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I've rarely seen a happier audience: Grange Festival's Die Fledermaus reviewed

I've rarely seen a happier audience: Grange Festival's Die Fledermaus reviewed

Spectator25-06-2025
'So suburban!' That's Prince Orlofsky's catchphrase in the Grange Festival's new production of Die Fledermaus, and he gets a lot of wear out of it. You couldn't really describe the Grange Festival as suburban – it's hard to imagine a corner of the Home Counties that's more remote from urban civilisation. No, if the vibe at Garsington is plutocratic, and West Horsley is pure Stockbroker Belt, the Grange Festival is definitely county, in a comfy, faded, Aga-and-chintz sort of way. The picnic takes precedence over the opera, and you'll see evening wear that was new around the time that Alan Coren retired from Punch.
Anyway, this lively Die Fledermaus knows its public and wants them to enjoy themselves. It's directed by Paul Curran, whose 2023 production of The Queen of Spades was the best thing I've ever seen at the Grange, and it's set in a generic mid-20th century. The promotional blurb talks about the 1920s but you could have fooled me, unless you count Ida's Josephine Baker-ish outfit in the Act Two party. Even there, though, the style is more Rocky Horror Show: men in suspenders, flashing lights and lots of cosy, old-school British naughtiness. I've rarely seen a happier audience; they were positively bubbling on the way out.
Paul Daniel conducts the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, and he doesn't hang around. No mannered imitation of Viennese style here, just warm colours, buoyant dance rhythms and a constant, energising swing. The singers didn't always feel entirely on the same page, but that might have been first-night awkwardness. Any Fledermaus that casts Ellie Laugharne (a mockney Adele, with diamond-tipped high notes), Ben McAteer (enjoyably dark-edged in every sense as Falke) and Darren Jeffery as a larger-than-life Frank, is never going to sound too shabby – even if the supporting characters did rather overshadow the more reserved central pairing of Sylvia Schwartz (Rosalinde) and Andrew Hamilton (a very straitlaced Eisenstein).
Still, it'd be churlish to grumble when you've got an Orlofsky as ripe as Claudia Huckle, or (as Alfred) a tenor as sunny as Trystan Llyr Griffiths. The jailer Frosch, whose Act Three monologue can scupper or save a Fledermaus, has become Frau Frosch – a pantomime dame played by Myra DuBois, who got one of the biggest laughs of the evening by turning a spotlight on the post-supper Grange audience ('The devil wears Bonmarché'). You need a genuinely gifted comedian in this role, and the Grange clearly has one. Odd, then, that certain gags got run into the ground, and even DuBois seemed momentarily baffled by a passing reference to El Salvador – not the first occasion that the English text emitted a musty aroma of 1980s sitcom.
Sure enough, it turns out that they're using a translation by John Mortimer. Gloriously on-brand for the Grange, of course, but it's a pity that they couldn't have given the gig to one of the many excellent living opera translators who might have valued the work. And who might, perhaps, have avoided the grisly pile-up of failed rhymes, mis-stressed syllables and rhythmic distortions that dear old Rumpole apparently thought would pass muster as singable lyrics. I'm being pedantic, no doubt. Operetta is fluff and the words are disposable, right? This is the UK's only major production of one of Johann Strauss's stage works in this, his bicentenary year. Strauss aimed to entertain, and for this crowd, in this place, this Fledermaus does precisely that.
At Garsington, Ruth Knight's staging of Handel's Rodelinda divides the stage into two levels, and even labels some of the characters to help you get a grip on the plot. It works surprisingly well, though there are some bizarre choices of imagery. A royal wedding scene occurs in a minimalist restaurant: quivering slabs of pig lie on shiny counters, while a pervy-looking chef sharpens his cleaver. As is often the way at Garsington, things look a lot better after the interval, when darkness has set in and lighting effects become a serious possibility. The final scenes made wonderful play with deep shadow and flickering candles.
There's no chorus in this opera, but Knight deploys a squad of sword-wielding, black-robed ninja dancers, who swirl menacingly around the main characters. From an impressive cast, Lucy Crowe stands out in the title role, her firm, glowing voice drooping with melancholy and making a sympathetic counterpart for Tim Mead's equally expressive Bertarido. As the usurper Grimoaldo, Ed Lyon grappled nobly with of one of Handel's typically ungrateful tenor roles, before – at the very last – opening out in pure, poignant humanity (this is a relatively rare Handel opera where the villain's final redemption is more than mere narrative convention). Peter Whelan conducted the English Concert, and with their crunchy collective attack and smoky, sighing flutes, they were as colourful and as committed as anything on stage.
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Rocky Horror Show cast get ready to Time Warp in Belfast
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Why has the world turned on the Waltz King?
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time23-07-2025

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Why has the world turned on the Waltz King?

On 17 June 1872, Johann Strauss II conducted the biggest concert of his life. The city was Boston, USA, and the promoters provided Strauss with an orchestra and a chorus numbering more than 20,000. One hundred assistant conductors were placed at his disposal, and a cannon shot cued The Blue Danube – the only way of silencing the expectant crowds. Estimates vary, but the audience was reckoned to number between 50,000 and 100,000; in all, there must have been a minimum of 70,000 people present. This month's Oasis reunion only played to 80,000. The result, in an age before modern amplification, was much as you might expect. 'A fearful racket that I shall never forget as long as I live,' was Strauss's own description. Still, the point stands. Johann Strauss II was famous; very famous. A Europe-wide newspaper poll, conducted in 1890, named Strauss as the third most popular individual in Europe – pipped to the top slot only by Queen Victoria and (in second place) Otto von Bismarck. Strauss died in 1899, before the era of recorded music, but within his lifetime sheet music for The Blue Danube sold upwards of one million copies. That's platinum disc territory, and in the 21st century, the phenomenon endures. The perma-tanned Dutch violinist André Rieu, whose classical pops orchestra is named after Strauss, has picked up some 500 platinum discs while his live shows – built around Strauss's music – play across the world to stadium-size audiences. His 2018 tour outgrossed Elton John, globally. Again, this is old news. I'm not here to tell you that Johann Strauss's waltzes, polkas and operetta hits were the pop music of their day: that people loved them, and continue to love them, is a matter of record. So why – in 2025, the 200th anniversary of his birth – is there a Strauss-shaped hole in the programmes of our major orchestras and opera companies? 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25 of the best photos bringing the swinging 60s back to life
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Scotsman

time18-07-2025

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But while they are painted as the cool, carefree days when the world shook off its shackles and life burst into technicolour, that's not how everyone experienced them. The cultural revolution didn't touch all corners of the UK, where many families were still experiencing great hardship and unable to afford the new fashions, sounds and technological breakthroughs the decade offered. These photos show life as it really was back then in the UK for ordinary people. They capture the excitement of the 60s, from the dance halls to the catwalk, but they also depict the practical realities of everyday life, from the supermarket aisles to the factory floor. If you were around in the 1960s, you will remember things like collecting Green Shield stamps in the shops, getting free school milk and enjoying donkey rides and Punch and Judy shows at the beach. You'll also recall the political demonstrations of the day, as women fought for equal pay, and huge crowds demanded an end to apartheid. And you'll likely remember the events which caught the public imagination, like Pickles the dog sniffing out the stolen World Cup trophy. TV rentals, the launch of Channel 2, a huge free Rolling Stones concert and the killer fog which descended are among the other evocative images in this retro photo gallery which together help capture the spirit of the 60s. What are your abiding memories of the 1960s? Let us know in the comments section. 1 . Green Shield stamps A shop assistant prepares to hand a sheet of Green Shield stamps to a customer at a newly opened supermarket in September 1960 | Getty Images Photo: Evening Standard/Hulton Archive Photo Sales 2 . Let's twist again A couple doing the twist at a ballroom in January 1962 | Getty Images Photo: Peter Hall/Keystone Features Photo Sales 3 . Free milk Comprehensive school pupils queue up for their free milk | Getty Images Photo: Evening Standard Photo Sales 4 . Disposable fashion English model Twiggy wearing Bagatel autumn fashions, including this plastic disposable mini-dress, in May 1966 | Getty Images Photo: Evening Standard/Hulton Archive Photo Sales

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