The Arts Section

Night Must Fall, Swan Theatre, Yeovil

AT first sight, you might think that Emlyn Williams’ 1935 drama Night Must Fall would be dated. The grumpy old hypochondriac in her wheel-chair, lording it over her staff and her penniless niece-companion, the bumbling Scotland Yard detective, the middle-aged bachelor looking for a wife and the cliche setting of the house in the middle…

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The Barber of Seville, Bath Opera, Wincanton and touring

WHAT joy! Live opera, and for the first time in our home town. It’s not that we have been starved of opera these past 18 months. Quite the contrary – we have seen more, with bigger name stars, than ever before, thanks to the wonders of streaming from the New York Met, the Royal Opera and…

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The Three Seagulls, Bristol Old Vic

THE title of this show reflects the way it was devised by the graduating cohort of Bristol Old Vic Theatre School’s BA in Professional Acting, from three different adaptations by Christopher Hampton, Anya Reiss, and Aaron Posner of Anton Chekhov’s The Seagull. Guided by the imaginative hand of director Sally Cookson, they set out to…

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A Splinter of Ice, Theatre Royal Bath

THE lives of spies – defected and active – have provided rich pickings for writers and dramatists, with Alan Bennett’s An Englishman Abroad, Peter Moffat’s Cambridge Spies, Graham Greene’s The Third Man and John Le Carre’s tales of George Smiley leading the way for Ben Brown’s new play, A Splinter of Ice. Halfway through its opening…

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Oleanna, Ustinov Studio, Bath Theatre Royal

I FIRST came across “political correctness” when, holding a door open at a department store so that a young women could have free access to the store, I was greeted with: “You wouldn’t have done that if I had been a man.” To say that I was shocked and confused would be putting it mildly…

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Oh Mary, Bec Applebee at Sandford Orcas

TEN years after Bec Applebee first performed Oh Mary at Sandford Orcas, she was back again, courtesy of Artsreach, on a beautifully chilly night to rehears the story of her heroine, Mary Bryant. Sentenced to death by hanging for stealing a lace-trimmed bonnet, reprieved as good breeding stock for the new penal colony in Botany…

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Flea the Pandemic, Sturminster Newton

WHEN a ship docked at Melcombe Regis near Weymouth in 1348, carrying treasures from the Far East, via Europe, it also carried the then usual cargo of fleas. These were no ordinary Siphonaptera, but carriers of the bubonic plague. Its devastating effects, from its Dorset landing all across the land of King Edward III, became…

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Constellations, Frome Drama, Merlin Theatre

SOMETIMES things fall into place, are of their time, when you couldn’t know this was going to happen, and the parties involved could not know, so it is a co-incidence whose time has come. Perhaps it is a consequence of the times we live in and the uncertainty that hovers over everything. In the space…

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Copenhagen, Theatre Royal Bath

COPENHAGEN, Michael Frayn’s still astonishing 1998 three-hander about physics, philosophy, mathematics, ethics, common sense and human interpretation, is delighting audiences at Bath again, en route to London in these uncertain days for live performance. Danish Niels Bohr, Jewish on his mother’s side, was just 16 years older than his young German student Werner Heisenberg when…

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