Reviews

Canterbury Tales, Wessex Actors on tour

THE Geoffrey Chaucer Canterbury Tales-telling contest is heading for a field or a theatre near you between now and 26th July. It’s a sort of local Britain’s Got Talent, in which the participants work together to produce a version of the medieval stories that’s accessible to modern audiences, and the winner is chosen by the…

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Orphee aux enfers at Iford Opera

THE Greek myth of Orpheus and his trip to the Underworld has never been more fun or more irreverent than in Jeff Clarke’s version for Iford Festival. Regular audience members are accus­tomed to Opera della Luna’s antics, but there was general agreement on the beautiful middle Satur­day that Clarke has excelled himself with this free…

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Twelfth Night at Gillingham School

SHAKESPEARE’S Twelfth Night, often seen as the “entry level” play in the canon, has been staged in countless periods, settings and costumes over the years. Now Gillingham School teachers Richie Lunn and Jane McCarthy have chosen the post-punk era, music of the Sex Pistols and the Clash, and an urban wasteland setting for the end…

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Mrs Warren’s Profession at Salisbury Playhouse

THE Cheltenham Everyman production of George Bernard Shaw’s Mrs Warren’s Profession is at Salisbury Playhouse until Saturday 4th July, and is almost sold out. But judging by the opening night audience, several anticipated an evening of period laughs a la Downton Abbey, and that it certainly is not. Written in 1893 but not performed until…

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Deckchairs, Halse Players at the Old Cider House

JEAN McConnell’s series of “Deckchairs”  playlets, with their small, all-female casts and minimal set, are a godsend for amateur societies. It is, perhaps, a slight surprise to find such safe fare on the menu at Halse, but every society needs a balanced programme and God of Carnage all the time would get a little wearing….

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Love for Love, BOVTS at Bristol Old Vic

William Congreve wrote only five plays, the best known of which was the last, The Way of the World. Love for Love, written in  1695 and famous for the line “O fie, miss, you must not kiss and tell”, is a complicated story of sexual encounters and true love which students from Bristol Old Vic…

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The Importance of Being Earnest, Theatre Royal Bath

OSCAR Wilde’s classic The Impor­t­ance of Being Earnest has been described as the “perfect comedy” and is certainly one of the most enduringing popular shows on the English-speaking stage. Edith Evans is thought to have nailed Lady Bracknell for all time with her iconic interrogation “a handbag?” and directors and actors have sought in vain…

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Ridgeway Singers and Band, St George’s Church, Reforne

EVEN on a sunny June evening, the waves crash against Portland Bill, the wind whistles along Chesil Beach and the white horses dance and race in the blue-green sea.  The seas on the night that the Earl of Abergavenny, an East Indiaman out of Portsmouth, foundered and sank off Portland in 1805 were huge and…

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The Day They Kidnapped the Pope, Street Theatre on tour

IT’S a rare treat to see a “new” play on an amateur tour, and althought Joao Bethencourt surreal comedy is 30 years old, it is new to audiences in the south west. As it says in the title, it’s about the kidnapping of the Holy Father – on this occasion by an eccentric Brooklyn taxi…

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