Showing posts with label UK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UK. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 February 2015

Avenue Q - 17.02.2015 - 28.02.2015

Keith Hayes and Nigel Higgs
Presents:

Avenue Q
Tuesday 17th - Saturday 28th February 2015


This musical seems to be becoming a cult classic across the UK and I can now see why....

Avenue Q is an American Musical based on an original concept by Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx who also wrote the music and lyrics.

It asks the audience to use their imaginations and be transported to a world of fur! The production revolves around puppetry with the actors working them wearing black and fully visible throughout the production. You do, however, forget about the actors and find yourself mesmerised by the colourful characters involved in the storyline.

Through song and comedy, this production actually touches on some hard hitting subjects such as the anxiety of entering into adulthood, pornography, racism and homosexuality and we even have full puppet nudity!!


The cast consists of 11 puppet characters and 3 human characters and the whole show is lively, fun and extremely entertaining. You have visuals on screens, catchy musical numbers and some extremely funny 1 liners.

We also have a real life person who is put into the script in a fictional situation. This person is Gary Coleman. Coleman was a child actor who played Arnold Jackson in Diff'rent Strokes, a 1980s American sitcom. He famously sued his parents after it was discovered they were delving into his assets. Gary Coleman actually died on 28th May 2010 and to honour him, the Off-Broadway productions in New York and the national tour in Dallas dedicated that nights performance to his memory.

The show mainly revolves around Princeton (Oli Leonard), a college graduate who has an degree in English and is on the hunt for his 'purpose' in life. He finds that the only apartment he can afford is on Avenue Q, where he meets his neighbour Kate Monster (Suzy Donnelly), a kindergarden teaching assistant with dreams of opening her own monster school. The 2 hit it off and we have the usual will they, wont they get together, and yes that full puppet nudity! Will they find love or will Lucy the Slut (Karrise Willetts) come between them? These 3 actors give believable and touching portrayals of their characters, well, maybe not Lucy the Slut who believes herself irresistible to all men. Karrise really does know how to belt out those numbers and made the character as marvellously slutty as she could be.

Also on Avenue Q we have Rod (Duncan McLawrie) who is a Republican banker and his roommate Nicky (Simon Baker). Their story follows the subject of homosexuality and when Rod discovers that Nicky is telling people that he believe that he is gay, he asks him to leave the apartment making Nicky homeless. Duncan McLawrie as Rod really gave us that feeling of hopelessness and indecision while Simon Baker as Nicky was full of life and fun.

Brian (Richard Beckett) and Christmas Eve (MIllie Farrelly) are 2 of the human characters within the storyline. Christmas Eve s a Japanese therapist but can't seem to get any clients, while Brian would like to be a comedian and is unemployed. The show shows their struggle and eventual happiness when Brian gains a job as a consultant. Richard Beckett and Millie Farrelly worked well with the characters and held their own in the midst of puppets.

Trekkie Monster (Mark Murphy & Dave Carey) is an absolute joy. He brings mayhem and fun where ever he goes. He seems to spend his life in his apartment and is in no doubt whatsoever that 'The Internet is for Porn' - he believe in this so much that he has even invested in it!

The bad idea bears played by Christina Peak and Chaz Farmer are the voices in our head that tell us things that we shouldn't be doing but really want to. They are cute, cuddly with an evil streak!

This production was something that Keith Hayes and Nigel Higgs had always wanted to produce and when the licence became available they snapped it up with all 4 hands!! They have lovingly directed and staged this show which is evident from the outset. The movement between scenes had been cleverly thought out and it was apparent that the actors all had a fabulous time entertaining us.

The use of the professional puppets really added to the production and gave it that high quality feel. The puppets and set had been hired from the professional touring production and all of the actors had been on a workshop in London with puppeteers which came across with wonderful handling of the characters. Simon Baker as Nicky and Mark Murphy/Dave Carey as Trekkie Monster really stood out for their exquisite puppeteering skills.

The cast were all extremely talented and there was not a weak link amongst them. I must mention Dane Foxx who played Gary Coleman. His character work, timing, singing and interaction with the audience was outstanding and he is a real talent to watch in the future.

The performances are run by 2 casts so here is a run down of dates and casts:

Team Soli (17th, 19th, 21st, 25th & 27th)
Princeton - Oli Leonard
Kate Monster - Suzy Donnelly
Nicky - Simon Baker
Rod - Duncan McLaurie
Lucy the Slut - Karrise Willets
Bad Idea Bears - Christina Peak & Chaz 'Saintly Sin' Farmer
Trekkie Monster - Mark Murphy
Christmas Eve - Amelia Rose Farrelly
Brian - Richard Beckett
Gary Coleman - Dane Foxx
Newcomer - Matthew Cotter

Team Kicky (18th, 20th, 24th, 26th, 28th)

Princeton - Richard Ham
Kate Monster - Karrise Willetts
Nicky - Simon Baker
Rod - Duncan McLaurie
Lucy the Slut - Suzy Donnelly
Bad Idea Bears - Louise Grifferty & Eléna Serafinas
Trekkie Monster - Dave Carey
Christmas Eve - Liz Webster
Brian - Richard Beckett
Gary Coleman - Dane Foxx
Newcomer - Matthew Cotter

This is a show definitely not to be missed and we all left the theatre with a skip in our step and buzzing from this theatrical experience.

To book your tickets, you can go to the online booking site: http://avenueq.devclever.net/ or buy your tickets on the door.

What are you waiting for????

The show is being performed at Highbury Theatre Centre,Sheffield Road, Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands B73 5HD

Watch out as we will also be reviewing Team Kicky on Friday!!

Review by: Jayne Lunn & Faye Hatch

Tuesday, 30 September 2014

New Alexandra Theatre, Birmingham - The Mousetrap - 06.10.14 - 11.10.14

Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap
comes to the New Alexandra Theatre
Monday 6 to Saturday 11 October



Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap has been the world’s longest running stage production at its London home for more than 55 years. The 60th Anniversary – and first ever - UK tour of this beloved murder mystery has now been seen by over 600,000 people across more than 600 performances, breaking box office records in many of its venues, from Southampton to Barnstaple, Dublin to Aberdeen.

The cast for the 2014 Autumn leg of the tour is Helen Clapp as Mollie Ralston, Michael Fenner (Doctors, Footballer’s Wives) as Mr Paravicini, Anne Kavanagh(Chichester Festival Theatre’s Goodnight Mr Tom, August: Osage County at the National Theatre) as Mrs Boyle, Charlotte Latham as Miss Casewell and Stephen Yeo as Christopher Wren - all reprising their roles from the production in London’s West End alongside: Christopher Gilling (ITV’s Law and Order, BBC1’s Silk) as Major Metcalf, Henry Luxemburg (Hollyoaks, Hotel Babylon) as Giles Ralston and Luke Jenkins (Scenes from an Execution, Unicorn Theatre) as Sgt Trotter.

Mousetrap Productions has also licensed 60 productions of The Mousetrap world-wide to mark the 60th year, and many of these have also broken their records, from Cape Town to Philadelphia, Singapore to Sydney.  During this period the world’s longest running show will be seen in every continent, with professional productions in Australia, China, Korea, Turkey, South Africa, Russia, Czech Republic, Hungary, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Poland, Spain, Scandinavia, Venezuela, and across the United States and Canada.

The Mousetrap continues at St. Martin’s Theatre, London.
                                                        

Birmingham New Alexandra Theatre
06 Oct - 11 Oct | 0844 871 3011


Wednesday, 27 August 2014

Birmingham Hippodrome Theatre - Cats - 09.09.14 - 27.09.14


PRESS RELEASE
Andrew Lloyd Webber’s
BIRMINGHAM HOSTS THE JELLICLE BALL ON ITS LAST STOP AHEAD OF A RETURN TO LONDON’S WEST END…

Andrew Lloyd Webber’s CATS returns to Birmingham Hippodrome Tuesday 9 – Saturday 27 September 2014 on its last stop of a current UK tour before returning to London’s West End for a limited run at the iconic London Palladium.

CATS first opened in the West End on 11 May 1981 and ran for a record breaking 21 years playing almost 9,000 performances. On Broadway it ran for an amazing 18 years and has been performed in over 300 cities in 26 countries. The global phenomenon has now been seen by over fifty million people worldwide.

Zizi Strallen takes the role of Demeter in the current cast, following in the footsteps of her parents Sandy Strallen and Cherida Langford, her sister Summer Strallen and her aunt, Bonnie Langford who have all trod the boards in the same production.

CATS is directed by Trevor Nunn, with choreography by Gillian Lynne and set and costume design by John Napier.  Re-creating the direction and choreography for the tour is Chrissie Cartwright.

Re-creating the direction and choreography for the tour is Chrissie Cartwright.

Based on T.S Eliot’s ‘Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats’, Andrew Lloyd Webber’s record- breaking CATS tells the story of how on just one special night of the year, all Jellicle cats meet at the Jellicle Ball where Old Deuteronomy, their wise and benevolent leader, makes the Jellicle choice and announces which of them will go up to the heaviside layer and be reborn into a whole new Jellicle life.

The infamous score includes one of Lloyd Webber’s most famous melodies, Memory, made famous by stage actress and originator of the role of Grizabella, Elaine Paige.

CATS has featured some of this country’s most famous stage performers including Elaine Paige (‘Grizabella’), Wayne Sleep (‘Mungojerrie’), Bonnie Langford (‘Rumpleteazer’), Paul Nicholas (‘Rum Tum Tugger’), Brian Blessed (‘Old Deuteronomy’), Sarah Brightman (‘Jemima‘) and Rosemarie Ford (‘Bombalurina’ & ‘Grizabella’).

The 2013/14 tour of the Cameron Mackintosh and The Really Useful Theatre production of CATS is again presented by David Ian.

CATS purr-forms at Birmingham Hippodrome
Tuesday 9 – Saturday 27 September 2014
Tickets £17.50-£42.50*
Performance Times; Mon – Sat eves 7.30pm
Wed Mats 2pm
Sat Mats 2.30pm
*5% fee applies, postage from £1, calls cost from 5p per min. Prices and discounting subject to change.

Thursday, 21 August 2014

About Town Video Art in Southside - Birmingham Hippodrome & Ikon - 13.11.14 - 16.11.14

ABOUT TOWN - VIDEO ART IN SOUTHSIDE 

presented by
Hippodrome Plus in partnership with Ikon
 
Thursday 13 – Sunday 16 November 2014

About Town is an exhibition of international video art in Birmingham’s Southside district taking place 13 – 16 November 2014.  Presented by Hippodrome Plus in partnership with Ikon, About Town showcases a wide variety of free night-screenings by artists from the UK and abroad, in unusual urban spaces. 

New commissions inspired by their location, alongside pieces from Ikon’s recent programme, will explore everyday city life and reflect on how we shape and are shaped by our surroundings. About Town audiences will intersperse their artistic experiences with short walks through streets brimming with local interest.

The Gallan Car Park, Hurst Street will see a combination of large scale installations, transforming it into a vast indoor landscape of moving imagery and ambient sound. Beat Streuli’s New Street (2013) will display projected sequences of photographic stills across three large screens, capturing the summer atmosphere of Birmingham’s streets. Gillian Wearing’s Broad Street (2000) focuses its attention on Birmingham’s frenetic night-life. Oliver Beer’s film Pay and Display (2011) documents his collaboration with the city’s Ex Cathedra choir to create an experimental music video shot in a stairwell in the Pershore Street Carpark. 
 
Birmingham Hippodrome will host a number of works in its foyer areas, on staircases and landings. Adel Abdessemed’s Happiness in Mitte (2003) depicts stray cats drinking, one by one, from bowls of milk left by the artist outdoors in Berlin’s Mitte district. In Hiccup #2 (2006) Canadian artist Kelly Mark documents a five day performance on the steps of the old Birmingham Library, repeating the same routine of simple actions while other people, undirected by her, are busy being otherwise occupied. 

A new commission, by emerging local artist Dean Kelland is based on 1970s British sitcoms. Other films to be shown include Marjolijn Dijkman’s Wandering Through the Future (2007), a montage of film clips, and Cornelia Parker’s Chomskian Abstract (2007), both speculating on the nature of the end of the world as we know it.  Nightingale (2003), by Birmingham-born Grace Ndiritu, explores racial stereotyping.

There will be numerous other works visible from the street, including Junebum Park’s Parking (2002) and Vladimir Logutov’s Twilight (2005), and Heather and Ivan Morison’s Colours and Sounds in Ivan Morison’s Garden (2002). 
 
Exhibition: About Town
Dates:  13 – 16 November 2014
Opening Hours:  4pm - 10pm
Location: Multiple venues around Hurst Street, Southside, Birmingham, B5 4TB
Price: Free