Reviews

All My Sons, Churchill Productions at Wimborne Tivoli

ONE of the greatest plays of the 20th century, Arthur Miller’s All My Sons, is a brave and triumphant choice for the Churchill company in Wimborne. The Tivoli’s is an audience not accustomed to big, serious drama, unless it’s in the form of a movie. But the many who all but filled the stalls on…

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Ladies in Lavender, ImpAct at Bournemouth Little Theatre Club

WILLIAM J Locke’s short story Ladies in Lavender is best known in Charles Dance’s film starring dames Judi Dench and Maggie Smith, but as so often happens with cinema adaptations, the stage play is a much subtler dramatic form. So it is with Shaun McKenna’s version, chosen by director Patricia Richardson for ImpAct’s autumn tour…

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A Taste of Honey, National Theatre at Bath Theatre Royal

WHEN the 19-year-old She­lagh Delaney burst onto the theatre scene with her first play, A Taste of Honey, its gritty script and unrelenting subject matter kicked audiences and London-centric critics into the reality of existence in the north. Sixty years on it still has the power to shock, as it vividly shows the growing seeds…

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Curtis Butterworth loves Molly May, Dorchester

THERE’S something strange and mysterious about Bul­bar­row in Dorset, and it inspired writer Natasha Solo­mons in several of her successful novels, the first of which was Mr Rosenblum’s List. One of its characters, Curtis Butterworth, particularly en­dear­ed himself to her, so his own history became the subject for a short story, which has now been…

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Much Ado About Nothing, Shakespeare at the Tobacco Factory, Bristol

IT’S 20 years since Andrew Hilton took the ambitious and risky step of establishing a theatre company to perform Shakespeare – for five years – in the former Imperial Tobacco factory in Bristol’s South­ville. In the intervening years the area has seen a resurgence of popularity, and the company, now known as stf, is a…

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Cyrano, Bristol Old Vic

EDMOND Rostand’s 1897 verse play Cyrano de Bergerac draws its inspiration from the true story of a Gascon hero and poet, and its swashbuckling romance continues to excite and delight audiences in theatres and cinemas across the world. It is currently one of the flavours of the year, with new several new stage productions and…

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The Seraglio, English Touring Opera at Bath Theatre Royal

  IF the story contained in this opera was to appear on one of the film channels on television it would undoubtedly has a pre showing warning that it contains racially discriminatory language and out of date social images that might be offensive to some viewers. The producers of this show did not think it was a necessary to print such a warning in…

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A Bunch of Amateurs, Studio Theatre, Salisbury

AMATEUR theatricals are the butt of many jokes but the best amateurs often bring a level of professionalism to their productions that stands comparison with many professional companies. Ian Hislop and Nick Newman used this well-known fact to great comic effect in their screenplay, A Bunch of Amateurs, but despite terrific performances by Burt Reynolds…

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Gaslight, Theatre  Royal, Bath

MOST people know this play from the glossy 1944 MGM film starring Ingrid Bergman and Charles Boyer, with the 18-year-old Angela  Lansbury (making her film debut) gaining an Oscar nomination as best supporting actress for her portrayal of Nancy the cheeky maid and the role of Rough, the policeman, somewhat glamourised to accommodate the actor…

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