This is a jolly rendition of Sleeping Beauty, which starts with the familiar story then, retaining the plot, largely leaves convention behind. So it starts with Carabosse, feeling spurned for being excluded from the Princess’s naming ceremony, vengefully condemning Bella to prick her finger and die. But with a novel twist, it is Yorkshire’s underachieving… Continue reading Sleeping Beauty
Month: November 2024
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Glitzy, glossy and full of razzmatazz, Crossroads Pantomimes’ engaging Snow White is exactly what big budget pantos are all about: much singing, dancing, pyrotechnics, sumptuous costumes, jokes and slapstick. Lesley Joseph (Birds of a Feather, Sister Act and ITV’s Love Your Weekend) is resplendent as the wickedest Queen Dragonella, desperate to be the fairest in the land and aiming to… Continue reading Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
A Christmas Carol
First performed in 1992 and staged only fitfully since then, Northern Ballet’s version of A Christmas Carol is further proof of the company’s flair for creating enthralling narrative dance spectacles. With its combination of dynamic choreography (courtesy of Massimo Moricone) and lucid storytelling, I would rank A Christmas Carol alongside Cathy Marston’s version of Jane Eyre and David Nixon’s retelling of The Great Gatsby as… Continue reading A Christmas Carol
Only Fools and Horses
For sixteen years, Only Fools and Horses had the nation hooked to its Christmas special, with millions of us tuning in to see what brothers Del Boy and Rodney were up to next. For much of the 1980s and into the early 1990s, the sitcom was a much-loved part of most people’s viewing habits on Christmas day.… Continue reading Only Fools and Horses
The Tempest
A billowing, grey silk curtain like a ship’s wind-buffeted sail fills the proscenium arch, and the thunder of a musical storm is already building up a tempest as the audience arrive, a foretaste of what is to follow when the lights go down. Less noticed, but equally ominous, the stage is flanked by towers of… Continue reading The Tempest
A Christmas Carol
I have been to many Eastern Angles Christmas shows over the years, but I have to say that this one is really up with the best of them. Dickens’s famous story has been performed thousands of times over the years and in many different media and guises, so to make it fresh and vibrant is… Continue reading A Christmas Carol
Theodora
Handel composed Theodora nearly a decade after his last opera. It was his favourite oratorio, the only one based on a Christian subject, with characterful music broken into nearly 60 episodes. But a challenge in presenting any oratorio, written for static performance, is where to set it for the operatic stage. Here’s the context: the Roman governor,… Continue reading Theodora