Just Between Ourselves – Derby Theatre

Just between ourselves

***

A London Classic theatre production.  LCT have performed for twenty five years, this is their 49th Uk tour and their third Ayckbourn play .  “Just Between Ourselves”  was premiered  in 1976, almost a half century ago and hasn’t been toured professionally for fifteen years.  One of 91 Aykbourn plays, it certainly deserves a dusting down and re-evaluation.

It features  5 birthdays, 2 unhappy marriages and 1 possessive mother as two couples marriages come under the spotlight and the specific glare of   a possessive, domineering mother/mother-in-law, Marjorie.

Connie Walker  as Marjorie dominates ; not only the characters, but the play itself. Her son comments that Scorpios ( Marjorie’s star sign )are secretive, scheming and devious.- a neat character summary as the tale teeters between  tragedy and comedy ,  comedy realised with acute, astute observations on the human condition which are painfully accurate. Tom Richardson (Dennis) is trying to sell a wrecked mini  to Joseph Clowser (Neil) whose wife  Helen Phillips (Pam) is indifferent to all around. Holly Smith ( Vera) is a bigger wreck than the mini. Physically the set by Liz Wright looks a little chaotic yet with lovely touches including  swirly orange and brown garden chairs and a  floral tea set, It could only be  the 1970s. The costuming is gloriously spot on . Voluminous  flapping flares, sensible  plaid skirts and stripey jumpers  abound.

Director Michael Cabot skilfully draws the omnipresent  underlying tensions and hostility to the surface allowing each actor to turn their character inside out. It is 1976, Dennis tinkers in his garage, and over a course of twelve months as he attends to a mechanical breakdown he is oblivious  to wife  his Vera’s impending emotional breakdown. Marjorie hovers in the background, making tea and finding fault while hypochondriac  friend  Neil has planned a birthday surprise for his wife,  Pam, who is less than enthusiastic.

The first half, featuring the men feels ungainly, however when the women enter the fray in act two , the pace accelerates. Gender roles and dynamics have moved on in the past fifty years ,so the liberation the women seek feel a little discordant. The bumbling macho male tropes seem similarly dated, the psychiatric problems awkward, with the misogyny and bullying uneasy laughs. Nonetheless Dennis is enjoyably frenetic in a way that basil Fawlty fans would appreciate and  Helen Phillips as Pam give an alluring pleasing performance.

Poignant, potent, wry and funny this is a worthy revival and runs until   sat 17th May before continuing on nationwide tour.

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Gladiator 11- film review

Gladiator II

Gladiator II 2024

★★★★ Watched 05 May 2025

I am a big sword and sandals fan and loved the first film. This sequel turned out to be both impressive and a disappointment at the same time


It is a lazy reheating of the first film, copying, but not improving upon the original. If you’ve seen the first one, you’ll quickly realize that you’re watching something you’ve already seen. And once something becomes a repetition of something great, it’s almost impossible to recapture that same level of greatness. Mescal, Washington, and the rest of the cast do their best, but this movie relies heavily on nostalgia.Denzel Washington’s portrayal is noteworthy, but his American accent felt somewhat out of place within the context of the film. It occasionally detracted from the immersion, making it harder to connect with his character fully.

For the most part, it repeats the structure of the original story and follows all the clichés typical of sword-and-sandal films: the plot, the betrayal, the arena fights-you name it. The irony is that people who haven’t seen the first one will probably enjoy this movie far more than those who remember the original.


The opening sea battle scene is terrific, the denouement at the close is not.

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Boys From the Blackstuff – Derby Theatre

*****

This drama as a television series made an enormous impact upon me as a young man in my early 20’s. In my memory it stands out as one of the finest social dramas I have ever seen. Originally written in the late 1970’s, but first televised in 1982, it came to encapsulate the despair of the early Thatcher Era. Alan Bleasdale’s original five episodes were just that, episodic and didn’t have a central narrative. James  Graham has taken on the daunting task of adapting it for stage and reimagining it for an audience forty years on.

He has created a visceral tour de force as powerful as anything I have seen at Derby Theatre in the last decade eclipsing even “Brassed off”

The totemic figure of the drama is Yosser Hughes, originally played by the late Bernard Hill on television, now on stage by  Barry Sloane

How do you adapt one of the all time great British TV series of the ‘80s for the ‘20s stage? ‘Very respectfully’, is the answer offered by James Graham’s version.

A reporter once asked Bleasdale, “Is it a problem that you have never written anything as good as “Boys from the Blackstuff”?

His response: “Who Has?”

James Graham is an excellent choice as adaptor. His script is faithful, respectful,  humorous, but kinetic and muscular too.  His success with the  Gareth Southgate drama ‘Dear England’,  demonstrated his own credentials at writing popular drama. Rehashing the iconic  original series  into something coherent and familiar is no easy task

Dramatically the play pivots around the shredded masculinity  and mental breakdown of Hughes. As our male Liverpudlian labourers endeavour to make a few bob on the sly to keep their head above water during a recession which has drowned their hopes and prospects. Hughes’ deranged and desperate catch phrases of  :“Gissa job and  “I can do that” still resonate today in an era when automation and artificial intelligence look set to rob a new generation of the dignity of labour. Barry Sloane as Hughes is magnificent who delivers an exhausting portrayal of a man on, then  over, the edge.

However Hughes now faces a nemesis in  Moss (Jamie Peacock), a young DHSS officer determined to make a name for himself. Chancellor Rachel Reeves will love him.

 Kate Wasserberg’s production is authentic and minimalist with a  glowering stark, industrial-style set from Amy Jane Cook.

What  Wasserberg does incredibly well is to trust the characters. With spellbinding realism, Hughes is the tragic  character  whom Shakespeare would have been pleased to insert into one of his Tragedies. When  Nathan McMullen’s Chrissie, is offered a job which he rejects  for ethical reasons – his obstinate refusal to accept it in the face of his desperate wife’s fury and tears is deeply unsettling in a memorable dramatic highlight eclipse only by the slow motion balletic depiction of the Police raid on Hughes’ house. Mathew Bourne would be impressed.

On the one hand ‘Boys from the Blackstuff’ is a period piece with the workforce facing 1970/s 80s mass unemployment and deindustrialisation. But its relevance is reinvented for 2025  as  the Chinese look to wipe out the Scunthorpe steel works and  Derby’s Rolls Royce awaits the shattering effects of Trump’s tariffs on sales and jobs.   Runs at Derby until sat19th April then continues on nationwide tour. Cancel whatever else you have on and come and see this production.

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Spitfire Girls- Derby Theatre

*****

This is a story with which I was already familiar. I always thought it would make a good drama and  Tilted Wig and MAST productions  have done it proud

It features two female lead roles, itself a rarity, two sisters Dotty and Bett played by Laura Mathews and Katherine Senior opening in  in the “Spitfire” pub in 1959. Betty starts to reminisce.

They had applied to be pilots with the ATA  ( air transport Auxilliary) whose role it was to deliver ( fly) new aircraft to their new home airfields. Simply qualified as pilots, the young women were then tasked with flying whatever they were given, could be a Spitfire, Hurricane, Lysnader, Mosquito , or Lancaster without navigational aids or radios, simply using the lie of the land.

Sarah Beaton’s  simple set enables them to recreate their flying exploits in convincing style. Although it was a serious, responsible role,  of course girls just wanna have fun and there is plenty of that too alongside sibling rivalry, and love, bright red lipstick and very stylish flying jackets. Wardrobe should keep an eye on those!

Director Sean Aydon adeptly enters the drama through the big lens of the well known story of the second world war before zooming in on the micro story of Betty and Dotty. Katherine Senior’s script skilfully presents gender equality as fact, not hectoring politics. Eamon O Dwyers sound is atmospheric, nostalgic, but never intrusive or overly  sentimental. It is also subtly on point. An atmospheric musical interlude borrows from Brian Eno’s “Music for Aiports !Dot evocatively  sings an excerpt from “The Trolley Song”, made famous by  forces favourite Judy Garland in “Meet by in St Louis” in 1944.

The relationship between Dotty and Betty is neatly developed, yet it also explores the sheer joy and exhilaration of the freedom of flying. Stephen Moynihan succeeds in keeping a small cast  visually fluid around the stage. Incredibly Peter Small’s lighting is searchlight free!

The social history of the time is remarkable. Around a million British men died in World War 1.  So for World War Two only twenty years later, physical manpower was reduced, an entire  tranche of men who would have been experienced, skilled  workers, managers and husbands did not exist , and there was work which needed to be done. Betty and Dot’s father laments the absence of help on the farm precipitated by their absence flying.

 I well remember in the 1960s seeing my Aunty Joan’s fingers stained yellow from cordite while   working in an ammunition factory. How they coped with being shunted out of work to allow the men to return and work I do not know.

Bett and her sister, Dot  join the ATA at the same time, much to the ire of their father. We follow their exploits in love and war, all remembered by the pair many years later, on the eve of 1960 in the Spitfire pub in which the play opens. Zany Dot embodies the can- do British bulldog , devil -may -care, spirit,

While all five players are excellent, the two sisters are  the key characters.. Dot shines the brightest. Dot is a fun, can-do girl who can handle anything almost to the point of recklessness. She draws everyone into her world, including her older, more serious sister.

 Jack Hulland plays Frank, the amiable  pub drunk,  pestering  Bett to serve him another drink. Samuel Tracey plays Jimmy, who captures the romantic interest of both women who is a lightning rod for the seismic shift in gender mores. Kirsty Cox plays  a kleptomaniac who would wreak havoc at a Primark today.

The show is  a tight 2 hours 10 minutes including interval , inevitably the second half , after  the women are trained, is pacier than the first. Senior as Dot is sensational. She has written the script, she sings, she dances, she captivates and gets to wear the sassy red dress Spitfire Girls soars until Saturday 12th April at Derby then leaves for a nationwide tour.

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Poems 2025

Vindicated

Quite quite still, not a sound

No bother, no trouble

Laying cold on the ground

The body angular, inert unfound

Soft wind blows  slowly past the rubble

Quite quite still, not a sound

A transgression taxed pound  for pound

Paid  for on the nail, not in the round

Laying cold on the ground

Pride vanquished. Hubris downed

Crowd gathered, awkward huddle

Quite quite still not a sound

Justice had at last been crowned

Amidst that fraught unequal struggle

laying cold on the ground

 Vindication has been found

Not deferred but at the double;

Quite quite still not a sound

Laying cold on the ground

 Gurindam- MalAY

Do not invade Greenland that is unwise

Always talk, persuade don’t prise

The same is true of the Panama canal

Never treat a treaty as trite, or even banal

And as for Canada. It realy is quite big

A maple tree far larger than a fig

Whisper don’t trumpet for words linger longer

The message clearer, brighter and stronger

Poetry isnt

    poetry isn’t painting

            poetry isn’t music …

            nor is poetry psychotherapy

          Nor religion

            yet each might learn

            from each other            

            but not become the other

Dangerous Poems

A list poem of trump’s banned words

Trumps banned word List

abortion           ideology

accessible      immigrants

accessibility   implicit bias

activism           implicit biases

activists           inclusion

advocacy         inclusive

advocate          inclusive leadership

advocates       inclusiveness

affirming care inclusivity

all-inclusive    Increase diversity

allyship             increase the diversity

anti-racism     indigenous community/ people

antiracist         inequalities

assigned at birth         inequality

assigned female at birth        inequitable

assigned male at birth            inequities

at risk  injustice

autism institutional

barrier intersectional

barriers             intersectionality

belong intersex

bias      issues concerning pending legislation

biased key groups

Biased toward              key people

biases key populations

Biases towards            Latinx

biologically female    LGBT

biologically male        LGBTQ

bipoc   male dominated

Black   marginalize

black and latinx           marginalized

breastfeed + people  marijuana

breastfeed + person  measles

Cancer Moonshot      men who have sex with men

chestfeed + people    mental health

chestfeed + person    minorities

clean energy  minority

climate crisis minority serving institution

climate science          most risk

commercial sex worker          msm

community     multicultural

community diversity Mx

community equity      MSI

confirmation bias       Native American

continuum      NCI budget

Covid-19          non-binary

cultural competence nonbinary

cultural differences   obesity

cultural heritage         opioids

Cultural relevance     oppression

cultural sensitivity     oppressive

culturally appropriate             orientation

culturally responsive peanut allergies

definition         people + uterus

DEI       people-centered care

DEIA     person-centered

DEIAB  person-centered care

DEIJ      polarization

dietary guidelines/ultraprocessed foods     political

disabilities      pollution

disability          pregnant people

disabled           pregnant person

discriminated pregnant persons

discrimination             prejudice

discriminatory             privilege

discussion of federal policies            privileges

disparity           promote

diverse              promote diversity

diverse backgrounds promoting diversity

diverse communities              pronoun

diverse community    pronouns

diverse group prostitute

diverse groups             race

diversified       race and ethnicity

diversify           racial

diversifying     racial diversity

diversity           racial identity

diversity and inclusion            racial inequality

diversity/equity efforts            racial justice

EEJ        racially

EJ          racism

entitlement     science-based

equality            segregation

equitable         self-assessed

equitableness              sense of belonging

equity  sex

elderly sexual preferences

enhance the diversity             sexuality

enhancing diversity   social justice

environmental justice             socio cultural

environmental quality             sociocultural

equal opportunity       socio economic

equality            socioeconomic status

equitable         special populations

equitableness              stem cell or fetal tissue research

equity  stereotype

ethnicity           stereotypes

evidence-based          systemic

excluded          they/them

exclusion         topics of federal investigations

expression      topics that have received recent attention from Congress

female topics that have received widespread or critical media attention

females            trans

feminism         transgender

fetus    transexual

fluoride             trauma

fostering inclusivity   traumatic

GBV     tribal

gay       unconscious bias

gender under appreciated

gender based underprivileged

gender based violence           under represented

gender diversity          underrepresentation

gender identity            underrepresented

gender ideology           underserved

gender-affirming care             under served

genders            understudied

Gulf of Mexico              undervalued

H5N1/bird flu vaccines

hate     victim

hate speech   victims

health disparity           vulnerable

health equity  vulnerable populations

hispanic           woman

hispanic minority        women

historically      women and underrepresented

identity       

     Southampton

The  brass band played

Streamers cascaded

Klaxons blared

We lined the rails overlooking the quay

New York far off,

Distant

Rule Britannia,

 A life on the ocean wave

The British grenadiers ,and ,as we cast off

God save the queen

White gloved stewards fussed

The horn blasted  farewell from the funnels

As we headed for a new life

And Cowes slipped sliding  away

Our bows submerged under grey  green tumult

Until Brooklyn bridge framed a horizon broken by giant buildings scratching at the skies

And Liberty beckoned

Boing

Zeberdee liked to spring in

Mais, Pourquoi tout le monde parle-t-il français ? he asked

Parce que nous sommes en France. Brian replied

Dylan was away, on tour

He was always on tour

He looked at Dougal whose hair needed brushing

He remined him of Boris Johnson, but much grumpier

Florence smiled like Rachel Reeves smiles when she days she isn’t going to put up taxes

Brian held  a piece of  paper

Keir Starmer had asked him to put together  a plan to stop boat people

Brian hadn’t thought about it.

 His home was on his back ,  

Why doesn’t everyone do that he thought?

Ermintrude thought that we should be kinder to everyone

Florence agreed

Zeberdee bounced up high again

It was then that he noticed it

Someone had painted a red cross on the Magic Roundabout

Florence looked at it from a ladder

“Some people are so silly” she said

Everyone nodded their heads’

Apart from Dylan

– because he wasn’t there

Fashion

For ev’ry season

Different colours, shapes,  styles

Omnipresent change

Bars

Thirst quenching relief

Manmade spring helps you forget

Until the next time

Poems Charlie

Drifting through next doors open bedroom window

Summer 1972

Wafting on an indifferent breeze

The sound of another world

Transported

I knocked on their door

“David Bowie

Moonage daydream- the rise and fall of Ziggy stardust and the spiders from mars

Had landed

I still have the album

Fjords brochure

Towering cliffs

Ebbing tide

Part of something much larger

Helpless, overwhelmed

I think I will like it here

Advice to a novice poet

Do not conform

Do not listen

Do not polish words

Until they glisten

Make them count

Make them shine

Make sure they are your words

And not mine.

Morecambe 1

Wind lashed

The bay unfolds

bright Light palette Splashed by God

Eric watches jauntily, his coat

Wrapped tight

Morecambe 2

Vista

of mud and sea

reaching out far beyond

Erics’ jacket wrapped round tightly

Protects

Ode to the Ambiguous Ten

I run a race, then run a meeting,

I run out of patience—no retreating.

 I set the stage with props and flair,

Set my mind, fetch your twin set after your hair.

I put a hat upon your head,

 Put the kettle on, or put your fears to bed.

 I go for gold, then go bananas,

 Go with the flow, its all quite harmless.

I take a hint, I take the wheel, I take offence,

 then take a meal. I stand my ground, or stand corrected,

 watch from the stands while comfortably seated

I get a gift, or get the sack, I get the picture, then get back on track.

 I turn the tide, I turn a frown- at a comic turn

 Turn the tables,  then  turn around.

I fall in love, then fall from grace, fall asleep, or fall  flat on my face.

 I break a vow, then break for lunch,

Or brake my speeding on just a hunch

Ten words, ten follies—English, you   beguile

whispered in riddles same words, different style

Sea Swimming

( after Jan)

You said  id feel amazing

You said id feel refreshed

Bt its been twelve hours now

I still cant feel my toes

Ive only just caught my breath

Im eating all the biscuits

Im drinking all the tea

Ive added a shot of brandy

Anything to make me feel

Like the time

Before the sea

I jumped in feet first, no messing

I committed heart, body and soul

But you nevertold me

That to feel so good

Myrmidons

You have to get this cold

The flaneur

What if?

Farewell

Waving goodbye he left his head on the park bench

Strode purposefully into the lake

He had a choice of what to carry

Obsidian black

Pink parasol ( with lace frill)

Dumbo print with flappy ears

Not all umbrellas are the  same

Would it be sunny?

Would it rain?

would they float?

Would he float?

Who knows?

The Park

Out in the park two children are digging

Two girls,Their long hair wind tossed, and free

Close by, a bulldozer, scores the earth

Its driver bare chested, his arms have naval tattoos

Spades competing with a large yellow bucket

Both searching for their prize

Above, vultures circle in mazy motion

Waiting to swoop for their prey

On whomsoever succeeds

First

Umbrella

Sleek, firm, erect

Flares at the end

Sometime useless

But handy when it is wet

Growing when it needs to

As fingers grip the shaft

Then put away

Until the next time

Left Out

I was left out

In a polished antique stand

On the porch

Just in case

Of too much sun

Or too much rain

Or too much snow

I was left out

British Weather

It had stopped, canopy collapsed

Drippy drops all that remained

Of the onslaught

fabric clip fastened

Dry once more

It began

Canopy opened

Dousing drops draining

Fabric clip unclasped

Against the onslaught

It had stopped, canopy collapsed

Drippy drops all that remained

Of the onslaught

fabric clip fastened

Dry once more

Paper

Waxed and lacquered

Ladies’ accessory

Until Jonas Hanway changed that

For men

Jonas Hanway

China

Invented them

Persian women loved them

But Hanway placed everyone in

The shade

The sea.

turns its dark pages

Time

Helen Mort

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‘Time is inferred from place.’

Canada, late October

Helen Mort

Oct 30

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I am in Banff, Alberta, reading Leanne Betasamosake Simpson’s ‘Theory of Water’. Travel has made a mockery of the clock. I wake up at 1am and 2am and look out of the window for snow and then I pick up the book again. I read:

“I don’t think I understand a clear division between time and space; rather I understand time as a function of the networks created by space. The passage of time within Nishnnaabeg thought is not linear, and it comes from non-living systems that make up the land. Time is inferred from place.”

Does time come from the light over Sacred Buffalo mountain? It feels inevitable when I run there at sunrise: the arrival of our sense of day itself. Apricot sun, eager. A fox loping off under tree cover.

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We don’t know what to do with the nights, sometimes. They are ungainly cardigans our mothers always told us we would grow into.

The mountains don’t fear the dark. Huge densities. Huge objects of certain desire. I know they’re there, even with the blind pulled down.

Time is inferred from place. A room is a small, built space. A geographical stanza. So many hours under sheets and blankets, stirring and waiting for the acceptable moment to be awake, as if anyone was in charge. As if anyone cares what we do.

Leanne Betasamosake Simpson:

“I’m thinking about this in Denendeh in June, where the sun is seemingly always out, high in the sky. Darkness comes for a few hours after midnight, more muted daylight than actual darkness. This contrasts with the dark of December and January, when the sun only appears for a few hours each day.”

Muted daylight – yes. A turning of the dimmer switch. Why can’t I shake off metaphors that centre the human, make hapless gods of us all?

I am thinking of the volume control on my parents’ record player in our living room in Chesterfield, the great wheel of it, the power it represented. In my memory, the days were twice as long and I was very close to the grey-and-purple patterned carpet. Infant time. Time in the eye of a child. I never dared to touch the volume dial.

“Cyclical time comes from land. Linear time is a European construct that overlays cyclical time – a mechanism to organise the world in a homogenous way to facilitate, of course, capitalism.”

Does time pass slower back in Sheffield? Moorland time. Heather time. Post-industrial time. When you climb out of the city and look down, are you out of time itself? Does an aeroplane climb above it? Does a whale dive below?

Betasamosake Simpson:

“Time is a mapping of cycles. A mapping of liminal space. I think of a child in the time before colonisation, in the darkness of December, measuring light on the snow with a stick and sinew…”

There will come a point – maybe this week, maybe next – when the first snows will arrive in Banff in earnest, bringing greater silence. Flurried hours, all walks made indefinite. I’m waiting for it, as I am always greedily waiting for something. I’ll walk down to the bridge above town and see the same man I always see on a bench there, white beard and patched up coat, fisherman’s beanie, not quite sitting but not quite lying down either. He’ll ask me if I saw what happened in the sky last night and I’ll say no and he’ll whistle, low, under his breath and shake his head.

Time in the gaps between elk antlers (don’t get too close!)

Time needled by the tips of trees.

Time bullied along by the beautiful surge of the Bow river.

Tanka#1

Now that you have gone

The ground no longer shows my

Imprint underfoot

Too much for the earth to bear

 It lies frozen forever

A First day back at school

It was Harry’s  first day back

At his new school

How did it go?

I asked

“Fine”

 came the reply

A bored sigh accompanying this  concise verbosity

He said fine in the insouciant,

 disinterested manner

Of a Foreign Secretary

 Being given  an Middle east

And for once, I experienced an emotion I rarely feel

Jealousy.

I want a  stiff shirt that will soften with dozens of washes

I want to believe that nothing matters because today is just another day

I want a new locker, new loos, new smells

I don’t want to know where everything is

I want to have to look for it.

I want  squeaky new shoes, and bright white  new trainers ( Nike Airs obviously)

I want to throw out the old, the worn out, scuffed and scruffy, the too tights ,  into a charity bag

( for someone else to take to the shop)

I want a new haircut that doesn’t reveal more grey

I want a new desk with a different view

I want new friends

With my enemies moved out somewhere else

I don’t want my next new friends to be in a care home

Or whist drive

Or poetry club, or pub ( heaven forbid)

I want a new pencil case that I can stick stickers on

 I want a new sports bag with equipment for

Sports I haven’t even tried yet

I want new people to tell about my summer holidays

Not post about it on facebook to people who don’t care how I fare,

I want to put behind me all the stupid things I did and said before

I want to be better, and different

And I want that chance every year

I want to learn new subjects

Russian,compter programming and economics

Well maybe not economics, anyone can make a mess of that, cant they Liz?

And I want fresh new, unused exercise books, and a new pen

And a pack of coloured pencils

And a new Coat peg that I can write my name on

Not, Gary, I’m bored with that, Sparky perhaps, maybe it will catch on?

I want butterflies in my tummy

And less tummy

It simply isn’t fair that when you are young you get a fresh start every year

Then when you are an adult get stuck with the same timetable

I want a new timetable, while I am still able

But without the homework

L’horloge Parlante va disparaitre  le 1er Julliet vingt vingt deux

France is not a place to feel rushed

There is always time

For a glass of fine wine.

For a baguette

For moules mariniere

A fine sancerre

A place where time runs amock

No need for a hovering speaking clock

But no more that mechanical spoken chant

C’est l’heure de la fin pour l’horloge parlante

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Do I Love You?- Derby Theatre

Do I Love You? Derby theatre

****

Northern Soul  was a regionalised phenomena. Although a huge music fan myself , it barely touched the South where I lived as a teenager. In the Midlands and North it was massive. The Catacombs club Wolverhampton, The  Wigan Casino , Blackpool Mecca, the twisted Wheel Manchester and Golden Torch Stoke were all catalysts and platforms for a truly underground music movement.

Theatre has been a very good crucible for promoting popular music via the Musical. It has been less sure footed  in producing drama about  music. Prolific playwright and social anthropologist John Godber aims to put that right in this drama about the Northern Soul Scene and its social impact incorporating dance, song and drama.

This is Northern Soul for a new generation, but  is this England 1975 or 2025? The bins are not being emptied, economic cuts are everywhere and the prospects for young people seem to be diminishing every day. Here the three graduates are flipping burgers.

Playwright John Godber reprises a social narrative formula in which the audience is often addressed directly which he cultivated so successfully with  both “Bouncers” and “Teechers” (sic). Occasionally the delivery is more of shared interrupted monologues than straight speech.

The main protagonists are three twentysomethings, Sally, Nat and Kyle, from Hull  who share a  love for Northern Soul  nurtured at  at an all-nighter in Cleethorpes not deterred by the pensionable age of many of the audience .They resolve  to learn the dances so they can compete at the blue ribband of Northern Soul events – the Weekender at Blackpool’s Tower Ballroom. It echoes  the Stigwood/ Travolta dance masterpiece “Saturday Night Fever”, apart from being set in Cleethorpes and Blackpool England  rather than New York and Studio 54, USA.

Godber directs brilliantly, The three actors create  a busy fast-food restaurant  crowded buses, and bustling  night clubs .  Martha Godber (, Chloe McDonald and Emilio Encinoso-Gil are all on stage throughout the performance, taking on further  characters, and  seemingly always dancing – keeping the play moving briskly and with brio. Elizabeth Godder  produces.

All of this is underpinned by a  blistering soundtrack which I suspect will have the audience racing to Spotify afterwards as they are introduced to new musical gems. The script is light, poignant, wistful and humorous as well as being  nostalgic for the predominantly pensioner audience with all our yesterdays revisited.

But there was one big frustration. The soundtrack was set at a low volume, for an audience with deteriorating hearing ( too many late night gigs) it should have been louder to capitalise on the good vibes. Furthermore, I presume to save on royalties, only excerpts were played. The audience was often singing along and yearning for the tracks to continue. This frustration was exacerbated at the end when the finale demanded a singalong/ dance-along, and instead the  actors walked off stage!

Nonetheless, a well written, accurate and hugely satisfying glimpse into Northern Soul which continues until  29th April and then departs on nationwide tour.

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Aladdin Sane Tribute band – Yarmageddon 6/3/25

Aladdin Sane

In the absence of the great man himself we are left with a burgeoning and constantly growing roster of tribute acts. I make appoint of trying to see them all on the basis that at least I know that I will like the music!

Last weekend was the famous “Yarmageddon”, four days of live, original and tribute bands at a Great Yarmouth holiday camp. Four days, fifty bands, no sleep. The Thursday was Glam Night with Aladdin Sane providing the Glam. I had not seen them before so was excited at the prospect of new material.

Aladdin Sane are the stage vehicle for Paul Henderson as David, erstwhile Mackem, but now from Peterborough. They played with a lead guitarist, bass, drums and keyboards, Paul adding on guitar parts where needed.

The good news for them was a captive 2500 audience, a good opening act, and four hours drinking time elapsed. However like most of the weekend acts they were allotted a strict hour set to play to an audience with widely diverse musical tastes, so  not as easy as a theatre of fans who had paid to see them only. Consequently the set list comprised mainly his best known hits with  understandably few surprises.

“Boys keep Swinging”  was a great opener and won the crowd over from the start. Paul was wearing an Earthling Era Union Jack frock coat and physically looked like 80’s Bowie with a “Serious Moonlight” hairdo. “  Starman” was a wise choice, usurping Space oddity in th sing a long stakes, and the rockers lapped up “Jean Genie” , “Moonage Daydream” and “Ziggy”. However it was a barnstorming “Suffragette City” finale which won the day for them. What a great song-  sung and performed with such enthusiasm.

A league table of Bowie tributes is an invidious task. Not least because the bar is being pushed ever higher for tribute shows. Abbas Voyage has changed what is possible as has the tactic of having several leads to cope with different eras as the Cher show so successfully did.

Suffice to say that Aladdin Sane did not disappoint either casual music fans or the Bowie cognoscenti

j

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Bridget Jones- Mad about the boy

*

Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy

Schmaltzy, sentimental lightweight reheating of the original  idea , fourth instalment in the series totalling over eight hours, including the 125 minute running time for this. They have run out of things to say about her.

This time, we meet Bridget as a widow and single mother, trying to navigate a new chapter of her life while raising her children. We  explores grief, resilience, and on line dating.

Renée Zellweger shines once again,  as Renee Zellweger . It doesn’t matter whether you’ve been a fan since the beginning or are just meeting her now, “Mad About the Boy”  is stretched to breaking point to fill two hours.

There are three laugh out loud set pieces, one when she is  stuck tree climbing up a tree with  her children, second when sexual health leaflets, innocently collected  cascade out of her tote bag in front of her children’s school teacher, and thirdly when her toy boy love interest dives into a swimming pool at a party to save    a party goers drowning pet dog.

The most amazing part of the film is love interest school teacher to her children who is seemingly the only member of staff at the school.. Mr Walliker is the science teacher, but he also does gate duty alone every morning, runs the Job Day, runs the Outward Bound trip with only the help of parents, and single-handedly runs the music concert while accompanying on piano.

Trite, formulaic and lazy, I was checking  my watch for much of the time mischievously wishing that the dog had drowned

Avoid

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Bat out of Hell Musical – Alexandra theatre, Birmingham, 10/2/25

Bat out of hell- Alexandra Theatre

***

This is music, an album, an era, which oozes nostalgia for me. I bought the album on release and saw ,Meat loaf perform the album live on the “bat”  tour

Raven Will do anything for love- and will do that!

Bat Out of Hell was the debut studio album by American rock singer Meat Loaf and composer Jim Steinman. The album was developed from the musical Neverland, a futuristic rock version of Peter Pan which Steinman wrote for a workshop in 1974. It was recorded during 1975–1976 , was produced by Todd Rundgren, and was released in October 1977 . The album featured Max Weinberg on drums and Roy Bittan on piano from Bruce Springsteen’s E street band. These details matter.

Springsteen, Rundgren and Steinman used to go together to see the opera in New York laying influences and foundations for work from all of them. When Springsteen wrote in Jungleland” “There’s an opera out on the Turnpike, there’s a ballet being fought out in the valley we are hearing the seed corn for “Bat out of hell”.

Anyone who saw the last tour, some three years ago is in for a surprise, many of the original cast remain but the production has been significantly revamped. The cast use hand held mics resulting in several “pass the parcel” moments and a hand held cameraman relays pictures onto two overhead screens.  The combination of the hand held mics and camera work mean that principals are sometimes performing with their backs to the audience. Musical, concert or arena show? You decide

It seems that Mick Lynch is now advising Equity as an overcrowded stage groans with physically accommodating the cast in one of the worst cases of overmanning I have ever seen on a professional stage.

The story? Boy and girl fall in love, Girls father disapproves, love conquers all- but does it? On the album, there is no linear narrative, so the director, Allison Coyne, can do what she wants ,however onstage the story is disjointed and chaotic, the choreography juvenile, apparently taking abandoned dance routines for an “S Club Seven” show, and not changing them much.

The visuals are an amalgam of Mad Max, Bowie’s Hunger City and “We will rock you”.

Onstage a dystopian future unfolds together with an underclass,“The Lost”,  down trodden by the dictator Falco, who never bursts into, “Rock me Amadeus”.

Katie Tonkinson is lithesome and engaging as  Falco’s daughter Raven. Glen Adamson plays an impish rebel leader Strat, physically bearing a remarkable resemblance to the late Rocker ,Ronnie James Dio.  Adamson’s vocals are superb but he cannot replicate the physical presence that Meat Loaf had  and is too fit and handsome to be able to emulate Meat Loaf’s lewdness.

Director Coyne, reimagines, ruins and emasculates, ” Paradise by the dashboard light”, by using the middle aged Falco and Sloane as the protagonists. In the notorious Old grey Whistle test video performance Karla DeVito is a slight 25 year old, physically and sexually overwhelmed and overpowered by Meat Loaf in a raunchy, depraved spectacle too much for the “Me Too” times of today. sex featuring old people is not rock n roll.

A live band playing from an elevated platform give the music raw power and immediacy particularly the guitar and piano who deserved  back -screen shots which they did not receive.

As Ravens’ mother  and father in their roles as Falco and Sloane,  Rob Fowler and Sharon Sexton excel.  Sexton is the star of the show, sexy in her pencil skirts and waist high side split dress, her vocals are outstanding, particularly on, “what part of my body hurts the most” with Falco, her acting the consistent highlight of the show. Carla Bertran, as Tink(erbell) is a delight

A pretty much full opening house on a bitterly cold and wet February evening were well rewarded for their commitment and gave the company a deserved standing ovation at the end. Those that had come to see Meat Loaf and Jim Steinman’s greatest hits had their fill, and the eponymous song twice!

Gary Longden

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A Complete Unknown

I approached this film with considerable trepidation. Most Rock bio pics are rubbish and shameless exercises in cashing in on the artist’s fame.

But while most rock and pop stars forge a living out of image and artifice, Dylan has always been an enigma, the polar opposite. He doesn’t care whether you buy his reords or go to his concerts because he is going to do them anyway, You have to be pretty good to get away with that- Dylan is.

Notoriously private, taciturn and opaque, beyond his music we know very little about the man himself. Folk rock trailblazer, motorbike accident, and that is about it. That is a huge advantage for the actor playing Dylan and the film itself, there is no detailed narrative to follow – they can make it up as they go along. Furthermore most of his contemporaneous artists are dead save Joan Baez, who receives  gentle treatment, Ele Fanning artist sylvie Russo

In order for this work, Timothee had to inhabit  Dylan, otherwise it would have been  a documentary. Fortunately he is up to the task. The production is surprisingly big budget  with the period sets lavish and the recreation of the Newport Folk festival convincing. Crucially the music is faithfully reproduced too

Mania Barbaro  is superb as Joan Baez,  and Johnny Cash  as an artist receives a cameo too. Edward Norton gives an historically vital portrayal of Pete Seeger.Tom Mangold and Jay Cock share the writing credits and do a formidable job. Cocks screenwriting credentials are impeccable As a screenwriter, he is notable for his collaborations with director Martin Scorsese, particularly The Age of Innocence and Gangs of New York.The is also a writer for Rolling Stone bible of American Music. Cocks is everywhere here. Not only has he fashioned a compelling narrative, but it is backed up by some great reproductions of Dylans music too.

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