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    • Strictly star Nikita Kuzmin rides into Grand Opera House in modern fairytale of star-crossed lovers Midnight Dancer
    • Nun better as Hayley Bamford takes on Deloris’s role in Sister Act for York Musical Theatre Company at JoRo Theatre
    • The Arts Barge returns for 2025 season of music, performance and art at Foss Basin. First up, By The Blue Bridge festival
    • REVIEW: Steve Crowther’s verdict on Gamelan Sekar Petak, Sir Jack Lyons Concert Hall, University of York, May 7
    • What’s On in Ryedale, York and beyond. Hutch’s List No. 20, from Gazette & Herald
    • Pickering Musical Society’s final musical, Hello, Dolly!, will be ‘our most extravagant show ever’ says director Luke Arnold
    • Question: Why will NE Theatre York shows no longer be reviewed? Here is the answer
    • Next Door But One turn spotlight on young carers & mental health in How To Be A Kid, on tour in schools and theatre spaces
    • Fiery Angel confirms Grand Opera House run for Agatha Christie’s Death On The Nile next March, directed by Lucy Bailey
    • REVIEW: Martin Dreyer’s verdict on Opera North in Simon Boccanegra, St George’s Hall, Bradford, April 24; Hull City Hall, May 17
    • REVIEW: Martin Dreyer’s verdict on York Late Music, Freedom Dances, Unitarian Chapel, St Saviourgate, York, May 3
    • REVIEW: Neon Crypt Productions in Dracula: The Bloody Truth, Theatre@41, Monkgate, York ****
    • The Brook Street Band to lead workshops and perform at National Centre for Early Music Composers Award Day in York
    • More Things To Do in York & beyond, when ‘finding the way through the human maze’. Hutch’s List No. 20, from The York Press
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    • Jessa Liversidge to perform A Tapestry Of Life concert for Mental Health Awareness Week at The Courthouse, Thirsk, today
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  • More Things To Do in York and beyond Gary Oldman’s exit stage left, minus bananas. Hutch’s List No. 21, from The York Press
  • REVIEW: Next Door But One in How To Be A Kid, next stop Friargate Theatre, York ****
  • Mikron Theatre Company must go down to the sea in Operation Beach Hut…at the Scarcroft Allotments on Sunday afternoon
  • Jessa Liversidge to perform A Tapestry Of Life concert for Mental Health Awareness Week at The Courthouse, Thirsk, today
  • Strictly star Nikita Kuzmin rides into Grand Opera House in modern fairytale of star-crossed lovers Midnight Dancer
  • Nun better as Hayley Bamford takes on Deloris’s role in Sister Act for York Musical Theatre Company at JoRo Theatre
  • The Arts Barge returns for 2025 season of music, performance and art at Foss Basin. First up, By The Blue Bridge festival
  • REVIEW: Steve Crowther’s verdict on Gamelan Sekar Petak, Sir Jack Lyons Concert Hall, University of York, May 7
  • What’s On in Ryedale, York and beyond. Hutch’s List No. 20, from Gazette & Herald
  • Pickering Musical Society’s final musical, Hello, Dolly!, will be ‘our most extravagant show ever’ says director Luke Arnold
  • Question: Why will NE Theatre York shows no longer be reviewed? Here is the answer
  • Next Door But One turn spotlight on young carers & mental health in How To Be A Kid, on tour in schools and theatre spaces
  • Fiery Angel confirms Grand Opera House run for Agatha Christie’s Death On The Nile next March, directed by Lucy Bailey
  • REVIEW: Martin Dreyer’s verdict on Opera North in Simon Boccanegra, St George’s Hall, Bradford, April 24; Hull City Hall, May 17
  • REVIEW: Martin Dreyer’s verdict on York Late Music, Freedom Dances, Unitarian Chapel, St Saviourgate, York, May 3
  • Breaking News
  • More Things To Do in York and beyond Gary Oldman’s exit stage left, minus bananas. Hutch’s List No. 21, from The York Press
  • REVIEW: Next Door But One in How To Be A Kid, next stop Friargate Theatre, York ****
  • Mikron Theatre Company must go down to the sea in Operation Beach Hut…at the Scarcroft Allotments on Sunday afternoon
  • Jessa Liversidge to perform A Tapestry Of Life concert for Mental Health Awareness Week at The Courthouse, Thirsk, today
  • Strictly star Nikita Kuzmin rides into Grand Opera House in modern fairytale of star-crossed lovers Midnight Dancer
  • Nun better as Hayley Bamford takes on Deloris’s role in Sister Act for York Musical Theatre Company at JoRo Theatre
  • The Arts Barge returns for 2025 season of music, performance and art at Foss Basin. First up, By The Blue Bridge festival
  • REVIEW: Steve Crowther’s verdict on Gamelan Sekar Petak, Sir Jack Lyons Concert Hall, University of York, May 7
  • What’s On in Ryedale, York and beyond. Hutch’s List No. 20, from Gazette & Herald
  • Pickering Musical Society’s final musical, Hello, Dolly!, will be ‘our most extravagant show ever’ says director Luke Arnold
  • Question: Why will NE Theatre York shows no longer be reviewed? Here is the answer
  • Next Door But One turn spotlight on young carers & mental health in How To Be A Kid, on tour in schools and theatre spaces
  • Fiery Angel confirms Grand Opera House run for Agatha Christie’s Death On The Nile next March, directed by Lucy Bailey
  • REVIEW: Martin Dreyer’s verdict on Opera North in Simon Boccanegra, St George’s Hall, Bradford, April 24; Hull City Hall, May 17
  • REVIEW: Martin Dreyer’s verdict on York Late Music, Freedom Dances, Unitarian Chapel, St Saviourgate, York, May 3
  • Breaking News
Posted on February 25, 2023May 15, 2025 by Charles Hutchinson

More Things To Do in York and beyond when city comes under art attack. Hutch’s List No. 9 for 2023, from The Press, York

THE cook, the dinosaurs, the pots and the mums serve up a week of cultural contrasts, as recommended by Charles Hutchinson.

Exhibition of the week: Lincoln Lightfoot, Grand Opera House, York, until May 31

ALIENS, dinosaurs, UFOs, even King Kong, invade the Grand Opera House box office as York artist Lincoln Lightfoot explores surreal concepts reminiscent of the poster art for the Fifties and Sixties’ B-movie fixation with comical science-fiction disasters.

Depicting unusual happenings with large beasts, staged in familiar settings and on iconic architecture, from York Minster to the Angel of the North, Lightfoot’s artwork escapes from everyday problems to tap into the fears perpetuated by the news media and politicians alike in a post Covid-19 world.

Artist LIncoln Lightfoot surveys his dinosaurs towering over York Minster in an earlier exhibition at The Den at Micklegate Social, York

The gig of the week: Courtney Marie Andrew, Leeds Brudenell Social Club, Wednesday, doors 7.30pm

PHOENIX singer, songwriter, poet and artist Courtney Marie Andrews initially approached making her latest album, Loose Future, by composing a song every day. Feeling “the sounds of summer” flowing through her writing in a Cape Cod beach house, she collected material imbued with romance, possibility and freedom for recording at Sam Evian’s Flying Cloud Recordings studio in the Catskill Mountains, New York State.

Dipping in the creek every morning before proceeding, she wanted to embody the feeling of letting love in after the break-up reflections of 2020’s Old Flowers. Hear the results in Leeds. Box office: brudenellsocialclub.co.uk.

Courtney Marie Andrews: Plunging into new love in her Loose Future songs at Leeds Brudenell Social Club

Topical monologue of the week: Black Treacle Theatre in Iphigenia In Splott, Theatre@41, Monkgate, York, Wednesday to Saturday, 7.30pm and 2.30pm Saturday matinee

GREEK myth meets modern reality in Gary Owen’s “horribly relevant” one-woman drama Iphigenia In Splott, set in contemporary Cardiff and rooted in the ancient tale of Iphigenia being sacrificed by her father to placate the gods.

Under the direction of Jim Paterson, York company Black Treacle Theatre presents Livy Potter in this 75-minute monologue about Effie, whose life spirals through a mess of drink, drugs and drama every night, and a hangover worse than death the next day, until one incident gives her the chance to be something more. Box office: tickets.41monkgate.co.uk.

Livy Potter: “Spiralling through a mess of drink, drugs and drama every night” in the role of Effie in Gary Owen’s monologue Iphigenia In Splott

Food for thought: Prue Leith: Nothing In Moderation, Grand Opera House, York, Thursday, 7.30pm

“I’M probably nuts to try it, but it’s huge fun,” says Dame Prue Leith as she mounts her debut tour at the age of 83. Nothing is off the menu as she shares anecdotes of the ups and downs of being a restaurateur, food writer, novelist, businesswoman and Great British Bake Off judge.

For the first time, Dame Prue tells tales of how she has fed the rich and famous, cooked for royalty and even poisoned her clients, while singing the praises of food, love and life. Audience questions will be answered post-interval. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.

Cook’s confessions: Prue Leith opens up in Nothing In Moderation on her debut theatre tour

The show that comes with strings attached: Chloe Bezer in The Slow Songs Make Me Sad, York Theatre Royal Studio, Friday, 7.45pm

CELLIST, writer and theatre maker Chloe Bezer’s “rollicking night of cabaret storytelling about post-natal depression” is her chance to make her mark, deal with the big stuff, and leave an inheritance before she is an ex-cellist and theatre maker.

Refusing to stay silent over the stuff usually kept quiet, and resolutely life affirming, Bezer addresses unrecognised hardships faced by new mothers, complicated relationships with making music and the question of what we leave behind. Cue clowning, heartfelt stories and raucous cello songs. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.

Writer, performer, musician and mother: Theatre and home maker Chloe Bezer in a whirl in The Slow Songs Make Me Sad

Mum’s the word: Mumsy, Hull Truck Theatre, Thursday to March 25

AS part of Hull Truck’s 50th anniversary programme, Hull playwright Lydia Marchant delivers the world premiere of Mumsy, wherein Sophie (Jessica Jolleys), her mum Rachel (Nicola Stephenson) and nan Linda (Sue Kelvin) battle through the friendship, drama and love of mother-daughter relationships.

“What a privilege to be directing this funny, warm, authentic new play,” says director Zoe Waterman. “Crammed into a one-bed flat in Hull with rising bills and decreasing wages, three generations of women push at their circumstances – and sometimes each other – to let their dreams soar.” Box office: 01482 323638 or hulltruck.co.uk.

Not keeping mum: Sue Kelvin, as nan Linda, in rehearsal for Hull Truck Theatre’s world premiere of Lydia Marchant’s Mumsy

Top of the pots: York Ceramics Fair, York Racecourse, March 4 and 5,10am to 5pm

THE Craft Potters Association has curated artworks from 60 prominent British ceramicists and potters, hailing from Cornwall to Scotland, for the return of York Ceramics Fair after a Covid-enforced short break.

Among the Yorkshire makers there will be Ruth King, Loretta Braganza and Emily Stubbs, from York, Katie Braida, from Scarborough, Penny Withers, from Sheffield, and fair chair Anna Lambert, from Keighley. Both Emily and Katie will be giving a demonstration. For tickets and a full list of exhibitors, go to: yorkceramicsfair.com.

Emily Stubbs: Taking part in the York Ceramics Fair at York Racecourse

High old time of the week: Attic Theatre Company presents James Rowland in Learning To Fly, Helmsley Arts Centre, March 4, 7.30pm

COMBINING theatre, comedy and music in his new show, James Rowland tells the story of a remarkable friendship he made when he was a lonely, unhappy teenager with the scary old lady who lived in the spooky house on his street. 

“It’s about connection, no matter what the obstacles; about love’s eternal struggle with time; about music and its ability to heal,” says Rowland. “It’s also about her last wish: to get high once before she dies.” Box office: 01439 771700 or helmsleyartscentre.co.uk.

James Rowland: Winging it in Learning To Fly at Helmsley Arts Centre

Comedy coupling incoming: An Evening Shared With Jasper Carrott and Alistair McGowan, Grand Opera House, York, April 16, 7.30pm

COMEDIANS Jasper Carrott and Alistair McGowan join forces to “split the bill and your sides” with a night of stand-up and impressions.

Their pairing for a one-off festival appearance turned out  to be a match made in comedy heaven, prompting the decision to tour together. They first played the Grand Opera House in November 2018, when McGowan’s opening set prompted Carrott to say, “I said ‘warm them up’, not boil them!”. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.

Double bill: Jasper Carrott and Alistair McGowan
CategoriesBreaking News Archive TagsAlistair McGowan, Attic Theatre Company, Black Treacle Theatre, Chloe Bezer, Courtney Marie Andrews, grand opera house york, Helmsley Arts Centre, Hull Truck Theatre, Iphigenia In Splott, James Rowland, Jasper Carrott, Learning To Fly, Leeds Brudenell Social Club, Lincoln Lightfoot, Lydia Marchant, Mumsy, Prue Leith, The Slow Songs Make Me Sad, Theatre at 41 Monkgate, York Ceramics Fair, York Racecourse, York Theatre Royal

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