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16th-19th May 2007 (Weds - Sat) @ 7.30pm
Una Voce Opera Company is performing
Donizetti's The Daughter of the Regiment
Southport Arts Centre, Lord Street, Southport, PR8 1DB.
A Comic Opera in Two Acts, sung in English.
We have a super Cast, including Nick Hardy, Samantha Chambers, Sioned Ellis and Radio Legend Johnny Kennedy as ‘Hortensius’.
The Opera is set in the Tyrol in 1805 as Napoleon’s Army crosses Europe and depicts a love story, with a happy ending, is suitable for all ages and tastes and embraces the history of the time.
Tickets: £15.00 (£12.50 cons.); £10.00 (£8.00 cons.) + Group rates.
Tickets available from:
UVOC 0151 924 8972 or Theatre Box Office 01704 540 011
Thursday 17th May, Downstairs at Royal Court Liverpool.
Doors open 6.30 for 8.30 p.m. Bar till midnight.
Burlesque Review
Downstairs at the Royal Court Theatre, Liverpool was the place to be last month... and where you should be on Thursday 17 May as well. Especially if you like glamour, beautiful surroundings, sequin-studded hilarity, and lashings of camp old nonsense.
The sumptuous Art Deco Bar provided a comfortable array of sofas, softly-lit tables and just the right air of intimate sophistication for the first Burlesque Review. The audience started to sashay in, some dressed in Victorian finery, others in garb ordinaire…
The International Society of Flaneurs (Liverpool Branch) made a fine showing, with striking headgear and emphatic trousering. The ladies boasted corsetry to rival that of the Burlesque Performers and raised the glamour quotient considerably.
There was also a delectable Louise Brooks lookalike, and some fascinating flappers. Zoot suited wide boys, spivs, playboys, and one faintly puzzled biochemist made up the rest of the men.
Canapés and wine were served on this opening night and the atmosphere was one of tingling anticipation. If this was what the audience looked like, what on earth would the performers have to show us?
As the suitably Art Deco period house music faded and the lights went up the stage was seized amongst a hail of scarlet glitter by our Something of Ceremonies, Jonathan Mayor.
Jonathan looked like Liz Hurley’s upstaging Bollywood Bridesmaid and proceeded to gleefully rampage around the audience in the Julian Clary/Dame Edna style which had them wriggling with a mixture of terror and delight. This kind of thing is a lot harder than it looks. Insouciant, fearless as to taste and very light on his feet, Jonathan’s intelligent wit scattered over the punters like the extra glitter that was sent out for at the interval.
For a rampagingly egotistical drag queen he was also a generous, professional compere and introduced the acts in such a way that they all got a big warm hand on their entrances…
First up was Miss Hedy Heights, a kittenish brunette whose gorgeous curves and cheeky 50s’ pastiche burlesque dancing left the audience breathless, for all sorts of reasons, and clearly wanting more…
To general surprise, we were then treated to one of the very few male burlesque performers, Warren Speed, whose Chaplin-meets-50 Cent number was clever, funny and all too brief.
Then came Lady Bond, a relative newcomer, who performed a witty little escapology routine which whisked us into the Interval.
A few snifters later Jonathan hurtled into the second half, introducing a bravura performance from Miss Kitty Bang Bang. She demonstrated her skill, grace and ability to make balloons look like perfectly acceptable items of clothing. Temporarily.
Another number from Warren as “Carrington” who demonstrated both an impressive physique and a fondness for corsetry, which elicited delighted giggles and a few hot flushes from the crowd.
Then we were happily at the mercy of Jonathan, who has none. He tore through a series of anecdotes and one-liners, had the audience at his eight-inch platformed feet, and kept the show as tight as a very tight thing indeed.
Hedy and Kitty rounded off the evening, and yes I do mean rounded, with a vivacious couple of numbers showing off their dancing skills, ingenious costumes and pretty bodies appealing to everyone present. No Size Zero Tolerance here. Interestingly there were as many, if not more, women there than men. In fact, only the Dirty Old Man Community was underrepresented.
At the end, the audience were properly appreciative, not least because they still had two hours drinking time ahead of them in a very nice bar surrounded by attractive people of all ages, persuasions and permutations.
Afterwards a line of lovely undergraduates were queuing up to ask the performers how they could escape their dreary lives in law, finance and medicine to become part of the wonderfully cheering world of the Burlesque Show.
The atmosphere was congenial and chatty, everyone mixed, minced and mingled, and the question on everyone’s lipgloss was “When is the next one?”
The answer is: On the 17th May, Downstairs at Royal Court Liverpool.
Tickets £15.00 through the Box Office 0870 787 1866. Price includes bubbly and nibbles.
Join us for the First Night of ‘Lost Voices’ - an exciting new live music night taking place at the View Two Gallery in Mathew Street in the heart of Liverpool’s Cavern Quarter.
Promoting the spirit of the eclectic, ‘Lost Voices’ nights will be an intoxicating blend of the strange, the wonderful and the strangely familiar- from cabaret song to experimental jazz, from traditional Indian music to classical minimalism.
‘Lost Voices’ is promoted by Steve Boyland, Ray Dickaty, Jonathan Raisin and Karen Wynne- a group of practising musicians with long track-records in Liverpool and beyond, working in a wide variety of genres from acoustic song writing to free jazz.
Our philosophy is to provide an outlet for all the music that falls between the cracks, to blur the boundaries between mainstream and experimental, to create a place where the audience can expect the unexpected… and never be disappointed.
‘Lost Voices’, will be happening at View Two Gallery- a cool space in the heart of town. A piano... a bar... a great music vibe and a late night ambience.
LAUNCH NIGHT featuring a wide-ranging bill including- acclaimed Sarangi player, Surinder Sandhu; Liverpool singer, Rachel Russell performing the songs of Edith Piaf, and saxophonist Ray Dickaty (ex-Spiritualised) performing with a new trio.
Thursday 17th May @ View Two Gallery in Mathew Street in the Cavern Quarter. (next to ‘The Grapes’ pub). Tickets £5/£3 on the door. Doors open @ 8.30 and music from 9 until late.
‘Lost Voices’ - a night to lift the spirits and refresh the soul.
Recap:
Genre- Classical, jazz, rock, folk, world music
Date- Thursday 17th May 2007
‘Lost Voices’
An eclectic evening of live music featuring a host of performers including, the acclaimed Sarangi player, Surinder Sandhu, and Rachel Russell performing the songs of Edith Piaf.
View Two Gallery, Mathew Street, Liverpool, L2 6RE (0151 236 9444/494 5441) 8.30pm, £5/£3
Comments
16th-19th May 2007 (Weds - Sat) @ 7.30pm
Una Voce Opera Company is performing
Donizetti's The Daughter of the Regiment
Southport Arts Centre, Lord Street, Southport, PR8 1DB.
A Comic Opera in Two Acts, sung in English.
We have a super Cast, including Nick Hardy, Samantha Chambers, Sioned Ellis and Radio Legend Johnny Kennedy as ‘Hortensius’.
The Opera is set in the Tyrol in 1805 as Napoleon’s Army crosses Europe and depicts a love story, with a happy ending, is suitable for all ages and tastes and embraces the history of the time.
Tickets: £15.00 (£12.50 cons.); £10.00 (£8.00 cons.) + Group rates.
Tickets available from:
UVOC 0151 924 8972 or Theatre Box Office 01704 540 011
In support of Jospice International, Thornton.
Posted by: Martha McAulay | May 5, 2007 09:36 AM
Thursday 17th May, Downstairs at Royal Court Liverpool.
Doors open 6.30 for 8.30 p.m. Bar till midnight.
Burlesque Review
Downstairs at the Royal Court Theatre, Liverpool was the place to be last month... and where you should be on Thursday 17 May as well. Especially if you like glamour, beautiful surroundings, sequin-studded hilarity, and lashings of camp old nonsense.
The sumptuous Art Deco Bar provided a comfortable array of sofas, softly-lit tables and just the right air of intimate sophistication for the first Burlesque Review. The audience started to sashay in, some dressed in Victorian finery, others in garb ordinaire…
The International Society of Flaneurs (Liverpool Branch) made a fine showing, with striking headgear and emphatic trousering. The ladies boasted corsetry to rival that of the Burlesque Performers and raised the glamour quotient considerably.
There was also a delectable Louise Brooks lookalike, and some fascinating flappers. Zoot suited wide boys, spivs, playboys, and one faintly puzzled biochemist made up the rest of the men.
Canapés and wine were served on this opening night and the atmosphere was one of tingling anticipation. If this was what the audience looked like, what on earth would the performers have to show us?
As the suitably Art Deco period house music faded and the lights went up the stage was seized amongst a hail of scarlet glitter by our Something of Ceremonies, Jonathan Mayor.
Jonathan looked like Liz Hurley’s upstaging Bollywood Bridesmaid and proceeded to gleefully rampage around the audience in the Julian Clary/Dame Edna style which had them wriggling with a mixture of terror and delight. This kind of thing is a lot harder than it looks. Insouciant, fearless as to taste and very light on his feet, Jonathan’s intelligent wit scattered over the punters like the extra glitter that was sent out for at the interval.
For a rampagingly egotistical drag queen he was also a generous, professional compere and introduced the acts in such a way that they all got a big warm hand on their entrances…
First up was Miss Hedy Heights, a kittenish brunette whose gorgeous curves and cheeky 50s’ pastiche burlesque dancing left the audience breathless, for all sorts of reasons, and clearly wanting more…
To general surprise, we were then treated to one of the very few male burlesque performers, Warren Speed, whose Chaplin-meets-50 Cent number was clever, funny and all too brief.
Then came Lady Bond, a relative newcomer, who performed a witty little escapology routine which whisked us into the Interval.
A few snifters later Jonathan hurtled into the second half, introducing a bravura performance from Miss Kitty Bang Bang. She demonstrated her skill, grace and ability to make balloons look like perfectly acceptable items of clothing. Temporarily.
Another number from Warren as “Carrington” who demonstrated both an impressive physique and a fondness for corsetry, which elicited delighted giggles and a few hot flushes from the crowd.
Then we were happily at the mercy of Jonathan, who has none. He tore through a series of anecdotes and one-liners, had the audience at his eight-inch platformed feet, and kept the show as tight as a very tight thing indeed.
Hedy and Kitty rounded off the evening, and yes I do mean rounded, with a vivacious couple of numbers showing off their dancing skills, ingenious costumes and pretty bodies appealing to everyone present. No Size Zero Tolerance here. Interestingly there were as many, if not more, women there than men. In fact, only the Dirty Old Man Community was underrepresented.
At the end, the audience were properly appreciative, not least because they still had two hours drinking time ahead of them in a very nice bar surrounded by attractive people of all ages, persuasions and permutations.
Afterwards a line of lovely undergraduates were queuing up to ask the performers how they could escape their dreary lives in law, finance and medicine to become part of the wonderfully cheering world of the Burlesque Show.
The atmosphere was congenial and chatty, everyone mixed, minced and mingled, and the question on everyone’s lipgloss was “When is the next one?”
The answer is: On the 17th May, Downstairs at Royal Court Liverpool.
Tickets £15.00 through the Box Office 0870 787 1866. Price includes bubbly and nibbles.
Posted by: Listings | May 5, 2007 10:01 AM
Thursday 17 May 2007, 7 p.m.
The Cooperative Group, Liverpool Friends of the Earth and FACT present:
A FREE screening of An Inconvenient Truth
By/featuring Al Gore
Plus...a Climate Change Pub-style Team Quiz
At: FACT cinema and bar, Wood Street Liverpool 1
On: Thursday 17 May 2007
Film: 7-9pm (Screen 3; to pre-book, ring the Co-op Group on 0161 246 2213
Quiz: 9.30-10.30pm (first floor bar) with donated prizes!
Bring your friends!
Frank Kennedy
Regional Campaigns Coordinator (North West England)
60 Duke Street
Liverpool
L1 5AA
Tel/fax: 0151 707 4328 / 4329
frankk@foe.co.uk
Posted by: Frank Kennedy | May 6, 2007 08:03 PM
Tuesday 15th - Saturday 19th May @7.30pm
Dublin by Lamplight.
Amidst the filth & fury of Dublin 1904, the theatrical event of the century is about to explode.
Winner at the 2005 Edinburgh Fringe Festival, "Michael
West's script brilliantly mixes fact & fiction, POETRY & politics." ****The Guardian.
Venue: The Liverpool Playhouse.
Box Office 0151 709 4776
Posted by: Listings | May 6, 2007 11:19 PM
Dead Good Poets
THURSDAY 17th May @ 8pm
Poetry & Music Night with Ade Jackson.
Launch of Ade's first collection LateNight SisterSongs (Headland).
His poetry will be followed by live music from Chiba Sprawl and guests.
8pm, Pilgrim Pub (Upstairs) 34, Pilgrim Street, Liverpool 1. Free Entry
Posted by: Listings | May 6, 2007 11:29 PM
THURSDAY 17th May @ 8pm
Louis de Bernieres & Ilone Antonius-Jones.
A sparkling & entertaining show of poetry, classical & traditional music & badinage.
Rated "unmissable" by Edinburgh Fringe Critics in 2005.
Blackburne House, Blackburne Place, Liverpool.
Tickets £10/£8 available from the Philharmonic Hall Box Office 0151 709 3789
Posted by: Listings | May 6, 2007 11:30 PM
April 22nd to May 20th 2007
EXHIBITION - 'From Scandinavia to Liverpool'
An exhibition exploring the theme of the history of immigration, culture and community, linking Liverpool with the Scandinavian countries.
COST - FREE
DATES - from April 22nd to May 20th 2007
VENUE - The Scandinavian Seamen's Church
138 Park Lane
Liverpool L1 8HG
TIMES - Tuesday/Thursday 18.00-21.00
Wednesday/Friday 12.00-15.00
Saturday/Sunday 12.00-17.00
ALL WELCOME
Posted by: ICE | May 6, 2007 11:57 PM
Join us for the First Night of ‘Lost Voices’ - an exciting new live music night taking place at the View Two Gallery in Mathew Street in the heart of Liverpool’s Cavern Quarter.
Promoting the spirit of the eclectic, ‘Lost Voices’ nights will be an intoxicating blend of the strange, the wonderful and the strangely familiar- from cabaret song to experimental jazz, from traditional Indian music to classical minimalism.
‘Lost Voices’ is promoted by Steve Boyland, Ray Dickaty, Jonathan Raisin and Karen Wynne- a group of practising musicians with long track-records in Liverpool and beyond, working in a wide variety of genres from acoustic song writing to free jazz.
Our philosophy is to provide an outlet for all the music that falls between the cracks, to blur the boundaries between mainstream and experimental, to create a place where the audience can expect the unexpected… and never be disappointed.
‘Lost Voices’, will be happening at View Two Gallery- a cool space in the heart of town. A piano... a bar... a great music vibe and a late night ambience.
LAUNCH NIGHT featuring a wide-ranging bill including- acclaimed Sarangi player, Surinder Sandhu; Liverpool singer, Rachel Russell performing the songs of Edith Piaf, and saxophonist Ray Dickaty (ex-Spiritualised) performing with a new trio.
Thursday 17th May @ View Two Gallery in Mathew Street in the Cavern Quarter. (next to ‘The Grapes’ pub). Tickets £5/£3 on the door. Doors open @ 8.30 and music from 9 until late.
‘Lost Voices’ - a night to lift the spirits and refresh the soul.
Recap:
Genre- Classical, jazz, rock, folk, world music
Date- Thursday 17th May 2007
‘Lost Voices’
An eclectic evening of live music featuring a host of performers including, the acclaimed Sarangi player, Surinder Sandhu, and Rachel Russell performing the songs of Edith Piaf.
View Two Gallery, Mathew Street, Liverpool, L2 6RE (0151 236 9444/494 5441) 8.30pm, £5/£3
Posted by: Dave Ellwand | May 14, 2007 09:35 PM