What’s On in Ryedale, York & beyond, from treehouse magic to churchyard sonnets. Hutch’s List No. 28, from Gazette & Herald

Elle Wootton in The 13-Storey Treehouse at Grand Opera House, York. Picture: James D Morgan

SHAKESPEARE sonnets, a treehouse with bowling alley and sea monster, The Magpies’ music festival and a thrilling children’s workshop will keep the summer diary busy, advises Charles Hutchinson.

Family show of the week: The 13-Storey Treehouse, Grand Opera House, York, today(8/8/2024) to Sunday, 1pm and 5pm

ADAPTED by Richard Tulloch (The Book Of Everything, Bananas In Pyjamas), this one-hour play for children aged six to 12 brings Andy Griffiths and Terry Denton’s story to stage life with a seriously funny cast and a treehouse replete with a bowling alley, a secret underground laboratory, self-making beds and a marshmallow machine.

Expect magical moments of theatrical wizardry and a truckload of imagination from the cast of Elle Wootton, Edwin Beats and Ryan Dulieu when Andy and Terry forget to write their debut play. Where will they find flying cats, a mermaid, a sea monster, an invasion of monkeys and a giant gorilla? Find out this week. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.

Josie Campbell: Writer of the script to accompany Shakespeare’s sonnets in York Shakespeare Project’s outdoor show at Holy Trinity, Goodramgate, York

Wedding invitation of the week: York Shakespeare Project, Summer Sonnets, Holy Trinity churchyard, Goodramgate, York, Friday to August 17, except August 12, 6pm and 7.30pm plus 4.30pm on both Saturdays

AUDIENCES are invited to a secret wedding at Holy Trinity, where they will meet the church’s most famous couple – Anne “Gentleman Jack” Lister and Ann Walker – while enjoying a complimentary drink. 

Linked by Josie Campbell’s script, York Shakespeare Project’s tenth anniversary selection of Shakespeare sonnets are performed in character by Maurice Crichton; Marie-Louise Feeley; Liam Godfrey; Emily Hansen; Halina Jaroszewska; Alexandra Logan; Sally Mitcham; Grace Scott; Effie Warboys; Helen Wilson and director Tony Froud. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk/show/summer-sonnets/. 

The poster for Safe Suburban Home Records’ August ’24 Roadshow at The Crescent, York

York gig of the week: Safe Suburban Home Records presents August ’24 Roadshow, Cowgirl, Teenage Tom Petties and Oort Clod, The Crescent, York, Friday, 7.30pm

SAFE Suburban Home Records will be in party mood at The Crescent, celebrating Friday’s release of York garage rock quartet Cowgirl’s new album, Cut Offs. Built around chief songwriters Danny Trew Barton and Sam Coates, they wrap melodies in walls of wailing guitar fuzz.

Teenage Tom Petties deliver transatlantic slacker rock with just the right amount of slop, fuzz and melody; Manchester’s mask-wearing Oort Clod promise post-punk, garage rock and jangly indie. Box office: thecrescentyork.com.

Fountains By Water, by Peter Hicks, on show at Fountains Abbey. Picture: Joe Cornish

Exhibition of the week: Peter Hicks, Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal Water Garden, near Ripon

THIS summer’s run of Peter Hicks’s exhibition, Fountains Abbey & Studley Royal – A Landscape Painter’s Perspective, is being extended to September 15. On show are works painted in response to the John and William Aislabie-designed landscapes at Fountains during Hicks’s residency in 2023.  

Commissioned by the National Trust, the Yorkshire landscape artist’s paintings, studies and sketchbooks are on display in Fountains Mill. Hicks specialises in abstract landscapes with acrylic washes on canvas and board, making his own benches and brush handles and using humble and accessible materials, such as old margarine pots for mixing his paints. Tickets: nationaltrust.org.uk/visit/yorkshire/fountains-abbey-and-studley-royal-water-garden.

Actress, vocalist and accordion player Natalia Tena fronts Molotov Jukebox at The Magpies Festival, backed by Balkan fiddle, Latin trumpet and a pounding rhythm section, on Friday

Festival of the week: The Magpies Festival, Sutton Park, near York, Friday and Saturday

RUN by transatlantic folk band The Magpies, The Magpies Festival is rooted in the trio’s native Yorkshire, where they first met. Now in its fourth year, the 2024 event will be headlined on Friday on the main stage by bi-lingual six-piece Molotov Jukebox at 10pm, preceded by Chris While & Julie Matthews, 6pm, and Jim Moray, 8pm.

Friday’s Brass Castle Stage bill features Em Risley, 5pm; Taff Rapids Stringband, 7pm; The Turbans, 9pm, and Easingwold musician Gary Stewart’s Graceland, 11pm.

Saturday’s main stage bill will be topped by Sam Kelly & The Lost Boys at 10pm, preceded by Charm Of Finches, 12 noon, The Often Herd, 2pm, Jesca Hoop, 4pm, The Magpies, 6pm, and Nati (formerly known as Nati Dreddd), 8pm. Saturday’s Brass Castle Stage line-up comprises Painted Sky, 1pm; Suntou Susso, 3pm; Northern Resonance, 5pm; Awkward Family Portraits, 7pm, and Marvara, 9pm. Box office: themagpiesfestival.co.uk/tickets.

The poster for the Three Day Thriller workshop for children at Helmsley Arts Centre

Children’s activity of the week: The Three Day Thriller, Helmsley Arts Centre, August 12 to 14, 10am to 2pm. CANCELLED

BUCKLE up for this improvising and devising workshop for 11 to 16-year-olds, designed to look at different theatre and performance techniques to make a new story in the thriller genre. The focus will be on character, plot and staging to create excitement, mystery and suspense, keeping audiences on the edge of their seats. At the end of day three, the work explored will be shared with family and friends. Places on the £75 workshop can be booked on 01439 771700 or at helmsleyarts.co.uk.

Robert Gammon: Playing at Dementia Friendly Tea Concert at St Chad’s Church, York

Dementia Friendly Tea Concert: Robert Gammon, piano, St Chad’s Church, Campleshon Road, York, August 15, 2.30pm

PIANIST Robert Gammon returns to St Chad’s to perform Bach’s Prelude and Fugue in F sharp Minor from the Well Tempered Clavier Book 2, Schumann’s Kinderszenen and two Chopin Polonaises. As usual, 45 minutes of music will be followed by tea and homemade cakes in the church hall.

“This relaxed event is ideal for people who may not feel comfortable at a formal classical concert, so we do not mind if the audience wants to talk or move about,” says organiser Alison Gammon. Seating is unreserved; no admission charge, but donations are welcome.

The gang is back: Martin Stephenson performs with his fellow Daintees stalwarts at Milton Rooms, Malton, this autumn

Gig announcement of the week: Martin Stephenson & The Daintees, Milton Rooms, Malton, October 13, 8pm

MARTIN Stephenson’s focus will be on You Belong To Blue, the February 2023 album that saw original Daintees’ members Gary Dunn, Anthony Dunn and Charlie Smith, plus a selection of special guests, joining up with the Durham-born singer-songwriter once again.

His Malton set will feature Daintees and Stephenson solo favourites stretching back to his 1986 debut Boat To Bolivia as he dips into country, folk, jazz, blues, skiffle and reggae. Box office: 01653 696240 or themiltonrooms.com.

What’s On in Ryedale, York and beyond, from August 14 onwards. Here’s Hutch’s List No. 29, from Gazette & Herald

Tony Froud’s Reverend Ebenezer Goode in York Shakespeare Project’s Summer Sonnets. Picture: John Saunders

DON’T poo-poo Ada Grey’s exhibition for children at Nunnington Hall, advises Charles Hutchinson, as he picks cultural highlights for the weeks ahead.

Wedding invitation of the week: York Shakespeare Project, Summer Sonnets, Holy Trinity churchyard, Goodramgate, York, until August 17, 6pm and 7.30pm plus 4.30pm Saturday

AUDIENCES are invited to a secret wedding at Holy Trinity, where they will meet the church’s most famous couple – Anne “Gentleman Jack” Lister and Ann Walker – while enjoying a complimentary drink. 

Linked by Josie Campbell’s script, York Shakespeare Project’s tenth anniversary selection of Shakespeare sonnets is performed in character by Maurice Crichton; Marie-Louise Feeley; Liam Godfrey; Emily Hansen; Halina Jaroszewska; Alexandra Logan; Sally Mitcham; Grace Scott; Effie Warboys; Helen Wilson and director Tony Froud. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk/show/summer-sonnets/. 

Heather Findlay: Busking at Sunday’s York River Art Market. Picture: Adam Kennedy

York’s answer to the Left Bank in Paris: York River Art Market, August 17 and 18, 10am to 5pm

YORK River Art Market sets out its stalls on the Dame Judi Dench Walk riverside for its third weekend this summer, featuring up to 30 artists and makers per day.  Among Saturday’s stallholders will be Bejojo Art, Jillie Lazenby, Woody’s Creations, Emily Littler, Happy Pot Mama, Magdalena Biernacka, Kissed Frog, I’ve Been Creative, Matt Lightfoot Photography, Inky Print Designs and Wood Wyrm.

Popping up on Sunday will be Urban Infill Store, Wild Orange Tree, Jo O’Cuinneagan, Rock and Twig Studio, David Lobley Photography, The Littlest Falcon, Feather Isle, Fei’s Crochet, Painter Merv, Stairwell Books, Ounce Of Style and plenty more. Look out for York singer-songwriter Heather Findlay on busking duty on Sunday. Admission is free.

Bedern Hall: Playing host to SconeFest from August 14 to 16

Festival of the week: SconeFest, Bedern Hall, Bartle Garth, St Andrewgate, York, August 14 to 16, 11am to 3pm

BEDERN Hall, York’s 14th-century dining hall,  hosts the city’s second annual SconeFest, promising a new mystery flavour every day, with the chance to win an afternoon tea for two at the hall if your guess is correct. In addition, the menu will include beloved flavours such as cheese, fruit and lavender.

Director Roger Lee says: “We’re honoured to have Bernadette – famed for her Christmas Pudding scones – baking for us, and we can’t wait for everyone to experience her incredible scones.” No need to book; visitors are welcome at any time throughout the day. Takeaway scones and hot drinks will be available.

Poo power: Illustrator and author Ada Grey’s exhibition at Nunnington Hall

Exhibition of the week: Ada Grey, Splat! Patter! Plop!, Nunnington Hall, Nunnington, until September 8

DIVE into a world where the “hilarity of poo” takes centre stage in this “unique children’s illustration exhibition like no other” by Ada Grey, creator of such picture books as Poo In The Zoo, Great Poo Mystery, Island Of Dinosaur Poo and Super Pooper Road Race.

Noted for the vibrant colours, lively characters and comical twists of her children’s tales, for the first time Grey is showcasing illustrations of such beloved characters as Bob McGrew and Hector Gloop in iconic moments from her favourite stories. Children have the chance to immerse themselves in Ada’s books, draw inspiration to create their own characters and proudly display their creations in the Poop-a-Doodle gallery. Grey will drop in on August 20 to run workshops for children from 11am to 4pm. Tickets and workshop bookings: nationaltrust.org.uk/visit/yorkshire/nunnington-hall/exhibitions.

MeatLoud: Paying tribute to MeatLoaf and Jim Steinman at Joseph Rowntree Theatre

Another slice of MeatLoaf: MeatLoud – Bat Out Of Hades, Joseph Rowntree Theatre, York, August 24, 7.30pm

FOUNDED in 2015, this powerhouse tribute to MeatLoaf and songwriter Jim Steinman is fronted by vocalist Andy Plimmer, who is joined Sally Rivers to take on the guise of Bonnie Tyler, Celine Dion and Cher. The second half features a complete performance of the classic 1977 album Bat Out Of Hell. Box office: 01904 501935 or josephrowntreetheatre.co.uk.

Jake Vaadeland & The Sturgeon River Boys: Making debut appearance at Selby Town Hall next month

New season opener: Jake Vaadeland & The Sturgeon River Boys, Selby Town Hall, September 4, 7.30pm

SELBY Town Hall kicks off its autumn season with the debut visit of Jake Vaadeland & The Sturgeon River Boys, purveyors of bluegrass and rockabilly from Saskatchewan, Canada.

Selby Town Council arts officer Chris Jones enthuses: “I absolutely love these guys. It’s probably the show I’m most looking forward to in the second half of the year. At just 21 years old, Jake is terrifyingly talented. He and the band – dressed in authentic 1950s’ suits – make the most fantastically fun, upbeat, toe-tapping music, already gracing the main stages of festivals across North America.” Box office: 01757 708449 or selbytownhall.co.uk.

Simon Russell Beale: Shakespeare actor, now starring as Ser Simon Strong in House Of The Dragon, will be in conversation at York Theatre Royal in September

Theatre chat: An Evening With Simon Russell Beale, York Theatre Royal, September 10, 7.30pm

WAS Shakespeare an instinctive “conservative” or, rather, gently subversive? How collaborative was he? Did he add a line to Hamlet to accommodate his ageing and increasingly chubby principal actor Richard Burbage? Did he suffer from insomnia and experience sexual jealousy?

In An Evening With Simon Russell Beale, in conversation with a special guest, the Olivier Award-winning actor will share his experiences of “approaching and living with some of Shakespeare’s most famous characters”, from his school-play days as Desdemona in Othello to title roles in Hamlet and Macbeth. Expect anecdotes of Sam Mendes, Nick Hytner, Stephen Sondheim and Lauren Bacall too. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.

Elkie Brooks: Heading out on her Long Farewell Tour. Leeds and York await. Picture: Neil Kirk

Gig announcement of the week: Elkie Brooks, Long Farewell Tour, Leeds City Varieties Music Hall, September 12; York Barbican, April 11 2025

AFTER 64 years of performing live, the “British queen of blues”, Elkie Brooks, is to undertake her Long Farewell Tour, visiting Leeds and York among 24 dates.

The Salford singer, 79, will perform such hits as Pearl’s A Singer, Lilac Wine, Fool (If You Think It’s Over), Sunshine After The Rain, No More The Fool and Don’t Cry Out Loud in a career-spanning show of blues, rock and jazz numbers that will showcase material from her forthcoming 21st studio album for the first time. Box office: elkiebrooks.com/elkie-brooks-tour-dates-2024; leedsheritagetheatres.com and yorkbarbican.co.uk.

The 13-Storey Treehouse takes up four-day residency at Grand Opera House for magical moments of theatrical wizardry

Banana drama: Edwin Beats’s Terry, left, and Ryan Dulieu’s Andy in The 13-Storey Treehouse. Picture: James D Morgan

THE 13-Storey Treehouse finds a new home in York from tomorrow to Sunday when Richard Tulloch’s stage adaptation of Andy Griffiths and Terry Denton’s story plays the Grand Opera House.

Tulloch, whose award-winning stage-writing credits include The Book Of Everything and Bananas In Pyjamas, has created a one-hour play for children aged six to 12 featuring a treehouse replete with bowling alley, secret underground laboratory, self-making beds and marshmallow machine.

Expect magical moments of theatrical wizardry and a truckload of imagination from the seriously funny cast of Ryan Dulieu, Edwin Beats and Elle Wootton, called into action when Andy and Terry forget to write their debut play. Where will they find flying cats, a mermaid, a sea monster, an invasion of monkeys and a giant gorilla? Find out from tomorrow.

Here cast members Ryan Dulieu (who plays Andy), Edwin Beats (Terry) and Elle Wootton (Val) discuss the play and its British tour.

For those who might not know the story, how would you sum it up?

Ryan: “The 13-Storey Treehouse is about a couple of goofballs, Andy and Terry, who turn up at the theatre thinking it’s their first rehearsal, only to find it’s opening night – and they haven’t even started writing the play yet (an actor’s worst nightmare come to life). Luckily Val, the stage manager, reluctantly joins in to help them make it all up as they go along, with the boys causing mayhem along the way.”

Elle: “As you can imagine, a lot of chaos and hilarity ensues.”

Edwin: “It’s an energetic and ridiculously fun show, loosely about imagination and togetherness. There’s music and laughs, and it’s worth coming just to see Val’s characterisation of Bill the Postman.”

How would you describe your characters?

Edwin: “I play Terry, who draws all the pictures in the books. Terry is somewhat goofy and entirely loveable. He is the doer, where Andy is the sayer. He’s not especially good at staying on task, so will often have to pull things together at the last moment.”

Ryan: “I play Andy, Terry’s best (and only) friend, the brains of the two, the one who writes the words (Terry does the scribbles). Andy is the main protagonist of the show, easily likable, very handsome, and incredibly funny.

Elle: “I play Val, a no-nonsense, super-organised, and very professional stage manager. She loves the theatre and wants the audience to have the best experience possible. But there’s more to Val than meets the eye. I really enjoy playing her because she is a character that surprises herself and others.”

Ryan: “I have to say I also absolutely love playing Andy. He has what can only be described as a certain ‘rizz’. He’s energetic and driven, always has big ideas, and works pretty hard to solve some Terry-induced problems. Playing Andy allows me be loud, confident, funny, and unleash my inner bossy-pants. Do I relate to Andy at all? You know, I think I really do!

Edwin: “I like Terry’s childlike wonder, and his abundant enthusiasm. He feels his feelings in a genuine and undiluted way. I relate closely to his distractibility, and the way he struggles with time management.”

Do you have a favourite part of the show?

Ryan: “Normally I say – spoiler alert – the giant gorilla, but at the moment my favourite part is probably the very beginning, where Andy and Terry have absolutely no idea what’s going on, and it almost seems as though there might be no show at all. It’s a thrilling bit of the show to perform, all that excitement and fear of making it up on the spot.

Edwin: “Barky the Barking Dog. There’s a part where Terry gets to watch his favourite TV show, then later on he discovers that he’s won 1st prize in the Barky the Barking Dog drawing competition!”

Elle: “The drawing competition always tickles me too! And I really enjoy Mermaidia.”

In the story, Andy and Terry live in the world’s best treehouse, fitted with a giant catapult, a secret underground laboratory, a tank of man-eating sharks and a marshmallow machine. What would be in your 13-Storey Treehouse?

Ryan: In my treehouse you would use trampolines instead of ladders to get around, there would be a spa-bath-cinema, a reptile-park on the roof (I love lizards and big, friendly snakes) and an automatic sandwich-making robot that would follow me around whenever I was hungry. Also, a ‘Luge’, which is like a go-kart, except there’s no motor and it’s all downhill!”

Edwin: “I’d have a football field and 21 chimpanzees in football boots. A branch that grows wonderful new fruits from your imagination. An enormous ski jump (that’s how you get down from the treehouse). And one level that’s just a very good authentic Mexican restaurant.”

Elle Wootton spreads her wings in The 13-Storey Treehouse. Picture: James D Morgan

Elle: “Oh my goodness! So many things! So hard to choose! I think I would love a bubble level: a giant room with a constant stream of bubbles, beautifully coloured lights and some great music. I also would love a jungle floor, where the whole space is full of tropical plants and there’s a lagoon to swim in.”

The story must have been tricky to bring to the stage. How does it all work?

Elle: “The magic of theatre! Which is a lot of trial and error in rehearsals, some amazing crew working behind the scenes, and a great team of performers working together with the audience’s imagination too!”

Edwin: “The book explores this idea that Andy and Terry have been goofing around so much that they’ve neglected to make a book for their publisher. In the theatre show, we’re similarly ill-prepared. We use our imaginations and the magic of theatre and make it up as we go along. We rely heavily on Val, the highly proficient and highly professional stage manager to create something out of nothing.”

Ryan: “Without ruining any surprises, it really engages the audience’s imagination! You’ll definitely see all the best bits of the book, and a whole team of clever people help us make it work, using things like puppetry, trick-props, some brilliant technical lighting and sound effects, and some really, very, very good acting of course!”

Ahead of making your UK debut with this show, you have toured Australia and the United States. What was the audience reaction to seeing the book brought to life on stage?

Edwin: “In Australia we’re rock stars. Aussie kids go ballistic when they see Andy and Terry! I remember sneaking onto the stage in near-darkness (before the show begins) and hearing excited whispers of ‘That’s Terry!’ from the audience. The US was great fun too: we had one especially massive audience in Alabama, where the concert hall seats close to 2,000 people!”

Ryan: “Audiences everywhere have been so enthusiastic and appreciative. I think the best thing about different Treehouse audiences around the world is how they all find new and different things they find funny in the show. It’s always surprising doing a show somewhere new and hearing audiences reacting differently to how you think they will.”

Elle: “It’s exciting and interesting to perform to people in different countries because sometimes the sense of humour in each country is different. So, in Australia people will laugh at things that in the US they might not and vice versa.

“But no matter where we go, audiences love the show! I’m looking forward to seeing what people in the UK connect with most in the play.”

Is it important to create theatre specifically for younger audiences?

Ryan: “Creating theatre for young people is one of the most important parts of the performing and theatre world. It opens the way for all of us to fall in love with theatre and live storytelling from a young age and creates pathways for young people to see they can have a career in the arts too.”

Elle: “Young people are the future, we have a lot to learn from them, but we also want to teach them the importance of creativity and connection.

“Theatre gives us a glimpse into another world, a different perspective, a view of someone else’s life, their feelings, and experiences. I think theatre, when done well, can help young people to develop empathy and learn important values, like friendship and respect.

Edwin: “Young people make the best audiences. Grown-ups are sometimes too polite to enjoy themselves, or too distracted by other things in life. Attending a show for young people can be joyous for the kids, and a valuable reminder for adults to exist in the moment.

Ryan: “Some of the best memories I have are being taken to pantomimes as a kid. I think my first show I saw was the Nutcracker ballet.”

Elle: “I loved the theatre when I was younger and was always affected by each performance I saw; I felt transported to another world. Although I did see a very scary rendition of Hansel And Gretel when I was quite young and it really stuck with me. I guess that taught me the strong impact that theatre can have on a young mind.”

Why come to the show?

Elle: “It is a joyful, rambunctious and entertaining ride that will absolutely fly by. You’ll laugh, you’ll get grossed out, you might even have a wee cry! Andy and Terry are a dynamic duo and so much fun to watch.”

Edwin: “I honestly believe it’s the most fun that can be packed into 55 minutes.”

Ryan: “It brings the book to life in such a creative and wonderful way. Whether you’re a die-hard Treehouse fan, or you’ve wandered in off the street and have no idea what a play even is, this show has something for everyone.”

The 13-Storey Treehouse, Grand Opera House, York, tomorrow (8/8/2024) to Sunday, 1pm and 5pm. Box office: atgtickets.com/york

Chief excutive Paul Crewes reveals vision for York Theatre Royal future in new season

York Theatre Royal chief executive officer Paul Crewes. Picture: Charlie Kirkpatrick

ONCE the York Theatre Royal packed away the big top as the circus-themed Around The World In 80 Days-ish concluded its globe-trotting travels last Saturday, attention could turn to the autumn and winter season.

At its core will be two in-house productions: Theatre Royal creative director Juliet Forster’s staging of Louisa May Alcott’s coming-of-age story Little Women, from September 21 to October 12, and the year-ending pantomime Aladdin, co-produced by the Theatre Royal and Evolution Productions, from December 3 to January 5.

Presented in association with “silent partner” Pitlochry Festival Theatre, Little Women is adapted by Anna Marie Casey in a new look at the story of headstrong Jo and her sisters Meg, Beth and Amy growing up in New England during the American Civil War.

Aladdin reunites regular dame Robin Simpson and baddie Paul Hawkyard, who returns after a year’s absence to restore a partnership last seen as Mrs Smee and Captain Hook in All New Adventures Of Peter Pan. Joining them will be CBeebies star Evie Pickerill as Spirit Of The Ring and BBC Let It Shine winner Sario Solomon in the title role.

“What we’re trying to do here is look to increase the work we produce ourselves, which has become smaller for reasons such as Covid,” says chief executive officer Paul Crewes. “We have to re-establish ourselves as a producing theatre that presents great touring work as well.”

Add Around The World In 80 Days-ish to the home-grown list, and Paul’s vision for the future is taking shape. “I want our in-house productions to run for more than ten days. That’s risky but unless you start doing it, you don’t build an audience,” he says.

“Then you think, ‘what work do I want to put around those shows?’, ‘how do we balance and support that work?’, and one of the things I want to do is build a programme of really high-quality dance shows. That’s why we have London City Ballet coming back for the first time in nearly 30 years as part of their re-launch.”

On September 6 and 7, London City Ballet will perform a revival of Kenneth Macmillan’s 1972 one-act ballet Ballade, not seen in Europe for more than 50 years, Arielle Smith’s premiere of Five Dances and artistic director Christopher Marney’s 2022 work Eve.

“We’re also delighted to have Company Wayne McGregor performing Autobiography (V102 and V103) on October 25 and 26,” says Paul. “Wayne McGregor is one of the top choreographers in the world; he’s just been knighted and he’s running the dance programme for the Venice Biennale 2024. That’s some statement about the quality we’re trying to establish here.”

Genetic codes, AI and choreography merge in this McGregor work that re-imagines and remakes itself anew for every performance as “artificial intelligence and instinct converge in creative authorship”..

Pride And Prejudice* (*Sort Of): Not sort of, but definitely, on stage at York Theatre Royal from November 4 to 9. Picture: Mihaela Bodlovicast

Looking further ahead, the Theatre Royal will welcome Jasmin Vardimon: Now, a new creation by choreographer Jasmin Vardimon MBE, celebrating the 25th anniversary of her dance theatre company, on February 8 next year. “This will be the company’s first time in York,” says Paul.

In addition to Little Women, the autumn’s classic literary focus will continue with Newcastle Theatre Royal’s Olivier Award-winning Pride And Prejudice* (*Sort Of), by Isobel McArthur after Jane Austen, from November 4 to 9. Billed as a unique and audacious retelling of Austen’s iconic love story”, in a nutshell, “it’s the 1800s, it’s party time. Let the ruthless matchmaking begin”.

“I’ve known the producer, David Pugh, for a long time, and it’s good to take shows from the West End and bring them here,” says Paul.

On a literary bent too, crime writer Ian Rankin’s detective Rebus treads the boards in a new play, Rebus: A Game Called Malice, from October 15 to 19, with Glasgow-born Gray O’Brien, last seen in York as the boorish, bigoted Juror 10 in Twelve Angry Men at the Grand Opera House in May, taking the role of John Rebus.

Rankin, who will attend a post-show discussion on October 18, has co-written the play with Simon Reade, set at a stately home dinner party where guests are required by the hostess to play a murder mystery game she has thought up. “It’s well timed after the new TV series, and having Ian Rankin at the discussion is a bit of a coup too,” says Paul.

Olivier Award winner Sally Cookson directs the Bristol Old Vic’s innovative production of Wonder Boy, Ross Willis’s “heartwarming and inspiring story about the power of communication packed with playful humour, dazzling visuals and thrilling original music”. Look out for live creative captioning on stage throughout from October 29 to November2. “Sally has a fantastic track record at Bristol and the National Theatre, and this piece just looks really, really exciting,” says Paul.

Among the one-nighter highlights are two Simons: An Evening With Simon Russell Beale, on September 10, wherein the Olivier Award-winning actor delves into his life and career to celebrate his memoir, A Piece Of Work, and An Evening With Simon Armitage & LYR, on January 24, featuring poetry and live performance by the Poet Laureate and his band.

“We just grabbed at the chance to put on Simon Russell Beale’s show when it was offered,” says Paul. “I’m not a great fan of actors standing on stage talking about themselves, but if it’s Simon Russell Beale – or Ian McKellen – then why not!”

Full details of the new season can be found at yorktheatreroyal.co.uk, including the Theatre Royal Studio taking on a new guise from October as a cabaret club after a makeover and name change to The Old Paint Shop for nights of music, improv and burlesque by York  artists. Box office: 01904 623568.

Brassed Off resonates down the years in new revival of colliery band drama at SJT

A scene from Liz Stevenson’s production of Brassed Off. Picture: Pamela Raith

LIZ Stevenson’s new staging of Brassed Off marks the 40th anniversary of the Miners’ Strike and the 30th anniversary of the 1994 setting of York film-maker Mark Herman’s pit community drama.

Adapted for the stage by Paul Allen, the co-production by Theatre by the Lake, Keswick, the Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough, and Octagon Theatre, Bolton, has moved from Keswick to Scarborough, where the cast of ten, including several actor-musicians, will perform Herman’s story of northern grit, heart and defiant humour from tonight until August 31.

Ten years after the Miners’ Strike, the mining community of Grimley, Yorkshire, is fighting to keep the colliery open. Meanwhile, revered band leader Danny is battling to keep his dispirited band of brass-playing miners together, fuelled by the dream of qualifying for the national championships at London’s Royal Albert Hall. Loyalty is tested, pressure mounts and the community begins to break apart, but can the band find a way to play on? 

“It’s a timely moment to present this iconic play, 40 years after the 1984 Miners’ Strike,” says Liz, Theatre by the Lake’s artistic director. “Our production looks back on the battles of this close-knit mining community, asking: what has changed? And what does this play mean to us today? We’ve assembled an incredible team to deliver a moving theatrical experience that celebrates the resilience of communities and the transformative power of music.” 

Liz’s vision for the production started with the question: How do you see the play from a 2024 perspective?  “It occurred to me that in our audience, there will be people who lived through the Miners’ Strike, worked down the pit,  and are still affected by it. Others will have had little experience of it and won’t have been affected.

“There’ll be some who know and love Mark’s film; others who won’t have seen it. So, what’s your starting point? In our production, we’ve imagined how young narrator Shane, the eight-year-old son of Phil and Sandra in the film, would be 38 now, not dissimilar to my age.

“So we’re now treating it like a memory play, where he re-lives his memories of his childhood, his father and his grandfather [band leader Danny], seeing them through adult eyes and reflecting on how the events of 1984/1994  made him the man he is today.

“Obviously lots of things have changed – though some haven’t – so it feels like a period piece, but for others it still feels like recent history, and some of our cast have grown up playing in brass bands.”

Brassed Off resonates as much as ever in 2024, when “deindustrialisation, inequality and poverty is still felt today in former mining towns and across different communities around the world”, says Liz.

“What there’s no denying in this country is that we still have a great deal of poverty, like the characters in this play. There’s a scene where Phil tries to take his life, and  it was an important decision how we would handle that scene: what led him to that point, as we see him become more and more desperate. Lots of people will be able to relate to that – it’s probably the most relatable thing in the play.”

Crucial too is Danny’s climactic speech at the Royal Albert Hall, the one where, in the moment of winning the national championships, he says: “I thought that music mattered, but does it bol****s, not compared with how people matter”. “We didn’t want to make it a nostalgia festival. We wanted to lift it out of that, stripping it back, simplifying the design too,” says Liz.

“There’s something important to be said, locally, nationally and internationally, about the significance of community and how we have to look after each other, how people matter more than money.

“This play shows how vital community is, and this production manifests that by having not only a cast of ten but also a community cast with three teams of two children and members of the local community playing in the band at each show.  That brings a community spirit to the performances – which is such a joy.”

That sense of community is enhanced by the theatre-in-the-round configuration of all three theatres. “It’s an inclusive, intimate setting, with audiences on all sides and everyone close to the action, but it’s a challenge too as the Scarborough stage is small but we have to have 19 bodies on stage at one point! You’re thinking, ‘how do we do this, with all the music, in that space, with lots of episodic scenes that flow into each other’?” says Liz.

“It needs to be fluent and dynamic, and especially as a memory play where one moment triggers the next. Something special happens when the band plays for the first time on stage: that feeling of everyone playing together in a collective endeavour. You see the importance of collaborating in the play, but when they perform the music, it takes it to another level.”

Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough, Theatre by the Lake, Keswick, and Octagon Theatre, Bolton present Brassed Off, Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough, tonight to August 31. Box office: 01723 370541 or sjt.uk.com.

More Things To Do in York and beyond as new beetle invasion blazes a trail. Here’s Hutch’s List No. 32, from The Press, York

The Delma Tomlin sculpture in the York Trailblazers trail of tansy beetle artworks

TRAILBLAZERS in beetle form, Georgian festivities, colliery band dramas, and riverside art take Charles Hutchinson in different directions in the week ahead.

Trail of the week: York Trailblazers, around York city centre, August 1 to September 30

FACT of the day: the river Ouse has the largest population of tansy beetles in the United Kingdom. Now sculptures of these insects form a new trail, York Trailblazers, a celebration of York’s unsung heroes mounted by York Civic Trust and Make It York with National Lottery Heritage Fund support.

Nominated by the public and community groups, the Trailblazers project highlights remarkable individuals who have made a difference to people’s lives either locally or globally. 

Author Terry Deary: Introducing his new novel at the York Georgian Festival this evening

Festival of the week: York Georgian Festival, today to Sunday

THE second York Georgian Festival opens tomorrow, when Horrible Histories author Terry Deary’s 6pm showcase of his new novel, A History Of Britain In Ten Enemies, will be an early highlight. 

Tours, talks and fascinating hidden Georgian gems will be at the heart of the festival. The first York Georgian Ball will be held at the Grand Assembly Rooms (now home to the ASK Italian restaurant) on Saturday at 7pm. Look out for Mad Alice’s Rogues Gallery Tour around the city at 4pm on Saturday and Sunday. For the full programme and tickets, head to: yorkgeorgianfestival.co.uk.

Brass band blues: A scene from Brassed Off at the Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough

Play of the week outside York: Brassed Off, Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough, tomorrow (2/8/2024) to August 31 

ADAPTED for the stage by Paul Allen from the 1996 screenplay by York filmmaker Mark Herman, Brassed Off takes to the stage in a co-production by Keswick’s Theatre by the Lake, Scarborough’s Stephen Joseph Theatre and Bolton’s Octagon Theatre, directed by Liz Stevenson.

The setting is 1994, ten years after the miners’ strike, when the tight-knit mining community of Grimley, Yorkshire, is fighting to keep the colliery open. Once the uncertainty around the pit’s future becomes too much for the pit band members, loyalty is tested, pressure mounts and the community begins to break apart. Can the band find a way to play on? Box office: 01723 370541 or sjt.uk.com.

Yard Act: Leeds art rock band play in their backyard on Saturday. Picture: Phoebe Fox

Leeds gig of the week: Yard Act, Here’s Our Utopia, Leeds Millennium Square, August 3, doors 6pm; 10.30pm finish

LEEDS art rock band Yard Act play their biggest gig yet on home turf at Leeds Millennium Square this weekend in the wake of the March release of second album Where’s My Utopia?.

Co-produced by James Smith’s indie quartet and Gorillaz member Remi Kabaka Jr, the album peaked at number four, following the number two success and Mercury Prize shortlisting of 2022 debut The Overload. Support acts will be English Teacher, Fat Dog and Ultimate Thunder. Box office: 0113 376 0318 or millsqleeds.com/whatson-event/yard-act/.

Laura Joy’s poster design for the 2024 York River Art Market weekends. She will be participating in all six days. Check out her work at laurajoydesign.co.uk

York’s answer to the Left Bank in Paris: York River Art Market, August 3 and 4; August 10 and 10; August 17 and 18, 10am to 5pm

ORGANISED by jewellery designer and York College art tutor Charlotte Dawson, York River Art Market returns to the riverbank at Dame Judi Dench Walk for a ninth summer season from this weekend.

Up to 30 artists and makers per day will be exhibiting ceramics, jewellery, paintings, prints, photographs, clothing, candles, T-shirts, shaving products and more. “We care that each of the six events are never the same, so we host a different variety of creatives at each one,” says Charlotte. Admission is free.

Richard Hudson’s Unwind: On show at Thirsk Hall Sculpture Garden. Picture: Celestine Dubruel

Exhibition of the week: Thirsk Hall Sculpture Garden, Kirkgate, Thirsk, open Wednesdays to Saturdays, 11am to 5pm, last entry 4pm

THIRSK Hall Sculpture Garden showcases modern and contemporary sculptures in 20 acres of walled gardens and parkland at the grade II-listed town house, complemented by artwork in Gallery One and The Orangery.

Artists on show include Farnoush Amini, Kenneth Armitage, Tere Chad, Tim Ellis, Laura Ford, Richard Hudson, Jeff Lowe, Gerald Laing, Michael Lyons, Trory Menage, Zak Ové, Tim Pomeroy, William Tucker, Austin Wright and Emily Young. To find out more about the 2024 exhibition, visit willoughnygerrish.com. Tickets: thirskhall.com/sculpture-garden.

Chris Hagyard, pictured in Guys And Dolls mode, will sing in Bev Jones Music Company’s One Night Of Broadway Hits

Musical revue of the week: Steve Coates and Bev Jones Music Company present One Night Of Broadway Hits, Joseph Rowntree Theatre, York, August 3, 2.30pm and 7.30pm

BEV Jones Music Company performs hits from 26 musicals, including Guys And Dolls, in an unashamedly traditional fashion under the musical direction of James Rodgers.

His band is joined in this moving, lively and at times funny show by vocalists Chris Hagyard, Annabel Van Griethuysen, Anthony Pengelly, Ruth McNeil, Sally Lewis, Stephen Wilson, Geoff Walker and producer Lesley Jones, back on stage for this show, wearing a silver cat suit unseen since 2010, when she played Vera in Stepping Out. Box office: 01904 501395 or josephrowntreetheatre.co.uk.

Hurry up Harry: The Three Inch Fools cast for The Secret Diary Of Henry VIII at Helmsley Walled Garden

Ryedale play of the week: The Three Inch Fools in The Secret Diary Of Henry VIII, Helmsley Walled Garden, August 6, 7pm; gates 6pm

THE Three Inch Fools, founded by the Cumbrian Hyde brothers, producer James and writer, composer and director Stephen, present an essential guide on how to keep your head in the Tudor Court in a new comical take on Henry VIII and his six-pack of infamous wives.

Unexpectedly thrust into the limelight, Henry must navigate the ups and downs of courtly life, all while fighting the French yet again and re-writing religious doctrine. Bring chairs, blankets, picnics, but not umbrellas. Park in the Cleveland Way car park. Box office: 01439 771700, helmsleyarts.co.uk or threeinchfools.com.

Korn-ucopia of heavy metal hits at Scarborough Open Air Theatre on August 8

Coastal gig of the week: Korn, Scarborough Open Air Theatre, August 8, gates 6pm

FORMED in California in 1993, Korn continue to push the limits of alt. rock and heavy metal after 40 million album sales, two Grammy awards and countless tours. Expect to hear such anthems as Blind, Falling Away From Me, Here To Stay, Freak On A Leash, Twisted Transistor, Make Me Bad and Did My Time as their European tour arrives in Yorkshire. Support acts will be Wargasm and Loathe. Box office: scarboroughopenairtheatre.com/korn.

Riley Catherall: Playing Pig & Pastry, York, on a tour that takes the Australian singer-songwriter to Nayland, Kirton in Lindsay, High Wycombe and Stockholm, Uddevalla and Oland in Sweden

Introducing: Riley Catherall, Pig & Pastry, Bishopthorpe Road, York, August 8. Doors: 7.30pm for 8pm start

MELBOURNE singer-songwriter Riley Catherall’s graceful trajectory into the Australian alt-country world has not gone unnoticed. So much so that he will be playing in York on Thursday, promising songs of poetic sincerity from his June 14 sophomore album The Light, The Beautiful Liar and his 2021 debut When I Go, a record focused on leaving, losing love and finding somewhere to settle down. Box office: wegottickets.com/event/624233/.

Anastacia: Playing York Barbican next May on her Not That Kind 25th Anniversary Tour

Gig announcement of the week: Anastacia, Not That Kind 25th Anniversary Tour, York Barbican, May 4 2025

CHICAGO singer-songwriter Anastacia will play York Barbican as the only Yorkshire concert of the 13-date British and Irish leg of her Not That Kind tour next year, marking the 25th anniversary of her debut album.

“I didn’t get to do a tour for my first album, which makes this all the more special,” says Anastacia. “I can’t believe it’s been 25 years since Not That Kind; we will be sure to celebrate in true Anastacia style. It’ll be one big anniversary party. I can’t wait to see you all there !” Box office: yorkbarbican.co.uk/whats-on/anastacia-2025/.

In Focus: The Magpies Festival, Sutton Park, near York, August 9 and 10

Actress, vocalist and accordion player Natalia Tena fronts Molotov Jukebox at The Magpies Festival, backed by Balkan fiddle, Latin trumpet and a pounding rhythm section, on Friday

RUN by transatlantic folk band The Magpies, The Magpies Festival is rooted in the trio’s native Yorkshire, where they first met. Now in its fourth year, the 2024 event will be headlined on Friday on the main stage by bi-lingual six-piece Molotov Jukebox at 10pm, preceded by Chris While & Julie Matthews, 6pm, and Jim Moray, 8pm.

Friday’s Brass Castle Stage bill features Em Risley, 5pm; Taff Rapids Stringband, 7pm; The Turbans, 9pm, and Easingwold musician Gary Stewart’s Graceland, 11pm.

Saturday’s main stage bill will be topped by Sam Kelly & The Lost Boys at 10pm, preceded by Charm Of Finches, 12 noon, The Often Herd, 2pm, Jesca Hoop, 4pm, The Magpies, 6pm, and Nati (formerly known as Nati Dreddd), 8pm. Saturday’s Brass Castle Stage line-up comprises Painted Sky, 1pm; Suntou Susso, 3pm; Northern Resonance, 5pm; Awkward Family Portraits, 7pm, and Marvara, 9pm.

Festival organisers The Magpies

The all-female The Magpies – Bella Gaffney (singer, songwriter, guitarist and banjo player), fellow founder Holly Brandon (fiddle player and tunesmith) and Ellie Gowers (guitarist, singer and songwriter) – are set on championing gender equality in the music industry, achieving gender parity in both line-up and staff, as well as providing a safe and comfortable environment for female musicians and festival goers.

Festival director Holly Brandon says: “We are so excited to put on The Magpies Festival. We’ve been over the moon at the response to the festival, from the incredible performances from world-class folk musicians to the high-energy spirit that our attendees brought along. It’s felt like a whole new feel to a folk festival.”

Box office: themagpiesfestival.co.uk/tickets.

Sam Kellly & The Lost Boys: To be found at The Magpies Festival at Sutton Park on Saturday

Dame Judi Dench to return home to York for I Remember It Well in conversation with Gyles Brandreth at Grand Opera House

The poster for Dame Judi Dench and Gyles Brandreth’s night of stories, sonnets and surprises at the Grand Opera House, York, on October 10

DAME Judi Dench is heading home to York for one night only in a special performance at the Grand Opera House on October 10.

Stage, film and television actress Dame Judi, 89, will be joined on stage at 7.30pm by television presenter, theatre producer, journalist, author, publisher and former Conservative MP for the City of Chester Gyles Brandreth.

Together they will present their sell-out West End and Royal Albert Hall show, I Remember It Well with Judi Dench & Gyles Brandreth. Tickets go on general sale at 10am on August 2 at atgtickets.com/york, preceded by ATG+ members 24 hours earlier.

Dame Judi joins her friend Gyles on a roller-coaster trip down memory lane as they explore the story of her extraordinary life, from her childhood in Heworth, York, in the 1930s to her latest Oscar nomination – for Best Supporting actress in Kenneth Branagh’s Belfast – in  2022. Expect moments from Shakespeare and anecdotes aplenty – stories, sonnets and surprises – in a “two-hour party of lifetime”.

Educated at The Mount School, and later briefly at the York School of Art, Dame Judi played a “forgetful angel” in the 1951 York Mystery Plays, staged by the St Mary’s Abbey ruins in the York Museum Gardens in the first revival since their suppression in 1569.

This was followed by her roles as a “young man in white clothing” in the 1954 production and the Virgin Mary in 1957, after completing her studies at the Central School of Speech Training and Dramatic Art. That year she made her professional theatrical debut as Ophelia in Hamlet at the Old Vic, London.

Her stage and screen career has taken in the Royal Shakespeare Company and National Theatre; the television series A Fine Romance and As Time Goes By; the role of M in the James Bond franchise from 1995’s GoldenEye to M’s death in 2012’s Skyfall, and an Oscar win, among eight nominations from 1997 to 2022, for Best Supporting Actress in Shakespeare In Love in 1998.

Six film BAFTAs, three television BAFTAs, two Golden Globes, two Screen Actors’ Guild awards, seven Oliviers, one Tony award and three Evening Standard Theatre awards have come her way too.

Here in York, Dame Judi received receive the honour of Millennium Person of the Present award at York Mansion House in 2000, was made an Honorary Freeman of the City of York in 2002 and has had a riverside walkway, Dame Judi Dench Walk, named after her.

On the theatre front, although Dami Judi will be appearing at the Grand Opera House this autumn, she is a patron of York Theatre Royal.

York Georgian Festival: what’s coming up from today to Saturday for fans of the era?

York Georgian Festival: for fans of fans and the period alike

THE second York Georgian Festival runs from today to Sunday, buoyed by an “overwhelming turnout” and VisitYork Tourism Awards nomination for last August’s inaugural event.

Day one’s highlight, Horrible Histories author Terry Deary’s 6pm showcase of his new book, A History Of Britain In Ten Enemies, has sold out.

In response to much demand, the festival will host the first York Georgian Ball at the Grand Assembly Rooms, now home to the ASK Italian restaurant, in Blake Street, on Saturday at 7pm. This ballroom played host to dances and dinners in the 18th and 19th centuries, and now guests will be dressed in their finest as they country-dance under the chandeliers this weekend.

Further festival highlights will be tours, talks and the chance to discover hidden Georgian gems across the city.

Festival creator Sarah White, events and marketing manager for York Mansion House, says: “I am delighted to be working with some of the most beautiful museums, venues and minds in York to bring this festival to life. We want to showcase the impact of this time period on the modern day, and we also want to dance the night away.”

Many events are pre-book only. For tickets, go to: yorkgeorgianfestival.co.uk.

The festival programme

Terry Deary: Introducing his new book this evening

Thursday

10am:  Behind the Scenes Curator Tour, at Fairfax House.

10am to 3pm (pre-bookable tours available): Tours and Tea for Charity at York Medical Society, 23 Stonegate.

10am to 5pm (last admission 4pm): Discover the “illegal chapel” at Bar Convent Living Heritage Centre.

10.30am to 5pm (last admission 4pm): Hobs Go Georgian, a fun family trail at York Mansion House.  Free with admission.

11.30am: 18th century cooking demonstration, York Mansion House. Free with admission.

11.30am: Blood, Guts and Bedlam Tour, from York Medical Society.

2.30pm: Dressing a Georgian Lady, York Mansion House. Free with admission.

4pm: Rogues Gallery Tour with Mad Alice, around the city.

6pm: Terry Deary previews his new book, A History of Britain in Ten Enemies. SOLD OUT.

7pm: Mad Alice History Talk and Gin Tasting, at Impossible York bar.

Friday

10am to 5pm (last admission 4pm): Discover the “illegal chapel” at Bar Convent Living Heritage Centre.

10am to 3pm (pre-bookable tours available): Tours and Tea for Charity at York Medical Society, 23 Stonegate.

10.30am: Georgian Dance Class at the Guildhall.

10.30am to 5pm (last admission 4pm): Hobs Go Georgian: a fun family trail at York Mansion House. Free with admission.

11.30am: 18th century cooking demonstration, York Mansion House. Free with admission.

11.30am: Blood, Guys and Bedlam Tour, from York Medical Society.

2.30pm: Fan language, York Mansion House. Free with admission.

4pm: Rogues Gallery Tour, with Mad Alice, around the city.

7.30pm: Bridgerton by Candlelight, Ignite Concerts. SOLD OUT.

Saturday

10am to 5pm (last admission 4pm): Discover the “illegal chapel” at Bar Convent Living Heritage Centre.

10.30am to 5pm (last admission 4pm): Hobs Go Georgian, a fun family trail at York Mansion House. Free with admission.

11am: Regency Rejigged dance performance, St Helen’s Square.

11.30am: 18th century cooking demonstration, York Mansion House. Free with admission.

2pm: Regency Rejigged dance performance, St Helen’s Square.

2pm: Anatomy of a Ball, Barley Hall Coffee Shop.

2.30pm:  Dressing a Georgian Lady, York Mansion House. Free with admission.

3pm: Regency Rejigged dance performance, St Helen’s Square.

4pm: The Raree Show of The Fox Trap’t, Holy Trinity Church, Goodramgate. SOLD OUT.

4pm: The Rogues Gallery Tour, with Mad Alice, around the city.

5pm: Family Walking Tour: A Day in the Life of Jane Ewbank, with York Georgian Society, starting from St Helen’s Square.

7pm: The York Georgian Ball, at Grand Assembly Rooms.

Sunday

10.30am to 1pm:  Hobs Go Georgian: a fun family trail at York Mansion House. Free with admission.

11am: Regency Rejigged dance performance, St Helen’s Square.

11.30am: 18th century cooking demonstration, York Mansion House. Free with admission.

1pm: Uncovering The Parrot: A Forgotten Women-Led Satirical Periodical of the 18th Century at York Mansion House. SOLD OUT. York Mansion House will be closed temporarily from 12.30pm to 2.20pm to accommodate this ticketed event.

2pm: Regency Rejigged dance performance, St Helen’s Square.

2.30pm: Fan language, York Mansion House. Free with admission.

4pm: Rogues Gallery Tour, with Mad Alice, around the city.

York Shakespeare Project invites you to a secret wedding at Holy Trinity Church, Goodramgate, as Summer Sonnets return

York Shakespeare Project’s poster for Summer Sonnets at Holy Trinity Church

YORK Shakespeare Project’s Summer Sonnets return to the churchyard of Holy Trinity, Goodramgate, York from August 9 to 17.

“After attracting a record audience of more than 600 people to the show last year in the Bar Convent gardens, we are delighted again to be offering a taste of Shakespeare that is both entertaining and accessible,” says YSP chair Tony Froud, who is directing the sonnet season for a second year.

Holy Trinity last hosted YSP’s Sit-Down Sonnets in September 2020, under social distancing restrictions during the Covid pandemic.

Writer Josie Campbell

“This year we plan to take full advantage of the historic and beautiful setting”, says Tony. “Many people will know the church as the site of the blessing of the relationship of Anne Lister (Gentleman Jack) and Ann Walker [at Easter 1834] and we are building this year’s show around that famous event” [now marked by a York Civic Trust rainbow plaque with the wording “took sacrament here to seal her union”).

The Summer Sonnets show has been scripted by Josie Campbell, who performed for YSP on the Rose Theatre’s Shakespeare Wagon in 2019 at the Eye of York.

Sharing her time between Yorkshire and Dubai, Josie is a professional actor/director and co-founder of Little Britches Theatre Company. In 2021 she toured Yorkshire with a pop-up production of Shakespeare’s Will, a one woman show about Anne Hathaway, Shakespeare’s wife.

Summer Sonnets director Tony Froud

For Summer Sonnets, Josie has come up with an entertaining plot, taking full advantage of the church’s setting and rich history. “I have thoroughly enjoyed writing a Sonnets show, which includes Anne Lister, one of Yorkshire’s most uncompromising and resilient women”, she says.

Audiences are “invited to a secret wedding in Holy Trinity, Goodramgate, in the heart of York”, where they will “meet the church’s most famous couple while enjoying a complimentary drink. As they witness the happy event, they may start to wonder: is everything quite what it seems?”

Debutant York Shakespeare Project sonneteer Grace Scott in rehearsal. Picture: John Saunders

“As ever, the show features a wide variety of colourful characters, each speaking in everyday English until they shift into their 14 lines of verse from one of Shakespeare’s sonnets to reveal the heart of their story,” says Tony.

“It’s a lovely experience. You can sip your complimentary drink on a summer’s evening in a delightful setting. Very often, the characters slip into a sonnet and the audience hardly notices that the language has become Shakespearean. And you should look forward to a surprise or two!”

2024 marks the tenth anniversary of YSP’s first show built around Shakespeare’s sonnets in the form of 2014’s Sonnet Walks, wherein groups of audience members met assorted characters as they walked through the streets of York.

Liam Godfrey: Making his Summer Sonnets debut. Picture: John Saunders

“Sadly, I never saw the Walks, but there’s an advantage in having a single setting where characters can meet, start a story and then reappear to complete it,” says Josie.

Tony’s cast is a blend of actors new* to the YSP Sonnets and seasoned sonneteers: Maurice Crichton; Marie-Louise Feeley*; Liam Godfrey*; Emily Hansen; Halina Jaroszewska*; Alexandra Logan*; Sally Mitcham; Grace Scott*; Effie Warboys*; Helen Wilson and Tony Froud himself.

York Shakespeare Project in Summer Sonnets, Holy Trinity Church, Goodramgate, York, August 9 to 17, except August 12, 6pm and 7.30pm, plus 4.30pm on August 10 and 17. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk/show/summer-sonnets/. Tickets: £10; £5, age 14 to 17; two under-14s per adult. The price includes a free drink.

Regular York Shakespeare Project sonneteer Helen Wilson in rehearsal. Picture: John Saunders

Psychologist Cheish Merryweather puts murder under the microscope in crime talk with psychopath test at Junction Goole

Cheish Merryweather: Research psychologist and psychopathy expert

DO you reckon you could get away with murder? According to research psychologist and psychopathy expert Cheish Merryweather, many people do.

Discover why in her new true crime talk, Murder: Staged, featuring a live psychopath test, at Junction Goole on October 4.

“The ‘CSI effect’ has created a new type of killer, one that is forensically aware and is out to mislead an investigation,” says Cheish, who has been seen and heard on the BBC.

“Murder: Staged will explore the lies embedded in crime scenes and share the expertise from those who dig deep for the truth”

The poster for Cheish Merryweather’s Murder: Staged tour, visiting Junction Goole on October 4

Cheish’s two-hour talk (plus a 20-minute interval) will include in-depth forensics, reconstructed real-life crime scene walk-throughs and a deep dive into cases that have not been seen on stage live before.

“The live psychopath test will be a good indication of who we really should be keeping a close eye on,” says Cheish.

Cheish Merryweather, presents Murder: Staged, Junction Goole, Paradise Place, Goole, October 4, 7.30pm. Age recommendation: 16+. Box office: junctiongoole.co.uk/events/murder-staged/.

REVIEW: NETheatre York in West Side Story, Joseph Rowntree Theatre, York ***

In black and white: Back row: Rebecca Jackson’s Maria, Finlay Butler’s Tony and Kit Stroud’s Riff; front, Kristian Barley’s Bernardo and Maia Beatrice’s Anita in NETheatre York’s West Side Story. Picture: NETheatre York

CREATIVE director Steve Tearle first saw West Side Story at the age of nine. Within two years he was performing in The Sound Of Music at the Sunderland Empire, whereupon a life-long love of musical theatre was born.

Yet he desisted from directing Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim’s 1950s’ musical. “I was always comparing what I could achieve with that amazing film,” he says, but then he attended a Broadway production in 2019 that changed his mind.

Here comes his different take, “not as ‘dancey’, not as polished, but very raw, very emotional, focusing on the acting”. In a nutshell, NETheatre York’s production would be built more on movement than choreography, although Melisa Boyd is still credited as choreographer, rather than movement director, working in tandem with Tearle.

After Rebecca Jackson’s Maria and Finlay Butler’s Tony cross without noticing each other in a sliding doors moment, the physical performance style is established in a long sequence without dialogue that opens the over-long first act, distilling the chaos and friction between two Upper West Side working-class gangs in New York:  the Polish-Irish Catholics, The Jets, and their Puerta Rican rivals, The Sharks.

All are wearing variations on black and white streetwear, as sharp as in the era of 2Tone Ska, but here designed to be timeless, representing all eras from the 1950s to the present day to emphasise the continuing resonance of a tragic teenage romance rooted in Shakespeare’s ill-fated, star-crossed tale of forbidden love, Romeo & Juliet.

Kit Stroud’s Riff and The Jets in NETheatre York’s West Side Story

The black-and-white uniformity is also designed to reinforce common humanity beneath the codes of a turf war, here delineated by The Jets moving in a jive style, The Sharks more fluid in their stride.

Black and white defines Tearle’s set design and lighting too: even the three mobile scaffolding towers that facilitate much climbing and clambering, not least for Maria and Tony’s balcony scenes, are decorated that way, matched by the bold-typed projections that chart the story’s calamitous rush from 5.34pm on Friday evening to 2.31am on Sunday morning on a countdown clock. The New York skyline is depicted in monochrome too.

Tearle only breaks the night with colour – to borrow a Richard Ashcroft song title – in moments of heightened drama or tragedy, first used when Maia Beatrice’s Anita decorates Maria’s new dress with a red band, echoing the red coat in Steven Spielberg’s otherwise B&W Schindler’s List. Later, the columns of bright white light will turn bloodshed-red.

If a musical is built on a triptych of music, story and choreography, Tearle’s production is stronger on its musicality and storytelling than movement: the ensemble motion in commotion needs more zip, more dynamism, more attack and anger, more heat too, although Riff and The Jets finger-click into the right gear in Cool.  

Tearle’s “focus on the acting, the characterisation” pays off, however, in the heart-stopping performances of Jackson’s Maria and Butler’s Tony. From Puerto Rican accent to beautiful singing voice and deportment, Jackson is a terrific young talent, one to watch, leading I Feel Pretty so delightedly and delightfully. Butler, lithe and full of stage presence, sings movingly too, especially in Maria.

Steve Tearle’s Doc and Finlay Butler’s Tony in West Side Story

Kristian Barley’s Bernardo and Kit Stroud’s kilted Riff exude macho menace as hot-headed rival gang leaders, ever ready for a rumble, Scott Barnes amuses in a camp cameo as gym party chaperone Mr Glad Hand and Erik Jensen’s Lieutenant Schrank is suitably no-nonsense.

Beatrice’s abrasive Anita and Jackson’s Maria combine in the show’s outstanding number, A Boy Like That/I Have A Love, while Tearle’s Jewish drug store boss Doc – the older, outsider voice of reason, bewilderment and despair – takes over the singing of Somewhere (a song originally given to Consuelo on Broadway), giving it added adult heft.

Look out too for Melissa Boyd’s volatile Rosalia, Alice Atang’s athletic Natalia, Zachary Pickersgill’s plucky Snowboy and Erin Greenley’s tomboy Anybodys, along with Steve Perry’s vengeful Chino.

Defining West Side Story as “a play with music, rather than as a music”, Tearle has followed up a similarly focused Fiddler On The Roof by “stripping back” his latest production, restricting the cast to 35, keeping the stage pretty much bare, save for the scaffolding towers, a neon sign for Doc’s store, eight chairs and a bed. The lighting ups its game, a dazzling component in capturing the moments of conflict and conflagration.

Not all the blocking works well, the tinsel curtain cutting off heads in one scene, and the movement is sometimes heavy footed, but we are seeing a new, character-driven side to Tearle’s direction this year, more grit, less glitter. Coming next: Elf The Musical, from November 26 to 30, when the (Christmas) glitter will no doubt resurface!

NE Theatre York in West Side Story, Joseph Rowntree Theatre, York, 2.30pm and 7.30pm today. Box office: 01904 501935 or josephrownteetheatre.co.uk.