REVIEW: Jingle All The Way, Pocklington Arts Centre, today, 10.30am & 4.30pm ****

Hannah Christina’s Rosie and Emilio Encinoso-Gil’s Rex in Elizabeth Godber’s Jingle All The Way at Pocklington Arts Centre

THIS is the third Christmas collaboration between Pocklington Arts Centre, playwright-director Elizabeth Godber and co-director Jane Thornton from the John Godber Company stable.

It also marks the last act of departing PAC artistic director Angela Stone, who has produced the show before returning to her native Scotland to live in Ullapool in the Highlands in January. Thank you, Angela, for all you have done for this East Yorkshire market town’s arts scene since October 2022.

“We take great pride in producing inclusive and engaging stories, bringing magical Christmas spirit to our stage and welcoming returning and new audiences to PAC,” she said, after completing a hat trick of Godber, Thornton and Stone enterprises, following in the snow tracks of The Elves And The Shoemaker: Save Christmas and Jack Frost’s Christmas Wish. 

How right she is. Catching an evening performance, the audience of young children and their mums and dads were rapt in joyous attention as they revelled in the storytelling skills of writer Godber (yes, John ‘s daughter) and her cast of part-Spanish, wholly Hull-accented Emilio Encinoso-Gil, continuing his run of good form after such shows as John Godber’s Northern Soul song of praise, Do I Love You?, and professional debutante and Godber Theatre Foundation member Hannah Christina,  a 2025 graduate of Performers College, Birmingham.

On Emily Clay’s beautiful set design of a forest of snowy Christmas trees, festive lights and multiple boxes, Encinoso-Gil’s Rex and Christina’s reindeer sister Rosie have newly enrolled at a new school, the East Riding Reindeer Academy, in Pocklington, it just so happens, as Christmas fast approaches.

Rosie wants to fit in, to be cool at school with the in-crowd, even if it means shunning her nerdy, outsider brother, with his never-ending list of interesting Christmas and Santa Claus facts but his struggle to know where he belongs.

She will have no problem in joining the Santa’s Sleigh cheerleaders. Rex, on the other hand, is anything but sporty and so initially is highly reluctant to compete to join the supremely athletic sleigh squad.

Rosie agrees to work with the schools’ coolest deer dudes, a strutting duo permanently in shades, even to inform on her brother. Ouch. Encinoso-Gil and Christina are a delightfully villainous duo as Jingle All The Way’s answer to Heathers, with deer-patterned jackets straight off the deer catwalk.

Hannah Christina and Emilio Encinoso-Gil’s to-cool-for-school villainous double act in Jingle All The Way

Nevertheless, not to be done over or outdone, this is an underdog, or rather underdeer story, where Encinsoso-Gil’s Rex finds his chutzpah to start training for the school-wide competition to fill the last place in the sleigh squad.

Kitted in American-college attire in green and red (Christina) and a different shade of red and green with brown (Encinoso-Gil) beneath antler headsets, they look suitably seasonal, their acting playful, physical and fun, their movement constantly changing (Encinoso-Gil’s energy-sapping training regime and weight-lifting exertions are a particular joy).

Their interaction with the audience is established quickly, topped off by a sing-song of Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer. Children are not slow to exhort their very vocal support for Rex with words of encouragement and cheers. Hurrah!

After appearing in both The Elves And The Shoemaker: Save Christmas and Jack Frost’s Christmas Wish, Dylan Allcock  returns for a third Pock winter season, this time as musical director, contributing instantly catchy original songs and a slew of deer-orientated Christmas favourites, not least Chuck Berry’s evergreen Run Rudolph Run.

Godber’s script has room for pathos as well as plenty of humour (in Godber family tradition), complemented by ruddy-cheeked Christmas spirit and fast-moving sense of purpose and attention-sustaining momentum under the Godber-Thornton axis, keeping each half to only 30 minutes.

Godber scores high points for local references too, always a good idea in Christmas shows but sometimes neglected or underplayed by other shows.

Encinoso-Gil is thoroughly good company as the loser-turned-winner, while the multi-role-playing Christina impresses with her array of accents, from Scottish to American to Yorkshire, in her characterful, character-filled debut.

“We make something that’s a little bit different to panto,” said Angela Stone. If the continuation of this pantomime partnership is her Pocklington legacy, then how fitting that would be.

For tickets: 01759 301547 or pocklingtonartscentre.co.uk.

What’s On in Ryedale, York and beyond when Christmas shows abound. Here’s Hutch’s List No. 45, from Gazette & Herald

Jools Holland: Boogie woogie pianist returns to York Barbican tonight

SEAGULLS, a rabbit, a winter sprite and The Animals, plus another solo version of A Christmas Carol, are among the highlights of the festive week ahead, recommends Charles Hutchinson.

No year would be complete without…Jools Holland and His Rhythm & Blues Orchestra, York Barbican, tonight, 7.30pm

BOOGIE woogie pianist supreme Jools Holland makes his obligatory winter outing to York in the company of his top-notch rhythm & blues players and vocalists Ruby Turner, Louise Marshall and Sumudu Jayatilaka.

His special guests will be Soft Cell singer Marc Almond, who previously toured with Holland in 2018, and blues guitar prodigy Toby Lee, his guest on last year’s tour too. Holland will be performing songs from the former Squeeze keyboardist and television presenter’s long-running solo career. Box office for returns only: yorkbarbican.co.uk.

The Animals: 60 years of rhythm & blues celebrated at Selby Town Hall

60th anniversary concert of the week: The Animals & Friends, Selby Town Hall, tomorrow, 7.30pm

THIS year marks the 60th anniversary of Newcastle rhythm & blues icons The Animals’ self-titled debut album and their seminal crossover hit The House Of The Rising Sun. Still in the line-up is drummer, founding member and Rock And Roll Hall of Fame inductee John Steel, who will be joined by Danny Handley on guitar and lead vocals, Milltown Brothers’ Barney Williams on keys and Norman Helm on bass.

The set list can draw on such favourites as We Gotta Get Out of This Place, Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood, Baby Let Me Take You Home, Boom Boom, Around And Around and The Right Time. Box office: 01757 708449 or selbytownhall.co.uk.

Pocklington Arts Centre cast members Levi Payne, left, Caitlin Townend and Dylan Allcock in Jack Frost’s Christmas Wish

Ryedale Christmas play of the week: Jack Frost’s Christmas Wish, Pocklington Arts Centre, tomorrow to December 24

ELIZABETH Godber’s second Christmas show for Pocklington Arts Centre invites everyone aged three to 103 to join Jack Frost (Levi Payne) and his friends Oslo the Rabbit (Dylan Allcock) and Blue the Winter Sprite (Caitlin Townend) as they race across the world to make his one wish come true: to be home for Christmas. Could that home be in East Yorkshire?

Wrap up warm for a frosty adventure from the team who delivered The Elves And The Shoemaker: Save Christmas last winter, steered by director Jane Thornton. Box office: 01759 301547 or pocklingtonartscentre.co.uk.

Stephen Brailsford: Playing Captain Cliff in the CU Scarborough cast for Captain Cliff & The Seagull Squad at Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough

Coastal children’s play of the week: Captain Cliff & The Seagull Squad, The McCarthy, Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough, tomorrow to December 21

ON a busy day at Scarborough’s South Bay, judges from Britain’s Best Beach are soon to arrive, but after a big rush of tourists, the bins are overflowing with rubbish in a play for children aged up to six, written and directed by Rob Salmon for the SJT and CU (Coventry University), Scarborough.

Faced by litter everywhere and a pile of something sticky by the rock shop, who can save Scarborough? Step forward Captain Cliff and the Seagull Squad, but can they clear up all the mess in time as they seek to complete four missions, one for each season? Cue a rescue adventure full of songs, silliness and festive fun. Box office: 01723 370541 or sjt.uk.com.

Ryedale School musicians: Performing at Kirk Theatre, Pickering, on Friday

School performance of the week: Ryedale School Music Concert, Kirk Theatre, Pickering, Friday, 7pm

THIS night of music performed by Ryedale School musicians features Ryedale Concert Band Shining Brass and Ryedale Stray Notes. Proceeds will go to Ryedale School Performing Arts and Rotary funds. Tickets are on sale on 01751 474833 or at kirktheatre.co.uk.

Mat Jones: Solo rendition of A Christmas Carol for two nights at Friargate Theatre, York. Picture: Vintage Verse

Solo show of the week: Mat Jones in A Christmas Carol, Friargate Theatre, York, Friday and Saturday, 7.30pm

RING in the Christmas season with Mat Jones’s spellbinding rendition of Charles Dickens’s Victorian festive classic, brought to life in vivid detail from Dickens’s original performance text as Scrooge encounters the Spirits of Christmas Past, Present and Yet To Come en route to the redemption of London’s most miserable miser. 

“A Christmas Carol is not just a story; it’s a celebration of the human spirit and the power of kindness,” says Jones. Box office: 01904 613000 or friargatetheatre.co.uk.

Jo Walton setting up her exhibition at Bluebird Bakery, Acomb, York

Exhibition of the week: Jo Walton, Steel, Copper, Rust, Gold, Verdigris, Wax, Bluebird Bakery, Acomb Road, Acomb, York, until January 23 2025

WHEN Rogues Atelier artist, interior designer, upholsterer and Bluebird Bakery curator of exhibitions Jo Walton asked poet Nicky Kippax to put words to images she had sent her, she responded with “The heft of a cliff and a gathering of sea fret”. Spot on, Nicky.

Into the eighth month of recovery from breaking her right leg, Jo is exhibiting predominantly large works that utilise steel, copper, rust, gold, verdigris and wax in the bakery, cafe and community centre, whose interior she designed in 2021.

Kate Rusby: Winter Light tour arrives at York Barbican on December 17

Christmas concert of the week: Kate Rusby, Winter Light Tour, York Barbican, December 17, 7pm

BARNSLEY folk songstress Kate Rusby draws on her seven Christmas albums – she released her latest, Light Years, in 2023 – for her annual celebration of South Yorkshire carols sung in pubs through the winter months.

Spreading Yuletide joy, Kate will be joined by her regular band, featuring her husband, producer, guitarist and banjo player Damien O’Kane, and the Brass Boys quintet. Look out for the fancy-dress finale. Tickets update: Closing in on a sell-out; hurry, hurry to yorkbarbican.co.uk.

The Corrs: Heading to the Scarborough coast next summer

Gig announcement of the week: The Corrs and Natalie Imbruglia, TK Maxx presents Scarborough Open Air Theatre, June 11 2025

THE Corrs, Irish sibling purveyors of sleek pop rock, lush harmonies and Celtic folk trimmings, will line up as ever with Andrea on lead vocals, piano and  tin whistle, Sharon on violin, piano and vocals, Caroline, on drums, piano and vocals, and Jim on guitar, keyboards and vocals.

Former Neighbours soap actress, Torn hit-maker and The Masked Singer 2022 winner Natalie Imbruglia will support. The Corrs join Shed Seven, Gary Barlow, Basement Jaxx, Pendulum, Rag’n’Bone Man, Blossoms, Texas, UB40 featuring Ali Campbell and The Script among next summer’s Scarborough OAT headliners. Tickets go on general sale at 9am on Friday at ticketmaster.co.uk.