Reviews

Shirley Valentine, Bath Theatre Royal and tour

MANY people will know this play, one of Willy Russell’s most famous works, along with Educating Rita and Blood Brothers, from the film starring Pauline Collins. Collins played the title role in London’s West End when it opened there in 1988, directed by Simon Callow. Two years earlier the Artistic Director of the Liverpool Everyman,…

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My Cousin Rachel, Studio Theatre Ashley Road, Salisbury

DAPHNE du Maurier’s novel My Cousin Rachel, published 66 years ago, is a REAL murder mystery … not a whodunit but posing a “did they do it” question that is never answered. It is the perfect story for a stage adaptation, and Diana Morgan’s version is the one chosen by Salisbury’s Studio Theatre for the…

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Into the Woods, AUB and Kokoro at Poole Lighthouse

STEPHEN Sondheim’s timelessly brilliant Into the Woods, interweaves various fairy tales into a spectacular story that goes on to delve into the psyches of the participants and follow them into the next stages of their lives. It sets substantial challenges for musicians, singers, dancers and actors, not to mention set, costume and lighting designers. So…

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Echo’s End, Salisbury Playhouse

ONE hundred years on from the Great War, the echoes of military conflict resound across Salisbury Plain, where the Army still holds around half of the 300 square miles as training grounds. The prolific and prodigiously talented Barney Norris, a Salisbury boy who writes plays and novels, teaches and co-runs a theatre company, has turned…

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Lovesong, Amateur Players of Sherborne at the Digby Hall

ABI Morgan’s play Lovesong, given its Dorset premiere by APS at Sherborne, is a poignant and clever example of why she is one of the most in-demand writers of the 21st century. She wrote Lovesong at the same time her television series The Hour was on screen, and just before scripting The Iron Lady for…

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As The Crow Flies, Salisbury Playhouse and touring

‘I TALK to the birds,” sings the eccentric Dr Doolittle – and in truth, many of us do. We talk to the cheeky robin who sits on the wall as we dig the vegetable patch and the blackbird who watches for the worms. But Beth really talks to the bird who comes to live in…

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What the Butler Saw, Bath Theatre Royal

RUFUS Hound has no reason to try and impress anyone with his acting, having been one of those who followed in James Corden’s footsteps taking One Man, Two Guvnors on into its West End transfer and on tour around the country, proving, with sold-out shows, that the play was still great without the big name,…

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People, Churchill Productions at the Tivoli Theatre, Wimborne

ALAN Bennett’s satirical play People opened at the National Theatre in 2012 and made a short UK tour the following year, to great critical and audience acclaim. It has not been seen since. Winston Leese, founder producer of the Dorset-based Churchill Productions, tried in vain to get performing rights and undaunted, found a way to contact…

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Dancing at Lughnasa, Street Theatre

BRIAN Friel’s semi-autobiographical play Dancing at Lughnasa and first performed in 1990, is set in County Donegal in 1936 seen from a child’s eyes and from the perspective of that child, grown up, many years later. Writer Michael Evans revisits the harvest festival of Lughnasa when he was a six- year-old boy living with his…

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