Reviews

Aida, Dorset Opera at Bryanston

IN a year when the focus is on war – the centenary of the start of World War One, the continuing and escalating conflicts in the Middle East, Iraq, Afghanistan, the Ukraine – Dorset Opera has chosen a battle themed opera for the first production of its 40th anniversary season. Verdi’s Aida, first performed in…

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Ladies Day at Studio Theatre, Salisbury

THE Studio Theatre company at Salisbury is giving the first regional performances of Amanda Whittington’s comedy Ladies Day at their Ashley Road headquarters from 21st to 26th July. It opens in a fish packing factory in Hull, where four friends decide to “celebrate” one of them leaving by going to the races. It is 2005,…

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Bedroom Farce at Yeovil Swan Theatre

ALAN Ayckbourn’s Bedroom Farce is one of the most frequently performed of his huge back catalogue, and the latest comes from the versatile Swan Theatre company in Yeovil. Directed by Beryl Snadden with a clever set designed by Geoff Kneller, it is the story of how one selfish and infuriating couple (Trevor and Susannah) can…

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Wessex Scenes, New Hardy Players on tour

AS we move closer to the centenary of the start of the First World War, the Dorchester-based New Hardy Players pay a timely tribute to Thomas Hardy’s own thoughts about war … the Napoleonic War, that is. Extraordinarily, the programme for this touring production, directed by Tim Laycock and Emma Hill, notes that at the…

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Singing the Ridgeway at Portesham

AT the beginning of the 20th century, Cecil Sharp collected hundreds of folksongs from working people in Somerset and inspired many other composers and collectors, including Percy Grainger and Ralph Vaughan Williams, to do the same in other parts of the country. In Dorset, brothers Henry and Robert Hammond were similarly inspired, travelling around the…

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Kafka’s Dick at Bath Theatre Royal

ALAN Bennett’s 1986 play Kafka’s Dick not only predates the British writer’s position as national treasure but allowed him to explore both his fascination with the Czech’s work but his views on intellectualism and pretentiousness. It is one of his least performed works, but audiences in the south west have a chance to catch up…

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Rock Of Ages at Bristol Hippodrome

BURRINGTON Combe should surely benefit from a few extra visitors this week, as the place which inspired the original Rock Of Ages, in 1763.The hymn, by the Reverend Augustus Toplady, was written after he sheltered from a storm in a cleft in a rock in the Somerset village, a rock since renamed the Rock Of…

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The Tempest, Miracle Theatre on tour

SHAKESPEARE’S final play, The Tempest, set on an island full of magic and strange noises, is the perfect vehicle for Miracle Theatre’s special brand of open air performance. Director Bill Scott has cleverly adapted and abridged the original so the whole thing can be performed by just six actors. The touring set is made up…

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The Daughter of the Regiment at Iford Festival

IFORD Manor near Bradford on Avon may well be the most beautiful setting for “garden opera” but it is also the smallest, with performances in a cloister that seats about 100 around a tiny acting space. So it’s not surprising that Jeff Clarke, founder and artistic director of Opera della Luna, said a resounding NO,…

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Crazy for You at Shaftesbury Arts Centre

IN 1992 Crazy for You, a “new” Gershwin musical comedy, hit the stage, incorporating some of the songs from the original Girl Crazy and other Gershwin shows with a sort of mix-and-match story influenced by Anything Goes, Calamity Jane etc. Set in Deadrock, Nevada (instead of Deadwood, South Dakota) and involving a young man who…

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