Reviews

Arcadia at Bath Theatre Royal

JUST as the media is abuzz with questions like “are you brainy enough to see a Stoppard play,” Blanche McIntyre’s new production of one of his greatest – Arcadia – comes to Bath’s Theatre Royal. I find it rather depressing that the country is being asked to criticise Stoppard for writing work that is a…

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84 Charing Cross Road at Salisbury Playhouse

JAMES Roose-Evans’ international hit play 84 Charing Cross Road started its life at Salisbury Playhouse in 1981, before a triumphant transfer to the West End (and then to Broadway) and an award-winning film. Now it’s back on stage in Salisbury, again directed by Roose-Evans– and it’s a sheer delight. I must be one of the…

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Earthquakes in London, AUB students at Poole’s Lighthouse

MIKE Bartlett’s dystopian play Earth­quakes in London was last seen in the region in 2011 when Rupert Goold’s Headlong production came to Bath. Set mainly in the capital, it dashes from a prescient past to an oddly promising future. Using that much-visited framework of three sisters and a disappointing father, its siblings are variously a…

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4 x 4 Ephemeral Architectures, Gandini Juggling at Pavilion Dance

WHEN total strangers leaving a show are so excited and happy that they talk to each other, you know the performance has been something special. And this was an exceptional show that had the audience – of all ages – buzzing with delighted admiration. Juggling and contemporary dance don’t have an obvious or immediate connection…

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Roundelay, Stephen Joseph Theatre Company, Bath Theatre Royal

A ROUNDELAY is a circular dance, or a song with a line repeated as chorus, or anything circular, and this new work from Alan Ayckbourn is certainly at least one of those three; an evening of circular entertainment. Part of the Brechtian nature of Ayckbourn is that he sometimes likes us to see the scaffold,…

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Peter Pan, TAG at Tisbury Victoria Hall

TISBURY Arts Group moved back from Nadder Hall to the more intimate surroundings of the Victoria Hall in the town centre for this year’s pantomime, Peter Pan, and the Saturday matinee packed every seat in the house, balcony included. This home-written version of the famous story (by an uncredited author) has Nana as a human…

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Treasure Island, Tarrant Valley Players

THERE are three essential ingredients for a successful village pantomime – a good script, talented performers and a strong sense of community. If you get all three coming together well you hit the jackpot, which is pretty much what Tarrant Valley Players did with Treasure Island at Tarrant Keyneston’s Ann Biddlecombe Hall. The Tarrant villages are…

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It’s a Wonderful Life, North Cadbury Village Hall and touring

FARNHAM Maltings’ It’s a Wonderful Life is a reworking of Frank Capra’s classic 1946 film of the same name. The production, which has been touring England and Wales over the past month or so, was brought to North Cadbury Village Hall by Take Art, Somerset’s highly enterprising arts charity. Skilfully directed by Gavin Stride and…

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Aladdin at Bourton Village Hall

VILLAGE hall pantomime is a uniquely British rural art form. It has a few essential rules. You must know most of the people on stage. There must be some local jokes. Children from the village will come and dance and sing. The costumes will be colourful. Lots of things will go a little bit wrong,…

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Three Men in a Boat, Salisbury Playhouse and touring

WHEN I worked at the Evening News in London, my friend Laine and I used to spend all our spare money on tickets for the National Theatre (at the Old Vic) and then we’d put out all our clothes on the beds in the flat we shared and perform our favourite plays, grabbing the costume…

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