BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew at Lord’s Cricket Ground, London
BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan
Agnew presents his solo show, An Evening With Aggers, at York Theatre Royal on April
16.
The voice of summer on Test Match
Special, Agnew, 59, is a key figure in the world of cricket, both as a former
Leicestershire and England fast bowler and as a commentator on the game.
Last summer, he commentated
on England’s World Cup victory in the most breath-taking 50-plus-one overs
match of all time, followed by one of the most dramatic Test Match victories
ever witnessed, at Headingley, Leeds, when Ben Stokes took on the Australians.
Now broadcaster Aggers will be regaling
audiences with some of his special memories and amusing
anecdotes.
Agnew learnt his craft under the tutelage of Brian Johnston,
emerging from the notoriety of the gloriously funny “leg over” incident
(yes, you will hear that on the night) to become BBC Radio’s voice of
cricket .
Agnew’s solo show takes the audience on
a trip down memory lane, waxing lyrical about his extensive and entertaining
career on the cricket pitch, as well as his many years on TV screens
and radio stations around the world.
He also recalls encounters on his A
View From The Boundary feature on Test Match Special, forwhich
he has interviewed many a star of stage, screen and elsewhere,
including two prime ministers, several rock stars, film
legends, writers, comedians and a boy wizard.
Producer Simon Fielder says: “An Evening With Aggers will appeal to
cricket fans and non-lovers of the game alike. You don’t have to be
into the sport to enjoy the stories and humour. Aggers’s shows are
always funny, charming and moving. They capture the essence of TMS,
which has been a national institution for the past 60 years.”
As Aggers says: “It‘s not just cricket commentary, but friendly company
for people at home, in the car, on the beach and even tucked up in
bed.”
Audience members will have an opportunity to tweet Agnew on the
night with questions and maybe even meet his beloved dog Tino.
The 7.30pm show will raise money for the Professional Cricketers’
Trust (PCT) and York Theatre Royal’s work in the community. Tickets cost £20 on 01904 623568
or at yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.
James, fronted by Tim Booth, centre, will play Deer Shed Festival this summer
JAMES will be the Saturday night headliners at July’s Deer Shed
Festival at Baldersby Park, Topcliffe, near Thirsk.
The Manchester band, led by Boston Spa singer Tim Booth, will top the July 25 bill, following in the footsteps of Johnny Marr, Goldfrapp, John Grant and Richard Hawley.
Deer Shed Festival’s delighted director, Oliver Jones, says: “There’s no doubt James are one of the biggest bands we’ve ever booked for Deer Shed.
“Their back catalogue is astonishing, with track after track of excellent guitar anthems, and their most recent album [August 2018’s Living In Extraordinary Times] confirmed that they’re still at the absolute top of their game. I’m not sure we’ve ever had a band that can pack out Leeds First Direct Arena before.
“Curating a line-up of artists that we personally love every year
is always a source of much pride for our team, and James now sit on top of what
we think is both the best and most star-studded music bill we’ve ever put
together.”
Formed in 1982, James have charted with such singles as Sit Down, Destiny
Calling, Laid, Sound, Born Of Frustration, Sometimes, Come Home, Tomorrow, She’s
A Star, Just Like Fred Astaire and Getting Away With It (All Messed Up), as
well as releasing 15 studio albums.
James, who headlined Scarborough Open Air Theatre in 2015 and 2018, join Stereolab, on July 24, and Baxter Dury, on July 26, to complete Deer Shed 11’s trio of main-stage headliners.
Meanwhile, the family-friendly festival’s latest additions, announced today, are The Soft Cavalry, the new project from Slowdive’s Rachel Goswell and her husband, Steve Clarke, on the Lodge Stage on July 25, before DIY supergroup Shopping take up the late-night party slot on the same stage.
French-Caribbean act Dowdelin, indie-rock band Marthagunn and Hullensian post-punk outfit Low Hummer all join Deer Shed’s In The Dock stage bill. Elsewhere, David Thomas Broughton and Andrew Cushin strengthen the festival’s north eastern contingent, alongside Marsicans, Life and Ruthie.
Manchester club night DJs Across The Tracks and Leeds DJ and
production duo Baba&Ganoush join Happy Mondays’ Bez on the late-night
silent disco line-up.
Deer Shed’s tenth anniversary event last summer sold out with record audience numbers. Tickets for Deer Shed 11 are on sale at deershedfestival.com, where further festival information can be found too.
Kate Tempest: playing Deer Shed 11 on July 26
Deer Shed Festival 11’s confirmed acts:
James; Stereolab; Baxter Dury; Ghostpoet; Cate Le Bon; Kate Tempest (Telling Poems); Tim Burgess; The Twilight Sad; Warmduscher; Boy Azooga; Sinkane; Dream Wife; Roddy Woomble; Jesca Hoop; The Soft Cavalry; Snapped Ankles; Melt Yourself Down.
Liz Lawrence; LIFE; Marsicans; Erland Cooper; Dry Cleaning;
Admiral Fallow; W.H. Lung; Ren Harvieu; Shopping; International Teachers of
Pop; Avalanche Party; I See Rivers; Kitt Philippa; Rachael Dadd; Native Harrow;
Kate Davis; Big Joanie; Do Nothing; Egyptian Blue; Rina Mushonga; Dowdelin;
Friedberg; Heidi Talbot & Boo Hewerdine; Ruthie.
Serious Sam Barrett; Eve Owen; Low Hummer; Irish Mythen; Rajasthan
Heritage Brass Band; Tom Joshua; Brigid Mae Power; David Thomas Broughton;
Conchur White; Gary Stewart; Beccy Owen; Morrissey & Marshall present
Dublin Calling; Steo Wall; The Magpies; Padraig Jack; Andrew Cushin; Bez (DJ);
Rory Hoy (DJ); Meg Ward (DJ); Across The Tracks (DJ); Baba&Ganoush (DJ).
YORK Theatre Royal’s Community Drive
scheme is back on the road.
Under the scheme, older people – a group
that can be at risk of isolation – can enjoy a trip to the theatre, and as many
as 100 people will receive tickets and transport to matinee performances of
Northern Broadsides’ play Quality Street in June.
Maisie Pearson, the Theatre Royal’s development
and communications assistant, said: “A meaningful activity like attending a
show can help people overcome isolation and reconnect with their community,
something which is particularly important for our older audiences.”
The first Community Drive during Driving
Miss Daisy last June brought 51 older people from York to the Theatre Royal. Otherwise
unable to visit the theatre, they had a memorable afternoon, talking to staff
about past visits to the St Leonard’s Place theatre, enjoying the show and
taking away a programme as a memento of their visit.
The Theatre Royal worked with a taxi
company to transport Community Drive participants to and from the theatre and
also partnered with Age UK York to bring a group from their Thursday Club. For
some, this was the first time in years they had returned to the theatre.
Maurey Richards and Paula Wilcox in Driving Miss Daisy at York Theatre Royal last June. Picture: Sam Taylor
A Thursday Club member said: “It’s
a really lovely thing to be able to come to the theatre and feel part of
something… the community of the theatre. It’s so kind to have something done
for older people – to be remembered.”
For Quality Street, the Theatre Royal
is working with charities that support older people to offer tickets and
transport to see Laurie Sansom’s production of J M Barrie’s play at 1.30pm on
June 11 or 2.30pm on June 13.
Tickets and transport can be requested
as part of a community group, such as a charity, care provider or day centre.
To book tickets and discuss any transportation needs, charity/group organisers or
individuals should call Maisie Pearson on 01904 550148 or email maisie.pearson@yorktheatreroyal.co.uk
“We’d like to thank everyone who has
supported us by donating to York Theatre Royal,” said Maisie. “Thank you for
enabling us to offer invaluable opportunities like the Community Drive.”
Family portrait: Bryan Bounds as Martin Gray, Will Fealy as his son Billy and Susannah Baines as his wife Stevie in Pick Me Up Theatre’s The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia?
YORK company Pick Me Up Theatre are staging next week’s northern UK premiere of Edward Albee’s emotional, if controversial, rollercoaster of an American play, The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia?.
New York architect Martin Gray has it all as he turns 50: fame, fortune, a happy marriage to Stevie, and a wonderful, gay teenage son, Billy, but he is hiding a BIG secret. Everything changes when he admits to his best friend, Ross, that he is having an affair with…a goat.
The Goat caused a stir but nevertheless was a hit with audiences when it opened on Broadway in 2002, winning the Tony Award for Best Play 40 years after Albee took home the same prize for Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?
Playing at the John Cooper Studio, Theatre @41Monkgate, York, from February 25 to 29, The Goatswitches between comedy and full-blown tragedy as Stevie, Billy and Ross struggle to deal with Martin’s revelation.
“The play is about love and loss, the limits of our tolerance and who, indeed, we really are,” explained Virginia-born playwright Albee, who died in September 2016. “All I ask of an audience is that they leave their prejudices in the cloakroom … and later — at home — imagine themselves as being in the predicament the play examines and coming up with useful, if not necessarily comfortable, responses.”
Bryan Bounds, left, Mick Liversidge and Will Fealy in rehearsal for The Goat
Directed by Mark Hird and produced and designed by Robert Readman, Pick Me Up’s production casts American actor and tutor Bryan Bounds as Martin; Susannah Baines as Stevie; Mick Liversidge as Ross and Will Fealy, a student at CAPA College, the creative and performing arts college in Wakefield, as Billy.
Bryan Bounds, who runs the American School of Acting at Westcliffe Hall, off Cold Bath Road, in Harrogate, suggested The Goat to Mark, having first met him when his son Frankie played Pugsley in Pick Me Up’s production of The Addams Family at the Grand Opera House, York, in October 2015.
“I saw the original Broadway production in 2003 at The Booth Theatre with Sally Field and Bill Irwin leading the cast,” he recalls. “Like a lot of people, I was stunned, and afterwards I sat cogitating with an old chap, and we both said, ‘yes, it’s entirely possible that you could fall in love with goats’, but actually this play is nothing to do with goats.
“Albee’s work is all about using theatre to elevate the consciousness of the audience. He says, ‘never leave the audience the same way you found them’. This play really stays with you and you start to think more about intolerance. But the less the audience know before going, the better for having an impact on them.”
Bryan had been sitting on suggesting The Goat to Pick Me Up, “but
then I saw Susannah [Baines] in Stephen Sondheim’s Follies and thought she’d be
perfect for Stevie because you need a very strong actor for that role,” he says.
“It will make you change how you think about everything, all in 90 minutes,” says Bryan Bounds, left, of Edward Albee’s play
“I asked Mark if he would like to direct it, and once he said ‘yes’, he suggested Mick Liversidge to play Ross, and I suggested Will Fealy for Billy. Will lives in Ossett and has been one of my students; he’s very talented and he’s just been offered an unconditional place at ArtsEd in London after he finishes at CAPA College.”
It was not a straightforward decision that Mark would direct The Goat. “When Bryan asked me, initially I sent a holding message saying I’d just agreed to direct Monster Makers, though I’m a reluctant director as acting is my passion,” he recalls.
“But then I read Albee’s play and thought, ‘oh my god, I have to do this’. I could see what Bryan could see in it.”
Playing Martin’s wife Stevie will be a “totally different direction” for Susannah. “I’m usually a bit more jazz hands; I rarely do straight plays; The Pitmen Painters in 2015 was the last one,” she says.
“Then I read the play without reading anything about it, and the
impact of its fallout is quite extraordinary and scary for all four of them.
You start with this happy, rich successful family who seem to have it all, but
one bombshell changes it all.”
Mick Liversidge, back left, Bryan Bounds, Susannah Baines and Will Fealy: Mark Hird’s cast for The Goat
Susannah adds: “I wouldn’t have done this play if Mark wasn’t directing
it, because he does everything with such care, such detailed research, and then
works so collaboratively in the rehearsal room.”
Bryan has enjoyed the rehearsal process with Mark. “The first
time we met up, he sat us down and we spent an hour just talking about the
characters; who they are; what do they each want? That’s the luxury of how he
works. Detail,” he says.
“I just believe we’re there to tell Albee’s story, and with Mark’s
huge amount of research, we will tell this huge emotive story, not just do a
play. I love the idea that it’s not all set in stone, so it will be different
every night because the audience’s responses will change every night.”
Mark says: “The audience don’t need to see the research. It’s the result that counts. At first, audiences would swear they’re watching a situation comedy that’s very funny, but as the play goes on, what they’re watching is a situation tragedy.
“Albee gave the printed edition of the play a subtitle: Notes
Towards A Definition Of Tragedy, but there’s not just a flow from comedy to
tragedy with the consequences of a tragic flaw leading to a fall from a great
height.
“Instead, there’ll be one line that has you in fits of laughter
and then suddenly you choke on that laugh because of the line that comes next.
It’s so well constructed and that’s what Albee is so good at.”
Mick Liversidge’s Ross confronts Bryan Bounds’ Martin in rehearsal for The Goat
Mark adds: “When you’re faced with moral ambiguities in a play, as with Greek tragedies, it makes you think about yourself and about society around you, and that’s what makes Albee’s play a modern version of a Greek tragedy.”
Bryan rejoins: “Albee wrote the play because he wanted audiences
to conceive the inconceivable. Originally it was going to be about a man
falling in love with another man, but then he thought, ‘No, I need to polarise
people’s response to it’.
“I have the feeling it will be the most disturbing play people will ever have seen at 41 Monkgate.”
Albee once said, “if you think this play is about bestiality, you’re either an idiot or a Republican”. Mark says: “He also said, it’s no more about bestiality than it’s about flower arranging’ and both are in the play!”
Why should you see The Goat? “It’s a play that will make you laugh, shock you, and maybe even make you cry,” says Susannah. “It’s the most outrageously funny tragedy you could ever see, and above all it will make you think.”
Bryan concludes: “It will make you change how you think about everything,
all in 90 minutes.”
Mark has the last word. “It will make you think about your
relationships; how you treat your family, as Albee portrays relationships in a
way that has a real impact on audiences.
“If you like theatre that’s entertaining and sends you home
changed and thinking about some big themes, this is one of those nights for
you.”
The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia?, runs at the John Cooper Studio,
Theatre @41Monkgate, York, from February 25 to 29, 7.30pm nightly. Box office:
01904 623568 or at pickmeuptheatre.com. Please note: this play contains adult
themes and strong language; suggested minimum age of 15.
Sister Agnes and Sister Julian enjoy a tour of the Dove Tree Art Gallery and working studio with Harrogate artist Anita Bowerman
EVER since Harrogate artist Anita Bowerman held an
art class for nuns at a Yorkshire monastery, the Sisters have been vowing to
pay a visit to her Dove Tree studio.
The Sisters come from
a closed order of Benedictine nuns at Stanbrook Abbey in Wass, near The White
Horse at Kilburn.
Rules mean they do not
venture out from the monastery in the North York Moors National Park, unless an
urgent errand calls, and they are allowed only one day’s holiday a year.
The Sisters spend
their time praying and carrying out other religious and household duties within
the monastery.
While visiting one of
the Sisters at a care home in Harrogate, the nuns decided to fulfil their promise
and call in to Anita’s Dove Tree Art Gallery and studio in Back Granville Road, behind the Cardamom Black restaurant.
Sister Julian beside the “Eiffel Tower” white piano at Anita Bowerman’s Harrogate gallery and studio
Anita was delighted
to welcome the excited visitors and show them around. “It’s not every day you
get a visit from two nuns. I was delighted to see Sister Julian and Sister
Agnes and they loved my artwork.
“Sister Julian played
my white mini grand piano, which was said to have been used during the official
opening of the Eiffel Tower.”
Anita, artist-in-residence
at RHS Garden Harlow Carr in Harrogate, has visited Stanbrook Abbey three times
in the past few years. The nuns invited her to teach them how to make paper-cut
artworks, so they could revive this ancient art in their spare time.
She is especially
close to Sister Julian, who loves art, and the two have been painting together
just outside the monastery.
“I love visiting
Stanbrook Abbey; it’s so peaceful and fills you with tranquillity and
inspiration,” says Anita. “Sister Julian is working on some amazing gold-leaf
art illustrations and I’ve been able to gather together some art materials for
her.”
Anita Bowerman showing Sister Julian and and Sister Agnes around her Dove Tree gallery and studio
Sister Julian and Sister Agnes were in raptures
over this part of their day out beyond the monastery walls. Sister Julian says:
“It was a rare opportunity for us to do this and it had to coincide with a
visit to one of our Sisters in a care home nearby.
“As soon as we stepped through the door, large and
small paintings and marvellously intricate cut-out work adorned the walls and a
profusion of colour and variety of scene were a delight to see. Anita welcomed
us warmly and told us about her work as artist-in-residence at the RHS Garden
Harlow Carr.
“Anita’s love of nature and gardens was evident in
the paintings she had of scenes throughout the year, painted ‘en plein air’
using anything she can find, such as twigs, feathers, pebbles, leaves and grass.
“This gives an unusual quality to her work, not
seen elsewhere, and makes her work down to earth and original. It’s a small
gallery but bursting with life and I would recommend a visit if at all
possible.”
Richard Durrant: cycling from concert to concert en route from Orkney to Sussex. York awaits on June 14
THE National Centre for Early Music’s 20th
anniversary spring season in York opens not with the raising of a glass of
champagne, but with a Cuppa & A Chorus.
Led by community musician Chris Bartram, the 2pm to 4pm
session on February 24 is an opportunity to sing in a relaxed environment and
enjoy a cup of tea, a slice of cake and a friendly chat.
Up to 50 singers attend each monthly gathering to sing “songs you know and love and explore new ones from around the world”, and further sessions of “Connecting Through Singing” will follow on March 30, April 20, May 18 and June 22. The charge is £3.50 each time; booking is recommended and more details can be found at ncem.co.uk/cuppachorus.
Helen Charlston: taking part in the University of York Song Day on February 29. Picture: Ben McKee
2020’s concert programme opens with the University of York
Song Day, an afternoon and evening of three concerts under the title The Year
of Song on Leap Year Saturday, February 29. The focus falls on romantic lieder
in the 19th century company of Robert Schumann at 12.30pm; Robert
and Clare Schumann at 3pm and their protégé Johannes Brahms, along with Robert,
at 7pm.
Soprano Bethany Seympour, mezzo-soprano Helen Charlston,
tenor Gwilym Bowen and fortepiano player Peter Seymour perform the first and
last concerts; soprano Emily Tindall, bass Jonty Ward and fortepiano player
Nicky Losseff, the middle one.
Silent Films At The NCEM return with Franz Osten’s 1928 epic
Shiraz: A Romance Of India (cert U) on March 8 at 7.30pm, telling the story
behind the creation of the Taj Mahal, screened in a BFI restoration with a
score by Anoushka Shankar.
Acoustic Triangle: blurring the boundaries between classical, jazz music and the avant-garde on June 23
As part of the Yorkshire Silent Film Festival, running from May 5 to 17 with live music in village halls, theatres, cinemas and the NCEM, a double bill of Funny Business (U) at 4pm and The Woman One Longs For (PG) at 7pm will be shown on May 10.
Jonny Best’s piano accompanies Laurel & Hardy and comedy’s greatest female clown, Mabel Normand, in Funny Business; Best is joined by violinist Irine Rosnes for Curtis Bernhardt’s 1929’s German film, The Woman One Longs For, wherein Marlene Dietrich shines in her first starring role as a mysterious femme fatale in a steamy tale of erotic obsession.
Folk At The NCEM has two concerts to be presented in association with York’s Black Swan Folk Club: Urban Folk Quartet, supported by Stan Graham, on March 9 and Kathryn Roberts & Sean Lakeman’s On Reflection show on April 22.
Jazz drummer Jeff Williams: in Bloom at the NCEM. Picture: Bob Hewson
Urban Folk Quartet’s high-energy, multi-instrumental
virtuosos Joe Broughton, Paloma Trigas, Tom Chapman and Dan Walsh combine
Celtic tunes and traditional song with Afrobeat, Indian classical, funk and
rock.
2020 marks 25 years of husband-and-wife duo Kathryn Roberts
and Sean Lakeman making music together. To celebrate this anniversary, they
take a whistle-stop tour through their past, revisiting and reinterpreting
songs from the early days of folk supergroup Equation to latest album Personae,
via a nod or two to their extra-curricular musical adventures.
Scottish traditional folk duo Aly Bain & Phil Cunningham,
who have toured together since 1986, play on March 29 and folk guitarist,
composer and ukulele player Richard Durrant returns to the NCEM on June 14 as
part of his Music For Midsummer tour that will take him 860 miles by bicycle
from Orkney to Sussex.
Kathryn Roberts and Sean Lakeman: whistle-stop tour through 25 years of making folk music
On his fourth and longest Cycling Music adventure, travelling with his guitar and ukulele, he will be showcasing his new album Weald Barrows. “I’ll be cycling down from Orkney alone this year and this will, for me at least, introduce a magic and a concentration to the music,” says Durrant, whose 7.30pm concert will be featured in the York Festival of Ideas.
On May 25, the NCEM plays host to Youth Sampler Day from 11am to 4pm, a chance for 12 to 18-year-old musicians to play by ear, develop their creativity and discover more about the National Youth Folk Ensemble.
“This is a fantastic opportunity for young musicians to
learn from inspiring professional musicians, with no experience of folk music
necessary, and there’ll be opportunities to take part in a short audition for
the ensemble too,” says NCEM director Delma Tomlin.
Antonio Forcione: return visit to the National Centre for Early Music
Jazz At The NCEM presents the returning Italian guitarist Antonio Forcione on April 26; legendary London and New York drummer Jeff Williams’ Bloom trio, featuring pianist Carmen Staaf and bass guitarist Michael Formanek, on May 17, and University of York Jazz Orchestra, directed by James Mainwaring, with composer John Low on piano, in a May 29 programme spanning quasi-classical textures to full-on big band sounds.
The jazz line-up continues with innovative trumpet player and composer Byron Wallen’s Four Corners, with Rob Luft, on guitar, Paul Michael on bass and Rod Young on drums, on June 10, when they will be taking part in the York Music Forum Showcase too.
In a concert embraced by the York Festival of Ideas, Wallen
will be putting his new album Portrait in the spotlight, conceived when sitting
in the central square in Woolwich and being struck by the community around him
with its mixture of ages and nationalities. Wallen last played at the NCEM last
October as a member of Cleveland Watkiss’s band.
Trumpet player Byron Wallen: leading Four Corners at the NCEM. Picture: Urszula Tarasiewicz
Acoustic Triangle blur the boundaries between classical, jazz music and the avant-garde on their return to the NCEM on June 23 with their adventurous repertoire of compositions by band members Tim Garland (saxophone, bass clarinet) and Gwilym Simcock (piano), plus Kenny Wheeler, John Taylor, Bill Evans, Olivier Messiaen and Maurice Ravel. Double bassist Malcolm Creese completes their line-up.
World Sound At The NCEM welcomes more returnees, Scottish
combo Moishe’s Bagel, on March 27 with their cutting-edge, intoxicating,
life-affirming Eastern European and Middle Eastern folk and klezmer music.
Everything stops for tea at 7.30pm on June 9 in the second
World Sound event, Manasamitra’s Tea Houses: Camellia Sinensis, a show that
tells the story of tea as new live music mixes with lighting and soundscapes,
participatory tea rituals and ambisonic technology that captures the audience’s
emotional responses in the performance space.
Teatime at the NCEM in Manasamitra’s Tea Houses: Camellia Sinensis
Creator Supriya Nagarajan uses her experience of synaesthesia to explore the interplay between sight, sound, taste and smell in a multi-media show that directly engages the 7.30pm audience in a musical interpretation of a tea ceremony that now forms part of the York Festival of Ideas.
Early Music At The NCEM has two highlights: the Early Music Day on March 21 and the University of York Baroque Day on May 2.
Three concerts in one day make up the Early Music Day, featuring harpsichordist playing JS Bach’s 48 Preludes & Fugues Part 1 at 1pm at the NCEM; recorder ensemble Palisander, with the NCEM’s Minster Minstrels, presenting Double, Double Toil And Trouble at 3.30pm at the Unitarian Chapel, St Saviourgate, and The Brabant Ensemble’s Cloistered Voices at 6pm at the NCEM. Previously known as the European Day of Music, the Early Music Day will be streamed across Europe.
Trumpet player Crispian Steele Perkins: performing at the University of York Baroque Day
The University of York Baroque Day is likewise divided into three concerts, taking the theme of Airs and Graces: A Musical Miscellany. At 12.30pm, trumpeter Crispian Steele Perkins joins Yorkshire Baroque Soloists for theatre music by Purcell and a flamboyant arrangement of Vivaldi’s La Follia; at 3pm, harpsichordist Masumi Yamamoto plays works by Handel, Scarlatti and Aime; the University Baroque Ensemble rounds off the day at 7pm with Scottish airs arranged by James Oswald and Geminiani.
Families At The NCEM brings Leeds company Opera North to York for 11.30am and 2pm performances of Dr Seuss’s Green Ham And Eggs in an introduction to opera for four to seven-year-old children and their families.
Two opera singers and a nine-piece orchestra begin their short
performance with an interactive workshop introducing families to the music,
instruments and themes within the piece, before they bring to musical life Dr
Seuss’s tale of the persistent Sam-I-Am’s mission to persuade a grumpy grouch
to try a delicious plate of green eggs and ham.
Sam Sweeney: playing the NCEM in the autumn
Looking ahead to the autumn, concerts in the NCEM diary already are folk trio Faustus (Benji Kirkpatrick, Saul Rose, Paul Sartin) on October 13; Chiaroscuro Quartet’s Mozart String Quartets, November 18; Unearth Repeat, with Sam Sweeney, Jack Rutter, Louis Campbell and Ben Nicholls, November 23, and Lady Maisery: Awake Arise, A Christmas Show For Our Times, with Jimmy Aldridge and Sid Goldsmith, December 18.
In this 20th anniversary year, “this spring we
are undertaking an essential refurbishment programme, in part to upgrade some
of the facilities that are showing the strain of so much usage,” says Delma, as
new loos and a kitchen take shape.
“We’ll be celebrating the anniversary fully in the autumn, especially
with a commission that will engage Early music with digital technology and field
recordings from Askham Bog. Yorkshire Wildlife Trust will be involved, as will
gamba player Liam Byrne this autumn.”
Tickets for the NCEM spring season are on sale on 01904 658338 and at ncem.co.uk.
George Thorogood: Good To Be Bad tour date at York Barbican
GEORGE Thorogood & The Destroyers will play York Barbican on July 22 on their Good To Be Bad: 45 Years Of Rock tour, their first in more than seven years.
“Ever since our first shows there in 1978, the UK has been one of our
favourite places to play,” says boogie-blues guitarist Thorogood, from
Wilmington, Delaware, who will turn 70 on February 24.
“We’re talking great venues, great energy and truly great audiences, and
we’re looking forward to coming back for it all. Expect our best, because
that’s what you’re gonna get.”
Since 1975, Thorogood & The Destroyers have sold more than 15
million albums and played more than 8,000 ferocious live shows, built around Who
Do You Love, I Drink Alone, One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer, Move It On Over
and his definitive badass anthem, Bad To The Bone.
“To hear George Thorogood flail his slide
up and down his guitar,” wrote Greil Marcus in Rolling Stone magazine, “you
might have thought he was Ben Franklin – that he’d discovered not the blues,
but electricity.”
In the Destroyers’ line-up alongside Thorogood will
be Jeff Simon on percussion, Bill Blough on bass, Jim Suhler on guitar and
Buddy Leach on saxophone.”
Tickets can be booked from Friday (February 21) at 10am on 0203 356 5441, at yorkbarbican.co.uk or in person from the Barbican box office.
Adam Martyn in rehearsal for his role as Nicholas Saunderson in No Horizon
RIGHT Hand Theatre’s No Horizon, a musical
about a Yorkshire science and maths genius, is on the horizon at York Theatre
Royal.
Staged at 7.30pm on April 9 and 2.30pm and 7.30pm on April 11 – there will be no performance on Good Friday – the show is inspired by the life of Nicholas Saunderson, a blind scientist and mathematician from Thurlstone, West Riding, who overcame impossible odds to become a Cambridge professor and friend of royalty.
Often described as an 18th
century Stephen Hawking, Saunderson was born on January 20 1682, losing his
sight through smallpox when around a year old. This did not prevent him,
however, from acquiring a knowledge of Latin and Greek and studying
mathematics.
As a child, he learnt to read by tracing the engravings on tombstones around St John the Baptist Church in Penistone, near Barnsley, with his fingers.
No Horizon premiered at the 2016 Edinburgh Fringe, going on to draw an enthusiastic response from BBC Radio 2 presenter Chris Evans, who called it a “Yorkshire Les Mis”.
Now, the musical has been adapted for a 2020 northern tour by Right Hand Theatre, a company passionate about diversity and inclusivity within theatre. The cast has a 50/50 male/female balance, delivering the show in a gender-blind way with a female Isaac Newton, for example. Both the director and lead actor are visually impaired.
The role of Saunderson is played by the
partially sighted Adam Martyn, from Doncaster, who trained at Liverpool
Institute of Performing Arts (LIPA). The female lead role of Abigail goes to Yorkshire
born-and-bred, Rose Bruford College-trained Larissa Teale.
The cast is completed by Tom Vercnocke
as Joshua Dunn; Louise Willoughby as Anne Saunderson; Matthew Bugg as John
Saunderson; Ruarí Kelsey as Reverend Fox; Katie Donoghue and Olivia Smith as
Company.
The musical will be staged with a fresh
look by director Andrew Loretto; vocal coach Sally Egan; movement directors
Lucy Cullingford and Maria Clarke; costume designer Lydia Denno; costume maker
Sophie Roberts; lighting designer David Phillips and tour musical director
David Osmond.
No Horizon’s 2020 northern tour is funded by Arts
Council England and Foyle Foundation, co-commissioned by Cast, Doncaster and
The Civic, Barnsley, and supported by Sheffield Royal Society for the Blind.
Tickets are on sale on 01904 623568 or at yorktheatreroyal.co.uk; April 9’s performance will be audio described, a Q&A will follow that night’s show.
Deluxe dancers: Ballet Boyz on tour with a new show in the spring
BALLETBOYZ are celebrating their 20th
anniversary with a spring tour of Deluxe, visiting the Grand Opera House, York,
on April 28.
This new show fuses beautiful dance
with original music, including collaborations from “some of the world’s most
inventive and thought-provoking choreographers and composers”, in a
co-production with Sadler’s Wells.
Shanghai
dancer and choreographer Xie Xin, artistic director of Xiexin Dance
Theatre, will make her British debut choreographing a new piece set to an
original electronic score by Jiang Shaofeng.
Punchdrunk
associate director Maxine Doyle will present work to live jazz music by
composer Cassie Kinoshi, of the Mercury Prize-nominated SEED Ensemble.
BalletBoyz artistic directors Michael
Nunn and William Trevitt say: “Deluxe is going to be a night of entertaining
and thought-provoking theatre that’s been 20 years in the making. The beauty of
our job has always been about finding and pursuing extraordinary talent and
sharing that with as many people as we can. It’s that simple.”
Over the past 20 years. BalletBoyz have
made 38 pieces of new work for the stage, won 13 international awards and
collaborated with 25 choreographers, Christopher Wheeldon, Akram Khan, Kristen
McNally, Matthew Bourne and Liv Lorent among them.
In the BalletBoyz line-up will be Joseph
Barton, Benjamin Knapper, Harry Price, Liam Riddick, Matthew Sandiford, Will
Thompson and apprentice Dan
Baines.
Looking ahead, in the autumn BalletBoyz
will undertake a new digital project in the wake of their award-winning dance
films Young Men and Romeo And Juliet.
Tickets for April 28’s 7.30pm show are on sale at £13 upwards on 0844 871 3024 or at atgtickets.com/york.
Gerry Grant making one of the pots for smashing at Fangfoss Pottery
IT sounds potty,
but Fangfoss potter Gerry Grant is making pots expressly to be broken.
“I’ve just landed
my most unusual job yet,” he says. “I’ve been commissioned by York company Pick
Me Up Theatre to make some props for next week’s production of The Goat, or Who
Is Sylvia?.
“What’s so unusual
about this request is that they’ve asked me to make a selection of very
large pots that will be smashed to pieces on the stage.”
These pots are made for breaking: Gerry Grant with the pottery that Pick Me Up Theatre’s cast will pick up to smash at next week’s performances
Presented by Pick Me
Up at the John Cooper Studio, Theatre @41 Monkgate, York, from February 25 to
29, Edward Albee’s American play centres around Martin Gray, a successful,
middle-aged architect who has just turned 50 and leads an ostensibly ideal life
with his loving wife, Stevie, and gay teenage son, Billy.
However, when he
confides to his best friend that he also is in love with a goat named Sylvia, he
sets in motion events that will destroy his family and leave his life in
tatters.
Albee’s domestic drama ponders the limits of an ostensibly
liberal society, showing a family in crisis to challenge audience members to question
their own moral judgment of social taboos.
The Goat cast members Bryan Bounds, Will Fealy and Susannah Baines
Director Mark Hird says: “The pottery plates, vases and bowls are an
integral part of the show. They represent wealth, prosperity and order in a
seemingly perfect household.
“They are expensive works of art collected by world-famous architect
Martin Gray to furnish the living room of the family’s New York home – and
they’re smashed when Stevie confronts Martin after discovering his affair with
Sylvia, the goat.”
Gerry has run Fangfoss Pottery for 43 years with wife Lyn Grant at The
Old School, Fangfoss, near York, and never before has he received such a destructive
commission.
“The pots have been specially made and fired to break easily,” says potter Gerry Grant. “I do hope they perform the task well”
“I’ve tried for more than 40 years to produce pots that are sturdy and
not easily broken. Now I’ve been asked to do the opposite! The pots have been
specially made and fired to break easily. I do hope they perform the task well.”
The Goat caused controversy but was a big hit – much like the pottery
breaking – with Broadway audiences when it opened in 2002. So much so, it won
the Tony Award for best play, 40 years after writer Albee won the same prize
for Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolf.
Next week marks its York premiere, when Gerry will witness his pots
being broken on the 41 Monkgate stage. “I’m looking forward to seeing the play,”
he says. “I’m sure it will be a smashing production”.
Tickets for the 7.30pm performances are on sale at pickmeuptheatre.com and on 01904 623568.