become as popular a date in the calendar for Dorset folk as Burns is for everyone who loves Scotland, poetry and a good time! The traditions of Burns…

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