Tristan and Yseult – Kneehigh at Bristol Old Vic

KNEEHIGH, the Cornish-based theatre company, has experienced mixed fortunes in recent years, but the revival of its 2003 production of Tristan and Yseult again confirms its status as one of the country’s most inventive. One of the world’s greatest love stories has been reimagined by Carl Grose and Anna Maria Murphy and is told by…

Read more...

What’s the time, Mr Wolf? – The Cornerhouse, Frome

THE theatrical highlight of this year’s Frome Festival was played in the breath-defying heat of the upstairs room of the Cornerhouse last week, as Ben Tinniswood gave his hour long solo show about a misfit and a loner who police presumed was the most likely perpetrator of a murder. When they could find no evidence…

Read more...

La Vie Parisienne, Iford Festival

La Vie Parisienne Iford Festival CUTTING edge or what? Jeff Clarke opens his exuberant new production of La Vie Parisienne with a triumphantly steam punk parade, as a four-person train with REAL steam puffs into the cloister station to disgorge the characters for the evening’s entertainment. Wow! And the fun doesn’t let up until the…

Read more...

Hors Piste, Poole Lighthouse

Hors Piste Poole Lighthouse SAY “circus” to most people these days and they are more likely to picture Cirque du Soleil than the conventional big top, with top hatted ringmaster, performing animals and tattooed trapeze artists. The Canadian company has revolutionised the way we view circus – but there is a new generation of circus-influenced…

Read more...

Candida, Theatre Royal Bath

PLAYING Tom Riddle (aka the fledgling he -who-must-not-be-named) in the Harry Potter Films must be a big thrill for a young actor, but it doesn’t make him a suitable candidate to play an Earl’s son in a Shavian comedy set firmly in the London of 1894. Frank Dillane plays poet Eugene Marchbanks in Simon Godwin’s…

Read more...

Blackadder at Motcombe

Blackadder Motcombe Village Hall IT’S quite an undertaking for a brand new theatre group to perform two of the best known episodes in a cult hit television comedy for their first outing, but Pieshop Productions was set up to do just that. The performers, mostly from north Dorset and south Somerset, were thrilled at the chance to perform…

Read more...

La Boheme on tour

La Boheme Dutch National Touring Opera PUCCINI’S La Boheme, certainly the most accessible of all grand operas, has been brought up to date and shortened to barely 75 minutes for a production by young singers from the Dutch National Opera, currently touring our region under the auspices of Dorset Opera Festival. The UK premiere of…

Read more...

The Importance of Being Earnest

Wessex Actors Company on tour OSCAR Wilde’s “trivial comedy for serious people,” The Importance of Being Earnest, is a perennial on the open air touring circuit, but you won’t see a more sparkling or convincing production than Linsey O’Neill’s for the east Dorset based Wessex Actors Company. Ingeniously devised for a circular performance area that…

Read more...

The Last Days of Mankind

The Last Days of Mankind BOVTS at Bristol Old Vic SATIRIST and journalist Karl Kraus wrote The Last Days of Mankind while he was living in Vienna during the First World War, watching as the popular press convinced the population of the “true” situation in Europe and that God was on their side of the…

Read more...

Taunton Thespians on tour

The Merry Wives of Windsor Taunton Thespians on tour TAUNTON Thespians have returned to the classics for their 2013 tour of The Merry Wives of Windsor, after last summer’s drenched tour of Terry Pratchett’s Lord and Ladies. The Shakespearean romp opened at Bishop’s Hull on Tuesday, with the emphasis on the “Carry on Falstaff” aspects…

Read more...