Reviews

Wendy: A Peter Pan Story, Bath Theatre Royal, The Egg

YOU know the story – the boy who can fly, the boy who never grew up, the boy who lives with a tribe of Lost Boys in Neverland, where he constantly battles with the evil Captain Hook, the boy who is looking for a mother … But what about that mother figure? Wendy – stolid,…

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Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Strode Theatre, Street

THE importance of Edward Albee’s 1962 play Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf was immediately recognised, and the film, made four years later, starred Hollywood’s hottest couple, Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton two years into their first marriage, in the central parts of Martha and George. Since then, the roles have been performed by the world’s…

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Aladdin, Poole Lighthouse

YOU almost certainly know the story of Aladdin, most recently thanks to Disney and various films, but if the back story is missing, you will need to go to Poole to find out more. Local pantomime favourite Chris Jarvis has not only written and directed this new version, but also stars as Widow Twankey, mother…

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Cinderella at Westlands, Yeovil

CINDERELLA is the most popular of all pantomimes, so it was the natural choice for the displaced Yeovil Octagon team as the first (of hopefully a very small number) of pantos to be staged at Westlands, their temporary home while the Octagon refurbishment progresses. And it is a triumph! The Octagon pantomime has got better…

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Oliver Twist, Tobacco Factory Theatres

Oliver Twist or The Parish Boy’s, Progress Charles Dickens second novel is also one of his darkest stories. How then do you make such a story acceptable as a Christmas entertainment without destroying the essential fabric of this wonderfully atmospheric story, and its fierce attack on Victorian society’s attitude towards the poor? Lionel Bart succeeded…

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The Turn of the Screw, Ustinov Studio, Bath

IS there a more mysteriously creepy story in all of opera and “serious” fiction than Henry James’s The Turn of the Screw, orchestrated by Benjamin Britten? Forests have been felled to provide the trees for the paper on which generations of experts, philosophers, students and musicologists have written their thoughts on the meaning of this…

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Martha and George at Street

IN a world of tinsel and jingle bells, Edward Albee’s classic 1962 play of domestic misery on an American campus is a start contrast, but that’s what is on offer at Strode Theatre Studio in Street from 14th to 16th December. Neil Howiantz directs the Strode Theatre Productions version of the play, which will be…

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Peter Pan – the High-Flying Panto Adventure, Bristol Hippodrome

THIS is the 11th time that Andy Ford has led the comedy output in a Hippodrome panto, and in more than one of those of shows he has had to carry that burden almost single-handedly propping up high profile personalities with little stage experience. This time its a different story with M. Poirot David Suchet,…

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Twelfth Night, APS, Sherborne Studio Theatre

IF you are following talented young Street actor-singer Toby Turley on I Have a Dream*, the quest for the new Sky and Sophie for the West End’s Mamma Mia, you will know that the ingredients for a perfect theatre on-stage partnership are not only acting (or singing) ability but also that intangible quality, chemistry. If…

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Arabian Nights, Bristol Old Vic

BRISTOL’S Old Vic Theatre is transformed into a magical city state in Arabia this Christmas. There’s a palace, a prison and a house where some of the “ordinary people” live, as well as sea monsters and a marvellous flying horse. And Schere is telling her stories to the petulant and babyish king. This brilliant retelling…

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