Reviews

Iolanthe, Yeovil Amateur Operatic Society at Octagon Theatre

YEOVIL Amateur Operatic Society was hot off the mark when it first staged Gilbert and Sullivan’s Iolanthe in 1903, less than 20 years after the work’s London premiere. The Somer­set society was started a year earlier, and its first seven shows were by G and S. This week YAOS’s sixth production of the batty story…

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Richard Strauss: Salome, BSO at Poole Lighthouse

Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, leader Amyn Merchant Kirill Karabits: Conductor Lise Lindstrom (soprano) WHAT a way to start another season!  At a packed Lighthouse, the BSO gave an intense yet disciplined semi-staged performance of the scandalous and ground-breaking 1905 opera by Richard Strauss, backed by a world-class team of fifteen soloists. The story of Salome, based…

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1984, Headlong at Bath Theatre Royal

GEORGE Orwell’s terrifying and prophetic dystopian novel 1984, published in 1949, has been adapted and re-imagined by Robert Icke and Duncan Macmillan, and it is playing at Bath’s Theatre Royal until 3rd October, before heading to Australia and the USA. The award-winning production, by Headlong, Nottingham Playhouse and the Almeida, opened two years ago. The…

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Another sell-out concert ends Music at St Giles season

THE first series of Music at St Giles House at Wimborne St Giles comes to a close on Tuesday 29th September with a visit from the Soloists of Prussia Cove. The programme of music, organised in collaboration between Lord Shaftes­bury and the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, has been a great success, and plans for the 2016…

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Sunset Boulevard, BLOC at Bristol Hippodrome

SUNSET Boulevard, based as it is on the Billy Wilder film of the same name, depends on the casting of a rock solid, completely confident and fully capable singer and actor in the role of Norma Desmond, the aging silent film star who hopes for one final revival, despite the coming of the talkies. Maureen…

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Untold Stories, ImpAct on tour

ALAN Bennett, now recognised as a National Treasure, regards himself as an unlikely candidate for the position. A shy but brilliant boy in his Leeds school, he went on to Oxford, graduating and teaching ancient history, before meeting up with Jonathan Miller, Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, and introducing a new brand of satire to…

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Twelfth Night, Swan Theatre, Yeovil

YEOVIL’s versatile and accomplished Swan Theatre Company has gone back to Shakespeare for the first time in 33 years – a long gap, but worth the wait, for this well-directed and often hilarious production of one of the Bard’s most accessible and popular comedies. Twelfth Night, directed by the experienced Ian White, brings some new…

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Fallen Angels, Salisbury Playhouse

“POSH feminists in drunken orgy” – doesn’t sound much like Noel Coward, does it? Obviously it’s a bit of a stretch to call Jane and Julia “feminists,” although they are undoubtedly posh – and drunk they definitely become in the hilarious second act of this early Coward comedy. In his portrayal of two still youngish…

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Flare Path, Theatre Royal, Bath

THE  works of Terence Rattigan have been widely revived in the past few years, triggered by the 2011 centenary of his birth, and one such play, Flare Path has survived this spate and is currently touring the country, visiting Bath this week. It is a period piece, set firmly in the Second World War, in…

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Soul Music, Wellington Theatre Co at Wellington Arts Centre

“Though this be madness, yet there is method in’t.” (‘Hamlet’ Act 2, sc 2) Late lamented, Sir Terry Pratchett’s ‘madness’- as expressed in his magnificently hilarious ‘Discworld’ novels, disguises his comprehensive knowledge of our serious, so-called reality. Terry’s method was to turn his wealth of learning to good account, by exposing the fun that lurks…

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