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Based on the unexplained suicide of four women who starved themselves to death over a period of 40 days and who systematically destroyed any clues that might have helped us to understand their actions, Lippy will not be every theatregoers cup of tea. If the play’s subject is bleak, the dramatic treatment of the subject […]
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Presenting a classic like Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice for the theatre holds certain risks. Patrons who are seasoned lovers of the English classics have certain expectations, and would be disappointed if the stage production differs greatly to the novel. Fortunately Tamara Harvey’s production rose to the challenge, bringing the story to life with its […]
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2015 marks the centenary of Arthur Miller’s birth and the RSC has honoured it with a near definitive account of what is probably Miller’s finest play – Death of a Salesman. Miller’s powerful, painful take on the elusive Great American Dream is not easy to bring off on stage but Gregory Doran’s characteristically assured touch […]
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Award-winning playwright Nick Payne, has amazed audiences on both sides of the Atlantic. Here he shares the sociable side of his nature with a dinner party full of ‘big’ characters.
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Perry good show We all love a bit of Grayson Perry – and a landmark exhibition at Turner Contemporary called Provincial Punk gives us an insight into this most colourful of artists. The exhibition explores Perry’s uniquely subversive practice, from a young artist forging his own artistic language in 1980s Britain to his status today […]
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Hugh Maynard plays John in Miss Saigon at the Prince Edward Theatre. He has a long musical theatre track record, a new album out and a powerful personal back story. SUSAN ELKIN finds out more. Some actors present themselves as exuberant show offs presumably because they dare not stop performing. Hugh Maynard isn’t one of […]
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LESLEY FINLAY shares the memories of a successful school project that involved a collaboration bringing students together with one of the country’s top publishers… Over the last few months I have been working with a group of young people from an academy in Margate, a town like many others with its pockets of poverty and […]
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As we move into the summer and thoughts of those year 13s moving in to the ‘real world’, you might want to consider this new series of books in the ‘Dummies’ series (although make sure they understand not to take the title personally!). Publishers Wiley have launched a new Getting a Job book series covering […]
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GRAHAM HOOPER explores the role children’s toys and games play in depicting conflict in the thought-provoking War Games exhibition currently on at the SeaCity Museum in Southampton. Could it be that guns actually look the way they do because they imitate their primitive ancestors, crafted by children playing in the woods, rather than the other […]
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Nothing boosts a child’s desire to engage than an exciting session of interactive learning. MARY HOPLEY reports on what happens when Sky Blue Theatre Company rocks into school for a breathtaking Shakespeare workshop. Facing a morning off from lessons, the excitement of the children was palpable as they filed into the hall for their Midsummer […]