Oct 292015
 

Emma Rice has taken the Daphne Du Maurier 1938 bestseller out of the box, shaken it about a bit and injected a good measure of humour. Does it work? Duncan Harley reviews Rebecca at HM Theatre, Aberdeen.

Lizzie Winkler as Bea and Andy Williams as Giles in REBECCA photo by Steve Tanner

Lizzie Winkler as Bea and Andy Williams as Giles in REBECCA photo by Steve Tanner.

Billed as a study in jealousy, and described by Du Maurier as “a sinister … psychological and rather macabre … tale about a woman who marries a widower”, the story is indeed a dark one.

Following the mysterious death of Rebecca, his first wife, Maxim de Winter returns to his Manderley estate in Cornwall with a new bride, Mrs de Winter.

From the outset, all is not as it seems and the new mistress of the house sets out to uncover the secrets of the past.

Along the way she must stand up to the sinister housekeeper Mrs Danvers, assert her new-found authority and finally enable her new husband to come to terms with the unburied memories which desperately haunt him.

Says Rice:

“Rebecca challenges us from the grave with her lack of care for society’s rules … I celebrate all of the wonderful female characters … from the passionate and loyal Mrs Danvers to the new Mrs de Winter, who wakes from her fairy tale slumber in front of our very eyes.”

Gender roles are to the fore in this adaptation. Men are men, and get up to man-like things such as drinking and womanising. Women are women and get up to dressing up and organising things. The exception to the rule is the unseen but omnipresent and very dead Rebecca de Winter, a manipulative sexual predator, incapable of love and intent only on satisfying her own pleasure.

Traditionally Rebecca is a morbidly dark tale but Emma Rice has lightened the story line somewhat. Sea shanties, performed by a sou’wester clad troop of jolly Cornish sailor men, lighten up the darkly intense mood and a Warhorse style puppet-dog sticks his nose into groins everywhere. There are episodes of knockabout and slapstick and at one point Jack – Rebecca’s cousin and ex-lover – attempts the great double-flickaroo’ cigarette trick.

Perhaps the most unlikely comedy turn comes via Katy Owen. Alongside playing the anguished harbour-side waif Ben, she plays Robert – the young Welsh house-boy. In a series of rollickingly hilarious skits Katy literally has the theatre audience in stitches.

Imogen Sage as Mrs de Winter, and Emily Raymond as the creepy Mrs Danvers, excel and LeslieTravers’ stage set is a triumph. Doubling both as decaying stately home and stormy quayside, the set appropriately suggests a place where nothing is as it seems. Rebecca’s wrecked boat becomes the wine cellar; the parlour effortlessly morphs into a boathouse and later a storm-swept harbour mouth.

If criticism were due, it would be on the grounds of a slightly hurried second half. The plot involves a lot of soul-searching and problem-solving, and at times the action moves perceptibly too fast for those unfamiliar with the storyline to follow. The notion of a Judge Jeffries style coastguard, played by Andy Williams, was also hard to swallow. But in them far off days in Cornwall, perhaps the local Coastguard did indeed double as hangman.

All in all though, the production works wonderfully well and the entire cast gave a polished and thoroughly professional performance.

After the final curtain call and as we all made our way down to the exits, a fellow theatre-goer was heard to remark:

“I wonder what Daphne would have made of it all?”

Her companion whispered:

“I think she would have approved wholeheartedly.”

Adapted and Directed by Emma Rice – Rebecca plays at HM Theatre Aberdeen until Saturday 31st October

Tickets from Aberdeen Performing Arts Tel: 01224- 641122

Words © Duncan Harley, Images © Steve Tanner

Sep 162015
 

Voice’s Duncan Harley reviews Dirty Dancing at HM Theatre, Aberdeen.

Dirty Dancing UK tour - Claire Rogers as 'Penny' & Lewis Kirk as 'Johnny' - cTristram Kenton

Claire Rogers as ‘Penny’ & Lewis Kirk as ‘Johnny’ – © Tristram Kenton

In this classic coming of age musical drama – set within the opulent New York State Kellerman’s Resort – daddy’s favourite little girl, Frances ‘Baby’ Houseman falls for moodily handsome resort dance instructor, Johnny Castle. No problemo? Well, think again!

Johnny comes from the wrong side of the tracks and the path to true love is strewn with prejudice and misunderstanding.

Set in strife torn 1960’s USA, the dialogue is littered with references to the politics of the time.

The escalating Vietnam War divides the nation, while in the Deep South the Civil Rights Movement is challenging racial segregation and ongoing discrimination against black Americans.

Meanwhile at Kellermans, the paying guests obediently sing the Civil Right’s Anthem ‘We Shall Overcome’ around the resort’s cosy campfire oblivious to the injustice dealt out on a daily basis to the resort staff.

The original 1980’s screen-play became a smash hit film.

Dirty Dancing was adapted for the stage in 2004 by novelist Eleanor Bergstein. Her intention from the outset was to create a piece of live theatre which could stand up on its own to be enjoyed by both those who had seen the original movie and those new to the story.

Overflowing with pitch perfect vocals, a stomper of a musical score and raunchy dance routines this theatre production ticks all the boxes.

Jessie Hart’s portrayal of ‘Baby’ is a case in point. From the early ‘clumsy dancing‘ through to those stunningly iconic final ‘lifts’ her metamorphosis from geeky-awkward girl to assuredly-competent woman is a delight.

Leading man Lewis Kirk’s performance as ‘Johnny Castle’ is stunning. Charismatic and with just the right amount of swagger, his steamy dance moves engage the audience with ease. Patrick Swayze may have set the bar high but Lewis has somewhat upped the ante.

Dirty Dancing UK tour - Jessie Hart as 'Baby' & Lewis Kirk as 'Johnny' - © Tristram Kenton

Jessie Hart as ‘Baby’ & Lewis Kirk as ‘Johnny’ – cTristram Kenton

Johnny’s dance partner Penny is played by Carlie Milner whose electrifying performance takes dance to a new level.

The impressive choreography is set to an equally impressive musical score. Act one alone features thirty one tracks, Act two a further eighteen including numbers by Otis Reading, Django Reinhardt, The Drifters plus Marvin Gaye.

Filled to the brim with classic numbers including ‘Be My Baby’, ‘Hungry Eyes’ and ‘Save The Last Dance For Me’ Dirty Dancing is a slick and energetic production.

Go see it; you’re guaranteed to have the time of your life especially when Johnny utters the immortal words “Nobody puts Babe in the corner!”

Directed by Sarah Tipple with Choreography by Kate Champion – Dirty Dancing plays at HM Theatre Aberdeen until Saturday 3rd October

Tickets from Aberdeen Performing Arts Tel: 01224- 641122

Words © Duncan Harley, Images © Tristram Kenton.

Sep 042015
 

Voice’s Duncan Harley reviews The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time at HM Theatre, Aberdeen.

DogNighttime. Photo by BrinkhoffMögenburg of Original West End CastWhen Wellington, the next door neighbour’s dog, is found murdered; fifteen year old Christopher Boone, a brilliant mathematician with some pretty complex personal issues, turns sleuth.
Emulating his hero Sherlock Holmes, he must solve the mystery of who killed Mrs Shears’ pet and absolve himself of complicity.

In the course of the ensuing who-dunnit Christopher discovers skeletons galore in the family cupboard.

After a long and often painful journey, including the realisation that Holmes was in fact a fictional detective, he solves the crime and is absolved.

Based on the book of the same name, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time highlights some of the issues faced by those who come into contact with those who differ markedly from the norm and of course many of the issues faced by those who are by nature quite different. The book’s author Mark Haddon comments that “Curious is not really about Christopher at all, it’s about us.” He may have a point.

Christopher, played by Joshua Jenkins, exhibits what can only be described as mind-blowingly challenging behavioural traits. He cannot bear to be touched, he becomes unbearably swamped by external stimuli, he cannot use a stranger’s toilet, he cannot tell a lie and takes everything completely literally – the list goes on and inevitably ticks all of the diagnostic boxes.

The play presents as a reading of Christopher’s own written thoughts, read aloud in segments mainly by his mentor and school teacher Siobhan, played beautifully by Geraldine Alexander. The unfolding story takes place within a high-tech multi-media set representing a gateway into Christopher’s consciousness. The drama literally takes place in Christopher’s head.

At times funny, often terrifyingly intense and always challenging, Curious is a superb production. Joshua Jenkins’ performance is both electrifying in its intensity and engaging in its complexity. There are lighter moments. Animal lovers will drool over the cute Andrex Puppy. They may even take a fancy to Toby, Christopher’s pet rat.

Stuart Laing and Gina Isaac excel as Christopher’s long suffering and often desperate parents, kindly neighbours peek into his life and at one point a cheerily upbeat railway policeman takes time out to help him on his quest but it has to be said that this is essentially a stage show all about Christopher.

The technical aspects of the production are worthy of a Hollywood blockbuster and have to be experienced to be believed. Aboyne born video designer Finn Ross has worked on everything from Festival Fringe through to Broadway and his expertise in combining live and pre-recorded imagery takes live performance into exciting new realms. Lighting, sound and set design are likewise superb.

Ultimately this play examines the nature of abnormality and the challenge of defining limitations. Having solved the gruesome dog murder and dismissed lingering doubts regarding his mathematical ability Christopher asks Siobhan “Does this mean I can do anything?” She does not reply.

Only those members of the audience who elect to remain in theatre following the final curtain call are likely to discover the answer.

Adapted for stage by Simon Stephens and directed by Marianne Elliott – The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time plays at HM Theatre Aberdeen until Saturday 5th September.

Tickets from Aberdeen Performing Arts Tel: 01224- 641122

Words © Duncan Harley, Images © Brinkhoff Moginburg

Jul 032015
 

9_to_5_by_Sid_Scott_1Duncan Harley reviews.

It is 1979 and the workers at Consolidated Industries have it in for the boss.
President of the company, Franklin Hart Junior, is a powerful but lecherous man who makes no secret of his lustful feelings for his secretary, Dolly Parton clone, Doralee Rhodes.

Rightly portrayed as a sexist, lying, egotistical bigot, Franklin piles on the pressure until at last “his girls” can take no more.

Some murderous drug fuelled fantasy ensues and quite by accident a dose of rat poison is poured into Hart’s coffee. He survives but following a series of hilarious events, including a confession of eternal love for Hart by office nark Roz Keith (Hilary Esson), is kidnapped at gunpoint and stripped of both clothes and dignity before being held in bondage in his own bedroom.

The ladies of Consolidated Industries must find a way forward or face a hefty spell in jail.

Aberdeen Opera Company is no stranger to HM Theatre Aberdeen having performed at the venue some five times during the past decade performing shows such as Phantom, Titanic and Sugar.

This seasons offering is yet another highly professional and engaging production.

The original 1980 comedy film ‘9 to 5’ featured Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin and Dolly Parton in the lead roles which makes for a hard act to follow. Theatrical productions based on star strewn films are sometimes underwhelming.

Fortunately Aberdeen Opera Company’s take on the ‘9 to 5’ story is in itself a hard act to follow. From the opening Parton blockbuster ‘9 to 5’, performed by the full company, the song list fires effortlessly and confidently through classics such as Backwoods Barbie, Dance of Death and Cowgirls Revenge before concluding with a ‘9 to 5’ finale. The truly engaging duet ‘Let Love Grow’ with Violet and Joe (Gavin McKay) is worthy of special mention.

Super efficient office manager Violet Newstead (Samantha Gray) steals the show and is the undoubted lynchpin of the production. Now into her tenth year with Aberdeen Opera Company, Samantha delivers a powerful performance both as the competent sassy Violet and as the Snow White psycho-killer dreaming of murdering boss Franklin Hart Junior.

Pistol packing Texan Doralee (Leanne Craggs) and frazzled divorcee Judy (Amanda Watt) complete the leading lady ensemble and Scot Jamieson’s confident and darkly humorous portrayal of the loathsome Franklin will no doubt type-cast him as the leading villain in all future Aberdeen Opera Company productions.

With choreography by Irene Buchan and musical direction by Craig McDermott this is a production which will have the audience to-tapping from the moment the curtain opens. Go see it!

Directed by Judith Stephen – 9 To 5 plays at HM Theatre Aberdeen until Saturday 4th July
Tickets from Aberdeen Performing Arts Tel: 01224- 641122

Words © Duncan Harley, Images © Sid Scott.

Jun 252015
 
The Producers UK Tour 2015 - Jason Manford as Leo Bloom and company - photo credit Manuel Harlan

Jason Manford as Leo Bloom and company.

By Duncan Harley.

It’s not often that the theatre audience gets a buy one get one free offer but in the case of The Producers that’s the deal.

This is after all a musical about the production of a musical and the resulting musical within a musical is a hilarious triumph.

When fast fading theatrical producer Max Bialystock (Cory English) and his newly hired accountant the timid Leopold Bloom (Jason Manford) realise they could strike it rich and go to live in Rio by producing the worst musical ever to open on Broadway, the search is on for a production guaranteed to belly flop spectacularly on the first night.

Bialystock, the producer not the Polish city, has a track history of theatrical flops and critical reviews include classic lines such as “by the end of the production everyone on stage was dead – they were the lucky ones!” However a dead to rights sure-fire flop is required and no chances whatsoever can be taken.

The search is on for the worst musical ever written and Springtime for Hitler by gun-toting Nazi playwright pigeon breeder Franz Liebkind (Ross Noble) appears to fit the bill in every way.

With a liberal sprinkling of swastika laden ultra-camp storm troopers, a sparklingly gold sequined Liberace pastiche of Adolf “Elizabeth” Hitler plus a few dead pigeons what could possibly go right on the night?

Adapted from the highly regarded 1968 Mel Brooks film of the same name, The Producers works well as a musical. The original screenplay initially bemused audiences who had no clear idea whether to laugh or leave the cinema in protest at the outrageously funny but uncomfortable lampooning of Herr Hitler and his entourage. Indeed a 2009 German language production of the musical at Berlin’s Admiralspalast, reputedly the Fuhrer’s favourite theatre, closed after only a few weeks.

The Aberdeen theatre audience however are left in no doubt from the very start of the production that belly laughs are the order of the day and that an evening of mad-cap comedy entertainment is in store.

This is a high energy production. The story and action literally proceed at a furious pace. Slap-stick gags, catchy songs and toe-tapping dance routines combine with spectacular lighting and a stunning set to dazzle the audience.

With big names such as Northern comics Ross Noble and Jason Manford plus veteran New York Broadway actor Cory English, The Producers is a production not to be missed.

As a bonus you get the musical “Springtime for Hitler – A Gay Romp with Eva and Adolf at Berchtesgaden” thrown in for free.

Directed by Matthew White, The Producers plays at HM Theatre Aberdeen until Saturday 27th June.

Tickets from Aberdeen Performing Arts Tel: 01224- 641122

Words © Duncan Harley, Images © Manuel Harlan

 

Jun 082015
 

Rapid_Departure_Hero_Diver2 Duncan HarleyBy Duncan Harley

The premise of Rapid Departure, the latest touring production by Moray-based Right Lines Productions is quite simple.

Environmental calamities are on the increase and extreme weather conditions can arise at any moment.

The surrounding area has been hit by a freak flood and the locals, aka the audience, are guided to the safety of the Boganlochan Village Hall, the designated Emergency Rest Centre.

The local council take charge of the crisis in the person of part-time seasonal grass strimmer Eric, played by Ewan Donald of River City fame. As the flood waters rise, so questions arise.

How would we all cope with such a fraught situation? Does this style of interactive theatre engage the audience? Will our hero save the locals from a watery end?

If the audience reviews are anything to go by, the production has hit a high note.

At the Kemnay Village Hall performance, audience feedback included the following:

“Fab – loved it!! Great cast and writing. Even made the teenagers laugh! Would make a great BBC special.”

“A fab night. Pure genius. Great script, great acting and great singing. Well done Euan & Dave.”

In all honesty, this production is a delight from beginning to end. At the Kemnay performance word must have gotten around that there would be a degree of audience participation and the front seats visibly filled up last. But no matter: no one was safe! In a series of hilarious but gentle audience engagements, the mail was delivered, food was distributed and sandbags given out. At points there was literally not a dry eye in the house!

Sing-along renderings of You Are My Sunshine and The Muckle Spate of 63 added to the fun, and within the first few minutes it was clear that a real treat was in store.

Rapid Departure is of course the latest production by Moray-based Right Lines Productions, the team responsible for theatrical comedies such as Who Bares Wins and The Accidental Death of an Accordionist.

Following rehearsals and an opening night on Eigg, the 90-minute production toured venues as far afield as Knoydart, Portmahomack and Fochabers, before swinging south to Kemnay, Pitlochry and finally Birnam.

Directed by Mark Saunders, whose professional career includes full-time lecturing at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, the production’s key elements of seriously educational farce are expertly exploited. Writers Dave Smith and Euan Martin’s script intended that a drama be made out of a crisis and that is exactly what Mark has delivered!

Rapid_Departure_Kemnay_VillageEstrid Barton is no stranger to Right Lines. She played Trish in the hit Pitlochry Festival Theatre production of Whisky Kisses. In her Rapid Departure role as the community-spirited Gloria, she amply sets the scene from the very start, and adds a confident comedic presence to the
show.

Alongside Albert, played by James Bryce, who with over a hundred plays under his hat also wrote the music for the show, Flora, played by Helen MacKay deserves special mention; not least for her dramatic entrance and mid-show white water puppet performance.

A veteran of The Cone Gatherers and Sunset Song, her vibrant and bright stage presence added much-needed positivity to the inhabitants of the Boganlochan Emergency Rest Centre audience, just when the weather seemed to be taking a turn for the worse.

As the arguments about global warming, re-wilding, renewable energy and of course the impact of flooding flow back and forth, Barry Hunter’s impressive macho presence as Connal borders at times on the Crocodile Dundee. The butt of many jokes, his vying with Eric for the affections of young Flora works well in the context of the central themes of the play.

With ultra realistic sound effects including rolls of thunder plus a truly memorable soup scene complete with a Paul Hogan-style big knife, Rapid Departure is a hilariously educational touring theatre production not to be missed.

True to form, Right Lines have triumphed yet again.

To check whether Rapid Departures is playing at a village hall near you see

http://rightlines.net/rightlines/rapid-departure/

Tickets from www.neatshows.org.uk

Words and images © Duncan Harley

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Feb 122015
 

BIRDSONG_-_2014_credit Jack LadenburgReviewed by Duncan Harley.

Playwright R. C. Sherriff recalled in his autobiography that almost every theatre management in London had turned down his 1928 drama Journey’s End.

“They said that people didn’t want war plays.”

This latest theatre production of Sebastian Faulk’s novel Birdsong, adapted for stage by Rachel Wagstaff, proves beyond doubt that even today, some 100 years after the start of the first “War to end all wars” public appetite for war drama is as strong as ever.

Alternating between the trenches of the Somme and the Amiens Chateau of the Aizaire household the production follows young British officer Stephen Wraysford, played by Edmund Wiseman, as he progresses through a tempestuous and doomed love affair with Isabelle Azaire, played by leading lady Emily Bowker.

The plot takes us underground into the darkly surreal world of the unquestioning Jack Firebrace, played effortlessly by Peter Duncan of Blue Peter fame. Jack, a sapper, is tasked with tunnelling underneath the battleground in order to plant explosives below enemy positions. It is here, in these tunnels that Stephen is finally faced with the pointlessness of conflict and it is here that he is resurrected as a human being.

This is no Journey’s End in stature and a century on from the events portrayed who could expect otherwise. Writers such as Sassoon, Graves and Remarque saturated the genre almost a century ago with ease. They were of course present as both witnesses and combatants.

The beauty of the stage version of Birdsong lies in its shocking starkness. Yes there are a good few humorous one liners and yes there are the usual clichés, albeit expressed in fresh ways. The endlessly repeated Lions led by Donkeys quote becomes a quiet reflection by Stephen on General Haig’s leadership qualities.

Wire cutters are issued despite assurances from above that the bombardment has destroyed the barbed wire defences. A soldier hangs from the barb wire, his legs shot off by machine gun fire. Who can avoid such repetitions? They are after all the reality of what happened.

Of particular note were the performances of Max Bowden as the young Private Tipper and musician/folk artist James Findlay whose haunting melodies set the mood from early on in the first act.

In creating darkly lit underground scenes, grim trenches and the delightful Amiens Chateau, set designer Victoria Spearing has triumphed. Scene changes were seamless and the tunnelling galleries appeared truly frightening.

Lighting and sound left little to the imagination. Indeed it was surprising that the rumble of artillery and exploding of underground mines failed to attract the emergency services.

All in all this is a brave adaptation. Sebastian Faulks’s, after all, took 503 pages to tell his story. The stage version of the story has but two hours and ten minutes to highlight the period 1910 – 1918.

Well worth seeing, this production will not disappoint.

Directed and produced by Alastair Whatley, Birdsong plays at HM Theatre Aberdeen until Saturday 14th February.

Tickets from Aberdeen Box Office: 01224 641122

Images: Jack Ladenburg.

Sep 062013
 

A Hollywood star is set to top the bill at an Aberdeen variety show on Wednesday 11 September 2013. The Drummond Varieties will welcome Scott Land, lead puppeteer on Team America: World Police, to Belmont Street’s Cafe Drummond later this month.

Scott LandScott Land will be travelling to the UK in September and will be performing at monthly variety showcase The Drummond Varieties. Having worked on a number of high profile Hollywood films – including Team America: World Police, Forgetting Sarah Marshall, and The Princess Diaries – Scott is one of the world’s most in-demand puppeteers.

Scott said:

“I really love performing in the UK so I can’t wait to get on stage at the Drummond Varieties and show the people of Aberdeen what I have to offer. I’ll be taking some of my favourite marionettes with me, and hope to show the audience something they might only have previously seen on television or in movies.”

Also performing at The Drummond Varieties in September is Aberdeen magic duo Fifth Dimension. Blending magic and humour, Fifth Dimension were the first act from the North East of Scotland to be invited to appear at Hollywood’s prestigious Magic Castle. Expect the unexpected as they perform impossible feats right in front of your very eyes, while making you laugh along the way.

Completing the line-up is top local singer-songwriter Davy Shanks, one of Aberdeen’s most popular musicians, and comedian William Bradshaw, whose slick delivery has seen him grow from strength to strength.

The show will be hosted, as ever, by Aberdonian magician and performer Eoin Smith.

He said:

“We’re moving into our fourth month now, and each month the shows are getting stronger and stronger. I was lucky enough to see Scott Land perform earlier this year and I know the audience is in for a real treat!”

The Drummond Varieties is a monthly showcase of amazing variety and cabaret acts held in Aberdeen city centre. Entrance to the show also includes a delicious meal and the chance to win brilliant prizes. Previous acts include comedian and radio DJ John McRuvie, magician Garry Seagraves and ventriloquist Tiffer Robertson.

The Drummond Varieties takes place in Cafe Drummond, Belmont Street on Wednesday 11 September 2013 and is suitable for over 18s. Doors open at 8pm. Tickets for The Drummond Varieties cost £6 and are available in advance from Cafe Drummond and Cavern Records. Tickets are also available on the door. Entry includes a one-course meal.

For more information, please visit www.facebook.com/thedrummondvarieties

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Aug 232013
 

Dogstar Theatre’s new production, The Baroness,  starring Roberta Taylor and directed by Matthew Zajac, is opening on Stornoway at the end of the month. As part of the Scottish tour the production will be performing at Alford, Findhorn and Gordonstoun School. With thanks to Liz Smith.

Roberta Taylor as Karen Blixen in The Baroness.

Roberta Taylor as Karen Blixen in The Baroness.

Dogstar’s autumn production, the UK premiere of The Baroness by Thor Bjorn Krebs, translated by Kim Dambaek, opens at An Lanntair, Stornoway, on Saturday 31 August following a preview on Friday 30 August.

The tour finishes at the Traverse, Edinburgh, on Saturday 28 September.

Roberta Taylor, one of Britain’s most talented actresses plays The
Baroness, and is joined by Ewan Donald as Thorkild Bjørnvig and Romana  Abercromby as Benedicte Jensen.

The play is directed by Dogstar’s Co-Artistic Director Matthew Zajac with music composed by Aidan O’Rourke.

In 1948, Karen Blixen (Isak Dinesen) the celebrated writer of Out of Africa, was 62 when she met the recently married and successful 29 year young poet and writer Thorkild Bjørnvig. The two shared a powerful and intimate friendship, their pact, which lasted 6 years, before falling apart.

The play charts the course of this relationship and also the relationship of a third character, Benedicte Jensen, to Bjornvig and Blixen.  Benedicte was the wife of Bjornvig’s patron and publisher.

The Baroness premiered to rave reviews at the Folketeatret in Copenhagen in 2011 and was nominated as play of the year in the 2012 Danish Theatre Awards. Full of tension and poetry, with three tremendous acting roles, the play is inspired by anecdotes, letters and books by and about both Blixen and Bjørnvig.

Roberta Taylor is best known for her long-running roles in Eastenders and The Bill.  She is also a best-selling author with her memoir, Too Many Mothers having sold over quarter of a million copies.  Roberta was a leading member of Glasgow Citizens Theatre for 20 years under Giles Havergal, Philip Prowse and Robert David MacDonald.

Aidan O’Rourke, is one of Scotland’s most exciting composers and musicians and a member of the amazing trio LAU, three times winner of the BBC2 Folk Awards Band of the Year. Recently Ewan Donald toured Scotland with Right Lines’ production of Be Silent or Be Killed.

The production has been designed by Catherine Deverell with lighting design by Kate Bonney. Supported by the Hugh Fraser Foundation www.dogstartheatre.co.uk

Listings Information

An Lanntair, Stornoway
Friday 30 & Saturday 31 August 8.00pm
Box Office 01851 708480 www.lanntair.com
Preview Friday 30 8.00pm

Strathpeffer Pavilion
Tuesday 3 September 8.00pm
Tickets WeGotTickets.com/strathpefferpavilion
TicketWeb.co.uk
June’s Card Shop Dingwall & Pavilion 01947 420124 & 0844 771000
www.strathpefferpavilion.org

Macphail Theatre, Mill Street. Ullapool
Wednesday 4 September 7.30pm
Box Office 01854 613336 www.macphailcentre.co.uk

Lyth Arts Centre
Thursday 5 September 8.00pm
Tickets: 01955 641434 www.lytharts.org.uk

Mount Stuart, Isle of Bute
Saturday 7 September 7.30pm
Doors open 7.00pm
Tickets 01700 503877 www.mountstuart.com

Tower Mill, Heart of Hawick
Tuesday 10 September 7.30pm
Box Office 01450 360688 www.heartofhawick.co.uk 

CatStrand, New Galloway
Wednesday 11 September 7.30pm
Box Office 01644 420374 www.catstrand.com 

The Buccleuch Centre, Langholm
Thursday 12 September 7.30pm
Box Office 013873 81196 www.buccleuchcentre.com

Birnam Arts
Friday 13 September 8.00pm
Box Office 01350 727674 www.birnamarts.com

Tullynessle & Forbes Hall by Alford
Saturday 14 September 7.30pm
Tickets: Alford Bistro 019755 63154 www.tullynessieandforbeshall.co.uk

Resolis Memorial Hall
Tuesday 17 September 8.00pm
Tickets 01381 610204 www.resoliscommunityarts.org.uk

Universal Hall, Findhorn
Wednesday 18 September 7.30pm
Tickets: Phoenix Stores 01309 690110 www.wegotickets.com/UniversalHall

Ogstoun Theatre, Gordonstoun School
Thursday 19 June 8.00pm

Eden Court, Inverness
Friday 20 & Saturday 21 September
Box Office 01463 234234 www.eden-court.co.uk

Druimfin, Tobermory, Isle of Mull
Tuesday 24 September 7.30pm
Box Office 01688 302828 www.mulltheatre.com

Craignish Village Hall, Ardfern
Wednesday 25 September 7.30pm
Tickets 01852 500746 www.craignishvillagehall.org.uk

Eastgate Theate, Peebles
Thursday 26 September 7.30pm
Box Office 01721 725777 www.eastgatearts.com

Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh
Friday 27 & Saturday 28 September, 7.30pm
Cambridge Street, Edinburgh EH1 2ED
Box Office 0131 228 1404 www.traverse.co.uk

Aug 152013
 

A new monthly variety show aims to bring old school variety back to Aberdeen. The Drummond Varieties will be held in city centre venue Cafe Drummond, Belmont Street, on Wednesday 21 August 2013.

Now into its third month, The Drummond Varieties sees a diverse range of talent take to the stage every month including magicians, ventriloquists, comedians, dancers, musicians and more.

Throughout the night members of the audience are also treated to a delicious candlelit meal, and are able to compete in an interactive competition for a fantastic prize.

Topping the bill in August is the Pied Pyper Freak Show, a group of trained professionals who will risk life and limb to entertain their audience.

Re-enacting stunts first seen in Victorian side shows, this is a unique act in the North East of Scotland that mixes humour with amazing feats of strength and bravery.

Also appearing is improvisational comedy troupe Wildly Unprepared, who will perform for the first time in Aberdeen since their successful run at the Edinburgh Fringe. Taking cues from the audience, these masters of comedy can turn any suggestion into a startlingly funny sketch.

Completing the line-up are two up-and-coming student acts that are guaranteed to dazzle the crowd. The Aberdeen University Juggling Society will appear to defy gravity with their amazing displays of dexterity, balance and coordination, while comedian Mitch Skilling will have the room howling with laughter at his hilarious take on the world around him.

Each month, The Drummond Varieties is hosted by local magician Eoin Smith ( pictured ). A regular at variety and comedy nights around the city, Eoin will guide the audience through the evening with a little magic and a whole lot of energy.

Eoin said:

“The first two shows have been fantastic, and I think we’ve raised the bar again this month. It’s been great to see so many people coming out to support variety in Aberdeen.

“There’s a lot of talk about variety and cabaret undergoing a revival at the moment, but the truth is that it never really went away. There’s a great variety scene forming in Aberdeen, and I hope that the public really get behind it and help it grow.”

The Drummond Varieties is a monthly showcase of amazing variety and cabaret acts held in Aberdeen city centre. Previous acts include comedian and radio DJ John McRuvie, magician Garry Seagraves and ventriloquist Tiffer Robertson.

The Drummond Varieties takes place in Cafe Drummond, Belmont Street on Wednesday 21st August 2013 and is suitable for over 18s. Doors open at 8pm. Tickets for The Drummond Varieties cost £6 and are available in advance from Cafe Drummond and Cavern Records. Tickets are also available on the door. Entry includes a one-course meal.

For more information, please visit www.facebook.com/thedrummondvarieties

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