TONY Cragg’s landmark sculpture exhibition at Castle Howard, near York, closes on Sunday after a successful staging in the country house and grounds since May 3.
The first major exhibition by a leading contemporary artist to be held across the North Yorkshire estate has featured large-scale bronze sculptures in the gardens, some up to six metres tall, plus works in wood, glass sculptures and works on paper, some on display in the UK for the first time.
Germany-based Cragg’s five-metre-wide sculpture Over The Earth (2015) has been set on a plinth in the middle of the Ray Wood reservoir, the first time it has been shown outside.
Eroded Landscape (1999) has been displayed inside the Temple of the Four Winds. Other works on show in the grounds include Senders (2018), Points Of View (2018) and Versus (2012). Inside the house, work is on display in the Great Hall, the Colonnade and the Long Gallery Octagon.
Hon. Nick Howard and Victoria Howard OBE say: “The exhibition has had a fantastic impact on Castle Howard. We have seen a 12 per cent increase in visitors from May to August 2024, compared to the same period in 2023, an increase in international visitors and impressive national and international press coverage.
“We are proud to have brought such a high-profile artist’s work to North Yorkshire and to have contributed to the artistic and cultural offers in the North of England over the summer.”
To celebrate the exhibition, Cragg has created a bespoke limited-edition print, Bluescape, exclusive to Castle Howard, with each one of only 50 signed and numbered. Prints can be bought from the gift shop or from Castle Howard’s online shop at castlehoward.co.uk, with delivery available to the UK, Europe and the USA.
Opening hours: grounds, 10am to 5pm, last entry 4pm; house, 10am to 3pm. Tickets: 01653 648333 or castlehoward.co.uk.
Sir Tony Cragg: the back story
Born: Liverpool in 1949.
Home: Lived and worked in Wuppertal, Germany, since 1977.
Education: BA from Wimbledon School of Art, 1973; MA from Royal College of Art, London,1977.
Career: Working as a sculptor and exhibiting since 1969. Participated in documenta 7 and 8 and represented Britain at 1988 Biennale in Venice. Awarded Turner Prize in 1988; Praemium Imperiale Award, Tokyo, in 2007; Lifetime Achievement in Contemporary Sculpture Award in 2017.
Professorships: Akademie der Künste in Berlin and Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, where he was director from 2009 to 2013.
Exhibitions in museums worldwide: Tate Gallery, London (1988); Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, and Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen,Düsseldorf (1989); Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh, and Musée du Louvre, Paris (2011); Lehmbruck Museum, Duisburg (2013); Von der Heydt-Museum, Wuppertal, and Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg (2016), and Boboli Gardens, Florence (2019).
Knighted in 2016 for service to visual arts and Anglo-German relations.
THE North’s biggest book club, The Big Read, returns from September 23 to 25, travelling to libraries across the North of England. First up will be Acomb Explore Library, Front Street, York, next Monday from 11.30am to 12.30pm.
Produced by Harrogate International Festivals and sponsored by the Inn Collection Group and Vintage Publishing, this free event is part of the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival and is designed to celebrate and create awareness of literacy, while paying homage to the legacy of crime fiction’s greatest writers.
Visitors will have the opportunity to meet the festival’s reader-in-residence, Luca Veste, and fellow novelist Ajay Chowdhury, winner of The Sunday Times and The Times Crime Book of the Year, who will travel to seven libraries from Merseyside to Teesside, discussing Chowdhury’s The Detective, as they take the festival on tour.
More than 1,000 free copies of tech entrepreneur, writer and Rented Space Theatre Company artistic director Ajay Chowdhury’s 2023 novel will be distributed across the participating libraries.
Luca Veste is the author of numerous crime novels, such as You Never Said Goodbye and The Bone Keeper. As well as hosting of the Two Crime Writers And A Microphone podcast and co-founding the Locked In Festival, he plays bass guitar in the band of authors, The Fun Lovin’ Crime Writers.
Sharon Canavar, chief executive of Harrogate International Festivals, says: “We know that reading stimulates the brain, reduces stress and helps us relax, and the aim of the Big Read is to bring people together from all walks of life through their shared passion for reading.
“This event is also a brilliant opportunity to raise awareness of local library services, which really are at the heart of our communities.
“The Detective is a cracking read and illustrates the rich variety that can be found in the crime-writing genre, and I’m sure it will encourage readers to explore the rest of Ajay Chowdhury’s books.”
Chowdhury’s latest novel in his Detective Kamil Rahman series, The Spy, was published by Harvill Sacker/Penguin Books in April, preceded by last year’s The Detective, The Cook in 2022 and The Waiter in 2021. First came his children’s novel, Ayesha And The Firefish, in 2016.
“I am both honoured and humbled that The Detective has been selected for this year’s Big Read,” he says. “I’m excited to join Luca on the road and looking forward to meeting readers across the North of England.”
Andrew Robson, of The Inn Collection Group, says: “The Big Read is a great way of supporting our libraries and bringing local communities together. Reading is one of life’s great pleasures and books have the ability to inspire us and show the world in a fresh light, which is why it’s a genuine pleasure for us to be involved in such a wonderful and rewarding project.”
Reader-in-residence Luca Veste says: “I’m delighted once again to be able to take the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival on tour with the Big Read. Local libraries are a cornerstone of our communities and have been an important part of my own life from an early age. I’m really looking forward to discussing this brilliant book with crime writing fans new and old.”
Crime novel devotees can head to a choice of seven participating libraries in York, Harrogate, Bradford, Formby (Liverpool), Stockport, Hexham and Stockton-on-Tees (Billingham) to collect a free copy of The Detective and sign up for the North’s biggest book club.
The Big Read 2024 schedule in Yorkshire:
Monday, September 23: Acomb Explore Library, Front Street, Acom, York, 1.30am to 12.30pm. The Harrogate Inn, Ripon Rd, Harrogate, 2.30pm to 3.30pm. Bradford City Library, Centenary Square, Aldermanbury, Bradford, 6.30pm to 7.30pm. Entry is free.
THERE was much to admire in the performance of the opening Haydn’s String Quartet in C major Op 33, No. 3 (The Bird) and why wouldn’t there be: excellent players and one of Haydn’s finest Quartets.
The nickname, The Bird, is derived from the early first violin chirping calls, acciaccaturas (very short, crisp notes), which convincingly transformed into haunting passages, sequences of very quiet, gently clashing suspensions.
The second movement Scherzo was, for the most part, hymn-like, the playing (on the lower strings) genuinely touching. The bird calling card did make an unexpected appearance in the central Trio section. Humorous and so Haydnesque.
The ‘authentic’ Adagio was effectively and poignantly delivered. The Rondo finale is ever-so-gently bonkers. Folk music, Hungarian gypsy energy, crazy batting of the theme between the violins and viola plus cello with the ending vanishing into a wisp of smoke.
But there were issues too. Intonation was not always dead centre – the high violin passage at the very opening and again in the Trio reappearance (second movement) with the two violins playing on their upper strings.
Sometimes the cello too wasn’t quite on pitch. But these were rare, and this is a technically demanding work with no places to hide. Another issue was balance.
Matters improved with the instrumental changing of the guard. The ever-excellent Tim Lowe’s (cello) insight and technical assurance was immediately self-evident in the following Tchaikovsky (String Quartet No.1 in D major, Op 11), but it was the introduction of Gary Pomeroy (viola) that seemed to be critical.
As the second half Dvořák clearly demonstrated, Simone van der Giessen is an excellent viola player, but in the Haydn the viola contributions were less prominent. Hence the balance issue, but why this was so I couldn’t honestly say.
It is perhaps worth noting that Tchaikovsky’s D major Quartet is less technically demanding than the Haydn. It was still a terrific performance though.
The rising and falling chords of the opening Moderato have been likened to the playing of an accordion. For me, it created an image of a gorgeous sunrise. Well, each to their own.
The rich textures and contrapuntal dialogue were very well delivered, contributing to a highly enjoyable, generous (eight-nine minutes?) opening movement. The outstanding movement was the folk-inspired Andante cantabile. It is just so poignant, so beautiful. The balance, the shape and the playing were quite delightful. At times I thought the first violin sounded like a cor anglais or soprano saxophone.
The energetic peasant dance-like Scherzo was rhythmically tight, the accents crisply delivered and confident playing throughout.
Much the same could be said of the closing Allegro finale. The performance was tight, crisp, with a fine viola solo and a razor-sharp signing-off.
The second half belonged to Dvořák’s String Quintet in Eb Major, Op 97. The opening Allegro came across as a generous, giving performance. The reappearance of the main theme – fortissimo and in octaves was decidedly emphatic and the quiet sense of return, of coming full circle, was very effective.
As was the second movement Scherzo. The drumbeat rhythm is tapped out on the second viola whilst the real melodic focus belongs to the first viola (Dvořák was himself a viola player).
The musical soul of the work is in the third movement Larghetto, and that is precisely what came across. There were notably fine contributions from Gary Pomeroy (first viola), Tim Lowe (cello) and Ben Hancox (first violin) – intricate, ornamented pizzicato playing. The Rondo finale was full of zest whilst generating an infectious love for the music itself.
ON his first UK solo tour in more than a decade, The Dream Syndicate founder and leader Steve Wynn visits Rise@Bluebird Bakery, Acomb, York, on Saturday night.
The Paisley Underground legend will be promoting his first solo album since 2010, Make It Right (Fire Records), along with his new memoir, I Wouldn’t Say It If It Wasn’t True (Jawbone Press), both released on August 30.
Wynn’s 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 1980s’ catalogue, coupled with illuminating covers and reflective numbers from the new record, adding up to a show of a past revisited.
His debut book details the winding path from growing up as music fan and pre-teen bandleader in Los Angeles, through the formation and ultimate dissolution of The Dream Syndicate at the end of their first era in 1988.
Stops along the way make room for tales of cross-country Greyhound trips to track down Alex Chilton to wild, off-the-rails tours with U2 and R.E.M. and the epic heart-of-darkness making of his Californian indie-rock band’s controversial second album, Medicine Show, and plenty more.
The new album is a similarly reflective and intimately revealing collection, written and recorded in tandem with the writing of I Wouldn’t Say It If It Wasn’t True, featuring contributions from R.E.M.’s Mike Mills, The Bangles’ Vicki Peterson, Psychic Temple’s Chris Schlarb, Serena Maneesh’s Emil Nikolaisen, The Baseball Project’s Linda Pitmon and a cast of dozens.
Wynn says: “I don’t see this show as a stodgy reading or as a random selection of songs but, rather, a tiny play of sorts, a way of giving a flesh-and-blood companion to the book. I’m looking for that magic place where, say, Lenny Bruce and Spalding Grey and Ray Davies and Bob Dylan and maybe Hedwig might meet in a dimly lit cabernet on the back streets of Hollywood. I’ve never done this kind of show before but if I can hit all those markers, I’ll be happy.”
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. Box office: Box office: bluebirdbakery.co.uk/rise. Wynn will be selling and signing copies of I Wouldn’t Say It If It Wasn’t True (book) and Make It Right (CD/LP) after the show. Further Yorkshire gig on Wynn’s eight-date tour at The Greystones, Sheffield, September 18, 8pm.
Steve Wynn: the back story
Founder, singer and guitarist of The Dream Syndicate, revered 1980s’ Los Angeles indie-rock band. 1982 debut The Days Of Wine And Roses is regarded as cornerstone of indie/alternative rock scene.
Prolific solo career, touring the world and recording on regular basis and touring/performing in indie supergroup Gutterball, Danny And Dusty and The Baseball Project (also featuring R.E.M. founders Mike Mills and Peter Buck).
Wrote scores for two hit Norwegian TV shows, Dag and Exit.
His songs have been covered by Luna, Yo La Tengo and Concrete Blonde among others
Lives in New York City.
I Wouldn’t Say It If It Wasn’t True in a nutshell:
A TALE of writing songs and playing in bands as a conduit to a world its author could once have barely imagine: a world of major labels, luxury tour buses and sold-out theatres, but also oneof alcohol, drugs and a low-level rock’n’roll Babylon. Ultimately, a tale of redemption, with music as a vehicle for artistic and personal transformation and transcendence.
Steve Wynn on Make It Right
“I WROTE and recorded these songs in tandem with working on I Wouldn’t Say It If It Wasn’t True, my memoir, which comes out on Jawbone Press the same week as Make It Right, my first solo album since 2010.
“With each chapter, I would get ideas for songs inspired by the deep dive into my past and vice versa. The reflections became intertwined after a while, a mutual commentary between literal and metaphorical ruminating.
“The songs here aren’t directly autobiographical although the album does start with Santa Monica, the city and boulevard where I was born, and concludes with Roosevelt Avenue, the main thoroughfare of the Queens neighbourhood in New York City that I call home today.
“You write what you know – even when you’re not aware it’s what you’re writing about at the time.
“If the book recounted a tale of trepidation and dread and questionable choices, then that tale would turn into a song of similar intent like What Were You Expecting. A step back for perspective and positivity, in turn, found its way into a song like You’re Halfway There.
“The cataclysmic ‘one big open drain’ of Simpler Than The Rain was resolved by the resolute ‘I’m just trying to make it right’ on the title track. A gauzy and melancholy where-did-it-go-wrong Southern California flashback on the Long Beach-inspired Cherry Avenue would steer me towards a steelier determination and reset on Making Good On My Promises.
“It was a dialogue between the memoirist and the musician, a one-man Q&A, a gentle volley in the tennis court of my mind. 40-love, game, set and match.
“As I’ve found the melodies and words to stir and simmer with the stories I told in the book, I’ve simultaneously brought friends and collaborators from my recent and distant past to help flesh them out on the record. The likes of Vicki Peterson, Mike Mills, Stephen McCarthy, Scott McCaughey, Jason Victor, Dennis Duck and Mark Walton and my wife Linda Pitmon are all in the book and – look! – there they are on the record as well!
“And much like life itself, new faces and hit-and-run collaborators would pass my radar during the sessions and provide new light as well. Chris Schlarb, from California dream pop ensemble Psychic Temple, added his cinematic touch; Emil Nikolaisen, of Norway psych-grunge combo Serena Maneesh, chimed in with his trademark sonic anarchy and then Eric “Roscoe” Ambel (Del Lords, Joan Jett) used his studio savvy producer chops to tie it all together at the end.
“It feels perfect and very appropriate that the book and record came out in the same week. Not that one is needed to understand the other. Hey, you can just put on Make It Right and use it as the catalyst to create your own life story, dig into your own past. It belongs to you now. Let it tell your own tale while I tell mine. We’re all just trying to make it right.”
Make It Right track listing:
1. Santa Monica. 2. Make It Right. 3. What Were You Expecting. 4. You’re Halfway There. 5. Making Good On My Promises. 6. Cherry Avenue. 7. Then Again. 8. Madly. 9. Simpler Than The Rain. 10. Roosevelt Avenue.
PARENTING Hell podcaster, game show panellist and comedian Josh Widdicombe will play York Barbican on February 28 2026, the opening night of the second leg of his Not My Cup Of Tea stand-up tour.
London-born Widdicombe’s 58-date itinerary in 2025-2026 will take in further Yorkshire gigs at Hull City Hall on October 2, CAST, Doncaster, on October 4, and Victoria Theatre, Halifax, on November 1 2025. Tickets go on general sale at 11am on Friday at www.joshwiddicombe.com.
In the words of his tour announcement: “Josh Widdicombe is back on tour, not again! By now he has almost certainly mastered the art of stand-up. Either that or he has wasted the last 15 years of his life. Come along and decide for yourself. Expect it to be shorter and with lower production values than Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour, but funnier and with more references to tea.”
Widdicombe, 41, co-hosts the Parenting Hell podcast with fellow comedian Rob Beckett, spawning an arena tour and a Sunday Times Bestseller Chart-topping book, Parenting Hell, How To Cope (Or Not) With Being A Parent, in 2023.
Widdicombe has co-hosted more than 30 series of multi-award-winning Channel 4 series The Last Leg, is a team captain on Sky Max’s Rob Beckett’s Smart TV and co-hosts Sky’s Hold The Front Page. The Plymouth Argyle supporter and former sports journalist has an almost complete collection of Panini football sticker books.
As well as three seasons of his Josh sitcom from 2014 to 2017, Widdicombe has chalked up multiple TV appearances on Hypothetical, QI, Live At The Apollo, A League Of Their Own, Insert Name Here, Have I Got News For You and Taskmaster, and he has performed at the Royal Albert Hall in a Royal Variety Performance.
He hosted the cult 1990s’ podcast Quickly Kevin: Will He Score?, playing multiple live shows, culminating in a final event at the London Palladium in May 2024.
In 2021, he released his first book, Watching Neighbours Twice a Day…How ’90’s TV (Almost) Prepared Me For Life, a childhood memoir of growing up on a diet of consuming far too much television in the 1990s.
This perennially frustrated observer of life’s foibles last visited York Barbican on October 3 2019 on his Bit Much stand-up tour: a night of grumbles and jokes in which Widdicombe “finally tackled the hot comedy topics of Advent calendars, pesto and the closing time of his local park”. Bit Much is now available on Sky and NowTV.
Here Josh Widdicombe discusses bringing his keen eye for the absurd side of the mundane to his new show, Not My Cup Of Tea, wherein he 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.
How is the preparation for the tour going?
“It’s going way better than I thought. To the point where I could probably get away with doing it in the spring, but I didn’t want to put any pressure on myself. I want to enjoy it because in the past I was so busy with Mock The Week and Live At The Apollo and stuff, I was chasing my tail and desperately trying to have enough material for each tour. This time I’m able to enjoy the process of creating the stand-up.”
How have you found the experience of returning to tiny clubs to road-test material after doing Parenting Hell arena gigs in 2023?
“I’ve been doing 20-minute sets and it’s almost divorced from the fact that I’m going on tour, which I think is the best way to write a tour; like you’re just doing it for the sake of it, in the same way I suppose it must be nicest for a musician to just write songs for the sake of writing songs.
“I’m doing stand-up for the sake of doing stand-up at the moment. I love the experience of coming up with ideas and just being able to go and do them.”
Why have you called your new show Not My Cup Of Tea?
“Because I like the phrase. And since I gave up alcohol in 2023, I drink a lot of tea. As you get older, you realise who you are a bit more and I’ve realised that the things I love are like parochially British things, like Martin Parr’s photography or Blur or Alan Bennett.”
Is there a theme?
“If there is a theme, it’s probably about accepting that I prefer being at home and not having to deal with any other human beings. Which is a weird way to approach a tour show where you have to travel around the country talking to thousands of people!”
Are you more of an introvert comedian than a show-off comedian?
“When I stopped drinking, I realised how much the reason I drank was really for social situations because I didn’t feel comfortable in them. I grew up in Devon [in the tiny Dartmoor village of Haytor Vale], I was an only child in a small school and watched TV for hours a day, so I was quite introverted.
“Here’s a good example. I’m currently doing The Last Leg every day in Paris and everyone’s like, ‘do you want to meet up in the morning?’, and I’m like, ‘no, I’m spending ten hours a day working with you, I want the morning to myself so I can read a book in bed’.
“And there’s something about observational comedy; it’s about watching from the outside, so I wonder whether that is part of why I do comedy.”
As your comedic style is not topical, you don’t have to worry about writing political jokes now, and then the Prime Minister changing by the time the tour starts…
“That’s right. My last tour straddled Covid and when I came back to do the rescheduled dates, all of the stuff was still relevant. For me, it’s always where I just say something and I think ‘that would be fun for stand-up’. I’ll note that in my phone and work that up at a gig.
“Like I thought about talking about giving up drinking but realised that was never going to be as funny as talking about Inside The Factory with Gregg Wallace.”
You joke about everyday frustrations. Do you still have the same frustrations, now that you have had so much success with The Last Leg and Parenting Hell?
“I live a very mundane life and I really like that. I like leaning into the fact that I like doing the school run or the big shop. I suppose I’ve finally become comfortable with that. After years of not knowing who I was, I’m quite happy being middle-aged. I’ve made my peace with the fact that I like putting my kids to bed and watching a Netflix documentary about basketball even though I don’t like basketball.”
Do you expect you will draw a Parenting Hell audience on this tour?
“That’s interesting. Obviously, there’s people that won’t be there for Parenting Hell, so I’m not going to do loads of parenting stuff. There’s a bit about my family but not a huge amount. Sometimes an anecdote that works on the podcast doesn’t work as stand-up.
“There was a saga on the podcast about my number plate being cloned that I have turned into a routine, but stand-up isn’t just telling an anecdote like you would on the podcast. There have to be observations and jokes around the story.”
Are there any other new routines you think will make the finished show?
“There is a bit about children’s parties and party bags, so, as you can see, I’m dealing with the big issues! I take a huge pride in the banality of the topics I talk about. I think 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.”
Has Parenting Hell’s massive success changed your stand-up style?
“I think the podcast has had a huge impact on how I understand myself as a comedian. I spent years terrified of letting the audience know who I was, and then we did Parenting Hell and I suddenly saw that the more I showed myself, the funnier I am. So I think it will almost certainly be the case that I’ve changed, but I wouldn’t ever do it consciously.
“I saw Ed Gamble at the Hackney Empire recently and – I’d hate him to know this – I found it incredibly inspiring because he was funny every 20 seconds for an hour and 10 minutes, and that is everything I want to be. Just be as funny as possible.”
Did you find it easy to give up drinking?
“I gave up in April 2023 and I found gigs to be quite easy because you just enjoy the bands. Or going to a football match, I find that easy, but I wouldn’t find going to a party or a stag do easy because if I drink, I really drink. When I drank, it was a laugh until it was not a laugh.”
You have been so busy with TV, such as The Last Leg, have you missed stand-up?
“It took a while for me to think I wanted to do stand-up again after the pandemic. I think I got really used to being at home. I hadn’t had evenings off for 12 years, and for the first time I got my evenings back and I was like, ‘oh this is what it’s like and it’s really nice’. But now I’m really loving it again.”
Do you ever worry about how long success will last?
“It’s the curse of the freelance. You can go up and down in terms of venue size; I don’t know where I am on that graph. I’d rather work really hard and take the opportunities while they’re here now. One day they might not be here.
“People ask ‘why did you do that show?’ and you’re like, ‘because it’s fun, because I love it and I get paid really well to do what I love, so why wouldn’t I do it?’ I can’t believe that I got paid to go to the Paralympics. This is my hobby that got out of hand!”
AS the new school year settles its feet under the table, School Of Rock opens for alternative lessons in life: music to the ears of anyone who believes that education should add up to more than Rishi Sunak’s vision of compulsory Maths to the age of 18.
After John Godber’s Teechers and Willy Russell’s Our Day Out both espoused the value of looking outside the box to stimulate children’s minds and actions, a more innocent force does so in School Of Rock in the idiot-savant form of Dewey Finn (Finn East).
Kicked out of his band, this failed rock-god guitarist is now in danger of being booted out of best mate Ned Schneebly’s (James Robert Ball) flat for pushing his freeloading beyond the tolerance of Ned’s insufferable, controlling partner Patty Di Marco (a suitably shrill and shrewish Amy Barrett).
Down but not yet out, he pretends to be teacher Ned to take up a substitute teacher’s post at posh and proper prep school Horace Green, immediately jettisoning Maths, tests and gold stars for lessons in the history of rock. Heavy rock, hard rock, not the swiftly dismissed Taylor Swift and Kanye.
Dewey is committing identity fraud, but he has a rebellious charm, the cheeky big kid within him encouraging his young charges to express themselves, all the more so in the hands of Finn East, who may have shades of Jack Black (from Richard Linklater’s 2003 film) in his performance but bags of personality of his own making, built on his instinctive comic timing and irrepressible stage presence.
He just happens to be a cracking rock singer too, and these are big, big rock songs, challenging to sing in the compositions of Andrew Lloyd Webber, especially When I Climb To The Top Of Mount Rock.
Crucial too, in the guise of Dewey, is his interaction, his easy connection with the multitude of children that makes up the Next Generation of the title: led by the supremely talented young band of Charlie Jewison’s knee-slide guitarist Zack Mooneyham, Daniel Tomlin’s geeky keyboard wizard Lawrence Turner, Zack Denison’s all-action drummer Freddie Hamilton and Matilda Park’s ace “bass face” Katie Travis (Park having mastered bass in a matter of weeks).
Plenty of children’s roles add to the joy in Julian “Downton Abbey” Fellowes’ ebullient script (rooted in Mike White’s screenplay), from Theo Rae’s fashion-fixated Billy Sandford to Molly Thorne’s bossy Summer Hathaway and Eady Mensah’s shy Tomika, from Team Gibson (with performances being shared with Team Fender, the names referring to makes of guitar).
Adults tend to play second fiddle, except for Megan Waite’s operatic-voiced head teacher, Rosalie Mullins, so repressed and orderly until Dewey brings out the Stevie Nicks butterfly from her dowdy chrysalis, and Dewey’s flatmates, Barrett’s ever-exasperated Patty and Ball’s Ned, a bundle of nerdy nerves that craves release in reconnecting with his past. Look out too for late replacement Flo Poskitt’s comical cameos as Ms Sheinkopf and Mrs Sandford.
School Of Rock is described as “technically challenging”, partly on account of having two bands, not only the burgeoning young players but musical director Stephen Hackshaw’s band that plays in the theatre boxes, rather than the pit, at one point stepping forward to watch the young’uns in the climactic Battle of the Bands.
The first night is not without technical hitches in the sound balance, but these are ironed out quickly, and in every way this is a show with high production values, from Nik Briggs’s direction, bringing out such confident, expressive, energetic performances in his next generation, to Danielle Mullan-Hill in her rock choreography, peaking with Stick It To The Man.
Lighting designer Adam Moore and sound designer Ian Thomson evoke the atmosphere of a rock gig, the lighting rig absolutely looking the part, topped off by fireworks fizzing at the finale. Briggs’s set and costume design rock, and Phoebe Kilvington’s hair and make-up is the icing on the cake.
The accents are uniformly spot on too in this all-American celebration of music, friendship and the power of self-expression, where the young cast all deserves gold stars and Finn East reasserts his golden talent to amuse.
York Stage presents School Of Rock The Musical: The Next Generation, Grand Opera House, York, until Saturday, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Saturday matinee. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.
A BIG orchestra, a psychedelic inflatable crab, veteran singers, a blues troubadour and a Spanish guitarist rub shoulders in Charles Hutchinson’s cultural diary.
Groundbreaking concert of the week: York Beethoven Project, An Evening of Revolutionary Music, Joseph Rowntree Theatre, York, today, 7.30pm
TODAY’S York Beethoven Project Come and Play workshop day climaxes with tonight’s performance of Beethoven’s No. 3 in Eb Major Op 55: Eroica in the project’s first pubic concert. The 40-piece orchestra will be the biggest ever to play the JoRo.
In addition, The White Rose Singers will be performing revolutionary musical theatre songs from Les Miserables, West Side Story, Carousel, James Robert Brown and more. Box office: 01904 501935 or josephrowntreetheatre.co.uk.
Exhibition launch of the week: Jason Wilsher-Mills: Jason Beside The Sea, Woodend Gallery, The Crescent, Scarborough, today until January 4 2025, Monday to Friday, 10am to 5pm; Saturdays, 10am to 4pm.
LOOK out for a giant inflatable sculpture of a psychedelic crab and colourful digital wallpaper featuring a pair of lovers inspired by Scarborough’s Peasholm Park in Jason Wilsher-Mills’s larger-than-life exhibition, a colourful explosion of artwork characters that reveals the stories of his memories of childhood seaside holidays, 1970s’ working-class experience and disability.
Scarborough Triptych, a three-panel wallpaper of argonaut characters, includes the Manchester Argonaut, inspired by Joy Division singer Ian Curtis. Wilsher-Mills, a Yorkshire-based disabled artist, will give a gallery talk on October 12. Gallery entry is free.
Ace memoir of the week: Paul Carrack, How Long: 50th Anniversary Tour 2024, York Barbican, tonight, 7.30pm
IN 1974, Sheffield musician Paul Carrack was in “fun London band” Ace when he wrote How Long, a song that would reach number three in the US Billboard Hot 100 and the Top 20 in the UK Singles Chart. Phil Collins named it among his top ten favourites in a 1981 issue of Smash Hits.
“‘How Long is probably the first song I wrote,” recalls Carrack, now 73. I wrote the song about a real situation, a situation that many people could relate to. Little did I know that it would become a classic and touch the hearts of so many.” His 50th anniversary tour takes a journey through his career, from his days with Ace, Squeeze and Mike + The Mechanics to his solo years. Box office: yorkbarbican.co.uk.
Rocking on: David Essex, York Barbican, September 17, doors 7pm
PLAISTOW singer, composer and actor David Essex, 77, plays York on his 20-date British tour, his first since 2022. His set list will span his entire repertoire, drawing on his 23 Top 30 hits and a career that has taken in playing Jesus in Godspell, Che in Evita, That’ll Be The Day, Silver Dream Machine and his own musicals Mutiny! And All The Fun Of The Fair.
The likes of Rock On, Lamplight, Hold Me Close, Gonna Make You A Star, A Winter’s Tale and Oh, What A Circus will surely feature. Box office: yorkbarbican.co.uk.
Troubadour of the week: Charlie Parr, Pocklington Arts Centre, September 19, 8pm
RAISED in Austin, Texas, and now living in the Lake Superior port town of Duluth, folk troubadour and bluesman poet Charlie Parr has recorded 19 albums since 2002, this year releasing Little Sun, full of stories celebrating music, community, and communing with nature.
Taking to the road between shows, this American guitarist, songwriter, and interpreter of traditional music writes and rewrites songs as he plays, drawing on the sights and sounds around him, his lyrical craftsmanship echoing the songs of his working-class upbringing, notably Folkways legends Lead Belly and Woody Guthrie. Box office: 01759 301547 or pocklingtonartscentre.co.uk.
Guitarist of the week: Iago Banet, Helmsley Arts Centre, September 20, 8pm
IAGO Banet, “the Galician King of Acoustic Guitar” from northern Spain, visits Helmsley on the back of releasing his third album, the self-explanatory Tres, in 2023.
Featured on BCC Radio 2’s The Blues Show With Cerys Matthews, this solo fingerstyle acoustic guitarist has played such festivals as Brecon Jazz, Hellys International Guitar Festival and Aberjazz, displaying skill, complexity and versatility in his fusion of gypsy jazz, blues, Americana, country, Dixieland, swing, pop and folk. Box office: 01439 771700 or helmsleyarts.co.uk.
Return of the week: Ryan Adams, Solo 2024, York Barbican, September 20, 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.
Show announcement of the week: Julian Clary, A Fistful Of Clary, Harrogate Theatre, May 2 2025, 7.30pm; Grand Opera House, York, May 25 2025, 7.30pm
JULIAN Clary is extending his A Fistful Of Clary stand-up tour to next spring. “Oh no, do I have to do this?” he asks. “Rylan and I were going to go back-packing in Wales. Sigh.”
Yee-haw, The Man With No Shame is adding 28 dates, Harrogate and York among them. “Yes, it has a Western theme,” Clary confirms, setting up camp for his comedy. “It was only a matter of time before I eased myself into some chaps.” Box office: Harrogate, 01423 502116 or harrogatetheatre.co.uk; York, atgtickets.com/york.
In Focus: Rehearsed reading of Alan Ayckbourn’s Father Of Invention, Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough, Sunday, 3pm
THE first ever public performance of the AI-futuristic Father Of Invention, written by Alan Ayckbourn in lockdown, will be given in a fundraising rehearsed reading at the Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough on Sunday (15/9/2024) at 3pm.
Ayckbourn directs a cast of Bill Champion, Paul Kemp and Frances Marshall from his 90th play, Show & Tell, joined by Ayckbourn alumni Liza Goddard, Elizabeth Boag, Laurence Pears and Naomi Petersen. This will be the first time the Scarborough writer-director, 85, has heard the work read aloud.
“Take a look at their rollcall of Ayckbourn-written-and-directed shows – we reckon they’ve racked up an impressive 39 between them,” says SJT press officer Jeannie Swales. “We haven’t counted last year’s reading of Truth Will Out, only shows that had a full production either here at the SJT or at The Old Laundry Theatre, Bowness-on-Windermere, including Show & Tell. Mind you, that’s still not quite half of the Ayckbourn canon of 90!”
One of a handful of dramas penned by Ayckbourn in the creative cocoon of his Scarborough home during the pandemic, Father Of Invention takes its title from its central character of technology magnate Lord Onsett, who has passed away.
“Lord Onsett was an entrepreneur who made billions from the rapid acceleration of Artificial Intelligence,” says Sir Alan. “His company introduced the now ubiquitous Artificial Sentient Lifeforms, which carry out vast swathes of jobs for humanity from cleaning to security.
“His family are gathered to discuss how his enormous estate will be divided but as ever with Lord Onsett, there are a few surprises in store…”
Leading the gaggle of familiar faces will be “our old friend” Liza Goddard, who has appeared in Ayckbourn premieres of If I Were You, Snake In The Grass, Life & Beth, Communicating Doors, Life Of Riley and The Divide.
The omnipresent Bill Champion has roles in Comic Potential, Haunting Julia, GamePlan, FlatSpin, RolePlay, A Chorus Of Disapproval, Intimate Exchanges, Woman In Mind, Absurd Person Singular, Surprises, Arrivals & Departures, Farcicals, Henceforward…, No Knowing, By Jeeves, Season’s Greetings, The Girl Next Door, Welcome To The Family and now Show & Tell to his name.
Paul Kemp has made his mark in This Is Where We Came In, Drowning on Dry Land, Private Fears In Public Places, The Champion Of Paribanou, Woman In Mind, My Wonderful Day and The Divide, this summer adding Show & Tell to that list.
York actress Frances Marshall has appeared in premieres of A Brief History Of Women, Joking Apart, Season’s Greetings, Family Album and Truth Will Out; Elizabeth Boag in Arrivals & Departures, Farcicals, Roundelay, Confusions, Hero’s Welcome, The Divide, Family Album and Truth Will Out; Naomi Petersen in By Jeeves, Joking Apart, Better Off Dead, Birthdays Past, Birthdays Present, Haunting Julia, The Girl Next Door, Constant Companions and Truth Will Out.
All money raised from the rehearsed reading will go towards the SJT’s New Work Fund, helping the theatre to present new work on its two stages and to nurture new talent.
Ticket availability is “limited”. Hurry, hurry, to book on 01723 370541 or sjt.uk.com.
IN the words of Alan Ayckbourn, “Show & Tell is about something which has preoccupied me for the last 60 years and probably more – theatre.”
In those years, the Scarborough writer-director has chalked up 90 plays – and still more are on their way. His SJT play for 2026 is written already and he is part way through 2027’s premiere too.
Play number 90, Show & Tell, is a “love letter to theatre”: the joy of theatre, the pleasure of writing and directing for Ayckourn at 85; the abiding delight for his audience in his abiding wit, social and cultural observation, foresight and insight, mischief-making and rug-pulling darker undercurrents.
Show & Tell is among his most playful in its celebration of the possibilities presented by ‘the play’ as an artform, here refracted through a backward glance at its back pages and his own too. A play full of play and full of plays, and indeed a play within a play.
All this is wrapped up in dark farce that “lifts the lid on the performances we act out on a daily basis,” as Sir Alan puts it. How much do we “show and tell”; how much do we conceal?
In this case, retired West Yorkshire managing director Jack Bothridge (grizzled, irascible Ayckbourn regular Bill Champion) has invited Homelight Theatre Company actor Peter Reeder (Richard Stacey) to the Bothridge family hall to tie up arrangements for a birthday party performance for his wife.
Unfortunately, belligerent Jack has no recollection of making any arrangements, mistaking the unnerved Peter Reeder for a meter reader. What’s more, Jack is not so much forgetful as in the incipient stages of dementia, in a hinterland between assertive clarity and confusion, as Ayckbourn exposes the misogyny, gruff bluntness, delusion and self-entitlement born of running a family business often on a capricious whim.
Champion is in terrific form here as a latter-day Lear, while Ayckbourn’s study of the generation that soils and spoils a family business is spot on in a nod to Ibsen and Arthur Miller. Look at Jack’s bullying treatment of Ben Wilkes (Paul Kemp), who ran his formal clothing department and is now his carer, outwardly as loyal as Lear’s Gloucester.
However, there is much more to the reserved Wilkes than first meets the eye, caught wonderfully by Kemp, the essence of the gradual “show and tell” in Show & Tell. His shattering revelation, told to the sympathetic ear of actress and company manager Harriet ‘Harry’ Golding (Frances Marshall) is a gem of a quietly detonating scene.
Kemp’s Wilkes becomes embroiled in the other side of the story: Ayckbourn’s depiction of the world of theatre, past and present. Through the tribulations of the ailing Homelight Theatre Company, desperately in need of Jack’s booking, Ayckbourn hones in on the dramas faced by companies post-Covid, the struggle to draw an audience, the battle between artistic ambition and exigency.
He comments too on the fad for changing a company name to meet changing times, in this instance from the pioneering Front Room Theatre to the more inclusive-sounding Homelight. He duly recalls the groundbreaking days of Centre 42, the radical project of Arnold Wesker and Charles Parker, one said to have “inflicted the most damage on theatre since Cromwell”.
Act Two recalls Ayckbourn’s 1984 play A Chorus Of Disapproval in going behind the scenes, but crucially too it draws on Ayckbourn’s earliest days at the Stephen Joseph Theatre, directing a French farce in 1961 when artistic director Stephen Joseph told him his budget was “technically nothing…and if you push me, £5”.
In theatre tradition, by now joined by Olivia Woolhouse’s insouciant actress Steph Tate, Kemp’s Wilkes steps in when needs must, the cue for Stacey’s exasperated Reeder to act like a spoiled child in the readthrough and Kemp to scene-steal gloriously.
What follows this character-revealing shenanigans is the play within the play: a full-scale French farce, A Friend Indeed, in Ayckbourn’s knowing pastiche of the artform, played straight but inherently over-the-top in full period costume.
Theatre laid bare, life laid bare, warts and all, yet delivered with a love of the stage that never dims.
Alan Ayckbourn’s Show & Tell, Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough, until October 5. Box office: 01723 370541 or sjt.uk.com.
SEEING a singer or band live should be different to listening to their recordings. China Crisis, who enjoyed sustained mid-tier success in the 1980s, are a fine example.
At The Crescent, they managed to fashion a twist on essentially a greatest hits setlist. They did so primarily by performing as a trio, comprising original Kirkby brothers in arms Gary Daly and Eddie Lundon and their musical impresario, Jack Hymer, whose keyboards subtly reinvented their layered sound.
This was pure China Crisis, keeping the worst pale white funk at bay. No saxophone, bass or drums, but they weren’t missed, thanks to Hymer’s cinematic keys.
No review of a China Crisis concert fails to mention Daly’s comic stand-up pizazz. He was hilarious from start to finish: anecdotes about their time at the top, jokes or “oh no missus” Frankie Howerd facial expressions, all nailed.
Even Lundon on guitar, who must have heard it all, was laughing too. With a comic’s command of the audience, Daly could have talked all night, and probably would, but he needed to get home. It added so much to the performance, making it a full grin of music, comedy and memories.
Opener Callum Spencer also put in the effort. Playing solo without his band, he really sold his from-the-heart songs. If this particularly audience were too mature to dance with him in the dark, you sense his moment may well come.
China Crisis are playfully spinning out their autumn as a band in style. Their melodies stand up beyond a certain nostalgia for lop-sided fringes and Cheggers Plays Pop. Their halcyon days were of a different time, but with Daly commentating, you can appreciate just how much they were influenced by what was going on around them.
Daly’s chameleon voice sometimes reflects those influences (George Michael and David Byrne receiving a namecheck) but reveals enough of himself for us to care. This was the band that Steely Dan’s Walter Becker famously loved so much that he signed on to produce them – and you get the fresh artistry of the arrangements (Daly at one point finger-conducting a lovely bit on It’s Never Too Late, but never ramming it home).
Over two leisurely sets, 18 songs were played out, to the visible pleasure of all present. There were many standouts (mostly in the second set, “the ones you know” according to Daly) with a deliciously purple patch running through Arizona Sky to Wishful Thinking, their finest hour.
Another wonderful Crescent night thanks to promoters Please Please You.
Review by Paul Rhodes. Pictures by Paul Rhodes and Carl Letman.
AFTER the success of Symphonies No. 1 and No. 2, the York Beethoven Project is going even bigger for No. 3 in Eb Major Op 55: Eroica in An Evening of Revolutionary Music tomorrow at the Joseph Rowntree Theatre, York.
“The project is a year old and in that time we have accommodated 84 musicians, averaging 54 at each event, with 40 this weekend: the largest ever orchestra at the Rowntree Theatre,” says organiser John Atkin.
“In fact, No. 3 is so popular that we’ll also be holding a one-day Eroica workshop for another 50 musicians on September 28 at St Barnabas Church, York, to accommodate those who could not fit onto the Rowntree Theatre stage.”
Devised and managed by White Rose Theatre, Saturday’s concert will be the third in the series of nine, performing Beethoven’s symphonies in order, and will be the first one to be open to the public.
In addition, the White Rose Singers will be joined by conductor Atkin’s musical theatre band to present revolutionary musical theatre songs from Les Miserables, West Side Story, Carousel, James Robert Brown and more.
Looking ahead, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 4 in Bb Major Op 60 will be performed on February 8 2025 at York Music Education, Millthorpe School main hall, York; Symphony No. 5 in C minor Op 67, June 28 2025, at St Mary the Virgin, Hemingbrough, and Symphony No. 6 in F Major Op 68 (Pastorale), September 27 2025, venue to be confirmed.
These will all be one-day Come and Play workshops with a performance from 4pm. Music will be distributed electronically in advance. Registration will open six months in advance. “If you would like to play with us in the future, please get in touch by emailing yorkbeethovenproject@gmail.com,” says John.
Saturday’s programme
Act One: Somewhere (from West Side Story; Bernstein and Sondheim), Company/Cathy Atkin; You’ll Never Walk Alone (from Carousel; Rogers & Hammerstein), Company; Symphony No. 3 in Eb Major Op 55 (Eroica; Beethoven), York Beethoven Project Orchestra.
Act Two: Willkommen (from Cabaret; Kandor and Ebb), Company/Pascha; A New World (from Songs for a New World; Jason Robert Brown), Emma Dickinson, Robert Davies, Alexa Chaplin, Richard Bayton, Company; Take Me To The World (from Evening Primrose; Sondheim), Neil Wood; Send In The Clowns (from A Little Night Music; Sondheim), Robert Davies; He’s My Boy (from Everybody’s Talking About Jamie; Sells & McRae), Emma Dickinson; The Boy From (from The Mad Show; Rogers & Hammerstein), Pascha Turnbull; Hopelessly Devoted to You (from Grease; Jacobs & Casey), Alexa Chaplin; Say No To This (from Hamilton; Miranda), Claire Ainsworth and Matthew Ainsworth; Why? (from Tick, Tick… Boom!; Larson), Richard Bayton, and Les Miserable Medley, Company.
Sopranos: Rachel Anderson, Helen Barugh, Emma Dickinson, Liz Gardner and Joy Warner. Altos: Claire Ainsworth, Cathy Atkin, Alexa Chaplin, Emily Rockliff and Pascha Turnbull. Tenors: Matthew Ainsworth and Richard Bayton. Basses: Robert Davies, Anthony Gardner and Neil Wood.
Saturday’s orchestra
First Violins: Louise Watson (leader), Jane Halnan, Susan Hibbert, Anna Howard, Sally Kingsley, John List, Robert Morris and Helen Taylor. Second violins: Nigel Ball, Nicola Dawson, Sue Lawrence, Tanya Pawson, Gordon Taylor, Dorothy Wilson and Emily Wilson. Violas: Joanna Ainsley, Elizabeth Inglis, Amanda Kirby, Francis Loftus, Mary Luker and Sarah Reece.
Cellos: Jenny Fortmann, Michael Lindsay, Margaret Moorhouse and Judith Spindler. Double bass: Rosie Morris and Christian Topman. Flutes: Clare Haskell and Julie Harris. Oboes: John Hayward and Rosie Lynch. Clarinets: Morgan Hollis and Jonathan Sage. Bassoons: Deborah Welch and Simon Whalley. Horns: Oliver Balm, Janette Norris, Mike Palako and Mike Reeder. Trumpets: Andrew Dalby, Cameron McArthur and Paul McArthur. Timpani: Tony Norris.
Conductor: John Atkin.
Musical Theatre Band:
Keyboards: John Atkin, Nigel Ball, Gill Boler; reeds: Morgan Hollis, Jonathan Sage; trumpet: Cameron McArthur; trombone: Martin Farmery; guitars: Paul McArthur; bass: Christian Topman; percussion: Andy Jennings.
White Rose Theatre presents York Beethoven Project, An Evening of Revolutionary Music, Joseph Rowntree Theatre, York, September 14, 7.30pm. Box office: 01904 501935 or josephrowntreetheatre.co.uk.