Howard Assembly Room Season Guide (Spring 2015)

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Howard Assembly Room Spring 2015


Spring at the Howard Assembly Room...

Mediterranean: a sweep of incredible music from around the Mediterranean sea; ancient music finds new voices in a turbulent 21st century. Operatic: Epic adventure story Swanhunter, and off-beat saga The Virtues of Things bring the pick of contemporary opera to Leeds. Futurefolk: simply brilliant musicians, thrilling performances, freethinking visionaries.

We are very grateful to the Emerald Foundation and the EsmĂŠe Fairbairn Foundation whose support enables us to offer such a varied and eclectic programme of performances and events.

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Juan Martin, January 2011


Performance Thursday 16 & Friday 17 April 7.00pm Saturday 18 April 2.00pm & 7.00pm Adults £10, 18 and under £5 Reserved seating Approx. 70 mins (no interval) Sung in English Commissioned by Opera North

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Swanhunter

An Opera North / The Wrong Crowd co-production Composed by Jonathan Dove using a libretto written by Alasdair Middleton. Against his mother’s wishes Lemminkäinen travels to the icy north in search of a bride. There, following an encounter with the mysterious Louhi, Lemminkäinen is set a series of impossible tasks. But unseen dangers lurk in the shadows... Will he find love? Can he complete his tasks? There’s only one way to find out... This new collaboration between Opera North and the acclaimed visual theatre company The Wrong Crowd, creates a beautiful new production filled with song, movement and puppetry.

Box Office: 0844 848 2727

CAROUSEL Participate Saturday 9 May 11.00am – 1.00pm Free for all ages Booking Essential Part of European Opera Days

Sing ON: With hope in your heart Few songs have had as many lives as You’ll Never Walk Alone. Performed twice in Rodgers and Hammerstein’s 1945 musical Carousel, the song was popularised by Gerry and the Pacemakers and Elvis Presley, before it was adopted by fans in Liverpool and Glasgow, becoming perhaps the most iconic football song of all times. Join Opera North for an uplifting morning of music exploring this and other songs from the musical. This workshop accompanies Opera North’s revival of Carousel this May.

Book online: howardassemblyroom.co.uk

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MEDITERRANEAN Music Thursday 23 April 7.45pm £15 Reserved seating

El Amor Brujo

Spain meets the New World With the Orchestra of Opera North The Orchestra of Opera North takes over the Howard Assembly Room with a magnificent concert exploring the centuries-old links between Spain and South America. At its heart is Villa-Lobos’ exquisitely expressive Concerto for Guitar, played by guitarist Craig Ogden. Alongside it sits El Amor Brujo, Manuel de Falla’s flamenco-inflected evocation of love, lust and witchcraft and Ginastera’s Argentine Variaciones Concertantes. The evening is completed by Schoenberg’s arrangement of Debussy’s symphonic poem Prélude à l’aprèsmidi d’un faune. Conducted by Eduardo Portal, this is the Orchestra of Opera North at its best.

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Box Office: 0844 848 2727

Music

Paul Lewis & Allan Clayton

Friday 24 April 7.45pm £20

Pianist Paul Lewis returns to the Howard Assembly Room following his 2010 sell-out concert. For this concert he partners tenor Allan Clayton in a work of boundless musical beauty and depth.

Reserved seating

Schubert’s timeless first song cycle, Die schöne Müllerin follows the journey of a love-lorn young man, exploring themes of romantic love, lost hope and impermanence.

Approx. 75 mins (no interval) ‘...arguably the finest Schubert interpreter of his generation’ Gramophone on Paul Lewis ‘Clayton is the real thing: a great British singer who deserves to be championed’ The Times on Allan Clayton

Much sought after tenor Allan Clayton is exciting and sensitive in his delivery which, paired with Lewis’ deep understanding of Schubert, promises an exhilarating performance of one of the great song-cycles.

Book online: howardassemblyroom.co.uk

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MEDITERRANEAN Film Saturday 25 April 7.00pm £5 Dir. Nuri Bilge Ceylan, Turkey 2011. 157 mins. Cert 15. Turkish with English subtitles. ‘Stunning...pure exhilarating mastery’ The Guardian

Once Upon a Time in Anatolia Director Nuri Bilge Ceylan has cemented his world-class reputation with his most recent pair of films, Palme d’Or winning Winter Sleep and this, his 2011 epic, Once Upon a Time in Anatolia. Depicting 24 hours in a murder investigation, police, prosecutors, a doctor and the killers themselves search for a body buried in the Anatolian steppe. Extraordinary photography of the landscape at night, absorbing characterisation and wry humour come together in an unforgettable film that is at once a road movie, a police procedural and a drama of Chekhovian subtlety. There will be an introduction ahead of the film screening.

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Box Office: 0844 848 2727

MEDITERRANEAN Music

Sardinia at Twilight

Friday 1 May 5.45pm – 6.45pm £5*

Discover the magic and music of Italy’s most intriguing island: Sardinia. This hour-long concert from versatile singer/guitarist Elena Piras contrasts her native music with that of Bulgaria and Scotland.

Film

Red Desert

Friday 1 May 7.30pm £5*

Shot on location in Budelli, Sardinia, Red Desert is Antonioni’s first colour film, starring the incomparable Monica Vitti. His use of spellbinding panoramas from the industrial side of the Sardinian landscape, abandoned fishing cottages, and looming docked ships, creates an ultra-stylish, near apocalyptic vision of a disaffected woman’s life.

Dir. Michelangelo Antonioni, Italy 1964. 117 mins. Cert 15. Italian with English subtitles. *Book both for £7.50 (Not available online)

Introduced by Dr Alan O’Leary, Senior Lecturer in Italian Cinema and Cultural Studies. In association with LivItaly, a project run by Italian at the University of Leeds. Book online: howardassemblyroom.co.uk

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Performance

The Virtues of Things

Friday 15 May 7.45pm £15

Conceived by composer Matt Rogers (AKA Gameshow Outpatient) and writer Sally O’Reilly, The Virtues of Things is a witty dissection of how operas unfold their fictions and how objects themselves carry meaning.

Reserved seating Approx. 80 mins (no interval) Sung in English Music Matt Rogers Libretto Sally O’Reilly Director Bijan Sheibani Design Giles Cadle Lighting Matt Haskins Supported by the Opera North Future Fund

A long-established family prop-making business struggles to adapt to modern pressures and time only sees its problems multiply. A slick outsider steps in to help, but his attempts to modernise place the family in peril. The Virtues of Things is directed by Olivier Awardnominated Bijan Sheibani, (Associate Director at the National Theatre), and was commissioned by Aldeburgh Music, Royal Opera House and Opera North to give opportunities to emerging opera writers. Joining together these leading arts organisations for the second year running The Virtues of Things premieres in London before visiting Leeds for an exclusive Yorkshire date.

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Box Office: 0844 848 2727 Book online: howardassemblyroom.co.uk

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Music

Taraf de Haïdouks

Monday 18 May 7.45pm £20

With support

Reserved seating

Save 20%

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Astonishing Romanian music from the world’s greatest Gypsy group. Taraf de Haïdouks, literally translated as ‘band of outlaws’, has an intense energy and flair. Their shows burst with clattering virtuosity and passionate Gypsy rasp – stealing your breath and getting your feet moving.

Box Office: 0844 848 2727 Book online: howardassemblyroom.co.uk

When presenting their BBC Radio 3 Award for World Music, long time admirer Johnny Depp stated: ‘Taraf de Haïdouks are the greatest musicians I know – they play a music which expresses the most intense joy, and have this gift to make you feel alive.’

‘Their live act is extraordinary – a magical mix of quicksilver melodies, amazing violin and cimbalom solos, earthy songs of lost loves and riotous traditional wedding songs’ The Daily Telegraph

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Music

Lau

Tuesday 19 May 7.45pm £17.50

Support: Siobhan Wilson

‘Lau continue to imbue the British folk scene with colourful, thought-provoking and highly original sounds’ Folk Radio

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Described by The Guardian as ‘perhaps the best live band in the country’, Lau combines the talents of accordion virtuoso Martin Green, guitarist/singer Kris Drever and nimble fiddler Aidan O’Rourke. For a decade they have been stretching folk music’s boundaries and exploring new musical territory. 2012’s Race the Loser album was nominated for Scottish Album of the Year and featured in many critics ’best of year’ lists.

MEDITERRANEAN Music Wednesday 20 May 7.45pm £15 Save 20% ‘Canzoniere was a whirlwind‘ The New York Times

Canzoniere Grecanico Salentino Pizzica Indiavolata With support

Tens of thousands of people congregate in Italian piazzas for Canzoniere’s concerts in Italy. Originally thought to cure the poison spider’s bite, the pizzica tarantata is a hypnotic blend of ferocious rhythms and passionate dance that Canzoniere take from its ancient roots to the present day, and right back again.

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The new album, The Bell that Never Rang is released in May, just in time for this show-stopping night.

Now, with their most recent album chosen as one of The Guardian’s Top 5 Albums of the Year and collaborations with Ludovico Einaudi and Ibrahim Maalouf, their explosive brand of tarantella is conquering the global stage. Not to be missed.

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Box Office: 0844 848 2727

Book online: howardassemblyroom.co.uk

The Guardian Albums of the Year MOJO

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MEDITERRANEAN Music Thursday 21 May 7.45pm £12.50 Save 20% ‘...makes the instrument sound as if it functioned with liquids rather than hammers.’ The Guardian

Stefano Bollani With support Stefano Bollani is an Italian pianist and composer of ebullient charm and uncommon sensitivity, whether performing solo or in landmark collaborations with Enrico Rava and Chick Corea. Of his latest release, Joy in Spite of Everything, All About Jazz said: ‘like a kind of musical contortionist, Stefano Bollani keeps repositioning himself with eye-popping ease. The diversity and eclecticism of Bollani’s projects are reflected in the sweeping breadth of his vocabulary’. His solo piano concerts are a veritable tour-de-force, a combination of virtuoso improvisation with an unfaltering lightness of spirit. A rare opportunity to see a major figure in today’s European jazz.

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Box Office: 0844 848 2727

MEDITERRANEAN Words Thursday 28 May 7.45pm £7.50 Reserved seating ‘Ali remains an outlier and intellectual bomb-thrower; an urbane, Oxford-educated polemicist.’ The Observer Part of Liberty Lectures in association with the University of Leeds

Tariq Ali

Between Past and Future ‘Since the beginning of the Arab Spring there has been much talk of revolutions. Not from me. I’ve argued against the position that mass uprisings on their own constitute a revolution, i.e. a transfer of power from one social class ... to another that leads to fundamental change’ Tariq Ali. Acclaimed commentator, author and broadcaster Tariq Ali investigates the deep currents of change sweeping across the Eastern Mediterranean, from IS, Assad and the rise in old tensions between Sunni and Shia Muslims to the role of the West. Acute analysis, provocative analogy and a lifetime of activism come together in this fascinating lecture.

Book online: howardassemblyroom.co.uk

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MEDITERRANEAN Film Saturday 30 May 3.00pm £5 Dir. Michael Curtiz, USA 1942. 103 mins. Cert PG. ‘...a rich, detailed screenplay studded with an indecent number of sparklingly quotable lines. It is a movie to play again, and again’ The Daily Telegraph

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Casablanca

Music

Released in 1942, Casablanca has only improved with age, remaining Hollywood’s quintessential evocation of love. This blockbuster has it all: silver screen royalty, quotable lines, and a heart-breaking love story.

Thursday 4 June 7.45pm £17.50

The film is set in a highly fictionalised WWII Morocco, under the control of the French Vichy Regime, where desperate refugees plead for transit papers to escape the stucco-walled coastal city of Casablanca. There, nightclub owner Rick Blaine (the thrilling Humphrey Bogart) has his world shaken as his lost love (Ingrid Bergman) and her anti-Nazi rebel husband arrive. With live piano to transport you back to the ’40s on arrival.

Box Office: 0844 848 2727

Reserved seating ‘A welcome new sound bringing a sense of urgency to the Blues’ All About Jazz

Heritage Blues Orchestra With support

Like fellow neo-traditionalists the Carolina Chocolate Drops, Grammy-nominated Heritage Blues Orchestra draw their lifeblood from African-American musical traditions: from juke joint country blues to chain gang songs. Performing here as a quintet, their sound harnesses the grit of low-down Mississippi blues, urban R&B, gospel and bold New Orleans brass. Lead guitarist Junior Mack, singer/guitarist Bill Sims Jr and vocalist Chaney Sims perform classics from the likes of Son House, Muddy Waters and Leadbelly: all driven along by drummer Kenny ‘Beedy Eyes’ Smith and harmonica ace Vincent Butcher. An unmissable show!

Book online: howardassemblyroom.co.uk

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MEDITERRANEAN Music

Le Trio Joubran

Friday 5 June 7.45pm £17.50

A rare opportunity to catch the pre-eminent Palestinian oud trio, formed by three brothers – Samir, Wissam and Adnan Joubran – perform with master percussionist Youssef Hbeisch. The Joubran brothers come from a family steeped in Palestine’s rich musical history. Their father, Hatem Mbadda Joubran, is a great oud maker, and their mother is an acclaimed singer.

Reserved seating

The brothers have a glittering international career. Their repertoire pays homage to their 4,000 year old instrument and takes inspiration from jazz and flamenco. Only hearing is believing these rich, subtle melodies and magnificent improvisations.

‘...a style that brings a new dimension to the traditional Arabic lute, thanks to the almost intuitive way they work together, and the emotional range of their improvisations’ The Guardian

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Box Office: 0844 848 2727 Book online: howardassemblyroom.co.uk

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Music

Çiğdem Aslan

Saturday 6 June 7.45pm £12.50

Mortissa

‘Absolutely stunning stuff...it is so infectious’ Cerys Matthews, BBC Radio 6

With support Just occasionally, a new artist emerges to throw old music styles into an intriguing contemporary perspective. Turkish-Kurdish vocalist Çiğdem Aslan has been described by The Guardian as ‘one of the best British-based discoveries of the year... [whose] success is down to her reworking old songs with a blend of delicate soulful vocals, subtle theatrics and a stage persona that could switch from stately to slinky and flirtatious.‘ With her band, she sings Rebetiko - the bravely outspoken Greek urban folk blending Byzantine, Turkish and Balkan influences - bringing to life the smoky bars and cafes of 1920s Athens and Smyrna.

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Box Office: 0844 848 2727

MEDITERRANEAN Music Thursday 11 June 7.45pm £12.50 Reserved seating Due to popularity max. 2 tickets per person ‘...searingly beautiful.’ The Financial Times

Reem Kelani With support British-Palestinian singer, musician and broadcaster Reem Kelani returns to the Howard Assembly Room following a show-stopping sell-out performance in 2012. With repertoire that criss-crosses the Mediterranean, from Palestine and Syria, Egypt and Tunisia, to Turkey and Spain, these are songs she not only sings, but truly inhabits. A staggeringly powerful voice and joyful stage presence make for a live performance that is quite simply unforgettable. The concert includes songs from her forthcoming album based on the music of great Egyptian composer Sayyid Darwish (1892 – 1925) accompanied by Bruno Heinen on piano.

Book online: howardassemblyroom.co.uk

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MEDITERRANEAN Music Friday 12 June 7.45pm £5 ‘Matar suffuses Nuri’s education in love and loss with an erotic frisson and fragile grace that lend the book an inner radiance’ The Independent Part of Liberty Lectures in association with the University of Leeds

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Hisham Matar

The Temptations of the Sea Hisham Matar was born in New York City to Libyan parents and spent his childhood in Tripoli and Cairo. His father, a political dissident, was kidnapped from Cairo in 1990 and remains among Libya’s ‘disappeared’. As part of the Mediterranean series, he reads from his novels Anatomy of a Disappearance and Man Booker Prize-nominated In the Country of Men. Interlacing fiction, autobiography and reflection he explores what it is to be a wanderer and the nature of displacement. Live music weaves through this specially conceived talk.

Box Office: 0844 848 2727

Music Saturday 13 June 7.45pm £15 Reserved seating

Save 20% ‘Clear tones; perfect intonation; an ideal balance between individual colour and an ensemble blend’ The Times

Vashti Bunyan Heartleap

With support Nine years after Lookaftering, her last album of new material, legendary British singer-songwriter Vashti Bunyan performs songs from her new LP, a unique and entrancing collection of ten songs forming what she is adamant will be her final album. Vashti re-emerged after 30 years in the wilderness with the 2000 re-release of her 1970 album Just Another Diamond Day (a bona fide cult-classic that made number 53 in The Observer Music Monthly’s Top 100 British Albums of All Time). Her new songs reveal an artist at her peak, masterfully marrying content and form to sparkling effect.

Book online: howardassemblyroom.co.uk

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Music

Sacred Sounds

Music

Wednesday 1 July 6.30pm £7.50

More than 877,000 Indian soldiers, many of them Punjabi Sikhs, fought in WWI. Their involvement has only recently been fully acknowledged in remembrance of the Great War. Inspired by the discovery of a single photograph, this special concert uncovers the music the soldiers took with them to the camp and battlefield.

Friday 3 July 7.45pm £7.50

Produced by Alchemy in association with SAA UK and The Network of Sikh Organisations

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Interspersed by readings of Sikh soldiers’ letters, the concert explores the song of the Great War, from ‘Shabads’, sacred Sikh hymns sung before battle, to a mother’s lament for a departing son. With Keertan Rehal, Kirpal Singh Panesar, Christella Litras and others.

Box Office: 0844 848 2727

Produced by the Geraldine Connor Foundation

Tell me what yo’ singin’ for Soul of Calypso

A concert of calypsos celebrating the pioneer of Caribbean music in 1950s Britain: Edric Connor. Connor collected, catalogued and recorded Trinidadian music, as well as being an acclaimed singer, broadcaster and actor in his own right. The evening features calypsos and Trinidadian folk music from his songbooks, performed by Nigel Wong and Simone Sauphanor, who both played with Edric. In the second half, the electrified beats of Trinidad’s most popular contemporary musical form, Soca ‘the soul of calypso’, bring us bang up to date and are performed by Sheldon Blackman and members of the legendary Breakfast Band.

Book online: howardassemblyroom.co.uk

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Events for families and young people All children must be accompanied by an adult.

Participate

Little Voices

Performance

The Selfish Giant

Sing songs, explore instruments, play games and have fun with music in our weekly sessions.

Sunday 12 July 4.30pm Adults £7.50, 18 and under £3

Opera North’s Children's Chorus presents a new semi-staged production of The Selfish Giant, based on the story by Oscar Wilde, with music by Handel.

Weekly starting Monday 11 May 10.00am – 10.45am & 11.15am – 12.00pm during term time. £6 per session, per child.

Opera North’s Early Years Programme

Performance

Opera North Youth Company presents...

Saturday 18 July 7.00pm Adults £7.50, 18 and under £3

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Suitable for ages 0-4. For more information call 0113 223 3520 or email littlevoices@operanorth.co.uk

Opera Bingo

Join the 80 strong Children’s Chorus for the much loved tale of the giant who builds a wall around his beautiful garden to keep the world out. Graeme Danby (Policeman in Opera North’s 2013 Albert Herring) plays the giant, Justin Doyle conducts and James Hurley directs.

Cards at the ready... it's Bingo Life! How much do we really know about the people we see in everyday life? This immersive musical theatre piece puts the audience in the centre of the action during a bingo game, with life changing effects for the bingo hall regulars. Box Office: 0844 848 2727

Book online: howardassemblyroom.co.uk

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The information in this brochure is published in good faith, but changes may occasionally be necessary. In the event of unforeseen circumstances Opera North reserves the right to change the performers or performance.

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Tickets Photographs: Juan Martin (pg 2-3) by Karen McBride, Swanhunter (pg 4) by Mike Cranston, Sing ON (pg 5) by Alastair Muir, Paul Lewis (pg 7) by Molina Visuals, The Virtues of Things (pg 10-11) by AKA (©ROH2014), Lau (pg 14) by Genevive Stevenson, Tariq Ali (pg 17) by Nina Subin, Heritage Blues Orchestra (pg 19) by Christophe Ubelmann, Le Trio Jourban (pg 20-21) by Jerome Conquy, Çiğdem Aslan (pg 22) by Savannah Photographic, Reem Kelani (pg 23) by Şahan Nuhoğlu (courtesy of Roll Magazine, Istanbul, Turkey), Hisham Matar (pg 24) by Diana Matar, Sacred Sounds (pg 26) Courtesy of the Council of the National Army Museum (London), Tell me what yo’ singin’ for (pg 27) by Terry Jeavons, Family events (pg 28-29) by Brian Slater. Supporter credits: Swanhunter: Opera North Future Fund, J Paul Getty Jnr Charitable Trust and by using public funding by Arts Council England. Performance in Leeds supported by the Liz and Terry Bramall Foundation and The Linden Charitable Trust. Little Voices: Liz and Terry Bramall Foundation. Opera Bingo: Opera North Future Fund and The Bernarr Rainbow Trust. The Selfish Giant: Opera North Future Fund.

Box Office: 0844 848 2727

Opening hours: Mon–Sat 10.00am–8.00pm howardassemblyroom.co.uk All events have unreserved seating unless otherwise stated. There is £1 charge for posting out tickets.

Save 20%

Simply buy an equivalent number of tickets for two or more shows displaying the Save symbol and you will receive 20% off your tickets. Currently not available online.

Discounts

Retired Over 60, Leeds Card Holders: 10% off Under 30, Full Time Students: £3 off 18 and under, Pension Credit, JSA, Income Support, Incapacity Benefit, Disabled People: 25% off (essential carer free) Under 30s: Opera, fun and fizz! Join Opera North’s free Under 30s scheme and you’ll receive offers for £10 tickets and exclusive invitations to Nights ON the Town. All discounts are subject to availability and do not apply to tickets of £7.50 and under. Only one discount per ticket and they cannot be used retrospectively. Proof of status must be shown. Access: Howard Assembly Room is committed to improving access for our audiences and aims to ensure that disabled visitors have an enjoyable experience. We have an infra-red system for visitors with hearing impairments, wheelchair spaces and lift access through Leeds Grand Theatre. We also welcome guide dogs and hearing dogs. Please note that disability concessions and wheelchair spaces cannot be booked online - please call 0844 848 2727 or book in person so Box Office staff can advise on how we can meet your specific access needs. Times displayed are the actual start of the performance.

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April Performance 16-18 Music 23 Music 24 Film 25

Swanhunter El Amor Brujo Paul Lewis & Allan Clayton Once upon a Time in Anatolia

Various 7.45pm 7.45pm 7.00pm

May 1 Music 1 Film 9 Participate 11 Participate 15 Performance 18 Music 19 Music 20 Music 21 Music 28 Words 30 Film

Sardinia at Twilight 5.45pm Red Desert 7.30pm Sing ON: Carousel 11.00am – 1.00pm Little Voices Various The Virtues of Things 7.45pm Taraf de Haïdouks 7.45pm Lau 7.45pm Canzoniere Grecanico Salentino 7.45pm Stefano Bollani 7.45pm Tariq Ali 7.45pm Casablanca 3.00pm

June Music 4 Music 5 Music 6 Music 11 Words 12 Music 13

Heritage Blues Orchestra 7.45pm Le Trio Joubran 7.45pm Çiğdem Aslan 7.45pm Reem Kelani 7.45pm Hisham Matar 7.45pm Vashti Bunyan 7.45pm

July Music 1 Music 3 Performance 12 Performance 18

Sacred Sounds 6.30pm Tell me what yo’ singin’ for 7.45pm The Selfish Giant 4.30pm Opera Bingo 7.00pm

Box Office: 0844 848 2727 howardassemblyroom.co.uk Registered Charity No. 511726

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