logo
#

Latest news with #UstinovStudio

Award-winning play about music and dementia comes to Bath
Award-winning play about music and dementia comes to Bath

Yahoo

time10-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Award-winning play about music and dementia comes to Bath

A PLAY about the power of music and memory is coming to Bath. Matthew Seager's In Other Words will be performed at the Ustinov Studio at the Theatre Royal Bath from Thursday, April 17 to Saturday, April 19. The play, which has been performed around the world, tells the love story of Jane and Arthur, who are connected by Frank Sinatra's voice. The play explores how music can help people with dementia reconnect with their loved ones. Matthew Seager, who plays Arthur, said: "Working on In Other Words as a writer and performer continues to provide the most fulfilling and formative experiences of my career." Sarah Metcalfe, managing director of The Utley Foundation and Music for Dementia, said: "It is a fantastic production - brilliantly written and performed. "It addresses an important topic with accuracy and sensitivity, showing the heartbreak of dementia but also flashes of hope in the power of music and human connection." Tickets are available from the Theatre Royal Bath box office.

Doubt review – Maxine Peake leads a crusade against a priest
Doubt review – Maxine Peake leads a crusade against a priest

The Guardian

time14-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Doubt review – Maxine Peake leads a crusade against a priest

John Patrick Shanley's play first appeared in 2004, the era of known unknowns. His parable about a priest suspected of abuse was, he has said, partly prompted by the search for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq: war justified by unproven conviction. He depicts a 1960s Bronx school where Sister Aloysius (Maxine Peake), implacable school principal, insists that Father Flynn (Ben Daniels) has behaved inappropriately towards Donald, the school's sole Black student – yet she lacks evidence. Peake maintains a beady eye and ramrod straight spine. Her deep, rustbucket voice of judgment is cut with a squeal of contempt. Daniels leans into his twinkle. His sermons sound like a hand extended to the congregation; his vestment gleams a verdant green. Her starch meets his charisma; dogged belief confronts impassioned rebuttal. Shanley sets his play precisely in 1964 – pop culture and protest will soon ignite the US, yet the school appears impervious to change. On Peter McKintosh's inhospitable set, its walls a grim charcoal, only a leafless branch and bare swathe of earth hint at autumn. Lindsay Posner's emphatic production is finely cast, but as the play reaches its pointy confrontations, he has the actors slow down and shout it out. Thumpity argument is effective, but Shanley's play could be more spry and guileful. An earlier scene has greater spark – Flynn slipping into the principal's chair as if by right, a convivial atmosphere suddenly bristling. The Catholic church's cruel mishandling of abuse has only become more evident since Doubt premiered – though we now try to foreground survivors. Shanley doesn't bring Donald on stage (nor does the boy accuse Flynn) – rather, we see his mother (Rachel John, poised and wary) with her own reasons for not joining Sister Aloysius' crusade. Sister James (Holly Godliman, excellent), the young nun who first raises suspicions, loses sleep and peace of mind. Doubt prowls around the mess of human motive. 'Things are in the air and you leave them alone if you can,' declares Donald's mother – but how do you live with the things you'd rather not know? At Ustinov Studio, Bath, until 8 March

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store