Reviews

Jane Eyre, Studio Theatre Salis­bury

CHARLOTTE Bronte’s novel Jane Eyre is accurately described as iconic, providing indelible set-piece scenes as it unfolds its story of an unloved orphaned girl and her quest to find love and acceptance. When Polly Teale adapted the book for the Shared Experience theatre company in 1997, she took a fresh approach, looking at the repressed…

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Fermented Honey, AUB students at Pavilion Dance, Bournemouth

SUPERSTITION, religious fervour, jealousy, domination and unrequited love are at the centre of Fermented Honey, a piece devised by graduating actors on the performing arts courses at Arts University Bournemouth based on the writings of Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Pablo Neruda. The setting is the Santa Clara asylum for female lunatics. The stage of Pavilion…

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Der Rosenkavalier at St George’s, Bristol

HAVING enjoyed a number of live screenings of plays, musicals and operas over the past few years, I was greatly looking forward to St George’s screening of Richard Strauss’ matchless opera Der Rosenkavalier, or to give it its English title The Knight of the Rose. Not that it could be described as being “live” in…

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Miss Saigon, Bristol Hippodrome and tour

SPECTACULAR, brilliant and legendary are just three of the words in the publicity for this, the completely revamped tour of the second big show by the writers of Les Miserables. This is the first time I have seen Miss Saigon since just before it closed in 1999, having also seen the very first cast in…

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Mary Chapin Carpenter, Bath Festival at the Forum

APPEARING at The Forum on a beautiful spring evening was a sort of homecoming for Mary Chapin Carpenter, the American singer-songwriter celebrating 30 years of recording. Her most recent record (she likes to call them “records”) is Some­timesJust the Sky, and was made at Real World studio in Box, just up the road from the…

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A Wiltshire Tale, Nick Harper, Bradford on Avon

“THERE is magic in this world right here,” says Nick Harper in the concluding verse of his epic poem A Wiltshire Tale, which he performed to a small but enthusiastic audience in St Margaret’s Hall at Bradford on Avon, part of a tour that also includes Bridport Arts Centre on 23rd June and the Larmer…

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Oh What a Lovely War, AUB and Kokoro at Elliott Road Studio

ARTS University Bournemouth found a unique way to commemorate World War I – by producing Joan Littlewood’s great music theatre satire Oh What a Lovely War with students from the 2014 and now the 2018 performing arts courses. The project was made more exciting by the involvement of Kokoro, Bournemouth Sym­ph­­ony Orch­estra’s contemporary music ens­emble….

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Trowbridge Chorus, St James Church, Trowbridge

THE audience for the Trowbridge Chorus spring concert, in the elegant and historic setting of St James Church, had a double treat with the baroque glories of masterpieces by Vivaldi and Handel. The concert, conducted by the benign but disciplined Graham Dalby, opened with Vivaldi’s Gloria, a work of transcendent music – even saying “Vivaldi’s Gloria”…

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