Punts – is on its way

Punts – Theatre503, The Latchmere, 503 Battersea Park Road, London SW11 3BW

Wednesday 31st May – Saturday 24th June 2017

You want me to have full penetrative sex with your son, right? I just wanted to, you know, check.

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Punts is – well what? Actually it’s a hilarious and thought provoking new play by Sarah Page about a young man’s sexual awakening and its effect on those who orchestrated it. Drawn from the playwright’s interviews with sex workers, Punts – produced by Kuleshov Theatre (BU21, Cans) – explores love in all its complex and contradictory forms.

Jack, a young man with a learning disability, lives at home, cared for by his devoted parents. Like most men in their twenties, he has needs – his mates at the rugby club talk about nothing but getting laid, whilst Jack’s most erotic experience to date is the time he was winked at by the pretty cashier in Lloyds. Desperate for their son to not feel left out, his parents Alastair and Antonia decide that they should to bring in a professional. But Julia, the prostitute they hire, has a far more profound impact on the whole family than they could ever have imagined.

Writer Sarah Page comments, In researching Punts I interviewed a number of prostitutes, ranging from women on the streets, those employed in Soho walk-ups, to a retired dominatrix who used to earn an annual income higher than our Prime Minister. All of the women had, at some point in their career, worked with clients with disabilities. This production explores the question of whether sex is a human right – which should be accessible to all, whether disabled or able bodied.

Punts investigates the tensions of familial love, the excitement generated by erotic attachment, the jealousy of finding yourself loved less than another and the paradox of wanting to look after those you love while also wanting them to be free.

Punts was selected from over 1,200 entries as a finalist for the international Nick Darke Writers’ Award 2016.

Punts

Wednesday 31st May – Saturday 24th June 2017

85 minutes
#PUNTS,

@kuleshovtheatre, @SarahGPage

Theatre503, The Latchmere, 503 Battersea Park Road, London SW11 3BW,

Tickets are available priced £15 (£12 concessions)
Wednesday matinees are £10
Pay What You Can Saturday matinees
Available from Theatre503

Box Office and https://theatre503.com/, 020 7978 7040.

Tuesday-Saturday, 7:45pm
Saturday matinees on 10th, 17th and 24th, 3pm Wednesday matinees on 7th and 14th, 3pm

 

Might Make You Smile by Brenda Burling reviewed by Frances Colville  

 

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This little book – Might Make You Smile by Brenda Burling – is designed to help you through diagnosis of and treatment for cancer by making you smile. The incidents related will be familiar to anyone who has had cancer or has supported family members through cancer treatment. Like a great many of us, I’ve been there. And I fully appreciate just how much being aware of other people’s experiences and even more importantly keeping a sense of humour can help.

 

All the stories in the book are based on real events from real people. They will make you smile but they will also make you think.

 

So if you know of someone about to embark on a cancer journey, consider buying a copy for them                 to help them on their way. And take a look at the stories yourself before you pass it on. By buying this book, you are also making a donation to the Helen Rollason Cancer Charity so it’s a win-win situation.

 

Published by Matthew James Publishing Ltd Might Make You Smile is available now in paperback priced £7.99.

The Anxiety Journal Book Review

theanxietyjournal

Anxiety is on the rise. In fact, according to mentalhealth.org.uk, in 2013 there were 8.2 million cases of anxiety in the UK. There has been an explosion in how many anxiety books are published and magazines are full of articles on anxiety and how to cope. In 2017 the House of Commons guidelines state that the maximum waiting time for NHS mental health services should be 18 weeks. It would be fair to say we have an epidemic on our hands.

The good thing about this is the normalisation of anxiety. It is easy to think you are alone when you have a health problem, but anxiety is normal and it is possible to get help. Not only from the NHS, but also from the plethora of books and articles on the subject. The Anxiety Journal is such a book. Full of great techniques and information, I was mightily impressed. The journal goes through every aspect of anxiety: what you may be feeling, symptoms, the different types of anxiety, self-care, triggers, quotes, exercises to help, CBT and how to leave the anxiety mindset behind amongst other things. It has a great resource list and beautiful illustrations by Marcia Mihotich. This is a great journal which is essential for anyone suffering from anxiety.

 

While some forms of anxiety are natural, even helpful, anxiety disorders can lead you into a spiral of stress and worry, and interfere with your everyday life.

Practical, supportive and uplifting, this is a journal for anyone who struggles with anxiety, whether in the form of phobias, social anxiety, generalized anxiety (GAD) or day-to-day worrying. Beautifully illustrated by Marcia Mihotich, The Anxiety Journal by Corinne Sweet encourages you to use CBT techniques and mindfulness exercises to help you better understand your anxiety and help you to achieve peace and calm.

Whether you’re awake at 4am unable to turn off those racing thoughts, or struggling to get yourself together before a presentation, The Anxiety Journal will help to soothe stress and reduce worry, identify negative thought-cycles, and provide you with techniques to combat anxiety wherever you are.

 The Anxiety Journal is available here.

 

Interview with Clementine Lovell by Paul Vates

Artistic Director of Pop-Up Opera

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[Clementine Lovell]

This summer, Pop-Up Opera return with a rarely-seen opera from the late eighteenth century, Cimarosa’s Il Matrimonio Segreto (The Secret Marriage).

 

Continuing to challenge the way opera is traditionally performed, Pop-Up Opera take their productions into unusual spaces, making them fun, fresh and intimate.

 

Il Matrimonio Segreto tells the tale of a rich Italian businessman as he attempts to marry off one of his daughters to a mad English toff with disastrous results. Packed with tunes and matrimonial mayhem, this exciting story about following your heart makes for a perfect summer opera filled with Pop-up Opera’s special humour, sparkle and fun.

 

The opera’s premiere in Vienna was the occasion of the longest encore in operatic history: Leopold II was so delighted that he ordered supper served to the company and the entire opera repeated immediately after.

 

Here’s a short interview with Pop-Up’s Artistic Director, Clementine Lovell…

How would you describe Pop-Up Opera to a stranger at a party?

We take opera into unexpected venues like barns and tunnel shafts and make it fun and engaging, and people who are not keen on or have never been to opera come and see it and are surprised how much they love it.

Do you find people concerned that they wouldn’t understand what’s going on? Isn’t all opera in a foreign language, for example? How accessible is it?

Our projected captions have become part of our signature style. We believe that you can still make opera accessible when performed in the original language. The music, the intentions of the actors, the interaction between the characters and the power of the drama get the story across. The captions are there to compliment, not to detract. They keep the audience broadly abreast of the story but don’t demand their attention all the time. With a comedy the captions can add another layer of humour, and we can play around with the modern context. In a drama we kept the translation more ‘straight’ but still with the same approach of captions rather than a full text translated into continuous surtitles.

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Do you think Pop-Up has a distinctive style?

Yes, we have definitely developed our own Pop-up Opera style. Our aim is to get the story across and to engage the audience, and our style has evolved around this. We adapt the productions to embrace each venue, so every night is different. The performance spaces vary wildly in size, shape, acoustic, feeling. We get in to the space on the day and start working out the entrances, exits, how to involve the audience… The performers have to think on their feet and be willing to allow some freedom and spontaneity. I think this keeps it fresh and creates a very special atmosphere. Our captions mentioned above are definitely a strong trademark, but we also put emphasis developing characters that the audience can root for and care about.

How was the company formed?

When I began training as an opera singer I had mixed reactions from my friends. Opera wasn’t really their thing, one even claimed to be ‘allergic’ to it. That stayed with me, and I wanted to prove them wrong, to show them that opera could be magical, hilarious, devastating or moving. I founded Pop-up Opera in 2011, on my return from living in Italy. Opera is so much a part of Italian culture, so broadly appreciated, and is performed everywhere, not just in the big houses. I grew up in a small village in the UK miles from an opera house. We never went to see it, it wasn’t an option. My uncle has a barn where he hosts folk and blues events and we put on an opera there for a largely non opera going audience. They loved it. It made me think about how the setting can have a bearing on people’s enjoyment, or their willingness to give it a go.

 

I made the decision to try and build a company that could stand on its own two feet financially rather than relying on funding. I didn’t have any money to invest or form a basis for the company, so I started it as a profit share, and convinced 12 venues to work with us for the initial season, a few of which guaranteed us a fee. I found a stage director and singers who were excited about the project and willing to take the risk and give it a go. The production was a success and the word began to spread. During the second year I sat down and made a business plan and worked out what we would need to achieve to stay afloat and meet our running costs. Once I felt confident the performances would bring in enough revenue, I moved away from profit share to offering our singers and directors fees.

 

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 What do you think has been your greatest achievement so far? And your biggest nightmare – what, in the past, has gone wrong?

The company that has grown significantly over the last 5 years and is able to stand on it’s own feet. The strong partnership I have with my co-producer Fiona Johnston, and the work we have put into building the company forms its foundation. We put a lot of work into approaching venues and and nurturing a relationship with them and with our audiences. We now have many regular venues as well as new ones, and will do around 90 performances this year. High points include getting ecstatic emails back from previously skeptical audience members after our shows, seeing 6 year old children enthralled by Cosi fan tutte, and hearing the full orchestra play the first few notes of Figaro as the curtain went up on the amazing set of our co-production with Kilden concert house in Norway. We are also proud to be a company that cast and crew want to work with, that we offer a fun and supportive environment for them, and a platform for talented people.

There have been many challenges and moments of despair. Initially Fiona and I were juggling producing with other jobs until we could pay ourselves. The costs of running a company are enormous and it’s both terrifying and liberating to be self reliant financially. We are covering costs but it’s a struggle and frequent cause of anxiety. We have learnt business and management skills on the job and have dealt with many challenging situations. The company is so full of potential and is growing in size and strength, but it’s still fragile. We have a lot of people reliant on us and so many variables. It can be very stressful. If we weren’t passionate about it, it just wouldn’t happen.

Is there something that you yearn to do – a certain performance or venue?

I would love to partner up with a larger organisation in the UK, so we could collaborate together and share our strengths and experience, to bring opera to an even wider audience. We would also love to reach more disadvantaged schools, communities and areas of the country which at the moment isn’t financially viable for us or them. There are operas we would love to do but we are currently limited by budget and by the number of people we can fit into our 9 seater tour bus. We consider carefully what productions will work for us, and take into account many factors. We have to balance artistic and creative drive with financial and logistical constraints. We also have to think about what will work in our venues and with piano reduction instead of orchestra.

 

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 Who inspires you and do you have a favourite composer?

Many people inspire me. I constantly meet interesting and inspiring people through my work. My mentor Steve Robertson inspires me because he has achieved so much and works non stop but remains positive and always willing to help others. I am inspired by many women who I know and/or look up to. Whether it’s juggling family and career, nurturing, creating, grafting, defying… there are some amazing women in my life or who I meet or hear about that inspire over and over.

If I was forced to pick one composer it would have to be Mozart.

 

The current production of The Secret Marriage – what is it about? Is it a comedy or tragedy?

It’s a comedy. Basically (in our version) a rich Italian businessman attempts to marry off one of his daughters to a mad English toff with disastrous results. As our brilliant stage director Max Hoehn says, “It’s a piece that revels in anarchy. The story is driven by this collision of eccentric and forceful personalities who are trapped in the ultimate engagement party from hell”.

 

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[The Secret Marriage poster]

 

How long is the rehearsal process – how does it all come together?

We have about a month of rehearsal time in total for each new production. Our wonderful musical director Berrak Dyer spends the first week working with the cast on the music only. The quality of the performance musically is very important to us. We then have around 3 weeks to stage the piece. The specific approach depends on the stage director we are working with, but they will be aware that the production needs to be flexible and adaptable for the different spaces yet with a strong structure. They will sometimes need to juggle rehearsing two casts, particularly when there will be up to 40 performances over a run. Our stage director also collaborates with Harry Percival who writes our captions. They will discuss ideas and aesthetic, and how the captions will be spaced during the action. The rest of our captions team will need to learn the show and the timing of captions operation for the performances. Props are sourced by Fiona in the lead up to and during the rehearsal period, although for Matrimonio we are excited to have a new team member on board in charge of costumes, another Fiona (Rigler). We constantly have to think outside the box due to budget restrictions and this forces us to be creative.

Does a venue find you or are you always on the lookout for unusual places to perform and you approach them?

Initially we had to approach many many places to find venues, but now many of our venues come to us. Word of mouth is a powerful thing and lots of people approach us off the back of seeing one of our shows. We are always on the lookout for new and interesting venues though!

What’s next for Pop-Up, in the short and long term?

Il matrimonio segreto opens on 18th May in London at Off Quay near East India dock. We will tour the production around the UK until the end of July. In the autumn we’ll be staging Hansel & Gretel which will open on 21st September in the Brunel Museum Thames Tunnel Shaft and will tour until late November.

In general it’s a very exciting time for the company. As well as our core productions touring 90 shows a year, we have also began to collaborate with larger organisations, such as the amazing Kilden concert house in Norway where we upscaled but still stayed true to our ethos and style. We hope to take on more projects and partnerships like this as well as continuing to bring our productions to intimate and usual venues around the UK. Ultimately though, the sky’s the limit. Anything is possible if you believe in it enough and are prepared to work hard to make it happen.

 

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Running time                        2 hours 10 minutes, plus interval (tbc)

 

Website                      www.popupopera.co.uk

Twitter                         @PopupOperaUK

Facebook                   /popupopera

Director                      Max Hoehn

Producers                  Fiona Johnston and Clementine Lovell

Musical Director       Berrak Dyer

Tour Dates:                 www.popupopera.co.uk

 

Pete ‘n’ Keely review: Paul Vates

 

Pete ‘n’ Keely at Tristan Bates Theatre,
1A Tower St, Covent Garden. WC2H 9NP

“Don’t worry about the story too much and you’ll be smiling when you leave”

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This showing has been running off-Broadway since the start of the century and, having just closed and now touring the US, it is finally having its European premiere here in London. It is 1968 in the US. Pete and Keely used to be stars, even marrying and then having the showbiz divorce. A sponsor has brought them back together for a one-off television special, in which they retell their lives through songs of the period. We see them meet, fall in love and cope with fame. Then we watch as it frays and falls apart. They suffer and argue in front of us, performing for the camera with fake smiles.

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[Katie Kerr as Keely]

The stars are obviously the cast – David Bardsley (Pete) and Katie Kerr (Keely). This two-hander has them singing throughout the evening in a variety of styles, sometimes solo. For me, Kerr’s rendition of Black Coffee stealing the show. Both are vocally stunning and perform with just the right amount of subtlety. The whole thing is cheesy, just like the music, the style, the props.

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[David Bardsley as Pete]

Perhaps a little rough round the edges at times and a little short of peril at the end, but it is comforting to be in the presence of two very confident performers, backed up with the solid musical direction of James Cleeve (keyboards), Doug Grannell (bass) and Richard Burden (percussion). Matthew Gould’s direction is inventive and fun and, with the cast and crew, manages to squeeze every drop of humour from the scenario. A shame, that fundamentally, the play itself does not stand up to the task, flawed at the end as it is.

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[Katie with David]

Emily Bestow’s stage design is hilarious, though. Camp, colourful and just right for the shenanigans that unfold: large discs of flower-power colour that hang from the ceiling. This show, running under two hours (with interval), is a joy to behold. Like watching a couple of master entertainers look back on their careers, taking us along for the ride. Don’t worry about the story too much and you’ll be smiling when you leave.

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[Katie and David – in Cairo!]

 

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Book: James Hindman

Original Music: Patrick Brady

Original Lyrics: Mark Waldrop and Patrick S Brady

Producer: Wallflower

Theatrical Director: Matthew Gould

Musical Director: James Cleeve

Show details and booking: www.tristanbatestheatre.co.uk

Performances: Running until 20th May. Tuesday to Saturday at 7.30pm. Wednesday and Saturday Matinees at 2.30pm.

Performances Length: 2 hours (this includes an interval)

Photographs: The Other Richard Facebook: /PetenKeely Twitter: @PetenKeely, @Wallflower_UK

Delicious Cinco de Mayo Fiesta Inspiration

Cinco De Mayo continues to serve it’s purpose to celebrate the victory of The Mexicans and what better way to celebrate than with the best of Mexican culture, good food and good booze. Mexican food is known for being hearty, flavoursome and rich so why not try a recipe which will impress everyone;

We have a delicious Vegan recipe for you to try tonight alongside a mouth-watering Vegan cocktail to see in Cinco De Mayo! Olé

Coronation Cauliflower Tacos;

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For the cauliflower;

1 teaspoon curry powder
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon cumin
1 teaspoon onion powder
100g vegan mayonnaise
40g dried apricots – chopped
1 tablespoon of chopped coriander
1 teaspoon of chopped mint
Zest of 1 lemon
1 teaspoon lemon juice – or to taste
Good pinch of Malden salt
Fresh cracked black pepper
1 medium sized cauliflower (must be ultra fresh)

For the garnish:
2 tablespoons of toasted almonds or sunflower seeds
Edamame Beans

For the Slaw
Ingredients:
¼ white cabbage
¼ red cabbage
1 carrot
100g vegan Greek yoghurt
2 tbsp lemon juice
Good pinch of Malden salt
Fresh cracked black pepper

Add Tacos

Now for the Cocktail:

Vegan Martini
MAKES 1 LITRE

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300ml Tanqueray Gin
40ml Ginger juice
12ml Salt Water
120ml Agave
80ml Lime
80ml Lemon
400ml Green juice

Shake it up and serve.

¡ARRIBA!

Seizing the moment by Margaret Graham

 

 WORLD MONUMENTS FUND PRESENTS: THE PAST, TODAY Preservation during conflict: Seizing the momentto protect the Middle East’s cultural heritage

 

With Zaki Aslan, Director of ICCROM-ATHAR (Sharjah United Arab Emirates) with introduction by Tracey Crouch MP

Royal Geographical Society, 1 Kensington Gore, London SW7 2AR

Tuesday 16th May 2017, 7pm (doors open at 6.30pm)

If I wasn’t going to be abroad I’d love to go to this talk:

Conflict continues to dominate the Middle East and we regularly hear about cultural catastrophes as heritage is deliberately targeted by direct damage, looting, abandonment and neglect. Historic buildings, artistic treasures, monuments and neighbourhoods are repeatedly dismantled or destroyed. Alongside the physical destruction comes the loss of people to champion heritage and the expertise to conserve it.

As part of an important series of talks about heritage in conflict zones, World Monuments Fund Britain presents Zaki Aslan, Director of ICCROM-ATHAR – an international body that works to conserve cultural heritage in the Middle East. Zaki Aslan will provide significant insight into the state of heritage in the region and discuss how the world’s nations could help more with conservation. The evening will be introduced by Tracey Crouch, Minister for Sport, Tourism and Heritage at DCMS.

This event follows the 2015 inaugural talk World Monument Fund talk in which Professor Maamoun Abdulkarim, the Director-General of Syrian Antiquities, visited the UK for the first time. With the recent news that Palmyra in Syria has just been freed from ISIS for a second time, Maamoun Abdulkarim will join the lecture by video to give us the very latest position on his country’s besieged cultural heritage.

 

Zaki Aslan comments, World nations should unite for heritage protection as this is part of our human story. We are facing cultural cleansing in countries such as Iraq and Syria; images we’ve received are appalling. Destruction of heritage should be treated as a war crime by the international community at large. We need to plan well for the recovery phase guiding all parties involved in the reconstruction process.

World Monuments Fund is the leading independent charity devoted to saving the world’s most treasured places. Their programme of issue-based events brings speakers to London who are closest to the international heritage stories making the very latest news.

Photograph: © iStock RPMGas

Twitter @WorldMonuments, @JohnD_WMFB, #PreservationConflict Box Office Tickets are available for £20 (£15 for WMF members) from

www.wmf.org.uk/activities or 020 7251 8142

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Be still my beating heart… Another Agatha Raisin… by Milly Adams

 

Sometimes the Frost Review Team receive a real treat. This time, bagsy me.

 

Agatha Raisin, Pushing up Daisies arrived on the mat…

 

M.C. Beaton has done it again. She is my hero, my saviour, the writer who lifts my heart, the one I truly believe has looked in the window and created a detective who is as rude as I am. No, I am not always, but sometimes. Lovely, lovely Agatha does not have the filter that others do. She thinks something, and out it comes. Is it an age thing?

 

And no, it’s not nice, or kind, and my mum would have added, nor is it funny to be rude. It’s true that it’s not nice, not kind – but good grief, M.C. Beaton is certainly so very funny. There’s no faffing about calling a spade a nice little trowel. Not, it’s a shovel.

 

Lord Bellington, Carsley’s biggest landholder, has enraged locals with his plans to sell off their allotments to make way for a new housing development. So when he turns up dead, nobody mourns his passing.

 

Indeed, I should think not, having worked my very precious allotment alongside many others doing the same – if that had been in jeopardy from a dastardly developer, the list of suspects would have been huge.

 

The problem is, the body count keeps mounting in Pushing Up Daisies, and our hero, Agatha, has to weave her way through a world of petty feuds, while she herself is cast down by moments of self-doubt.

 

This is what is so glorious about Agatha. Not only does she blast her way through the sensibilities of some she meets, she is, also, beneath it all, rather a delicate flower. No, I need to alter that. Not delicate, but vulnerable, in her search for love, something which underpins all the wonderful books in the Agatha Raison series.

 

I had rather forgotten about these wonderful books as work pressures have mounted, but have been out and bought several to take on a week’s break before beginning another novel of my own for Arrow. People will wonder why on earth I am laughing aloud, and with fondness at this black comedy, unless of course, there are more Agatha Raison fans around at the time. Then they will understand and we’ll exchange knowing looks.

 

Buy it, enhance your life. And buy the next, and the… Well, you get the picture.

 

While you’re at it, don’t forget the Hamish Macbeth series too, also written by M.C. Beaton.

 

Pushing Up Daisies (Agatha Raisin) M.C. Beaton pb £7.99