Reviews

Three Seasons with Paul Lewis and Steven Osborne, pianos, Nash Ensemble, and New Generation Artists, Bath Mozart Fest

THE Bath Mozart Fest took us musically through three of the four seasons, Spring, Summer and Autumn, in the course of just 24 hours. Spring came in the form of four members of the BBC New Generation Artists – pianist Elisabeth Brauss, violinist Aleksey Semenenko, violist Elvind Ringstad and cellist Andrei Ionita. In music, as…

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Riverdance 25 Anniversary, Bristol Hippodrome

IF I was to ask 1,000 people who won the 1994 Eurovision Song Contest, I doubt that more than a handful would come up with the answer – Irish duo Paul Harrington and Charlie McGettigan singing Rock ‘n Roll Kids. If I mentioned the name Michael Flatley, a dancer who led an Irish dance team…

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The Weir, Frome Drama, Merlin Theatre

THERE are moments when the magic of theatre is almost tangible, seconds or even minutes when a whole auditorium holds its breath, intense passages when even the stage lighting seems to change subtly and you don’t know whether it’s the lighting engineer’s skill or your brain that is lowering the level. Conor McPherson’s The Weir…

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The Return of MADS, Mere Lecture Hall

MERE Amateur Dramatic Society has welcomed its faithful audience back to the Lecture Hall with four short plays, one the premiere of a solo show by a well-known local playwright, and another a revived radio play by the mother of a Mere resident. The evening begins with Jean McConnell’s Day Trippers, performed by Rose Heesom…

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Season’s Greetings, Swan Theatre, Yeovil

ALAN Ayckbourn’s 1980 play Season’s Greetings is perhaps the polar opposite of all those sickly, soft-focus images of the perfect family festivities. Set in the home of Neville and Belinda Bunker, the five scenes start on Christmas Eve and end in the early hours of 27th December, and show how the family and friends slot…

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The Changing Room, Studio Theatre, Arts University Bournemouth

UNIVERSITY students have had a massively challenging, and disappointing, time during the pandemic lockdowns and cancellations, segregated from the majority of their friends, colleagues and teachers and learning for all-important exams by Zoom meetings and virtual lessons. So it’s all the more impressive that the BA(Hons) students at AUB have re-emerged into the public spotlight…

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The Vicar of Dibley, Street Theatre at Strode Theatre

MUCH-loved television shows like Blackadder and Dad’s Army have become a staple of the local amateur stage in recent years and now we can add The Vicar of Dibley to the list, thanks to an effervescent production by Street Theatre. It’s easy to see why these classic television comedies are so popular, both for performers…

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Heathers- the Musical, Bristol Hippodrome

FOR most of the time in which it was responsible for issuing a certificate for a film to be shown to the public, The British Board of Film Censors would, after seeing the film, place it in one of three categories, U, which could be seen by anyone regardless of age unaccompanied, A,  which anyone…

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