Reviews

Grease, Octagon Theatre, Yeovil

YEOVIL Youth Theatre’s “Grease” was chock-a-block with energy from the word go. As the fact packed programme informed us: “The watchword with a production like “Grease” is FUN” – and fun it certainly was. As one of the few people there with a bus pass, it was a treat to witness the eager anticipation and…

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Aida, Bournemouth Pavilion

VERDI’s great opera was brought to the Pavilion for one night only by the Chisinau National Opera and Philharmonic Orchestra in a new production directed by Ellen Kent. Perhaps the most popular of all Verdi’s operas, Aida is the tragic story of a beautiful Ethiopian slave girl and her love for the Egyptian battle hero…

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Mary Gauthier and The Handsome Family at the Freight and Salvage

THE Freight and Salvage in the centre of the university town of Berkeley in California is described as a coffee house, but its fame is for much more than serving a latte or a frapaccino. This community run venue not only offers weekly classes in banjo, fiddle and guitar but attracts some of the world’s…

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Mozart Requiem, Lighthouse, Poole

Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, leader Amyn Merchant Bournemouth Symphony Chorus, Chorus Master Gavin Carr Conductor: Kees Bakels Elizabeth Watts, Soprano, Jennifer Johnston, Contralto Joshua Ellicott, Tenor David Stout, Bass Mozart Don Giovanni Overture Mozart Symphony No.38 “Prague” Mozart Requiem Amsterdam-born Kees Bakels, the BSO’s former Chief Guest Conductor, has remained a regular visitor to Poole since…

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Disposing of the Body, Swan Theatre, Yeovil

THE Swan in Yeovil is rather like the Menier Chocolate factory in Southwark, London: a safe bet for high quality work; whatever they choose to produce, the standard of acting, direction and overall production value will be top-notch, and Disposing of the Body is no exception. Written by Hugh Whitemore, whose work for television, stage…

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PAGODA, Shaftesbury Arts Centre

PAGODA paid their third visit to Shaftesbury at the weekend playing music in their typically eclectic style – hard to define but delightful to listen to. The linchpin of the ensemble is accordionist Paul Hutchinson who immediately established a warm rapport with his audience, MC-ing the proceedings in a suitably relaxed, informal style. The other…

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Serious Money, Bristol Old Vic Theatre School at Circomedia

CARYL Churchill’s 1987 play Serious Money was a smash hit when it opened at the Royal Court, and now, quarter of a century later, it is just as powerful now when audiences can see how weirdly prophetic it was. Set in the time when the London money markets exploded in coke and insomnia fuelled mania,…

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Minerva Scientifica

IF your dog has the misfortune to be allergic to fleas, it is hard to have any interest in the little beasts. But no-one could fail to be seduced by the charms of Karen Wimhurst’s musical flea and Frances Lynch’s interpretation of the scientist and entomologist Miriam Rothschild, who made a special study of the…

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Rent, Bath Operatic and Dramatic Society, Mission Theatre

525,600 minutes, as a song from Rent points out, is a year, spent in the life of a New York community “celebrating life and facing death and AIDS at the turn of the century” to quote its writer Jonathan Larson. The show is a rock version of Puccini’s La Boheme, with most of the characters…

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The Recruiting Officer Salisbury Playhouse

GEORGE Farquhar’s The Recruiting Officer was one of the first plays chosen by the newly-formed National Theatre 50 years ago, and clips from it have been popular highlights in the various television programmes about the anniversary, with Maggie Smith as the plucky Sylvia and Laurence Olivier as the braggart coward Brazen. The exposure should be…

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