Reviews

The Dance of Death, Ustinov Studio, Bath Theatre Royal and touring

AUGUST Strindberg’s 1900 play The Dance of Death sowed the seeds for a number of important 20th century works, notably Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf. It was brought to public notice in the UK by Laurence Olivier’s National Theatre production at the Old Vic in the late 1960s. Now a new version, adapted…

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Crimes on Centre Court, Bath Theatre Royal

THE more you know about tennis at SW 19 the funnier you’’ll find the New Old Friends new show, Crimes on Centre Court, opening at Bath until 28 May prior to a national tour later in the year. One happy co-incidence is that Ben Thornton,  one of the quartet of actors, bears a long distance…

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Waitress, Southampton Mayflower and touring

I FIRST got acquainted with the story of Waitress back in July 2007, at 20th Century Fox’s screening cinema in Soho. Later, the first copy of the film, on 35mm, was couriered down to Dorset on a motorcycle. Screen Bites, the food film festival we ran at the time, staged its first UK showing for…

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Singin’ in the Rain at Bristol Hippodrome

THE idea of producing a satire on the birth of talking pictures bounced around Hollywood for years, with one or two modest versions being filmed, before it landed on MGM producer Arthur Freed’s desk in the early 1950s. After a few more twists and turns, Gene Kelly and choreographer Stanley Donen took up the challenge…

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Catch Me if You Can, Theatre Royal, Bath

ONE of the most underestimated of Frank (Guys and Dolls) Loesser’s musicals, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, is rarely performed in this country, in spite of a fine score full of hummable solo and chorus numbers. The book was too strongly based in American business culture and humour to appeal to an…

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French Dressing, Swan Theatre, Yeovil

THE name of the French fin de siecle comic dramatist Georges Feydeau is synonymous with bedroom farce – but, in the age of #MeToo and the constrictions of cancel culture, is there still a place for his fizzy confections of mistaken identities and thwarted illicit pleasures? That may be the inevitable response to a Feydeau…

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The Rise and Fall of Little Voice, Salisbury Playhouse and touring

WHEN Jim Cartwright’s play The Rise and Fall of Little Voice opened 30 years ago, the performances of Alison Steadman and Jane Horrocks took the critical breath away from the London reviewers. Its impact continues, and several revivals have delighted audiences around the country and the world. Now a new production, starring Shobna Gulati as…

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Henry V, Antic Disposition at Bath Abbey

1915. A group of wounded soldiers, French and English, arrive at a military field hospital in France. One of them has a copy of Henry V. They decide to pass their time by staging a Shakespearean play. The action moves back 500 years to the fields of France. Antic Disposition specialises in staging plays in…

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School of Rock, Bristol Hippodrome and touring

ANDREW Lloyd Weber, composer of, amongst others, Evita, Phantom of the Opera, Cats and Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, and Julian Fellowes, author of Downton Abbey and Aristocrats, are hardly the first names that would come to mind if you were looking for a composer and someone to adopt the script of a cult…

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Sheila’s Island, Bath Theatre Royal and touring

TIM Firth’s play Sheila’s Island – a sort of gender-swapped version of his 1992 Neville’s Island – is touring the UK in a production by Joanna Read. When it opened at Bath Theatre Royal on 11th May, one of its four actors, Abigail Thaw, was indisposed, and the remarkable Tracy Collier got the chance to…

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