Striking gold at The Grange at Oborne

VISITORS and locals all love The Grange at Oborne, a tiny village on the outskirts of Sherborne. It’s a beautiful old building, with a warm atmosphere that is reflected in the welcome from the owners and their staff. The Grange at Oborne has been a country house hotel for many years, with a great reputation…

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Kinetics at Dorchester Corn Exchange

A PLAY about early-onset Parkinson’s Disease and Parkour might sound a bit heavy-going and a trifle improbable, but Kinetics is neither. Sue Wylie has deftly turned a serious medical diagnosis into an inspiring journey, and a barmy extreme sport into an accessible and exciting adventure. Sue is well-known as an actress, both professionally and as…

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King’s Shilling, Time and Tide at Springhead

TIME and Tide is a Wareham based non-profit-making company which specialises in acoustic performances. They made a welcome return to Springhead at Fontmell Magna on Sunday 18th October with King’s Shilling, a folk-drama which told the touching stories of a number of ordinary men and women who fought for king and country.  The company, which…

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Don’t Get Your Vicars in a Twist at Studio Theatre, Salisbury

JOURNALISTS and playwriting partners Lesley Bown and Ann Gawthorpe quickly recognised the comic potential of the Church of England’s decision to accept female vicars into the once wholly patriarchal workforce. But for their hilarious farce Don’t Get Your Vicars in a Twist, on stage at Salisbury’s Studio Theatre in Ashley Road until 24th October, they…

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Sweeney Todd at Shaftesbury Arts Centre

MYRA McDadd was already a fan of Stephen Sondheim when she and David Grierson saw an Edinburgh Fringe production of Sweeney Todd in 1995. “I realised that I was totally smitten by this show, with all its dark and dangerous themes,” she writes in her director’s notes to the programme for Shaftesbury Arts Centre’s autumn…

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The Crucible at Bristol Old Vic

THE first time the British theatregoing public saw Arthur Miller’s timeless play The Crucible was at Bristol Old Vic, and now, to mark the 100th anniversary of the playwright’s birth, it is re-staged where it all started. Director Tom Morris says in the programme that the danger of staging the play is that we might…

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Freedom. Bread and Peace, Arts By The Sea, Shelley Theatre

BOURNEMOUTH’s Arts By The Sea festival is always rich with new work, exploratory, experimental, avant-garde, sometimes just plain wacky! It is ambitious and surprising and if you don’t like some things, you will also find others that will interest and excite you. One of this year’s new works was Freedom, Bread and Peace, a music-theatre…

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The Producers, Strode Musical Theatre Company at Street

MEL Brooks’ musical version of his cult film The Producers takes no prisoners, and those easily offended should certainly steer clear. And SMTC, under their director Lois Harbison, do the show proud, pulling no punches as they expose the underbelly of theatrical production to the scrutiny of the audience. Briefly the story is of Max…

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Before the Party, Bath Theatre Royal and touring

WELL, here’s a difficult question. Should Tom Conti’s production of the Somerset Maugham/ Rodney Ackland play Before the Party, in which Conti also stars, be treated as a post-modern skit on the creaking amateur productions of legend, or taken seriously as a professional production of a biting but witty social drama? Judging by the response…

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A proper pub lunch at The Wise Man

BY the time you get to our age, you are supposed to forget birthdays, but on the other hand, they are a good excuse to go out with friends and have a meal, so we headed off to West Stafford to meet a friend at the pub she had recommended. West Stafford, just a few…

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