The Arts Section

Lucky for some at Swanage

PURBECK-based writer Georgie Codd will host her first live night out in Dorset on Friday 13th June. In aid of Dorset Mind, it is based around her second book, Never Had a Dad: Adventures in Fatherlessness, which was published in 2024. The book attracted millions of listeners when it was previewed on the hit US…

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Ensemble Moliere, St Swithins Church, Bath

BATH’S annual music festival, still struggling to retain its former glories, ended the 2025 event at the beautiful St Swithin’s Church on Sunday afternoon with a concert by Ensemble Moliere, celebrating the life and work of the remarkable dancer Marie Salle. Born to fairground tumblers in 1707, Marie transformed the then rigidly formal world of…

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This Happy Breed, AUB at Palace Court Theatre, Bournemouth

THE celebrations held to mark the anniversary of VE day must not only have stirred memories for those now comparatively few people who remember the occasion, but intrigued those who are too young to know about the lives and times of their parents and grandparents. If you, like me, were born after the war, but…

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A tribute to the father of protest songs

YOU don’t often hear the phrase “protest singer” these days, but the tradition – which stretches back for many years in unions and traditional working communities, and was reinvented by the folk singers of the 1960s – lives on in Reg Meuross, the Crewkerne-based singer-songwriter whose work has always championed the issues of the day,…

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The Beautiful Future is Coming, Bristol Old Vic

FLORA Wilson Brown’s play The Beautiful Future is Coming was first seen at the Jermyn Street Theatre in 2024, and now comes to Bristol Old Vic in a new production by Nancy Medina, the theatre’s artistic director. In the programme Nancy says “ We’re thrilled to share this beautiful human story in our city, which…

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Foxfinder and The Effect, BOVTS at Bristol Old Vic

IT keeps raining, the fields are under water, the country has a policy of forced quotas for farmers, townsfolk are rationed to one egg a week, any misdemeanour or farm failure means removal from your farm to work in factories where life expectancy is a maximum of three years … and brutally trained young men…

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Is A River Alive? Robert Macfarlane at Bath Literature Festival

PRONOUNS have become weirdly political in the last few years – it is all-too-easy to cause offence by using the wrong one when addressing or referring to a person who has adopted “they” and “their” as their preferred form. Author, environmental campaigner, poet and philosopher Robert Macfarlane encounters the same problem in his new book,…

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Larks descending on the BSO

BIRDSONG has been an inspiration to composers and musicians for centuries, from the trills of Vivaldi’s Goldfinch Concerto to Beyonce’s cover of the Beatles’ Blackbird. Now, the Lark Music-Making Competition, launched this week in association with the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, encourages today’s amateur instrumentalists to take flight with their own interpretations. Open to anyone over…

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Ancient music in an ancient setting

THE picturesque West Somerset village of Dunster, on the edge of Exmoor, is famous for several things, including its castle, its Yarn Market, the medieval Gallox (“Lovers”) packhorse bridge, the tithe barn and the beautiful late medieval Priory of St George. This church is the main venue for another important Dunster attraction, the music festival…

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