THEATRE REVIEW  The Trials of Oscar Wilde – Paul Vates

at Greenwich Theatre, London

 

“It flies by – almost an hour of court proceedings that are both informative and gripping”

 

The European Arts Company have now embarked upon a UK tour with this production – at times a verbatim performance of the two major court trials that saw Oscar Wilde imprisoned for two years. If that comes as a surprise to you, where have you been?!? I ought to mention that at the end of Titanic, there is an iceberg… Anyway, The Trials of Oscar Wilde is a repeat of a successful tour from 2014 and certainly a show worth catching if it pops up near you as it passes on a pertinent message.

 

When the documents of the actual court proceedings came to light a few years ago, it was a revelation to read – and now, thanks to this play, see – Oscar being argumentative, witty and contrite whilst in the dock. All in his own words, collected together by Oscar’s grandson Merlin Holland.

 

John Gorick

 

The whole tragedy began with an accusation made by The Marquess of Queensberry – that Oscar was having ‘relationships’ with young men. Oscar sued for libel and that case underpins Act One. It flies by – almost an hour of court proceedings that are both informative and gripping.

 

Act Two is The Criminal Case that followed. Roles are reversed, suddenly Oscar has to defend himself rather than prosecute. Sadly, the second half doesn’t quite grip as much as the first. There are witnesses called and these are played as grotesques, like pantomime characters popping up in a drama.

 

Rupert Mason and John Gorick

Directors John O’Connor and Eva Savage may be aware that Oscar’s speeches aren’t as delightfully pithy as an audience would perhaps hope, so they allow some minor characters to go for laughs. For me, it doesn’t sit right. It may show the actors’ versatility but I think it’s to the detriment of the drama of the play.

 

John Gorick plays Oscar, with an assurance and a fist on hip stance that one would expect. He allows the characters strengths and weaknesses to show. (Although, once in a while he allows his chin to protrude – giving me a quick glimpse of something else. I see Tommy Cooper in that face. That is meant as a compliment and a suggestion for a role he could look into!)

 

Benjamin Darlington and Patrick Knox

The rest of the numerous characters are played by costume-changing Rupert Mason (brilliant as prosecuting barrister Charles Gill and witness Fred Atkins), Benjamin Darlington and Patrick Knox.

 

A simple and effective set design by Tom Paris has all the action in the centre, with carefully placed chairs and props down the sides. A long curtain hangs at the back, with intermittent projections aiding the story along.

 

It should be noted, of course, that Oscar was found guilty for a crime that does not exist in the UK today: that of homosexuality. It is, however, still illegal to be gay in 78 countries and punishable by death in five… Food for thought, indeed.

 

 

Photographer           David Bartholemew

Playwrights              Merlin Holland and John O’Connor

Directors                  John O’Connor and Eva Savage

Set Designer            Tom Paris

Box Office                from individual theatre box offices (see tour list below) and at

www.europeanarts.co.uk/next#tour-dates

Running Time          2 hours 20 minutes (including interval)

Twitter                                 @EuropeanArtsCo, #TrialsOscarWilde

 

UK Tour Schedule:

April

10th-11th                  Brighton Pavilion

12th-13th                  Arena Theatre, Wolverhampton

14th                          Pomegranate Theatre, Chesterfield

17th-18th                  The Haymarket, Basingstoke

20th                          Middlesbrough Theatre

24th                          Harrow Arts Centre

25th-27th                  Theatre Royal, Winchester

May

8th                            Key Theatre, Peterborough

9th                            Brewhouse Theatre, Taunton

10th                          Forest Arts Centre, New Milton

11th                          Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury

15th                          Stantonbury Theatre, Milton Keynes

16th                          Theatre Royal, Bury St Edmunds

17th                          Stamford Arts Centre

21st                          Trinity Theatre, Tunbridge Wells

22nd                         Chipping Norton Theatre

23rd-25th                 Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford

28th-29th                  Dugdale Centre, Enfield

30th                          Guildhall Arts Centre, Grantham

31st                          The Courtyard, Hereford

June

1st                            Waterside Arts Centre, Sale

 

ROYAL CHINA – RESTAURANT REVIEW

Who wants some world famous Chinese food? Us, obviously. We took a trip to Baker Street’s Royal China restaurant and experienced huge flavours from its Cantonese menu with some superb service to boot.

Renowned for its Dim Sum and Hong Kong style dishes, alongside seasonal menus, the restaurant has something for any Chinese food lover.

The Baker Street branch is considered to be the Group’s flagship (of its six restaurants in London from Queensway to Harrow on The Hill) and when you walk into the atmospheric dining hall which can hold 250 people, you immediately see why!

Head chef Pak Kuen Ng is somewhat of a celebrity in the biz. Growing up in Hong Kong, his own experiences influencer the flavours. Our favourite dishes on the day included the Honey Roast Pork Puffs, deep fried stuffed crab claw, roast duck Cantonese style and ‘Royal China’ Lotus Leaf Rice. OK, we know that’s a lot on the favourites list but trust us on this one, the flavours are on point!

If you are drawn towards the Dim Sum, you’re in luck – there’s a new menu launching this month which will be served daily from noon through to 5.30pm. A huge mix of Cheung Fung, dumplings, buns and meat pots, all ranging from £3.90 to £6.60 a dish, it’s a budget friendly way to trial the lot however the Black Gold Yolk Lava Buns are eying us up…

You won’t be going thirsty here either, with over 40 different teas to choose from and over 100 wine bins, there’s a tipple to compliment each dish.

Visit https://www.royalchinagroup.co.uk/ to book and see what’s on

 

Budsies Soft Toys by Dr Kathleen Thompson

 

Looking for a novel present for the artistic child? Budsies are a US-based company who will take a drawing (either your child’s drawing  – or yours – nobody’s judging) and turn it into a soft toy. Their custom-stuffed animals are:

  • Hand-made to look just like the drawing you submit
  • 16″ or you can upgrade to 30″ for an extra huggable creation
  • The perfect surprise gift for anyone

They ship to various international locations including the UK. Check out their website for a full rang of their products.

 

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

SISTER SCRIBES GUEST: RACHEL BRIMBLE ON WRITING ABOUT STRONG WOMEN

I first met Rachel when I tentatively joined a new chapter of the Romantic Novelists Association in anticipation of a house move, Rachel could not have been more welcoming and instantly made me feel at home. She manages to combine this open and friendly manner with a dedication to her career that makes her one of the most prolific authors I know.  

 

I’ve always wanted to write, but it wasn’t until my youngest daughter started school full-time that I started to pursue my dream of becoming a published novelist. That was in 2005 and my first book was published in 2007. I was ecstatic!

This book had been through the New Writers’ Scheme which is an amazing opportunity for a full manuscript to be critiqued by a published member of the Romantic Novelists Association. The RNA is an amazing group of female novelists (and a few men!) who support, encourage and applaud romance writers throughout the UK. It is a true honour to be a part of such a wonderful organisation and has almost certainly provided the push needed over and over again when I’ve felt I couldn’t continue to write.

Just recently, I handed in my twenty-third full-length novel to my current publisher (Aria Fiction). I have always loved drawing inspiration from real-life progressive and inspirational women, and this is reflected in the types of heroines I like to portray in my books.

As I write romance, these women ultimately end up falling in love, but it is their journey of self-discovery and empowerment that drives me to write and ensure my characters succeed. The love aspect is merely a much-welcomed added extra!

I write mainstream contemporary romance, romantic suspense and historical romance. My latest series is set in the fictional Pennington’s Department Store in Bath, England. Influenced by my love of the TV series Mr Selfridge and The Paradise, I was inspired to write a series that focused on the women’s issues of the early 20th century.

Once I’d decided on the theme of ‘female empowerment’, there was no stopping my fingers at the keyboard. I am passionate about self-growth, belief and achievement and to write about women determined to make a societal change appeals to me in every way. Book 1 in the series (The Mistress of Pennington’s) is about women striving to make their mark in business amid an extremely male-dominated world, book 2 and my latest release (A Rebel At Pennington’s) is about women’s suffrage and book 3 (hopefully released in the Autumn) is about the stigma surrounding divorce at the time.

As you can no doubt imagine, the research I undertook to uncover the required characterisation and inspiration to create these female protagonists led me to learn about some truly phenomenal women. Discoveries that will stay with me forever. There are so names we are familiar with – famous suffragettes, women aviators, doctors and scientists who all excelled and made their mark at the turn of the century, but there were also many women who remain unknown to us. Or at least, they were to me.

It is these women that inspire my work and the heroines I want to spend months and months with as I pen a 100,000 word novel about their evolving lives. The Edwardian period was a time of great change for women and it’s exciting to be a part of that. I love bringing historic women’s issues to the foreground of my novels and hopefully inspiring a woman in her own life today.

I could not write without women from the past, the present and undoubtedly, the future.

Here’s to the strong women who have gone before us and who continue to walk with us today!

 

Rachel Brimble lives in a small market town near Bath with her husband, two daughters and mad chocolate Labrador, Tyler. When she’s not writing, she likes to read, knit and walk the beautiful English countryside. Author of over 20 romance novels, Rachel hopes to sign a new contract for a contemporary romance trilogy in the not too distant future.

Website: https://rachelbrimble.com/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rachelbrimbleauthor/?hl=en

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rachelbrimbleauthor/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/RachelBrimble

 

FROST’S FAVOURITE: NAILCARE

No matter how chic you look in your power dress, daring to bare to a chipped nail definitely eliminates sass points. If professional shaping and shellacs aren’t your thing, check out our High Street list of must-haves for manicured looking nails

Unicorn Nail Vanity Kit (£12.99)

A cutie mini vanity kit packed with the nailcare staples you need. Not necessarily the most professional to pull out pre-meeting but certainly pocket sized and, let’s face it, cute AF

Buy from: Thumbs Up

Nail Foundation (£15)

This priming basecoat a triple threat.Fortified with Hydrolysed Silk, it strengthens weak nails, promote healthy nail growth and acts as a banishing tool – ridding you of ridges and imperfections for a super smooth nail surface

Buy from: Look Fantastic

OPI Infinite Shine Nail Colour (£14.50)

Tis the season to get SUMMERY! As the weather warms and the sun tries to shine, we’re all about bright and bold. This OPI range is glossy and glam and has some brilliant pink hues (From Here To Eternity is our FAVE)

Buy from: Amazon

The Body Shop almond nail and cuticle oil (£8)

We know that cuticle oil splits the crowd – it’s an extra layer and usually forgotten BUT trust us, it’s worth the investment. The Body Shop offers a two in one pen which is packed with lovely scented, sweet almond oil. It softens cuticles and treats dry, brittle nails whilst helping your manicure last longer

Buy from: The Body Shop

SISTERS SCRIBES: KITTY WILSON ON STRUCTURAL EDITS

Hello, it’s lovely to be on Frost again and I thought I’d take the chance to tell you what’s happening in my writing life right now.

It’s been a busy couple of months for The Cornish Village School series. At the time of writing this I’m working through the structural edits on book three, have signed off on the cover for the audio release of book two and received my first copies of the paperbacks for book one.

Structural edits are the first thing that needs to be tackled once you’ve finished and polished the first (second, third, umpteenth) draft and bitten the bullet and sent it off to your editor to see what they think. Because the author tends to be so close to the book, these edits are a vital, objective view of what needs to be tidied up, changed and possibly cut, possibly extended. Chapters may need to be moved or restructured and it usually involves ‘killing your darlings’.

For me, waiting for these is the most terrifying time; I somehow expect them to receive, read and critique my draft within the first fifteen minutes. I fill that quarter of an hour by biting my nails and opening up Indeed.co.uk and looking for jobs. I could definitely be a cast member in the Disney Store (as long as there is no singing required), perhaps that job negotiating exit from the EU would be simpler than any edits I will have to do (this job was advertised during my last panic browse. I considered it). Then I give myself a good talking to about rational behaviour and decide that I could do some housework, change my mind (no need for desperate measures), panic a bit more and start the next book in an attempt to distract myself.

The starting of the next book thing is a jolly good move. It’s my favourite bit of the process – that time where the world is full of possibilities, deadlines are so far away they may as well not exist and you can make anything happen. Once I’d written the first chapter with a vicar (my new hero and I’m already in love with him), a guerrilla yarn-bombing octogenarian and a secret underground dungeon, all was right again in my world. In fact, I was so enthused I almost forgot the dreaded edits. Which were made even more worrisome this time around by the fact that I have a new editor* and I am a little oppositional to change (I still have the screws to my bunkbed that my mother dismantled when I was eight).

When the structural edits did come in I read them, had a mini meltdown and it took a couple of days before I processed the words in front of me – all of which were fair, true and actually very positive. In fact, there was nothing at all that warranted the seismic earthquake of stroppiness I had engaged in but which is, apparently, a natural part of the process, because only after that could I start working my way diligently through her fairly short list of suggestions.

The next phase is the line edits and the proofread, all of which I’m hoping will be completed by the time you are reading this and I should be well on the way to finding romance for my handsome vicar. I enjoy these, or at least I think I do. If you’ve heard screaming bouncing across the British Isles recently then there’s a good chance I was kidding myself. Keep your fingers crossed for me!

All love, Kitty.

*who’s proved to be lovely btw.

 

Follow us @Sister5cribes

Hape Remote Control Engine by Dr Kathleen Thompson

 

 

I love requests to road test Hape toys, but this time Hape have surpassed themselves with the remote control engine. Merging traditional toys with modern technology, they have created a young boy’s dream (and quite a lot of fun for parents and grandparents too).

The neat looking train is light-weight and easy to handle for a toddler. It has easy-use controls on top, which my grandson loves, to make the engine go forward and backwards and make various fun noises and – importantly, it has a neat USB charger so that adults are not wasting time changing batteries every five minutes.

But it doesn’t end there – now comes the cool bit. A simple smartphone app allows you to move the train backwards and forwards, accelerate it, turn the headlights on and off and sound alarms and a whistle, all remotely via bluetooth.

Now here’s the dilemma – do you let your toddler use your smartphone and have the thrill of controlling the train by himself – after all, the app is designed to be easy for a child to use? Or you could just keep quiet – and make the train run off in all different directions as your little one tries to pick it up – trust me it can be a lot of fun. Yes, my grandson has a lot to deal with when he visits me.

The train has a magnetic coupling, so carriages and trucks from other sets can be linked up and it runs on standard wooden train tracks, thus can be integrated with your child’s existing toys. It also runs quite happily along a wooden floor.

I simply love it. My grandson loves it too, when he gets a chance to wrestle it from me. At a little over £27 from Amazon this high-quality toy will be treasured for years.

 

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

Hape’s have done it again, and when do they ever fail? Puzzles for the Children at Easter (or any time)

Frost Magazine has never ever been disappointed with Hape’s products: well made  toys that reach out to children, ‘Play with me, I’m bright, friendly and you’ll learn without knowing it’. And maybe thinking of my youngest granddaughter, even share, but that’s a bit of a stretch. I’ve been looking at Hape’s  selection of puzzles, covering everything from the animal kingdom to learning the alphabet.

Puzzle Mania!

Ocean Lens Puzzle, £11.99 from Amazon.

 

This creative puzzle features four sea creatures, each with their own special lens to help you see what’s hiding under the deep blue sea. Use each animal as a looking glass to identify the shapes hiding underneath their resting place. As someone who snorkels when given a warm blue sea I found it an intriguing concept. As did the 20 month old I was sharing it with. It led to all sort of conversations, and books were brought to me to show me fish.

24M+ allegedly, but I found myself fiddling about with them, looking through them when i was stuck in Chapter 12 of my latest novel. Then even talking about them, saying what a fabulous idea. My own children played with similar but those weren’t so versatile, or chunky, or appealing.

 

Wild Animal Puzzle & Play, £12.99 from Amazon.

I was explaining to one of the grands that some wild animals like the water while others want to munch on trees. She was fascinated, and spent time creating scenarios, and noises before placing  the pieces. She lives in a family with two dogs, and so this puzzle is an extension of her life. She is hugely interested, and there was lots to talk about. It’s just the old bugbear of lost puzzle pieces, but I did note that they were all put to bed, in their places, and then into the drawer. Again, they’re so chunky, and nice to handle, and none of those fiddly little pegs my own children had to try and grip. This one has a 2 in 1 design so there’s another play scene hiding on the flipside for even more fun.

24M+

There are more Hape puzzles to consider – which sound just the ticket.

Chunky Clock Puzzle, £13.99 from Amazon.. A fun introduction into how to tell the time.

3Y+

Chunky Alphabet Puzzle, £15.99 from Amazon. Sure to brighten up the toy box with a pop of pink, green, blue and yellow provides an introduction into capital letters and the first steps towards reading and writing.  3Y+

Numbers Peg Puzzle, £11.99 from Amazon. Using garden critters, fruit and vegetable designs to identify the different animals, try fitting the number pegs into their rightful space or add up the shapes hidden under each number for an alternative way to understand basic maths.  3Y+

Chunky Numbers Puzzle, £15.82 from Amazon,  provides the perfect opportunity to find where each number fits in the board and understand basic mathematical sums of addition and subtraction. Using thick, chunky puzzle pieces makes it perfect for small hands to hold.

3Y+

Chunky Lowercase Puzzle, £15.99 from Amazon. This brightly coloured Chunky Lowercase Puzzle from Hape provides little ones with the perfect introduction into the lowercase alphabet, to help children take their first steps towards reading. Because of its chunky design the puzzle pieces stand up independently so you can put together your own words and phrases.

3Y+

Frost Magazine cannot recommend these puzzles too highly. Excellent.