THEATRE REVIEW: Macbeth at Temple Church, London – Paul Vates

 

 

 

‘The lighting’s good, isn’t it?’

 

 

I couldn’t wait to see this production. Two years ago I sat in the same church and was riveted by the same company’s Richard III. My fault – it could only be a let down in comparison. The same atmosphere welcomes us, though. It is exciting and different to be inside a church which is a theatrical venue. The same promenade stage, with audience down the two sides. To be so close to the action, to be part of it.

 

Sadly not. I spent the evening feeling I was being performed at.

 

Antic Disposition’s directors – Ben Horslen and John Riseboro – have set the play in Victorian times. The costumes give an air of patriarchal control and a squeezed sense of formality and restriction. Then Macbeth enters – completely the opposite – promising so much more. He prowls the stage, looking for answers, mumbling and growling like a caged bear.

 

Harry Anton plays the part. All rugged, macho and looking like he’s just stepped off the set of Poldark. Well, hello, Macbeth!! Ding Dong! But he’s dour and lacklustre. [Blast.] Lady Macbeth, however, played by Helen Millar, has a shining presence – a brilliant beacon of light in a dark production, even when dressed completely in black for the first half. Once she is Queen, she then dresses in the brightest of blood red. This is in itself a shock to the eyes, as all costumes are black or the darkest of greys and browns.

 

The use of the witches is clever. Throughout, they are also the house servants of the Macbeths – always on hand to assist or hinder as the play requires. Louise Templeton, Bryony Tebbutt and Robyn Holdaway excel by their underplaying and choreography, subtly manipulating the characters around them. The rest of the cast – Chris Courtenay, Nathan Hamilton, Robert Bradley, Peter Collis and Andrew Hislop – come across as ‘actors in a Shakespeare play’ – there is the usual shouting and finger pointing, seemingly placing emotion before meaning.

 

 

Overall, I found too many of the actors annoyingly hard to hear as they fought the acoustics. Much of the staging was, surprisingly, quite unimaginative and dull. Static and filmic. Monologues were done to no one in particular, even though the eager audience was sitting there, right in front of them. Macbeth’s solo musings were slow and monotone. Two-dimensional. But I want action, power and a crispness of performance – I want my Macbeth to be enigmatic, not contemplative.

 

I want the actors to take a risk and use the environment they find themselves in. Instead, they play this version inwardly and safe. I want danger, all I got was contemplation. No doubt, as the run settles into the space, the pace will pick up, the actors will relax and the drama will increase. I realise I come across as grumpy and, excepting Max Bialystock, no one ever sets out to do a bad stage production, but Shakespeare is so often performed and comparisons abound. And everyone has an opinion. One gent in the queue for the interval toilets could genuinely only muster, ‘The lighting’s good, isn’t it?’

 

Ouch.

 

 

 

 

Photographer    Scott Rylander

Directors           Ben Horslen and John Risebero

Producer           Antic Disposition

Designer           John Risebero

Composer         James Burrows

Performances   Until 7th September – Tuesday to Saturday at 8pm

Matinees: Saturday at 3pm

Venue               Temple Church, London EC4Y 7BB

Nearest Tubes  Temple or Blackfriars (Circle and District lines)

Tickets              Box Office 0333 666 3366 or online at www.anticdisposition.co.uk

Price                 £25 – £40

Running Time   2 hours 15 (including an interval)

Twitter              @anticdispo

 

 

 

 

 

Windfalls by Kelly Myers Reviewed by Natalie Jayne Peeke

Windfalls is the beautiful magical land where fairies live.

The fairies live in their own little mushroom homes which they keep immaculate and sleep on a fresh bed of petals each night. Each fairy is assigned to an apprentice upon finishing school, some jobs just like us humans, teaching and carpentry and other not so much, dust collecting and wing repairs.

The fairies are kind, helpful and gentle beings. However not every fairy is happy with their way of life. Chyme and Emmaline are sisters but are completely opposite, Chyme is the perfect fairy she is helpful, smart and generous, Emmaline however is not what one would call your perfect fairy, she is resentful of her sister, she skips school and loves to cause trouble.

They are forced to put their differences aside, A threat looms in the shadows. Can Chyme and Emmaline save their village from a mutual enemy? A glorious and magical escape to the land of Windfalls. A beautiful story of sisterhood, teamwork, bravery and determination.

Available on Amazon.co.uk 

Natalie Jayne Peeke. The Bookworm mother.

SISTER SCRIBES: JANE CABLE CATCHES UP WITH TAKE FOUR WRITERS’ LUCY AND ANGELA

Carrying on with our catch up with last year’s Take Four Writers, today it’s the turn of Lucy Coleman and Angela Petch.

Lucy:

This year has flown by and I can’t believe it’s August already – eight months since the last of Jane Cable’s series: ‘Take Four Writers’. As we all catch up, I suspect the main theme running through our updates will be that there are never enough hours in the day. But a writer’s life is never dull, and we are blessed!

Writing as Lucy Coleman, by the end of 2019 I will have had two new books out this year with Aria Fiction, the second of which is ‘Magic Under the Mistletoe’ due out on 5 September. Set in the hamlet of Porthkerry, near Cardiff, it begins in a snowstorm. It was inspired by the heavy snowfall in December 2017, which turned much of the UK into a winter wonderland.

A new publishing contract with Boldwood Books will see the first of six novels published over the next two years, beginning with the release of ‘A Springtime to Remember’ in December 2019. The story is set in Versailles, a place that is very dear to my heart.

I’ve also recently returned to blogging and my monthly feature ‘The Happiness Factor’ covers tips on motivation and generally surviving the ups and downs of a busy life. Also fun things – interior design tips, home spa pampering, the aesthetics of your workspace if you work from home, and my best buys. A treat doesn’t need to break the bank, but it can lift the spirits.

I don’t ‘endorse’ products, but share things I’ve purchased which make me smile, or have helped me. One of my best buys recently was a back brace I wear when typing, which has taken away my spells of backache!

If you get a moment, do drop by my website https://linnbhalton.co.uk/the-happiness-factor-blog/ and check it out.

Angela:

The Tuscan Secret was published by Bookouture on June 26th, after rigorous editing. At first I panicked at the structural changes suggested. I had written this book originally in 2012 and had to reacquaint myself with the story. But then I settled and began to enjoy the challenge. Today my editor told me it has sold just shy of 10,000. I could never have imagined that figure as a self-published author. (There’s also been a knock-on sales increase of my other books).

This week I sent my first draft to my editor of the second commissioned Tuscan novel, and the editorial roundabout will again whir into action. Hopefully, what I learned from the first round will ease the process.

Downsides:

  • I’m at least half a stone heavier from spending many hours sitting in front of my laptop.
  • I am developing bad posture.
  • My hubby says my head’s in another world half the time. (It is!)

Positives:

  • I’m loving what I’m doing. There was never enough time to concentrate on my writing before. It’s fun to live in a “what-if” world.
  • I have made great new friends in the writing community.
  • I’m gaining self-belief.
  • Far from being escapist, I firmly believe that writing helps me connect more with the world.

We all know that very few authors make a mint. It would be great to have more pennies and pounds in my bank account… but money is not the only measure of happiness. Connecting with readers (even with those who give less than shining reviews) makes all those hours of being hunched over my writing; all those hours of my head feeling it’s going to burst, my eyes squinty and itching — all worth it. Hand on heart.

 

SISTER SCRIBES: JANE CABLE CATCHES UP WITH TAKE FOUR WRITERS’ JACKIE AND CLAIRE

Everyone loved our Take Four Writers’ articles last year so I thought it would be really interesting to catch up with them. Writers lives have ups and downs, and in 2018 we shared them all. Here’s what Jackie Baldwin and Claire Dyer have been up to since – news from Lucy and Angela tomorrow.

Jackie:

Hello everyone,

This year, a big thrill has been seeing copies of ‘Perfect Dead’ in The Works shops. It never gets old going seeing my book in the wild. I stroll past ‘casually’ whilst giving it an intense stare.

2019 has been dominated by writing my third DI Farrell book, ‘Avenge the Dead.’ This is the first time I’ve had a book published with the title I originally chose! I finished the first draft in seven months this time so I’m getting quicker with each book. The plot revolves around the Criminal Bar in Dumfries where I used to practice as a solicitor so I’m drawing on personal experience in some respects but the plot and characters are wholly fictional. Honestly!

In addition to writing and the day job I’m also in the process of moving closer to Edinburgh. We’ve found a house but it needs quite a bit doing to it so trying to organise all that has been a challenge. Hopefully, we’ll be installed before my first grandchild arrives in October!

I’ve completed my structural edit for Avenge the Dead. This is probably the stage that I most enjoy where you can fix errant plot lines and even insert new characters or subplots if the mood takes you. Currently I’m working on the Line Edit which is a complete nightmare. For example, you mention the word out three times on one page and need to change two of them.

Recently, I’ve realised that writing books is a lot like having babies. You have your baby and fall madly in love, forgetting the pain. You think it would be a great idea to have another baby. You get into the labour ward and yell, ‘WHAT was I thinking?’ And repeat…

Claire:

It’s a well-known fact that the writing life is not a simple one, and it’s easy to lose hope and/or struggle with doubt and this year I’ve been battling with both these things!

However, with the help of my amazing writer support network I am back on track. I have completed a rewrite, edited another novel and started a new one.

I’ve also celebrated my son’s wedding, am working on the draft manuscript of a poetry collection due for publication in 2021 and am planning a holiday to the ever-wonderful Kalkan in Turkey.

I also have my husband’s wise words to fall back on when things get tough. He’s not a writer, and has learnt from living with one that he has to tread carefully, and part of this is to remind me gently now and again that it all depends on the lens.

Yes, writing and getting published is a challenge, BUT I have had three novels and two poetry books published, with another on the way; I have a wonderful group of writer friends, I curate a monthly poetry night in Reading and I spend my days doing what I love. Moreover, my son’s wedding went well (see picture) and I still have writer-hope; it’s small and fragile but, using the right lens I can see it sitting next to my laptop, its bright eyes shining.

 

A Taste of Heaven by Dr Kathleen Thompson

 

 

I love working as a correspondent for Frost Magazine and sampling and reviewing Opies Foods products is always a pleasure.

The 140 year old company is based in Kent, the garden of England, and this is no coincidence. Local fruits and vegetables have inspired many Opie products, which range from traditional, but top-quality favourites, such as cocktail cherries and various pickles, including gherkins, cornichons and onions, and even green peppercorns, to some very modern twists on bottled fruits.  They also have an organic range, and many of their fruits and vegetables are sourced in the UK.

As I stared at the jars of Peaches with Courvoisier and Black Cherries with Luxado Kirsch, which I’d been sent to review, my creative juices (and digestive juices) began to flow. But how to enjoy them best? A generous helping accompanied with ice-cream is always the easiest option – and totally delicious, but I was feeling adventurous. My kids’ expressions morphed from excited anticipation to raw dread as I picked up my ancient recipe book, and pleas of ‘we just want them with ice-cream, Mum’ and ‘step away from the oven’ made me question whether they trusted my culinary skills.

Naturally I ignored them and continued leafing through the recipes.

Clafoutis – of course – this French desert was just made for these delicious fruit preserves. So, oven warming nicely, I teetered on the kitchen stool and found some flour at the back of a top cupboard shelf, a little milk, butter, sugar (not too much, I planned to substitute with the yummy cognac- and kirsch-infused syrups from the fruits) and now I just needed some vanilla extract. I was sure I had some. On my knees I reached to the dark recesses of the corner unit and grabbed a handful of small bottles – cochineal (crikey that must be old), almond essence and, yes, vanilla extract.

I emerged, smiling, to be greeted by insolent and miserable stares, but I ploughed on. The batter was made in a jiff with the help of my blender (top tip) and I poured half into each of two buttered flan dishes. I sliced the peaches and arranged them on the batter of one,  put the black cherries on the other.  Around half an hour in the oven (190degC) and I was delighted with the results. Two very professional deserts  – the fruits looked and tasted amazing and the cognac and kirsh-infused syrup gave the clafoutis a really special taste – simply heaven. Even the kids were impressed.

If you want more recipes (from professional chefs) check out the Opies Foods website, where you can also read about their quite unique range of products. These make great gifts for anyone (including yourself, of course). The two fruit preserves I used in my clafoutis are available at Tesco.

Something else you may want to consider is putting some Opies Mixed Fruits With Prosecco into the bottom of a glass, and adding more … of course … prosecco – it makes a very impressive drink for a special occasion.

Photos provided by Splat Marketing

By Dr K Thompson, author of From Both Ends of the Stethoscope: Getting through breast cancer – by a doctor who knows

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01A7DM42Q http://www.amazon.com/dp/B01A7DM42Q

http://faitobooks.co.uk

A SPORTING STORY SELDOM TOLD

Jane Cable reviews Keeping Up by Michael Bates and Tom Huelin

So why am I reviewing a book about cricket? More than one reason, but mainly because this autobiography tells a story seldom told; that of a brilliant young sportsman who fell by the wayside. Not because of accident or injury, but because he it came to the point he simply couldn’t get a job. As an honest portrayal of what went wrong it should be required reading for any youngster aiming for a career in professional sport – and their parents.

This book is important because it’s the story of a career that didn’t work out. And not because of lack of talent, lack of professionalism, or lack of hard work. These are the stories we don’t hear. Especially in an everything’s perfect candy floss world dominated by social media. We need to know it’s OK if you try your best and it isn’t enough. It’s a lesson for us all.

I first met Michael Bates in late 2008 when he was part of an exceptionally talented group of youngsters in the Hampshire Cricket Academy. At the time I was freelancing as a cricket writer, working for the club’s website and I was keen to write about these youngsters. Michael came across as confident and mature (he’d have just turned eighteen), with a burning ambition to play for England.

Humour me for a few sentences while I wax lyrical about his keeping, because in order to understand this book, you need to understand just how good Michael was. That’s hard if you’re not an out and out cricket badger, but if you watch any sport at all, you’ll know that the best of the best move in a way that sets them apart, and have such confidence in their ability they make the almost impossible look easy. And that was Bates behind the stumps.

The book charts his progress from school cricket, through, and beyond, the professional game. For me it was absolutely fascinating to see the club I knew so well from one angle revealed through another. I totally relate to Michael’s descriptions of the macho environment where admitting weakness was practically impossible, but at the same time, in one day cricket at least, it was a period when Hampshire were very successful.

So what went wrong for Michael? In simple terms, these days wicket keepers need to be good batsmen as well. Now while he could undoubtedly bat, it was never in the same class as his keeping. But I was of the school of thought that maybe he didn’t score so many runs himself, but add the runs he stopped the opposition from scoring and the equation more than evened itself out.

But the powers at Hampshire didn’t agree and after Michael being a key part of the team that won Hampshire two trophies in 2012, they brought in a keeper with a better batting reputation over his head. Hampshire members were outraged. And although no-one knew it at the time, Michael Bates’ career was effectively over at twenty-two.

The one thing this book doesn’t do very well is draw comparisons with the wider world, perhaps because it’s fundamentally a book about cricket. But the authors have missed a trick here. Not just the angle that it’s OK to talk about failure, but also the inherent lessons for modern teams in the world of work in general.

The book does, however, have a happy ending. Michael Bates is now coaching at a high level in the cricket world, being part of the backroom staff behind the England Women’s World Cup win in 2017. He’s been able to take the harsh lessons he learnt and apply them to help others to succeed. At twenty-eight years old, that’s quite something.

 

Keeping Up is independently published. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Keeping-Up-Surviving-specialist-multi-dimensional/dp/1090420161/

CBD Oil (Cannabidiol) – News From Green Stem by Dr Kathleen Thompson

 

 

Since writing about CBD oil in Frost last month, Green Stem CBD wellness products wanted us to let you know that TV presenter Jenny Powell is their new ambassador.

They told us that Jenny discovered CBD oil when she was searching for a safe and natural remedy for crippling migraines, which affected her each month. In the past these had caused her to use various medications, and she had needed to lie in a dark room for 3 or 4 days. Jenny says of CBD oil, ‘I tried it and now eight months later, I haven’t had a migraine,’ and ‘For me, that’s life-changing.’

She’s spoken widely in the media about the benefits of CBD in recent months, and, as a guest on TV show Lorraine, apparently she commented, ‘Just a couple of drops underneath the tongue twice a day works for me.’ It seems that she was so impressed, she shared her CBD oil oral drops with her father, who is in his nineties and suffering from cancer. She felt that his pain, anxiety, and sleep were improved after using the drops.

Just to remind you, readers, anecdotal reports are interesting but not scientific proof of benefit. Currently, only a few hundred people have been studied in clinical trials, and more trials are urgently needed to investigate the pros and cons of CBD, and, importantly, the most-effective and safe doses. Nevertheless, Jenny clearly feels it works for her and her father and we are pleased that her migraines are so much better, whatever the reason.

CBD is short for cannabidiol – extracted from the hemp plant, a cousin of the marijuana plant. Although marijuana contains THC, which makes one ‘high’, CBD doesn’t have this ability. CBD is thought to have anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant properties.

Until more evidence is available I can’t tell you whether it works in the myriad of illnesses suggested, or even what dose you should take. However, if you do decide to try it, it’s important to find a quality product and Green Stem makes CBD to stringent guidelines and quality and potency checks. It is available in Boots.  Their products are also free of THC (the chemical causing marijuana ‘highs’). CBD can affect the blood levels of various medicines, so if you do take it in addition to other medicines, you should check with your doctor.

 

 

By Dr K Thompson, author of From Both Ends of the Stethoscope: Getting through breast cancer – by a doctor who knows

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01A7DM42Q http://www.amazon.com/dp/B01A7DM42Q

http://faitobooks.co.uk

 

Note: These articles express personal views. No warranty is made as to the accuracy or completeness of information given and you should always consult a doctor if you need medical advice

 

SISTER SCRIBES: KITTY WILSON IN PRAISE OF CRITIQUES

I’ve recently returned from the Romantic Novelists Association (RNA) conference where I briefly had to speak to the NWS members. It was terrifying (terrifying!) but did make me think it was worth sharing details of the scheme that helped me, alongside many others, become published.

The NWS is a New Writers Scheme run by the RNA and encourages unpublished writers to join local meetings and make friends with the more experienced. It’s how I began to meet other authors, including the Sister Scribes, and as we are always saying writers need writer friends – I should tattoo this on my forehead and be done, I say it so often – and joining the RNA is a great way to meet them.

More than that, and why I initially joined, is its critique scheme. For the price of membership (considerably less than you’d pay for an assessment anywhere else) you are entitled to a critique of your full manuscript (partials are accepted if you haven’t got as far as writing The End yet).

It was the first opportunity I had to have my writing read by someone who knew the industry inside out (i.e. not my mother and close friends) and who could be completely honest about what they thought – the reader remains anonymous so they can be truthful without worrying that you’re going to launch at them at the Winter Party and either cover them in kisses or rip their eyes out whilst spitting ‘so, you didn’t like my heroine?’

The critique is usually divided into areas like plot, pace, voice, dialogue so you can see immediately which are your areas of strength and which ones need work. It doesn’t matter if you’ve written a zillion books, every writer needs a little help and an objective eye (otherwise we wouldn’t need editors), so if you expect a critique that says ‘oh my goodness, this is the best thing ever written in the history of the world’ then you may be bound for disappointment. If you want someone to gently point out what needs work to make your book even better then you’re in luck.

Being me, I found it really hard initially to hear the positive, whereas the things I needed to work on seared into my soul, fluttering under my eyelids as I’d try to sleep. It was at this point I decided to colour code my critique – if you have read my other posts you know I need no excuse to break out the felt-tips – and then I could see there was easily as much green (yay, this was great) as there was orange (this needs work).

What I didn’t know was how this technique would feed into my edits when I was eventually published and I use the orange and green method for these. So not only did joining the RNA get me friends and recommend friendly publishers and agents, it taught me how to react to suggestions about my work in a positive way, which meant that when my structural edits arrive, my meltdowns don’t last too long…or at least only as long as it takes me to unzip my pencil case. Thus not only did it improve my writing pre-publication, it also gave me tools which I have used habitually since becoming published.

So, if you are writing and as yet unpublished and if your manuscript has a romantic element then I cannot recommend the RNA’s New Writers Scheme enough. I’m going to pop a link below and hope to see you at a meeting soon. Good luck on your path to publication.

All love, Kitty x

 

https://romanticnovelistsassociation.org/membership/#link_tab-1517250016637-2-10