Reviews

The Odyssey, Frome Merlin and touring

THERE was great excitement in the dance world when Mark Bruce launched his latest production at Frome’s Merlin Theatre. After taking critics and audiences by storm with his Dracula in 2013, expectations were high for his version of The Odyssey, and they were not disappointed. This first tour opened in Bruce’s now home town and…

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Lord of the Flies, Gillingham School

WILLIAM Golding was a teacher at Bishop Wordsworth’s school in Salis­bury when he wrote his most famous novel, the dystopian and enduringly terrifying Lord of the Flies. The world is at war and a plane carrying schoolchildren to a place of safety away from the conflict crashes on a remote tropical island. It’s the sort…

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Let It Be, Theatre Royal, Bath

THE last time The Beatles appeared in concert, apart from their well-publicised show on top of the Apple building a year before they finally split up, was at Wembley in May 1966, before many of their most famous songs had been written or recorded, let alone performed live. The beauty of a show such as…

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Shearwater, Artsreach tour at Wootton Fitzpaine

AS a student scientist in the 1970s, Malcolm Green and a fellow undergraduate spent three months on a tiny uninhabited island in the Vestmann archipelago off the western coast of Iceland. They were there to study and record the breeding lives of the seabirds and particularly of the shearwater, tiny elegant birds, which migrate from…

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Goody Two Shoes, Tarrant Valley Players at Tarrant Keyneston

THE Paul Reakes version of Goody Two Shoes throws away the original story to create a pantomime that includes all the essential elements of the genre. It was that version that Tarrant Valley Players chose for their 2016 show, packing out the Anne Biddlecombe Hall in Tarrant Keynes­ton for its three night run. The Players…

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The Good Person of Szechwan, AUB students at Pavilion Dance

THE audience at the latest Arts Uni­versity Bournemouth production had a Brechtian experience at the reconformed Pavilion Dance, but the question has to be whether David O’Shea’s interpretation was more style than substance. There should be nothing comfortable about the German playwright’s works, which are specifically aimed at suppressing emotional involvement to give the audience…

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Jack and the Beanstalk, Shaftesbury Arts Centre

PRINCIPAL boys are becoming an endangered species in professional pantomime – apparently young audiences brought up on boy bands and “reality” television shows find it hard to accept the idea of a girl dressed as a boy. But the tradition lives on in amateur panto, and at Shaftesbury  this year, director Rosie King has not one…

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Come and Sing … HMS Pinafore Salisbury Playhouse

Don’t just see it – be it!  So read the G&S4U publicity for Saturday’s HMS Pinafore at Salisbury Playhouse. Under the energetic direction of Ian McMillan, we, as members of the audience, were being invited to become a vast chorus of sailors, sisters, cousins and aunts and, clutching union jacks, to set sail on the…

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Jane Eyre, Bristol Old Vic

THE Sally Cookson directed, company-devised adaptation of Jane Eyre, first seen at Bristol two years ago in its two-part, four-and-a-half-hour version, has been abridged to three hours plus, and has been enthralling audiences at the National Theatre in recent months. Now it is back in Bristol until 6th February, and those with good memories and…

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Dutilleux and Tchaikovsky at white heat in the Lighthouse

Dutilleux: Tout un monde lontain Tchaikovsky: Manfred Symphony Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, leader Amyn Merchant Kirill Karabits: Conductor Jean-Guihen Queyras: Cello THIS year the centenary of the French composer Henri Dutilleux is being commemorated in a series of events on Radio 3, and this concert was the BSO’s contribution. Dutilleux died three years ago at a…

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