YORK’S Queen of Burlesque, Freida Nipples, returns to Rise@Bluebird Bakery, Acomb, York, tonight for Baps and Buns Burlesque at 7pm.
She will be joined by cabaret artists, from drag queens to acrobats, for a fun night of debauchery and glamour in Acomb, hosted by Freida, who has run shows at York Theatre Royal, The Basement at City Screen Picturehouse and Impossible York over the past six years. and more.
“The big question is, are you ready for it?” she teases. Tickets include a welcome drink on arrival, with a non-alcoholic option available. For tickets, go to: bluebirdbakery.co.uk/rise.
SHED Seven’s album of orchestral reworkings, Liquid Gold, arrives tomorrow on Cooking Vinyl as their 30th anniversary celebrations take to the road.
These gilded reinventions were recorded in collaboration with arrangers Fiona Brice and Michael Rendall, Rendall having teamed up with the Sheds for 2017’s Top Ten comeback album Instant Pleasures and 2024’s A Matter Of Time.
The track listing will be: Getting Better; Speakeasy; Devil In Your Shoes; On Standby; Going For Gold; Waiting For The Catch; Better Days; Parallel Lines; Disco Down; Ocean Pie; new composition All Roads Lead To You and Chasing Rainbows.
Already the York band have trailered the 12-track recording with a quintet of tasters: Speakeasy, Devil In Your Shoes, Getting Better, the BBC Radio 2 B-listed Waiting For The Catch duet with Issy Ferris, of UK folk/rock/Americana duo Ferris & Sylvester, and, most recently, Chasing Rainbows, their most streamed song of all time and perennial set closer.
Originally released on 1998’s Let It Ride, Chasing Rainbows has been reshaped with a string arrangement and plaintive piano before the Sheds furnish the song still further, giving its melancholy and yearning a deeper resonance.
Frontman Rick Witter says: “When we set out to re-record Chasing Rainbows for Liquid Gold, this particular track presented a different kind of challenge. We knew we were handling something with extreme care, as we understand just how significant Chasing Rainbows is to so many of you! It’s not just a song but a part of your lives and memories. We read your comments and felt the impact this song has had.
“In crafting this new version, we poured all that emotion and significance into it. As we worked in the studio, it became clear that this rendition embodies a collective spirit. It’s not meant to be better than the original but rather to stand as its sister, a cinematic alternative, like the closing scene of a movie. That’s why it sits proudly at the end of Liquid Gold. You can almost hear your voices singing long after the record has finished.”
On the heels of being named as ambassadors forNational Album Day, playing Blossoms’ Big Bank Holiday Weekend at Wythenshawe Park, Manchester, on August 25, and BBC Radio 2 In The Park in Preston on September 8, the Sheds head out on a record store tour of short sets and record signings tomorrow.
They also will perform six intimate shows to mark the 30th anniversary of their 1994 debut album, Change Giver, before their full-scale headline tour starts on November 14.
A year that began with Shed Seven topping the album charts for the first time in January with A Matter Of Time will end with Witter and guitarist Paul Banks going back to where the Sheds’ story began, when the two former Huntington schoolboys play acoustic shows at the Huntington Working Men’s Club in York on December 21 and 22.
The Liquid Gold album campaign has been given further impetus with a Bootleg Edition, featuring stripped-back artwork hand-stamped by a band member and five bonus tracks, available as a specially priced CD and on black double-vinyl.
Other formats include signed yellow splatter double-vinyl and a Live At York 2CD that adds a live album recorded at the brace of York Museum Gardens 30th anniversary gigs in July. The Sheds’ official store also offers fans the chanced to build their own custom album bundles. All pre-orders are on sale at shedsevenn.lnk.to/LiquidGoldPR
Shed Seven’s gig diary: September 27 to December 22
September 27, Manchester, HMV (1pm SOLD OUT)
September 27, Bury, Wax & Beans (6pm SOLD OUT)
September 28, Birmingham, HMV (1pm SOLD OUT)
September 28, Leamington Spa, Head Records (5pm SOLD OUT)
September 29, London, Rough Trade East (5pm SOLD OUT)
September 29, London, Rough Trade East (7pm SOLD OUT)
September 30, Southampton, Vinilo (1pm SOLD OUT)
September 30, Brighton, Resident Music (6.30pm SOLD OUT)
October 1, Bristol, Rough Trade (12 noon LOW TICKETS)
October 1, Bristol, Rough Trade (5pm SOLD OUT)
October 2, Nottingham, Rough Trade (12 noon SOLD OUT)
October 2, Nottingham, Rough Trade (6pm -SOLD OUT)
October 3, Sheffield, Bear Tree Records (12 noon SOLD OUT)
October 3, Liverpool, Jacaranda (7pm SOLD OUT)
October 4, Newcastle, Beyond Vinyl (6.30pm SOLD OUT)
October 10, Kingston-Upon-Thames, Pryzm, Change Giver show, hosted by Banquet Records (EXTRA SHOW ADDED)
October 11, Kingston-Upon-Thames, Pryzm, Change Giver show, hosted by Banquet Records (SOLD OUT)
October 12, Coventry, HMV Empire, Change Giver show (SOLD OUT)
October 16, Edinburgh, Assai Records (12 noon SOLD OUT)
October 16, Glasgow, HMV (5pm SOLD OUT)
October 17, Glasgow, SWG3, Change Giver show, hosted by Assai Records (SOLD OUT)
October 18, Manchester Academy 2, Change Giver show, hosted by Crash Records (SOLD OUT)
October 19, Leeds Beckett Student Union, Change Giver show, hosted by Crash Records (SOLD OUT)
November 14, Sheffield Octagon (SOLD OUT)
November 15, Cardiff University Great Hall
November 16, Liverpool University Mountford Hall (LOW TICKETS)
November 18, Halifax, Victoria Theatre (LOW TICKETS)
November 19, Hull City Hall
November 21, Aberdeen Music Hall (SOLD OUT)
November 22, Glasgow O2 Academy (SOLD OUT)
November 23, Edinburgh O2 Academy (LOW TICKETS)
November 25, Leicester O2 Academy (LOW TICKETS)
November 26, Margate, Dreamland
November 28, Bristol O2 Academy (SOLD OUT)
November 29, Newcastle O2 City Hall (LOW TICKETS)
November 30, Leeds O2 Academy (SOLD OUT)
December 2, Oxford O2 Academy (SOLD OUT)
December 3, Lincoln, Engine Shed (LOW TICKETS)
December 5, Stockton Globe
December 6, Manchester O2 Victoria Warehouse (SOLD OUT)
December 7, Birmingham O2 Academy (SOLD OUT)
December 9, Norwich – The Nick Rayns LCR, University of East Anglia (SOLD OUT)
December 10, Cambridge, Corn Exchange (LOW TICKETS)
December 12, Bournemouth O2 Academy (LOW TICKETS)
December 13, Nottingham, Rock City (SOLD OUT)
December 14, London O2 Academy, Brixton (SOLD OUT)
December 21, Rick Witter & Paul Banks, Huntington Working Men’s Club, York, acoustic gig (SOLD OUT)
December 22, Rick Witter & Paul Banks, Huntington Working Men’s Club, York, acoustic gig (SOLD OUT)
For ticket availability, head to shedseven.com/gigs.
FIFTY per cent of the tickets for Coldplay’s first ever concerts in Hull – at Craven Park Stadium on August 18 and 19 2025 – will go on sale to fans with HU, YO, DN and LN postcodes via Ticketmaster this evening from 6pm.
The general sale for Coldplay’s Hull shows and six nights at Wembley Stadium, London, on September 22, 23, 26, 27, 30 and 31 next year will open at 9am tomorrow morning at ticketmaster.co.uk/coldplay-tickets/artist/806431. These will be their only British/European dates in their Music Of The Spheres World Tour diary for 2025.
Last Sunday evening, Coldplay placed a poster in the window of the Dublin Castle, in Camden, London – the venue for their debut gig on February 22 1998 under the name The Coldplay, tickets £4 with flyer – to reveal that ten per cent of their proceeds from the Wembley and Hull concerts will be donated to Music Venue Trust.
This will help to fund the trust’s support of UK Grassroots Music Venues and upcoming artists. Donations also will be made to the Music Venue Trust by the concerts’ promoters (SJM Concerts, Metropolis Music and Live Nation), the band’s booking agent (WME), the two venues and the official ticket agents (Ticketmaster, See Tickets and AXS).
Mark Davyd, the Music Venue Trust’s chief executive, said: “Coldplay are the perfect example of a UK band who came through the grassroots circuit on their way to worldwide stadium-filling success.
“It’s fantastic to see them celebrating their own pathway to Wembley by giving back to the grassroots music venues that supported them and recognising the artists and promoters that are struggling more than ever to build their own careers.
“Through our partnership with Save Our Scene – who introduced us to Coldplay last year – this money will go directly into work that ensures communities right across the country will continue to have access to great live music on their doorstep.
“The band’s support really will stop venues closing, make tours happen and bring the joy of live music to thousands of people. After months of discussing Coldplay’s potential support around these UK shows with them, we’re so happy and grateful that the news is finally out there.”
In a world first for a stadium show, Coldplay have pledged to power production for the Wembley concerts with 100 per cent solar, wind and kinetic energy, collected at the venue and elsewhere in the UK, and delivered by a specially designed electric battery system.
In addition, one of the satellite stages at each show will be fully powered by energy generated by the audience via kinetic flooring and power bikes.
In June, the band announced that their Music Of The Spheres World Tour has so far produced 59 per cent less CO2 emissions than their previous stadium tour in 2016/17, exceeding their original target of a 50 per cent reduction. They also revealed that nine million trees have been planted, to be followed by a further million before the end of the year.
Coldplay will make a limited number of Infinity Tickets available for the shows via Ticketmaster at 12 noon on Friday, November 22. Infinity Tickets are released for every Coldplay show to make the Music Of The Spheres World Tour accessible to fans for an affordable price.
As always, they will cost £20 per ticket, and they are restricted to a maximum of two tickets per purchaser and must be bought in pairs, which will be located next to each other, anywhere in the venue.
Since the first Music Of The Spheres World Tour date in March 2022, Coldplay have sold more than ten million tickets, making it the biggest tour by a group of all-time.
Coldplay’s tenth studio album, Moon Music, will be released on October 4 and will set new standards for sustainability, with each LP being made from 100 cent recycled plastic bottles (nine per record). It is available to pre-order on EcoCD, EcoRecord LP and digital via ukstore.coldplay.com.
Moon Music is the world’s first album to be released on EcopCD, created from 90 per cent recycled polycarbonate, sourced from waste otherwise headed for landfill.
The track listing is: Moon Music; feelslikeimfallinginlove; We Pray, featuring Little Simz, Burna Boy, Elyanna and TINI; Jupiter; Good Feelings featuring Ayra Starr; 🌈; iAMM; Aeterna; All My Love and One World.
GARDEN ghosts, Yorkshire landscapes, campsite class division, awful auntie antics and ridiculous improv comedy herald the arrival of the arts autumn for Charles Hutchinson.
Installation of the week: Ghosts In The Gardens, haunting York until November 5
GHOSTS In The Gardens returns with 45 ghosts, inspired by York’s past, for visitors to discover in the city’s public gardens and green spaces, with the Bar walls, St Olave’s Church and York Railway Station among the new locations.
Organiser York BID has partnered with design agency Unconventional Design for the fourth year to create the semi-translucent 3D sculptures out of narrow-gauge wire mesh, six of them new for 2024. Pick up the map for this free event from the Visitor Information Centre on Parliament Street and head to https://www.theyorkbid.com/ghosts-in-the-gardens/ for full details.
Exhibition of the week: A Yorkshire Year, Nunnington Hall, near Helmsley, until December 5
THE changing landscape of the Yorkshire countryside and coastline is captured by Yorkshire artists Robert Dutton, from Nunnington, and Andrew Moodie, from Harrogate, in a diverse collection of seasonal images at the National Trust house.
Dutton presents a dramatic interpretation of the untamed expanses of Yorkshire, from meandering freshwater rivers and hidden woodlands to the stark beauty of the moors. Moodie directs his attention to the undulating valleys of the Yorkshire Dales, as well as coastal villages. Opening hours: Tuesday to Sunday, 10.30am to 5pm, last entry at 4.15pm. Normal admission prices apply at nationaltrust.org.uk/nunnington-hall
Touring play of the week: John Godber Company in Perfect Pitch, Harrogate Theatre, until Saturday; Pocklington Arts Centre, October 9 and 10; Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough, November 13 to 16
WHEN teacher Matt (Frazer Hammill) borrows his parents’ caravan for a week on the Yorkshire coast with partner Rose (Annie Kirkman), they were expecting four days of hill running and total de-stress. However, with a Tribfest taking place nearby, Grant (Tom Gallagher) and Steph’s (Laura Jennifer Banks) pop-up tent is an unwelcome addition to their perfect pitch.
The class divide and loo cassettes become an issue as writer-director John Godber reignites his unsettling1998 state-of-the-nation comedy, set on an eroding coastline, as Matt and Rose are inducted into the world of caravanning and karaoke. Box office: Harrogate, 01423 502116 or harrogatetheatre.co.uk; Pocklington, 01759 301547 or pocklingtonartscentre.co.uk; Scarborough, 01723 370541 or sjt.uk.com.
Children’s show of the week: Birmingham Stage Company in Awful Auntie, Grand Opera House, York, today to Sunday
CHILDREN’S author David Walliams and Birmingham Stage Company team up for the fourth time. After adaptations of Gangsta Granny, Billionaire Boy and Demon Dentist, here comes actor-manager Neal Foster’s stage account of Awful Auntie.
As Stella (Annie Cordoni ) sets off to visit London with her parents, she has no idea her life is in danger. When she wakes up three months later, not everything Aunt Alberta (Foster) tells her turns out to be true. She quickly discovers she is in for the fight of her life against her very own awful Auntie! Suitable for age five upwards. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.
Comedy gig of the week: Hilarity Bites Club presents The Halls Of Ridiculous, Cal Halbert and Tony Cowards, Milton Rooms, Malton, Friday, 8pm
NORTHERN comedy The Halls Of Ridiculous, namely Chris Lumb (from BBC Three’s Russell Howard’s Good News) and Phil Allan-Smith (from BBC One’s This Is My House), push the boundaries of improv, sketch and character creativity with their quick-thinking scenes, zany special guests and quirky approach to performance.
Cal Halbert is one half of The Mimic Men, the UK’s only impressionist double act; host Tony Cowards is a rapid-fire gag merchant with an arsenal of one-liners, delivered by a likeable everyman character. Box office: 01653 696240 or themiltonrooms.com.
Fundraising musical theatre concert of the week: 1812 Theatre Company, Just Us And A Piano, Helmsley Arts Centre, Friday and Saturday, 7.30pm
SINGER Julie Lomas and pianist Neil Bell bring together a grand piano and an ensemble 1812 Theatre Company singers to celebrate the world of musical theatre, from the Broadway classics of George Gershwin, Cole Porter, Jerome Kern and Richard Rodgers, through to Cabaret, Wicked, My Fair Lady, Miss Saigon, Les Miserables, Hamilton and the music of Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Singers Amy Gregory, Esme Schofield, Florrie Stockbridge, Joe Gregory, Julie Lomas, Kristian Gregory, Natasha Jones, Oliver Clive and Phye Bell will be raising funds for Helmsley Arts Centre. Box office: 01439 771700 or helmsleyarts.co.uk.
Ten Year Anniversary Tour: Honey & The Bear, Milton Rooms, Malton, Saturday, 8pm
BRITISH folk and roots duo Jon Hart (guitar, bass and bouzouki) and Lucy Hart (guitar, ukulele, bass, banjo, mandolin and percussion) are joined by guests Evan Carson (percussion) and Archie Churchill-Moss (melodeon).
Conjuring stories in song, Honey & The Bear tell tales of Suffolk folklore, courageous people they admire and their passion for nature, as heard on third album Away Beyond The Fret, released last November. Box office: 01653 696240 or themiltonrooms.com.
Gig announcement of the week: Josh Widdicombe, Not My Cup Of Tea Tour, Hull City Hall, October 2 2025, and York Barbican, February 28 2026
PARENTING Hell podcaster and comedian Josh Widdicombe, droll observer of the absurd side of the mundane, will take stock of the little things that niggle him, from motorway hotels to children’s parties, and explain why he has finally decided to embrace middle age, hot drinks and doing the school run in his 58-date tour show, Not My Cup Of Tea.
“That’s my favourite type of stand-up: really niche observations about silly little things that you wouldn’t think about. I’ve got no interest in the big topics.” Box office: joshwiddicombe.com; yorkbarbican.co.uk; hulltheatres.co.uk.
GARDEN ghosts, a coming-of-age classic, a political groundbreaker, astronaut insights and an awful aunt stir Charles Hutchinson into action as autumn makes its entry.
Play opening of the week: Little Women, York Theatre Royal, September 21 to October 12
CREATIVE director Juliet Forster directs York Theatre Royal’s repertory cast in Louisa May Alcott’s coming-of-age story of headstrong Jo March and her sisters Meg, Beth and Amy as they grow up in New England during the American Civil War.
Adapted by Anne-Marie Casey, the production features Freya Parks, from BBC1’s This Town, as Jo, Ainy Medina as Meg, Helen Chong as Amy and York actress Laura Soper as Beth. Kate Hampson returns to the Theatre Royal to play Marmee after leading the community cast in The Coppergate Woman. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.
York gig of the week: Steve Wynn, I Wouldn’t Say It If It Wasn’t True: A Night Of Songs And Stories, Rise@Bluebird Bakery, Acomb, York, September 21, 7.30pm
STEVE Wynn, founder and leader of Californian alt. rock band The Dream Syndicate, promotes his first solo album since 2010, Make It Right (Fire Records), and his new memoir, I Wouldn’t Say It If It Wasn’t True (Jawbone Press), both released on August 30.
Touring the UK solo for the first time in more than ten years, his one-man show blends songs from and inspired by the book with a narrative structure of readings and storytelling. Expect evergreens and rarities from The Dream Syndicate’s catalogue, coupled with illuminating covers and reflective numbers from the new record. Box office: bluebirdbakery.co.uk/rise.
Installation of the week: Ghosts In The Gardens, haunting York until November 5
GHOSTS In The Gardens returns with 45 ghosts, inspired by York’s past, for visitors to discover in the city’s public gardens and green spaces, with the Bar walls, St Olave’s Church and York Railway Station among the new locations.
Organiser York BID has partnered with design agency Unconventional Design for the fourth year to create the semi-translucent 3D sculptures out of narrow-gauge wire mesh, six of them new for 2024. Pick up the map for this free event from the Visitor Information Centre on Parliament Street and head to https://www.theyorkbid.com/ghosts-in-the-gardens/ for full details
Last chance to see: Tony Cragg’s Sculptures, Castle Howard, near York, ends September 22
TONY Cragg’s sculptures, the first major exhibition by a leading contemporary artist to be held in the grounds and house at Castle Howard, closes on Sunday after a successful run since May 3 that has seen a 12 per cent rise in visitor numbers since the equivalent period last year.
On show are large-scale bronze sculptures in the gardens plus works in wood, glass sculptures and works on paper, some being displayed for the first time in Great Britain. Opening hours: grounds, 10am to 5pm, last entry 4pm; house, 10am to 3pm. Tickets: 01653 648333 or castlehoward.co.uk.
Political drama of the week: Mikron Theatre Company in Jennie Lee, Clements Hall, Nunthorpe Road, York, September 22, 4pm to 6pm
IN Marsden company Mikron Theatre’s premiere of Jennie Lee, Lindsay Rodden charts the extraordinary life of the radical Scottish politician, Westminster’s youngest MP, so young that, as a woman in 1929, she could not even vote for herself.
Tenacious, bold and rebellious, Lee left her coal-mining family in Scotland and fought with her every breath for the betterment of all lives, for wages, health and housing, and for art and education too, as the first Minister for the Arts and founder of the Open University. She was the wife of NHS founder Nye Bevan, but Jennie is no footnote in someone else’s past. Box office: mikron.org.uk/show/jennie-lee-clements-hall.
Book event of the week: Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival presents The Big Read, Acomb Explore Library, York, September 23, 12.30pm to 1.30pm; The Harrogate Inn, Harrogate, September 23, 2.30pm to 3.30pm
THE North’s biggest book club, The Big Read, returns next week with visits to York and Harrogate on the first day, when visitors can meet the festival’s reader-in-residence, Luca Veste, and fellow novelist Ajay Chowdhury, who will discuss Chowdhury’s Sunday Times Crime Book of the Year, The Detective.
More than 1,000 free copies of tech entrepreneur, writer and theatre director Ajay Chowdhury’s 2023 novel from his Detective Kamil Rahman series will be distributed across the participating libraries. Entry is free.
Travel show of the week: Tim Peake, Astronauts: The Quest To Explore Space, York Barbican, September 25, 7.30pm
BRITISH astronaut Tim Peake is among only 610 people to have travelled beyond Earth’s orbit. After multiple My Journey To Space tours of his own story, he makes a return voyage to share stories of fellow astronauts as he explores the evolution of space travel.
From the first forays into the vast potential of space in the 1950s and beyond, to the first human missions to Mars, Peake will traverse the final frontier with tales of the experience of space flight, living in weightlessness, the dangers and unexpected moments of humour and the years of training and psychological and physical pressures that an astronaut faces. Box office: yorkbarbican.co.uk.
Children’s show of the week: Birmingham Stage Company in Awful Auntie, Grand Opera House, York, September 26 to 29
CHILDREN’S author David Walliams and Birmingham Stage Company team up for the fourth time. Ater adaptations of Gangsta Granny, Billionaire Boy and Demon Dentist, here comes actor-manager Neal Foster’s stage account of Awful Auntie.
As Stella (Annie Cordoni ) sets off to visit London with her parents, she has no idea her life is in danger. When she wakes up three months later, not everything Aunt Alberta (Foster) tells her turns out to be true. She quickly discovers she is in for the fight of her life against her very own awful Auntie! Suitable for age five upwards. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.
AFTER directing Gangsta Granny, Billionaire Boy and Demon Dentist, Neal Foster is at the helm of his fourth David Walliams stage adaptation and playing the lead too for the first time in Awful Auntie.
As with the previous three children’s plays, and indeed myriad Horrible Histories shows too, Birmingham Stage Company is heading for York, playing the Grand Opera House from today (26/9/2024) to Sunday.
“It’s been ten years since we started working with David, and we’ve done four of his books now,” says Neal, long-standing actor-manager, director and writer/adaptor for the Birmingham company.
“He’s been a brilliant person to work with, so generous, so interested; he’ll do anything to help; he’s there at rehearsals, he’s there on opening night. He looks at my scripts with a really helpful professional colleague’s eye, and it’s been a wonderful ten years.”
Neal continues: “I think he has always appreciated how we capture the tone of his work and how we understand how comedy works on stage. I’ll send him drafts and he’ll send notes. I think it works because I get his humour and I knew it would work on stage from the moment I read the books.”
“We’re both fans of Roald Dahl and heavily influenced by him, and Birmingham Stage Company has done more Dahl shows than any other companies in the world.”
One David Walliams story had been adapted by another company before the Birmingham bond was forged. “He had not been entirely happy with that show and thought maybe it was not the right road to go down again. When we approached him, he liked our track record with the Horrible Histories shows, and that gave him the confidence to run with us.
“Gangsta Granny was then so successful that David was happy to put his books in our hands and has been delighted with the work we’ve done. The stories are very funny, he has a fantastic, wicked sense of humour, but there’s always something important going on in the stories too. It’s no surprise that you will see adults with tears in their eyes at the end because he writes in that way.
“That’s one of the reasons I wanted to do them, and why they work so well on stage is that David is a performer too and so the stories are naturally theatrical.”
Awful Auntie sends Stella to London with her parents, but she has no idea her life is in danger. When she wakes up three months later, only her Aunt Alberta (Foster’s role) can tell her what has happened, but not everything Alberta says turns out to be true, whereupon Stella discovers she is infor the fight of her life against her very own awful Auntie.
Neal is savouring playing Aunt Alberta. “I’ve been doing it since March,” he says. “One of the first shows I did with Birmingham Stage Company was Roald Dahl’s George’s Marvellous Medicine, where I played Grandma, one of my favourite parts, and there’s a resonance with that role in Alberta because she too loves being wicked and naughty.
“In the end, Grandma was just rather nasty, but in this one, Alberta turns out to be a serial killer, probably psychopathic, but what makes it so wonderful is that she’s not just wicked but very funny too.
“It’s a great privilege to play one of David’s leads, having adapted and directed the previous shows. It’s been a great joy to play a part this time, knowing I could do it, and though it would be hard to pull it off, I knew it would lend itself to being played by a man, applying the strength of a man, because Alberta is quite brutal.”
Neal “loves the science of comedy in making it work”. “David’s tone is like Chekhov’s comedies: it makes audiences laugh and cry, where you feel sad at some parts, laughing at the characters but at the same time sympathising with them,” he says.
“Here Aunt Alberta is very funny but menacing. She’s entertaining; she’s dangerous, but she’s NOT terrifying. Menacing, yes, but at the same time David is providing children with an adventure.”
That is the key to Birmingham Stage Company welcoming children as young as five to Awful Auntie. “With all those wicked characters in Roald Dahl’s work, for example, we wouldn’t give them thatlabel, but they probably are psychopathic,” he says.
“When you’re playing Alberta, you realise she doesn’t seem to care and is lethal in what she does, having her psychopathic responses, but it’s not something young audiences need to know, whereas as an actor you’re aware that she’s basically an absolute nutter!”
Birmingham Stage Company in David Walliams’s Awful Auntie, Grand Opera House, York, today, 6.30pm; Friday, 10.30am and 6.30pm; Saturday, 2.30pm and 6.30pm; Sunday, 11am. Age guidance: Five upwards. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.
YORK actress Kate Hampson returns to the York Theatre Royal stage on Saturday for the first time since her title role in the August 2022 community play The Coppergate Woman.
She will play Marmee, mother to the March girls, in creative director Juliet Forster’s repertory production of Anne-Marie Casey’s re-telling of Louisa May Alcott’s cherished American novel Little Women, presented in association with Pitlochry Festival Theatre.
She is joined in this coming-of-age story of growing up in New England during the American Civil War by This Town star Freya Parks as headstrong daughter Jo, Ainy Medina as Meg, Helen Chong as Amy and fellow returnee York actress Laura Soper as piano-playing Beth.
“It’s been a really challenging but joyful rehearsal period, working with Juliet again, and I can’t wait to play it to audiences – and I get to walk to work each day!” says Kate in a lunchtime break. “The cast are all fantastic, each bringing something new and unique to their roles. We’re all getting on really well, working with voice coach Yvonne Morley to get the accent right and united, because it’s not only a different [American] accent but an accent from a different time, and we have to sound related to each other.”
Describing Marmee’s matriarchal role, Kate says: “What’s really striking is that for most of the play, she’s a single mother, and that’s a hard task. She’s presented as wholesome and deeply loving, caring for each child equally, encouraging each of them to achieve their full potential, but she’s also Victorian, stiffer, more formal, than today.
“There’s a softness to her but there’s also that Victorian formality, which was the behaviour of the time. So you can’t go too gentle and soft in the role, even though she’s a great mum. It’s the way she gives them their autonomy that’s beautiful to watch. She lets her daughters make up their own minds, not collectively, but individually, seeing them as each being very different with very different needs.”
Kate continues: “Marmee is a really fascinating character to play. She’s a challenge because she’s often portrayed as this warm, kind woman, full of wisdom, the perfect mother, and to some extent she is that, but she’s multi-faceted, and I’m keen to explore that, especially in her relationship with Jo. Like when Jo says, ‘I have this rage’, and Marmee says, ‘I had this rage too and I had to learn to suppress it’.
“She’s very pragmatic, she knows the limitations, and yet she wants her daughters to ‘dream big’, but she had that rage and sadness that she couldn’t do the things she wanted to do. She is both very loving and good at imparting knowledge, getting her daughters to solve their problems themselves, rather than spoon-feeding them.”
Kate has enjoyed shaping her interpretation of Marmee’s role in the rehearsal room. “You get this thing with character development where you start in one place, take it to another place, and then you have to bring it back to what feels the right place, pulling it back by thinking ‘would I be standing like this?’ or ‘would I be so affectionate at this point?’,” says Kate.
“It’s lovely to have had the time to do that, and I feel that on the first night, it’ll be where I want it to be, but characters always develop further in the run, when you find new things and the relationships develop too.”
Reflecting on the abiding popularity of Louisa Alcott’s story, Kate says: “I think she was so progressive as a writer. You only have to look at her own life, how she lived it, her relationship with her parents. She was progressive, she was feminist and she was brave.
“People can still identify with that. There are still the same issues on life’s journey; the ups and downs of family relationships in that world still prevail. There’s also the challenge to modern audiences, where they have to think: how can we continue to strive to be better and strive for more equality, especially in societies where there is still none. Both remain relevant goals, because it’s not finished, it’s not done.”
Urging York audiences to attend Little Women, Kate says: “Come and sit in a beautiful space and be entertained by a classic play told in a new way. You want people to enjoy it but to go away with questions to answer because the story still resonates.
“It deals with universal themes of family, love and loyalty, the good times and the bad times, so though it’s historical, you can make it relevant to today, resonating with the experiences we have to deal with or might yet have to face.”
Little Women, York Theatre Royal, September 21 to October 12. Performances: 7.30pm, September 21, 24 to 28, October 1, 3, 5 and 8 to 12; 2pm, September 25 and 26, October 2, 3 and 10; 2.30pm, September 28, October 5 and 12; 6.30pm, October 4 and 7, and 7pm, October 2 (fundraising gala). Post-show discussion: October 11. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.
* The special fundraising gala performance on October 2 will raise vital funds for York Theatre Royal’s continued work as a producing theatre and for the development of future community projects.
JENNIE LEE is “the radical MP you have never heard of”, until you venture out to Mikron Theatre Company’s world premiere of Lindsay Rodden’s play at Clements Hall, Nunthorpe Road, York, on Sunday afternoon.
Marianne McNamara directs a cast of actor-musicians Eddie Ahrens and Marsden company debutants Georgina Liley, Lauren Robinson, and Mark Emmons in Jennie Lee, a play with original songs, wherein writer-lyricist Rodden charts the extraordinary life of the groundbreaking Scottish politician, Westminster’s youngest MP at 24, so young that, as a woman aged under 30 in 1929, she could not even vote herself.
Tenacious, bold and rebellious, Lee left her coal-mining family in Cowdenbeath and fought with her every breath as the Labour MP for North Lanarkshire for the betterment of all lives, for wages, health and housing, and for art and education too, as the first Minister for the Arts and founder of the Open University. Oh, and she was the wife of NHS founder Nye Bevan, but Jennie is no footnote in someone else’s past.
Alongside this formidable couple, Sunday’s audiences will meet Winston Churchill, Harold Wilson, Margaret Thatcher and a whole host of other characters in a typically entertaining, enlightening and educational show by Mikron, peppered with songs by Sonum Batra in the music hall and Twenties’ Flappers style.
Introducing her premiere, Lindsay Rodden says: “When I first decided to find out about the remarkable life of Jennie Lee, I knew very little about her. I knew about her commitment to bettering the lives of her class, how striking and fascinating she seemed, and that she was usually known, if she was known at all, as the wife of Aneurin Bevan.
“What I didn’t know then was that this daughter of a coalminer, who became an MP at an age when, as a woman, she couldn’t even vote herself, lived a long and fascinating life, bore witness to all the horror and pride of the 20th century, and made history herself.”
Lindsay continues: “Her life was full of drama and theatre, and I knew I had to put it on the stage. In fact, I could have written three plays from her 88 years of struggle and triumph, and telling her story with a cast of just four – luckily supremely talented! – actors has been quite the challenge.
“Jennie faced down Churchill in the Commons on her first appearance, she travelled all over the world, and she gave us the Arts Council and the Open University as we know them. She was clever, erudite, stylish and funny, stubborn and sharp too. I wish I had known her. Putting her on the stage is the next best thing.”
Lindsay was delighted to be invited to write a second play for Mikron after her evocation of the wild and wonderful world of the weather, Red Sky At Night, toured nationwide in 2022.
“It was about six months after the tour that Marianne and I were talking about ideas for the future, and I said I’d love to do another play but with a different approach as one of the things that Mikron is really good at is shining a light on the corners of history that have been ignored,” she says.
Jennie Lee would be that subject, by chance coinciding with Tim Price’s premiere of Nye, the story of Nye Bevan’s dream of the NHS, at the National Theatre, London. “And apparently there’s also going to be another play about Jennie Lee in Scotland towards the end of the year [Matthew Knights’ Jennie Lee: Tomorrow Is A New Day, produced by Knights Theatre]. It’s fantastic that she’s featuring in three plays in one year – and about time too. Her life was so long and so eventful, she really needs three plays to even scratch the surface.”
Mikron is a suitable vehicle for telling Jennie’s story, she says. “There’s something about the Mikron performance style that realty lends itself to leaping on this rollercoaster ride through 80 years, the incredible unfolding of the 20th century, with such zip and music too.
“But there’s no way we could tell every aspect of her life, but one thing I decided not to do was concentrate on her relationship with Nye – they married when she was 24 and he was 31 – though he is in the play.”
Lindsay notes how Jennie was encouraged to become involved in politics through her education. “Her parents decided to set her free from housework and the kitchen to go to university, so that nurturing of her mind began very early on. I could see where the roots everything she achieved came from.
“She grew up with poverty all around her, seeing the treatment of women around her, the terrible health problems that arose from that and the terrible difficulties in finding medicine to deal with those problems. We should all be proud of what Jennie achieved for better health and education.”
Mikron Theatre Company in Jennie Lee, Clements Hall, Nunthorpe Road, York, Sunday, 4pm to 6pm. Box office: mikron.org.uk/show/jennie-lee-clements-hall.
“PEOPLE think that I am a comedian, but art comes first,” says Jim Moir, as he mounts his second exhibition at RedHouse Originals, Harrogate.
“This one is ‘Birdland’ because of my love of birds,” he told the crowded preview gathering that spilled out of the gallery doors. “I spend most of my days bird watching and painting.
“My mother said to me, ‘are you going to retire?’. I said I retired at 21 when I was never going to work for anyone again. I wanted to be an artist and then took a diversion into acting and comedy, and this is now the third act, doing what I was doing at 12. I’m 65 now, and I’m loving it.
“Back in Yorkshire, where I was born, for this exhibition. I’ve been all over the world, but I never get a reaction like I do in Yorkshire – and people buy paintings here!”
On show – and for sale – until September 28 is an exclusive collection of 50 new paintings celebrating his favourite subject ahead of the October 24 release of his second bird book, More Birds, Paintings Of British Birds, published by Unbound.
“I’m a big wildlife fan,” says Leeds-born Moir, alias comedian Vic Reeves. “When I started birding, I was very young. I remember all I had was natural history books. I’d just look at them on me bed, all day, all night, and then if it wasn’t that, I’d be looking at birds.
“I loved bird watching as a kid and I could probably tell you what any bird was, to this day. It’s really important.”
Birdland marks Moir’s return to RedHouse, having first exhibited there in 2022 when Yorkshire Rocks & Dinghy Fights captivated visitors and featured in the first season of Sky Arts’ Painting Birds With Jim & Nancy Moir. Two paintings that featured in the documentary are now on show in the new collection, by the way.
Described as “the Warhol of bird painting” by the Guardian art critic Jonathan Jones, Moir’s enduring fascination and wonder at nature is expressed through his depictions of peregrine falcons, lapwings, curlews, barn owls and ospreys, even elevating the pigeon to iconic status. “To paint a bird and put it in its environment gives a bit more of a clue about its life and its personality,” he says.
Why birds, Jim? “It’s what I grew up doing: I was bird watching because I grew up before tablets and mobile phones,” he says. “Birds. That’s what I liked looking at. I liked outdoor pursuits. Nature. I still do.”
What is his favourite bird and why? “It’s always the one I see that day, and if I have to make a special trip, it definitely will be that one,” he says.
Jim Moir: Birdland, on show at RedHouse Originals Gallery, Cheltenham Mount, Harrogate, until September 28. Opening hours: Monday to Saturday, 10am to 5pm; Sundays by appointment. Free entry.
Jim Moir: the back story
BORN James Roderick Moir in Leeds on January 24 1959.
First came to prominence as a comedian, actor, and musician with the stage alias of Vic Reeves, writing TV sketches with long-term writing partner Bob Mortimer.
Long before the rise of Reeves, Moir was a practising artist. “Painting is what I always liked doing and if you can get the opportunity to live your life doing what you like doing, then grasp it,” he advises.
After completing an engineering apprenticeship, he studied Fine Art Foundation at Sir John Cass College in 1983, leading to a curator position at The Gardner Gallery and his first exhibition in 1985.
Moir had applied to Goldsmiths but was rejected on the grounds of being “too accomplished” already. “I wanted to go to Goldsmiths but they wouldn’t let me in, so I just walked in and started using the facilities and went to the lectures,” he recalls.” I did that for three years.”
The influence of Pop Art giants from the 1960s such as Gilbert and George, Andy Warhol and Peter Blake, is evident within his paintings, both thematically and stylistically. Often dreamlike and peppered with satirical humour, Moir’s fantastical compositions have been likened to the Surrealist and Dadaist movements of the late 1910s and early 1920s.
Moir’s passion for image-making and sculpture has been integral to his career, through set design and props on such shows as Vic Reeves Big Night Out, The Smell Of Reeves And Mortimer and Shooting Stars, His artwork has remained ever present on television screens as the backdrop to his comedic vision.
Since presenting Turner Prize Moments in 2011, he has tipped the balance of focus from performance towards visual art.
“When I started doing comedy, it was kind of a side-line to my artwork,” he says. “I’ve never not painted. Now I’ve got to a stage where I thought, I’ve done the comedy. I’ve done the TV. I’ll just do bits on TV and film if I want to do it. But all day long I’m going to paint pictures. That’s what I like doing.”
From October 31 to November 3 2012, he transformed the botanical York Museum Gardens into a “magical wonderland” for the Illuminating York festival, lighting up the ruins of St Mary’s Abbey, the Yorkshire Museum and the inners wall of the city’s bar walls with three large-scale, psychedelic, audio-visual projections as part of the York 800 celebrations.
Given “free rein to unleash his absurd and magical creations” and inspired by absurdist works such as Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland, Reeves and partners Bright White Ltd, Bar Lane Studios, Chetwoods and Arup created “a new world that turns the expected upside down and revels in the beauty of the unexpected” at a cost of £500,000.
Organisers invited the public to take part in a projection of dancing figures on St Mary’s Abbey or to power bicycles with wings of light. Among the surreal visions in Reeves’ Wonderland were a bright red elephant, standing on tiptoe while wearing a fez, and a lurid green giant elephant seal fighting a man in purple, while the entire facade of the Yorkshire Museum was transformed into a moving projection of music, pictures and colour.
The third display, beamed onto the city walls behind the bowling green, featured Reeves trapped in a surreal landscape, desperately trying to escape by swallowing blue or red pills to shrink or grow in size.
“Art should be fun,” Reeves told The York Press. “I have ideas and if I think they are funny or peculiar I draw them. I draw because I get a kick out of it. It’s my drug. I’m just doing what I do and it’s projected onto a building that is Georgian.”
Lives and works in converted Georgian schoolhouse in Charring, Ashford, Kent.
Naturalist, nature photographer, television presenter and author Chris Packham on Jim Moir
“JIM doesn’t just see birds, he looks at them, so intensely that he understands them. Not just anatomically or behaviourally – he knows how they feel. That transcends painting or art – that is using a brush and pigment to make a future.
“Jim has imbued the bird with imagination. You can’t do this just because you can paint beautifully; it’s not about reproduction, it’s about translation. About being able to speak bird with paint.
“To me, Jim’s process actually appears more instinctive than constructed, which in turn makes it far more admirable and valuable than ‘clever’. There are plenty of clever artists; sometimes I enjoy unravelling their art, but I prefer art that talks to me, talks straight. Art made from love.”
Special event: Jim Moir In Conversation With Tony Pitts
When: September 27. Doors open at 6pm; talk starts at 7pm.
HELMSLEY Literary Festival leads off Charles Hutchinson’s recommendations to fill the cultural diary, joined by drag, folk and blues acts and an American coming-of-age classic.
Festival of the week highlight: Helmsley Literary Festival, Helmsley Arts Centre, John Hegley, New & Selected Potatoes, Saturday, 7pm to 8pm; I Am A Poetato, Sunday, 11am to 12 noon
POET, comic, singer, songwriter and spectacles wearer John Hegley heads to Helmsley with two shows, the first being his seriously funny, cleverly comic “best of golden oldies compilation with some new stuff” about love, family, France, art, the sea, dogs, dads, gods, taxidermy, carrots, glasses and…potatoes.
Second gig I Am A Poetato features An A-Z of Poems about People, Pets and other Creatures! Spelling it out for Helmsley, he promises Hedgehogs. Elephants. Laughing. Mandolin. Singing. Luton. Even a cardboard camel with moving parts. Yo! For full details of two days of talks, signings, readings, open mic and a quiz, with Hegley, Anne Fine, Joanne Harris, Harriet Constable and The Chase’s Paul Sinha, visit helmsleyarts.co.uk. Box office: 01439 771700.
Drag show of the week: Bianca Del Rio, York Barbican, tonight, doors 7pm
COMEDY drag queen and RuPaul’s Drag Race champion Bianca Del Rio heads to York on her 11-date stand-up tour. Up for irreverent discussion will be politics, pop culture, political correctness, current events, cancel culture and everyday life, as observed through the eyes of a “clown in the gown”, who will be “coming out of my crypt and hitting the road again to remind everyone that I’m still dead inside”. Box office: yorkbarbican.co.uk.
Return of the week: Ryan Adams, Solo 2024, York Barbican, Friday, doors 7pm
NORTH Carolina singer-songwriter Ryan Adams returns to York Barbican next week after playing a very long, career-spanning set there with no stage lighting – only his own side lamps – in April last year. This time he will be marking the 20th anniversary of 2004’s Love Is Hell and tenth anniversary of 2014’s self-titled album, complemented by Adams classics and favourites. Adams, who visited the Grand Opera House in 2007 and 2011, will be performing on acoustic guitar and piano. Box office: yorkbarbican.co.uk.
Folk gig of the week: Friday Folk presents Harp & A Monkey, Kirk Theatre, Pickering, Friday, 7.30pm
GREATER Manchester song-and-storytelling trio Harp & A Monkey specialise in poignant, uplifting and melodic short stories, both original and traditional, about everyday life, love and remembrance. In a nutshell, the extraordinary ordinary, from cuckolded molecatchers and a lone English oak tree that grows at Gallipoli to care in the community, medieval pilgrims and Victorian bare-knuckle boxers.
This versatile collective of artists, animators, storytellers and multi-instrumentalists has undertaken bespoke songwriting for soundtrack, film and art projects for the likes of Sky Arts and the Department of Sport, Media and Culture. Fylingdales Folk Choir will perform too. Box office: 01751 474833 or kirktheatre.co.uk.
Play of the week: Little Women, York Theatre Royal, Saturday to October 12
CREATIVE director Juliet Forster directs York Theatre Royal’s new production of Louisa May Alcott’s coming-of-age story of headstrong Jo March and her sisters Meg, Beth and Amy as they grow up in New England during the American Civil War.
Adapted by Anne-Marie Casey, the production features Freya Parks, from BBC1’s This Town, as Jo, Ainy Medina as Meg, Helen Chong as Amy and York actress Laura Soper as Beth. Kate Hampson returns to the Theatre Royal to play Marmee after leading the community cast in The Coppergate Woman. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.
Exhibition of the week: Leeds Fine Artists Celebrating 150 Years, Blossom Street Gallery, York, until October 31
LEEDS Fine Artists is celebrating its 150th anniversary with an exhibition at its regular York host, Blossom Street Gallery, featuring an inspirational collection of work demonstrating a wide range of styles and different media.
Taking part are: Sharron Astbury-Petit; Dawn Broughton; Jane Burgess; Mark Butler; Pete Donnelly; Alison Flowers; Roger Gardner; Margarita Godgelf; Dan Harnett; Peter Heaton; Nicholas Jagger; Michael Curgenven; Catherine Morris; Martin Pearson; Clare Phelan; Trevor Pittaway; Neil Pittaway; Annie Robinson; Annie Roche; Sarah Sharpe and John Sherwood. Opening hours: Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, 10am to 4pm; Sundays, 10am to 3pm.
Travel show of the week: Tim Peake, Astronauts: The Quest To Explore Space, York Barbican, September 25, 7.30pm
BRITISH astronaut Tim Peake is among only 610 people to have travelled beyond Earth’s orbit. After multiple My Journey To Space tours of his own story, he makes a return voyage with his stellar new show, sharing the collected stories of fellow astronauts as he explores the evolution of space travel.
From the first forays into the vast potential of space in the 1950s and beyond, to the first human missions to Mars, Peake will traverse the final frontier with tales of the experience of spaceflight, living in weightlessness, the dangers and unexpected moments of humour and the years of training and psychological and physical pressures that an astronaut faces. Box office: yorkbarbican.co.uk.
Blues gig of the week: Ryedale Blues Club, Lightning Threads, Milton Rooms, Malton, September 26, 8pm
SHEFFIELD blues-rock trio Lightning Threads are influenced by the great rock musicians of another time, drawing comparisons with The Black Keys, Gary Clark Jr, Cream and The Doors.
Tom Jane, guitar and vocals, Sam Burgum, bass and vocals, and Hugh Butler, drums and keyboards, have been nominated for Best Album in the 2024 Blues Awards for their November 2023 debut, Off That Lonely Road, recorded with Andrew Banfield, of Superfly Studios, and graced by Kelly Michaeli’s gospel vocals. Box office: 01653 696240 or themiltonrooms.com.