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Showing posts from January, 2025

The Gift at Park Theatre

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The first trip back to the theatre in 2025 was to this comedy about friendship, family, obsession and mental health.  A very funny, but intimate three hander in a small space, it can be difficult to hit the right tone to actually make the audience properly laugh and stay believable, but this one got it just right.  Brilliantly written dialogue performed spot on, I really believed in this group of friends/family despite the frantic and overwrought responses that spiral from an unexpected and unwanted ‘gift’. I also loved the way that the excel spreadsheet was given its rightful place as a crucial tool for the obsessive mind. We had front row seats in the corner which meant that we were side on and slightly behind the action but actually it didn’t affect things too much at all, and we had a better view of what was going on behind the sofa… to be honest that really only came in useful once but still…. I laughed a lot; this is funny and with heart, letting us skate lightly across ...

Matthew Bourne's Swan Lake

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I did get out of the house once to do something a bit cultural over the christmas break. I first saw Matthew Bourne's version of this ballet many years ago, although I can't remember when or who with, but I remembered loving it, so it was good to visit again this time on a family New Year outing.  We were in the cheaper seats in the second circle so our view was a largely overhead one, and we couldn't see much of the orchestra, so that was a shame, but overall, Sadlers Wells tickets for £30 with a pretty clear view of the stage isn't a bad deal in my books.  I have to say it wasn't everyone's cup of tea, with a ballet virgin and some confusion over storylines in our party, but I still enjoyed it a lot.  Of course the most obvious difference from the original story and choreography is that the swans are male, powerful and a bit menacing but the story has had to go through quite a few revisions to make sense.   In this version, there is clearly a tragic gay love s...

Chatterbox Film and Television Awards 2024

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Smashing together some of my favourite TV and film  here's a fairly short list of my best of the year.  As always, they are things I have seen this year, rather than when they first appeared.   If you want to see my fuller comments you can follow the links. Best film drama Putting all the different genres together this year, the nominees are: Past Lives: A story about missed love, what might have been and hope.   Understated performances from the two leads as the characters meet at various times over the years Poor things:  This was such an original film with fantastic performances, particularly from Emma Stone, but from all of the supporting cast too.  The set design and costume was fantastic too, and the whole thing was strange in a good way. A Real Pain:   A quietly funny and moving odd couple movie with Jesse Eisenburg and Kieran Culkin as two cousins meet to join an Auschwitz tour and visit the home of their Grandmother in Poland....