The Arts Section

Mrs Henderson Presents, Bath Theatre Royal

BATH Theatre Royal ends its summer season in triumphant style with the world premiere of a new musical set in and around the Windmill Theatre in London between 1937 and 1940 Based on the film Mrs Henderson Presents, the show has a new collection of songs by  with lyrics by Don Black and music by…

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The Teacup Poisoner, Storm on the Lawn at Prior Park, Bath

THERE really WAS a storm on the lawn for the final production at Prior Park after 18 seasons – the opening night was rained off! But the 36 young performers were ready to challenge the weather gods on Thursday, giving a powerful performance of Mark Powell and Ben Occhipinti’s new musical, The Teacup Poisoner. Based…

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A Number, Nuffield Theatre, Southampton

CARYL Churchill is surely one of this country’s leading playwrights, her best known plays probably being Top Girls, about the rise of women to the top of business and politics, written during the Thatcher era, and Serious Money, about stock market traders in the same Thatcher era or monetarism, and premiered in 1987, the year…

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Warminster Macbeth wows Stratford audience

A STARTLING modern-dress and high-tech version of Macbeth played to 450 people in late summer sunshine in the Royal Shakespeare Company’s open air venue, The Dell. The two performances by Warminster’s Athenaeum Limelight Players was part of the RSC’s 2015 Open Stages programme and ALP chairman Adela Forestier-Walker said it had been a great challenge…

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Blithe Spirit, Dramatic Productions at the Tivoli Theatre, Wimborne

IF the spirit of Noel Coward hovers around any theatre where his plays are being staged, it must have been very blithe last week, when Dramatic Productions staged his delightful satire on the vogue for seances and spiritualism in the appropriately Art Deco setting of Wimborne’s Tivoli Theatre. Blithe Spirit is usually seen primarily as…

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The Tempest, Brownsea Open Air Theatre

WAY back in 1964, as part of the international Shakespeare Quater­cen­t­enary celebrations, Joyce Caton and her merry band of actors from Bournemouth and Poole took the first  audience to Brownsea, ferried over by a fleet of little boats from Sand­banks to the island in Poole Harbour – and the first words they heard on the…

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Avenue Q, Sell A Door Theatre, Bournemouth Pavilion

AVENUE Q broke many barriers when it first appeared on stage in the early years of this century. What had started with the simple idea of taking popular puppets into “crossover” roles, specifically to cast Kermit the frog in the title role of a production of Hamlet, soon developed into a grown up musical with…

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Gretchen Peters at the Cheese and Grain

THE lactose and gluten intolerant Nashville-based country singer songwriter Gretchen Peters couldn’t help commenting on the name of the venue her agent had chosen for her Cambridge Folk Festival warm up – Frome’s Cheese and Grain – but the room’s history did nothing to prevent her and her excellent band performing a sensational set to…

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Agrippina at Iford Festival

HANDEL’s Agrippina is a dark story about family jealousies and treachery, extra-marital liaisons  and power plotting – so what more natural updating than to the days of Dynasty! That’s how director Bruno Ravella envisaged the final opera in the 2015 Iford Festival, with Alinka Kozari in the title role done up like Joan-Collins-as-Alexis, her rival…

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The Magnificent Three, Miracle Theatre on tour

WHO wants to be trapped in a small town in Colorado where the most exciting thing to happen is the tumbleweed blowing down Main, when there’s a chance of global big business on the horizon. That’s the American Dream, and its one that nasty Nate Milton has every night. But his double-crossing ways don’t fool…

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