Places&Faces® · 89 · August 2017

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AUGUST 2017 / £3.50 WHERE SOLD

The magazine for

Norfolk & Suffolk

WIN! —

FOR 4 R E N N I D AT DELIA'S

30 PAGES OF AT THE SUNDOWN FESTIVAL

WHAT'S ON

SIR MICHAEL

PARKINSON

THE KING OF THE CHAT SHOW

CELEBRITIES / FOOD / TRAVEL / FASHION / HOMES & GARDENS / THEATRE ISSUE № 89

www.placesandfaces.co.uk

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The C-Class Cabriolet. Freedom as standard.

Total driving enjoyment with no compromise on comfort. The all-new C-Class Cabriolet offers impressive traction and dynamism, courtesy of the optional permanent allwheel drive 4MATIC system. Enhanced with automatic wind deflector AIRCAP and the neck-level heating system AIRSCARF as standard, you’re sure to enjoy year-round open-air driving like never before.

Representative example C 200 Sport manual including optional metallic paint 36 monthly payments of*(Term of agreement) On-the-road price Customer deposit Retailer deposit contribution Optional final payment† Total amount of credit Total amount payable††

Ready for an unforgettable open-air experience? Book a test drive today.

Option to purchase fee† Representative APR Fixed interest rate

£419 £37,630 £4,999 £4,378.76 £16,400 £28,252.24 £40,871.76 £10 4.9% 4.76%

Official government fuel consumption figures in mpg (litres per 100km) for the new C-Class Cabriolet range: urban 23.5(12.0)–54.3(5.2), extra urban 39.2(7.2)–72.4(3.9), combined 31.7(8.9)–62.8 (4.5). CO2 emissions 208-116 g/ km. Official EU-regulated test data are provided for comparison purposes and actual performance will depend on driving style, road conditions and other non-technical factors. Whilst this offer is only available through Mercedes-Benz Finance, we do arrange finance behalf of other finance companies as well. Model featured is a Mercedes-Benz C 200 Sport at £37,630 on-the-road (on-the-road price includes VAT, delivery, 12 months’ Road Fund Licence, number plates, first registration fee and fuel). Specification imagery may show optional features. Content relating to finance is promoted by Mercedes-Benz Finance. Your Retailer may offer finance on behalf of other companies. *Finance offer based on a C 200 Sport on a Mercedes-Benz Agility Agreement, on 10,000 miles per annum. Vehicle condition, excess mileage and other charges apply. †Payable if you exercise the option to purchase the car. ††Includes optional purchase payment, purchase activation fee and Retailer deposit contribution. Orders/credit approvals on selected C- Class Cabriolet, between 1 July and 30 September 2017, registered by 31 December 2017. Guarantees may be required. Offers cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer. Some combinations of features/options may not be available. Credit provided subject to status by Mercedes-Benz Finance, MK15 8BA. Prices, fuel consumption and CO2 emissions correct at time of production.

The best or nothing.

Mercedes-Benz of Norwich Barker Street, Norwich, NR2 4TN 01603 751000 www.mercedes-benzofnorwich.co.uk


M E E T

T H E

T E A M

COLIN HUGGINS MANAGING DIRECTOR

T: 01493 742091 M: 07775 858862 E: colin@h2creativemedia.co.uk

DONNA TITCOMBE FASHION & BEAUTY EDITOR

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ANDREW HIRST HEAD OF CLIENT SERVICES / STUDIO

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Richard Bainbridge, Jack Baines, John Bultitude, Benet Catty, Chuff Media, Peter Clarke, Melanie Cook, Judy Feston, Andrew Florides, Simon Franklin, Samantha Fraser, Julian Gibbons, Pete Goodram, Carl Lamb, Ellen Mary, Eliza Miller, Nick Mobbs, Mark Nicholls, Hayley Philpot, Franck Pontais, Jennifer Read, James Spicer, Samantha Thompson, David Wakefield

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call Jane on 01493 742088 or visit our website at www.placesandfaces.co.uk/ magazine-subscribe

PUBLISHED BY:

W ELCOME

TO AUGUST’S PLACES&FACES® BEHIND THE SCENES we have been working hard to bring

you an even bigger and better magazine with even more to read and enjoy. Our celebrity interviews include Rory Charles Graham better known as Rag’n’Bone Man. Rory broke through in late 2016 with his debut single Human. He went on to win the 2017 BRITs Critics Choice Award and finish second in the BBC Sound of 2017. In February 2017 the release of his debut album Human took the Official Charts by storm becoming the decades fastest- selling album so far by a British male soloist even outselling the albums of Sam Smith and Ed Sheeran. We also caught up with Kerry Ellis and Matt Cardle ahead of their two night performance at The Apex Theatre in Bury St Edmunds. Kerry is recognised as the leading lady of West End and Broadway musicals, with a number of starring roles in London, New York and around the world. Meanwhile, Matt has become a multiplatinum recording artist having completed five sold-out tours since winning The X Factor’s highest rating series in 2010, watched by over 19 million and Mark Nicholls speaks to Joe Pasquale as his latest one-man show Devil In Disguise heads to Great Yarmouth’s Britannia Pier. Our celebrity interviews don’t stop there John Bultitude spoke to Sir Michael Parkinson arguably the man who put the British chat show front and centre of the entertainment world. We hope you like our new music column where every month we will be looking at some of the lesser known facts of rock and pop. We kick off this month highlighting TEN things you might not know about the late Chuck Berry who sadly passed away in April this year. This issue is packed with interesting articles for you to enjoy including a comprehensive What’s On round up, theatre reviews, as well as our regular columns which we know from your feedback you enjoy. These include fashion, beauty, new car reviews, interior design, recipes and restaurant reviews to name but a few. So take some time out and relax with a well earned cup of tea or glass of wine and enjoy our latest edition of Places&Faces® magazine.

Colin Huggins PS. Congratulations to Simon Haines, Kathy Pointer and Jean Hollick who won tickets in our July issue to see Tom Jones at Holkham Hall.

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TERMS & CONDITIONS Humberstone House, 47 Englands Lane, Gorleston, Norfolk NR31 6BE T 01493 742088

PRINTERS: MICROPRESS Fountain Way, Reydon Business Park, Reydon, Suffolk IP18 6DH

Copyright on all content is with H2Creative Media Limited. Reproduction in part or whole is

forbidden without the express permission of the publishers. All prices, events and times were correct at the time of print, and you are encouraged to contact the businesses and venues

prior to making bookings. All expressions and opinions demonstrated within the publication, are those of the Publisher including contributors. Places&Faces® is a registered Trade Mark of H2Creative Media Limited.


AylshamShow the

Blickling Park • Monday 28th August 2017

Food and farming area

Sheep dog and spaniel displays

Fun fair

Red Devil’s parachute display

Advance tickets only £12

Children 16 and under FREE • Car Parking FREE Discounted tickets available from: • Aylsham: Coxford’s Butchers & Just Regional

• Banningham: The Banningham Crown • Cromer: JB Postle • Catton: Yeomans Electrical • Cawston: Woodrow Garage • Drayton: Drayton Stores • Edgefield: Edgefield Nursery • Fakenham: Papworth Butchers • Holt: Budgens • North Walsham: Papworth Butchers & Sainsburys • Norwich: Archant (EDP) & Ben Burgess • Sheringham: Papworth Butchers • Sprowston: White House Farm PYO & Rosie’s Cards & Gifts • Stalham: Tesco • Swaffham: Papworth Butchers • Thorpe: Thorpe Travel

www.theaylshamshow.co.uk

For more information or to buy online visit Gates open from 8am at Blickling Estate Tickets £15 cash only on gate

Battle of Britain Flypast

Beer tasting

Animals

Adrenaline Tour Quad Bikes

Plus lots more!

The locally grown day out!


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CONTENTS

62

46

61

48 36

40 19

65

72 COVER STORY 42 The Rag'n'Bone Man comes to town

PERSONALITIES 28 10 things you might not know about: Chuck Berry 40 46

Michael Parkinson comes to Norwich Joe Pasquale’s Devil in Disguise

106 Five minutes with Tom Blofeld

FASHION, BEAUTY & HEALTH 11 Spire Hospital: Game, set, ouch! 52 54 57 59

Global Diagnostics: State-of-the-art scanning

Ladies Fashion: Ruffle mania Beauty in the sky

Men's warm weather essentials

TRAVEL 48 Travel Time - our monthly round up! COMPETITION 31 Win! Dinner at Delia's

WHAT’S ON 13 Mel Cook: Visit Norwich 15 16 19 26 32 34 36 38

Summer shows at The Hippodrome

81 84

62

Great Yarmouth's Maritime Festival

65

The Out There Festival

68

What's on in August

West End Review: Wind in the Willows The National Gilbert & Sullivan Opera Company Dreamboats and Petticoats

Matt Cardle & Kerry Ellis at the Apex

HOMES AND GARDENS 76 Outdoor Fun Essentials 79

FOOD AND DRINK 61 Franck Pontais: Cracking Courgettes

Fine Furnishings: Arcadia Home Interiors

This months property advice

Gardening notes from Ellen Mary

72

A League of their own: Delia's Restaurant & Bar

Richard Bainbridge: Marvellous Meringue

This months food and wine from The Imperial

Fine food, relaxation and indulgence at Congham Hall

BUSINESS 95 Financial advice from Carl Lamb 97

Julian Gibbons: Tragedies & enquiries

MOTORING 88 Taking the new Honda Civic Type R out for a spin 92

The Nations favourite: The Ford Fiesta

SOCIAL SCENE 98 Caught on camera


Orthopaedic surgery at Spire Norwich Hospital

Prompt and expert care to get you moving again Our Orthopaedic Consultants specialise in: • Hip - hip replacement and revision surgery • Knee - whether sports related, arthritic changes or knee replacement • Shoulder - from keyhole diagnostic procedures to shoulder replacement • Back and spine - from simple pain management techniques to complex spinal surgery • Hand and wrist - carpal tunnel, arthroscopy and reconstructive work Whether you are insured or self-funding, we are here to look after you. For further information or to book an appointment with a specialist consultant, contact our friendly private patient advisors today.

01603 255 614 info@spirenorwich.com www.spirenorwich.com


HEALTH

tennis elbow the tendons during these shots. However all is not lost for the amateurs as the tendon problems felt on the inside part of the elbow, the so called ‘golfer’s elbow’, is more common in high level players. As with tennis elbow, golfers elbow is more common in non-golfers and actually occurs with some frequency in tennis players. Failure of technique is a common cause of golfers elbow in high level tennis players and Helen Culling of Spire Norwich highlights the need for intervention by the tennis coach as well Hospital discusses ‘tennis elbow’ with as the surgeon or physiotherapist in many tennis injuries. If the Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon player tends to snap the wrist on serving or forehand top-spin shots this can lead to increasing strain and injury to the tendon Mr Emmet Griffiths on the inside part of the elbow”. “Tennis elbow symptoms come on slowly and it is rare that this is brought on by one single episode or injury. Pain is felt on the prominent bone on the outside part of the elbow. Aching arlier this year both Andy Murray and Novak spread down the forearm towards the hand and is worse Djokovic were ruled out of tennis tournaments due on bending or flexing the wrist. For sudden onset pain, for to elbow injuries. Although recently knocked out example if it comes on during a serve, it can represent tendon of the Wimbledon tournament, Andy Murrays first tearing rather than the usual slow degeneration and irritation serve registers at an impressive 116 mph on average, of the tendon that is seen in elbow ‘tendinoses’ seen in sports”. so it’s no surprise really that the most elite athletes at “MRI scanning or ultrasound scanning can be an adjunct the very top of their game can fall foul of upper limb problems to simple clinical examination which is usually sufficient. when they put their body under so much strain. Initial treatment is with rest and physiotherapy. This involves The term ‘tennis elbow’ will be widely recognised to most tendon stretching treatments as well as manual therapies people, tennis players or not. It was a condition first described such friction massaging or acupuncture. Additional measures in the UK by British surgeon Henry Morris in an when returning to play are sometimes helpful, article outling ‘lawn tennis arm’ in 1882 and it including increasing the size of your tennis grip, FOR MORE INFORMATION subsequently adopted its name in 1883 in a further wearing a tennis elbow brace, avoiding playing on shoulder or elbow article entitled ‘lawn tennis elbow’. In fact it is on damp days with wet heavy balls and reducing injuries arrange an estimated that less than 10% of tennis players get string tension on your racquet”. appointment with your GP or telephone 01603 tennis elbow and for the majority of those affected “Further interventional treatment may be 255 614 to make a private they have never picked up a racquet so it’s unlikely required if more conservative measures fail appointment with that ‘tennis elbow’ was the diagnosis for the world to control symptoms. Traditionally steroid Consultant Orthopaedic number 1 and 2 respectively earlier this year. injections have been used and, although Surgeon Mr Emmet Mr Griffiths, Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon anecdotally successful in some, overall may Griffiths. For further details regarding Mr Griffiths visit at Spire Norwich Hospital with a specialist cause more damage to the tendon www.spirenorwich.com interest in shoulder and elbow complaints in the long-term and their use and ‘click’ on his explains “Tennis elbow affects the recreational is gradually being discontinued. consultant profile players much more commonly than the Surgical procedures including professionals. This is caused by the excessive more common open operations and contraction of the muscles on the back of the forearm, pulling newer keyhole procedures are normally reserved on the tendons on the outside of the elbow, predominantly for cases where more serious damage has occured. However during backhand shots. This leads to more trauma on if used in appropriately selected cases, will be very successful a microscopic level to these tendons”. in resolving elbow tendon pain. The key to preventing elbow “Professional players have a stronger wrist tendon issues in the recreational as well as elite tennis player position which prevents the stretching of is focus on strength and endurance training for muscles in the elbow and the forearm as well as focusing on the condition of the other components of the ‘kinetic chain’”. Mr Griffiths concludes “Most injuries can be managed by sensible lengths of rest and anti-inflammatory treatments. Persistent cases should be looked into by a Shoulder and Elbow specialist, who can make an early diagnosis thus directing accurate treatments and enabling access to more interventional treatments if deemed necessary”.

Game, set, ouch!

E

All surgery carries an element of risk and the content of this page is provided for general information only. It should not be treated as a substitute for the professional medical advice of your doctor or other healthcare professional.

11


mazona Zoo go ws

it’sss Braziliant!

Explore the Amazona in Cromer

Under 4’s go FREE Braziliant value: Admission still at 2014 prices!!

GIANT MAIZE MAZE

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FUN PLAY PARK

(August only) Amazona Zoo Rainforest Springs logo

AWARD

WINNING

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Timber Maze Refreshments Go-Karts

Crazy Croquet Inflatable Fun Tractor Rides & much more

cromercamping.com

South American Animal Adventure

For opening times andAnimal other South American Adventureenquiries

07771 605797 / 07974 658993 Sat Nav - NR29 4NL

Open 21st to 29th October 2017 SPOOKY FUN FOR ALL!

amazonazoo.co.uk South American Animal Adventure

Please visit our website for more details and special offers:

Hall Road, Cromer NR27 9JG Tel. 01263 510741 Facebook.com/AmazonaZoo

@AmazonaZoo

amazonazoo.co.uk

www.hirstysfamilyfunpark.co.uk

ST. GEORGE’S PARK & arounD GREAT YARMOUTH: MOSTLY FREE!

SAT 16 - SUN 17 SEPTEMBER A FREE FUN-FILLED WEEKEND OF OUTDOOR SPECTACLE, FAMILY-FRIENDLY ACTIVITY & WORLD-CLASS PERFORMANCE

street arts

circus

outtherefestival.com

music

comedy

acrobatics


VISITNORWICH

melanie cook

Be inspired to write your own Some horsey adventures beckon this summer in Norwich, says Melanie Cook of VisitNorwich NEW RESEARCH THIS YEAR from VisitEngland shows that

more than half of British holidaymakers would visit a literary attraction on holiday in England. With this in mind, follow the story of Anna Sewell’s Black Beauty – the book that brought an audience more than just being an extraordinary story, it’s also inspired animal welfare reforms. There are many literary anniversaries to commemorate in 2017, names we have grown up with and many whom we’ve read. It’s the 50th anniversary of Arthur Ransome's death (Swallow & Amazons), the 75th anniversary of Enid Blyton's Famous Five, and the 125th anniversary of the first Sherlock Holmes publication. It’s also 140 years since Black Beauty – Anna Sewell’s 50-million bestselling novel – was first published by Jarrold & Sons, Norwich in 1877. Anna Sewell was born in Great Yarmouth in 1820. At the age of two she moved to London, though was often sent back to Norfolk with her brother Philip to stay with their grandparents in Buxton. However her family finally settled back in Norfolk, in Norwich in 1867 – which is from where Anna wrote Black Beauty between 1871 and 1877. In recognition of the anniversary, Jarrolds and The Museum of Norwich at the Bridewell have opened a small exhibition: Cecil Aldin: The Art of Black Beauty. Working with such partners as VisitNorwich, Write On Norfolk, Woodforde’s and Redwings horse sanctuary, the anniversary will also be used to bring a host of one-off events for all ages.

The highlight will definitely be the Museum of Norwich at the Bridewell’s exhibition of 13 watercolours by Cecil Aldin, who was commissioned to illustrate the 1912 edition of Black Beauty which was also published by Jarrold & Sons. Excitingly and quite by coincidence, a rare 1915 special edition of Black Beauty (signed by the illustrator) was given to Redwings this year to auction and this will also form part of the exhibition, with the book auction taking place before Christmas. Over the summer and into the winter (the exhibition closes 25 November) the museum will hold events such as storytelling, horse welfare talks, and equine related arts and crafts. In addition, Norfolk County Council, for the second year, is running their summer ‘Write On Norfolk’ short story competition for children through the long school holidays. Families will be encouraged to visit the Black Beauty exhibition to learn more about Anna and her work, hoping it will create some inspiration. Meanwhile at Jarrolds, more themed complimentary events will take place. There’ll be competitions in the arts & crafts and book departments, a special August afternoon tea, and a hard-back special edition of Black Beauty featuring the Cecil Aldin watercolours available for £20. And for adults only: Woodforde’s Black Beauty beer exclusively for sale in the Deli! For the whole family, on Saturday 26th August (1.30pm) Jarrolds will host children’s author Lou Kuenzler, who will be signing and reading from her book, Finding Black Beauty – a reimagining of Anna Sewell’s classic Black Beauty. This will be followed by a writing workshop at the Museum of Norwich at the Bridewell at 3pm, where Lou will be inspiring and encouraging budding authors. It’s also hoped the anniversary celebrations will ignite a passion for people to learn more about Anna Sewell herself; she loved horses and really cared about their welfare. Black Beauty isn’t just fiction for children – the book was actually written for adults to highlight the plight of the mistreatment of horses in Victorian England. And it achieved its aims: legislation came into play both in England and the US to better care for horses after the book was published. Today animal welfare is still a hot topic. Redwings are a charity providing help and shelter to mistreated horses and donkeys from around the country. Their stables in fact, at Aylsham in the Broads, is home to Maya, nicknamed Black Beauty for obvious reasons. Maya was rescued from a cruel and neglectful owner in Essex in 2010 along with six other horses and throughout the summer can be visited in Aylsham (Fridays to Mondays, free of charge). Once at Redwings take the opportunity to not only see how ‘Black Beauty’ is now thriving, but also visit many other rescued horses and adorable donkeys. You can even join their Adoption Stars programme and sponsor Black Beauty for a year for £12.50, which also means an invitation to her next birthday! Something I bet Anna would have loved to have done.

CECIL ALDIN: THE ART OF BLACK BEAUTY is at The Museum of Norwich at the Bridewell between 25 July – 25 November. The museum is offering free entry in the first two weeks of the exhibition courtesy of the 700th commemoration of the Norwich Freemen. For details of Write On Norfolk go to www.norfolk.gov.uk. Full Black Beauty events can be found on www.visitnorwich.co.uk.

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GREAT YARMOUTH GREAT YARMOUTH

SUMMER

CIRCUS WATER S SP PE EC CT TA AC CU UL LA AR R

“ONE “ONE OF OF THE THE 7 7 WONDERS WONDERS OF THE BRITISH SEASIDE” OF THE THE BRITISH SEASIDE” TELEGRAPH THE TELEGRAPH

EVERYDAY 2.30 7.30 2.30 EVERYDAY E 2.30 V 7.30 SUNDAYS SUNDAYS E 2.30 6.30 6.30 AND AND

*NO 2.30 SHOW *NO 2.30 FRIDAYS SHOW FRIDAYS

AND AND

01493 0 01493 844172 844172 hippodromecircus.co.uk hippodromecircus.co.uk NO SHOWS: JULY 17 SEPT 4, 7, 8, 11, 12, 14, 15 NO SHOWS: JULY 17 SEPT 4, 7, 8, 11, 12, 14, 15


WHAT’S ON

hippodrome circus

R E M m r a sU l U c A T C e p S 7 1 0 2 S U ciRC

The Hippodrome Circus just off the Sea front in Great Yarmouth now presents family show’s in all of the main School Holidays. Dubbed one of the “Seven wonders of the British Seaside” by the Daily Mail, the unique 1903 Historic venue has an incredible line up of shows for 2017. Britain’s last surviving total circus building stages its brand new Circus and Water summer blockbuster extravaganza with amazing international circus artists, dancers, swimmers, acrobats plus comedians Jack Jay and Johnny Mac and mind blowing feats of daring from the amazing Globe motor bike riders and the thrilling Wheel of Death. The show is presented in the Hippodrome’s atmospheric Opera House setting, inspired by the Phantom of the Opera at the Venetian Hotel in Las Vegas. The mind blowing finale Water Spectacular is one of only three in the world and the only place in Europe that stages such a show with swimmers, aerialists and special effects when the ring turns into a giant pool – an

unforgettable experience. Rated by Norfolk’s Places & Faces magazine as one of the top fifty things you must see in Norfolk, also Britain’s most visited summer show. Jack Jay and Johnny Mac are now firmly established as one of the country’s leading double acts, and the hilarious feast includes plenty of slapstick and water comedy moments – one thing is for sure, you’ll be saying ‘I’m enjoying myself!!!’ Don’t miss this unique family entertainment it’s the ultimate summer family experience a unique blend of action comedy and spectacular thrills. – The Summer Spectacular opens on 12th July and runs till the 17th September. 15


| AUGUST 2017

y il M fA e h t L l a r o f n U F H T U O m R a Y T A e aT thE gr

E M I T i mar festival The 2017 Great Yarmouth Maritime Festival will take place on Saturday 9 and Sunday 10 September

16


WHAT’S ON

great yarmouth maritime festival

GREAT YARMOUTH TOURISM

T

he famous Great Yarmouth Maritime Festival is a fantastic free two-day event found on historic South Quay with ships to go aboard, live shanty folk music, fun street theatre exhibitions and demonstrations for visitors to explore. The Maritime Festival is always a riot of colour with tall ships and supply vessels flying colourful bunting from their masts. Three different stages will host a huge variety of live folk music and sea shanty songs at the Great Yarmouth Maritime Festival, performed live by bands from all over the UK and Europe. Packed marquees with demonstrations and exhibitions are set up all along historic South Quay for Maritime Festival visitors to see. Maritime related craft and charity stalls have all sorts of things to buy. Visitors can also try their hand at some traditional maritime skills on the demonstration stands. Festivalgoers also enjoy street entertainment, face-painting and fun children’s activities. The Greater Yarmouth Tourism and Business Improvement Area Ltd is delighted to announce that visitors can go aboard several ships at this year’s Maritime Festival. The Earl of Pembroke will be open from 10am on both days for visitors to go aboard. Tickets will cost £3 for adults and £2 for children aged 5-16. A family ticket for 5 people (2 adults max) can be bought at the ticket booth. The Regal Lady has unfortunately been unable to make the trip from Scarborough.

The Esvagt will be open from 10.25am on Saturday and 10.15am on Sunday. Entrance is by a pre-booked guided tour only, with places limited to 12 people per tour. Tours will last around 25 minutes. The Esvagt is now fully booked. Unfortunately none of the ships to go aboard are suitable for wheelchair access this year. Please note, if you are coming to the festival in a wheelchair, we recommend that you use the Middle Gate opposite Nottingham Way or the South Gate to enter the Maritime Festival. Historic South Quay features a lengthy stretch of cobblestones shortly after the entrance at North Gate which can be a little bit tricky and somewhat uncomfortable for some wheelchair users to navigate.

17


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Christmas Party Nights

December at the Raceview Restaurant

At Yarmouth Stadium

Date

Price Offer

Looking for a fantastic Chrismas Party venue?

Sat 2nd Mon 4th Wed 6th Fri 8th Sat 9th

£31.99 £14.99 £14.99 £31.99 £34.99

Starter, Main Course, Dessert & Disco after Racing Main Course Only (No Disco) Main Course Only (No Disco) Starter, Main Course, Dessert & Disco after Racing Starter, Main Course, Dessert & Disco after Racing

Mon 11th Wed 13th Fri 15th Sat 16th

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Book Now! 01493 720343 Yarmouth Road, Caister-on-Sea, Norfolk NR30 5TE 01493 720343 www.yarmouthstadium.co.uk

Tues 26th £26.99 Boxing Day Brunch Wed 27th £14.99 Main Course Only Festive Special - Complementary Bottle of wine per table of 4 Adults.

Enjoy the festivities in our Party Lounges! “Christmas Executive Package” Monday & Wednesday - £28.00pp

Friday & Saturday - £39.99pp


A U ' n O Gust s t A H W IN

lous activities and eve mmer with these fabu nts - there’s su is th OT H 's at wh something Make the most of for everyon e!

GREAT BRITISH PROMS Great British Proms Blickling Hall Saturday 12th August the event, previously known as the Last Night of the Blickling Proms, returns in 2017 as The Great British Proms. The programme, which contains a veritable British feast of music from across the home nations, is being planned for what has become an annual favourite in the Norfolk calendar for 1000s of concert-goers. The National Symphony Orchestra will be performing iconic music from all corners of the UK; it will begin with the National Anthem. Following on from this there will be representation of some truly rousing English, Irish,

Welsh & Scottish classics guaranteed to stir the audience. The second half will see the National Symphony Orchestra, whose international reputation for excellence puts them in the top 4 orchestras in the UK, return to the stage to perform all the Proms favourites including “Rule Britannia”, “Land of Hope & Glory” & British anthem “Jerusalem”. Car-parking is free. The evening ends with fireworks over the lake. – Saturday 12th August gates open 5pm, concert starts 7.30pm, Blickling Hall

FOOD AND DRINK FESTIVAL The Sandringham Food and Drink Festival returns for its 3rd year. This year a host of celebrity chefs will be demonstrating throughout the day, including Tom Kerridge (Saturday) - Michelin starred chef Galton Blackiston (Saturday) - 14 year Michelin star holder and ‘East Anglia’s favourite chef’ Jean Christophe Novelli (Sunday) a 5 out of 5, AA Rosette and multi Michelin Star award winning chef who has also been dubbed “The Nation’s Favourite French Chef”. Sabrina Gahyour will also be there on the Sunday; Sabrina is a self-taught cook and food writer who hosts ‘Sabrina’s Kitchen’ in various venues across London, renowned for Persian and Middle Eastern flavourful dishes. – Saturday 5th to Sunday 8th August, Sandringham

FESTIVAL American soul shouter Geno Washington performing with his the Ram Jam Band will be headlining Big Gig 2017. Signed to Piccadilly by early 1966, the group just broke into the Top 40 with “Water.” Though it was their highestcharting single, Geno Washington and the Ram Jam Band hit the charts three times in the next year with “Hi-Hi Hazel,” a cover of “Que Sera Sera,” and “Michael.” The band’s first two LPs,

Hand Clappin’ Foot Stompin’ FunkyButt...Live! and Hipsters, Flipsters, Finger-Poppin’ Daddies! were much better documents of the band at work, and both hit the British Top Ten. – Friday 4th, Saturday 5th and Sunday 6th August, Halesworth Big Gig in Halesworth Town Park 19


A U G u s t n O ' s WHAt IN

FIREWORK DISPLAY Every Wednesday evening in August the skies over Great Yarmouth will be illuminated with a fantastic summer firework spectacular. The evening starts off with fun and music entertainment from 8pm followed by the firework display starting at 10pm. The best viewing areas are anywhere along the seafront Esplanade, between the Britannia Pier and the Wellington Pier. Enjoy the free live music at the Sea Life Centre Gardens from 8pm, before watching the fireworks. A fabulous free weekly event not to be missed!

Every Wednesday in August Great Yarmouth Seafront 8pm – 1030pm

ROCK ‘N’ ROLL MUSICAL The UK’s premier Rock & Roll production That’ll Be The Day returns with another brand new show! Highly acclaimed for its stunning live entertainment value, That’ll Be The Day is an outstanding celebration for all true fans of the golden era of popular music. This latest production features a fantastic new-lineup of smash hits spanning the 50s, 60s, 70s & 80s, plus more side-splitting comic sketches, all performed live on-stage! Prepare for an unforgettable night of nostalgia, laughs and ROCK ‘N’ ROLL! – Kings Lynn Corn Exchange, Friday 1st September 7-30pm COMEDY The Nimmo Twins return to The Playhouse in Norwich with their sell out, award winning show The Country Members. She Goo, Billy Boy, The Council and Kraftwork return to be recorded for posterity on a shiny disc thing that captures voices and souls in the Devils’ work. Book early to avoid disappointment. – Wednesday 23rd August to Monday 28th August 7-30pm, The Playhouse, Norwich 20

ACCOUSTIC HITS 10cc’s Graham Gouldman: Heart Full of Songs – Acoustic hits from the 10cc singersongwriter. I’m Not In Love, Dreadlock Holiday, The Things We Do for Love – Graham Gouldman’s decade of 10cc hits provide the soundtrack to so many teenage memories. But his career also includes hits from The Yardbirds (For Your Love, Heart Full of Soul), The Hollies (Look Through Any Window, Bus Stop) and many others. Graham loves playing these hits with his three-piece acoustic band. Featuring all these classics along with Bridge To Your Heart (from Graham’s time in Wax with the late Andrew Gold) the evening includes more of his work for film soundtracks and material from the latest solo album Love And Work. A special celebration of one of our great songwriters. – Snape Maltings, Wednesday 16 August 7-30pm


WHAT’S ON

august NEWMARKET NIGHTS Jess Glynne will be returning with her spectacular outdoor summer show to Newmarket Racecourse in August. Her number-one charting debut album, ‘I Cry When I Laugh‘, has now turned triple platinum in the UK, making it the highest selling debut album of the past year. She also became the second British female solo artist after Cheryl to have five numberone singles in the UK. With no signs of slowing down, 2017 is set to be a further massive year for Jess, with her second album on the way! – Saturday 26th August Show 5:30pm Newmarket Summer Nights, Newmarket Racecourse

AN EVENING WITH For one night only, celebrate the glittering career of one of Liverpool and England’s finest footballers John Barnes. This is a unique chance to get up close and personal with one of the brightest talents this country has ever produced. – Thursday 17th August 7-30pm, Waterfront, Norwich

MUSIC Two of the most powerful and awardwinning voices of this century appear in concert together for the very first time. Kerry Ellis and Matt Cardle will take to the stage for an epic evening performing at The Apex in Bury St Edmunds. – Wednesday 23rd – Thursday 24th August 2017, The Apex, Bury St Edmunds 7-30pm

MUSIC With appearances on the Dame Shirley Bassey’s Tribute Show, Graham Norton, Strictly and The One Show, British harmony trio Blake present a brand new tour, featuring the finest songs from stage and screen. Projections and lighting bring the cinematic magic to life... Linked together with the boys’ famous improvised banter, the show features music from Hans Zimmer, Ennio Morricone, Leonard Bernstein, Andrew Lloyd Webber and many more. This is the ultimate celebration of movies and musicals, all sung in thrilling vocal harmony. – The Apex, Bury St Edmunds, Thursday 14th September 7.30pm

THEATRE OPEN DAY Each year the Theatre Royal throws open its doors for a day to let you explore every bit of this busy working theatre. You can go backstage, see the stars’ dressing rooms, have a go at lighting, sound, ‘flying’, stage management and much more. There are tours, talks, displays and performances taking place throughout the day. As well as the main theatre, you can also have a look round Stage Two, our education and training centre, and find out more about all the classes and activities taking place there. The Open Day is suitable for all ages, and especially good fun for families. Admission is FREE for everyone. – The Norwich Theatre Royal Open Day is on Saturday 26th August – Come along and have a look behind the scenes – FREE OUTDOOR THEATRE Billionaire Boy at Holkham Hall – enjoy outdoor theatre at its best in Holkham Walled Garden this summer. Mr Spud has lost all his money. Not much….just a few billion pounds. Heartbreak Productions, Mr Spud and his son, Joe, would like to invite you to a garage sale (they used to own 500 garages) where they will be selling their final belongings to raise some money to buy food. The Formula 1 racing car has already been taken by the bailiffs, but there might be something interesting left. Bring your picnics, blankets and fold up chairs and come to the helicopter pad outside at Bumfresh Towers to hear the story of how Mr Spud made his billions, lost it all and how Joe became the richest boy in the world. Recommended for ages 7 and above. – Wednesday 16th August, Holkham Hall

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Tuesday 29 Aug - Saturday 2 Sept Eves 7.30pm, Mats Wed, Thur & Sat 2.30pm TICKETS: £8 - £28.50 Book online: www.theatreroyalnorwich.co.uk Theatre Street, Norwich NR2 1RL


A U G u s t n O ' s WHAt IN

MUSIC Jane McDonald is one of the nation’s most loved entertainers and is back by popular demand continuing to tour with her best show to date. “Making Memories” is a fantastic production packed full of phenomenal songs and arrangements featuring Jane’s exceptional musicians and singers. Jane will be performing “Memory” after receiving five-star reviews for her performance as Grizabella in Cats the musical. With amazing new medleys, old fan favourites and some exciting additions you’re guaranteed to be on your feet time after time. – 27th August 7-30pm, Marina Theatre, Lowestoft

STRICTLY COME JOKING Barry Cryer and Colin Sell – the Ant and Dec of the Sanatogen set reunite to bring you a new show, devised by them after the visitors left. Cryer, still a “sprightly Veteran” (Undertakers Gazette) and Sell a “Legendary Virtuoso” (Pensioners Weekly) combine to entertain you with songs, jokes and the amazing realisation that they are still here. Join them before they come apart! – Strictly Come Joking – Playhouse Norwich, Friday 1st September 7-30pm

WHAT’S ON

august

FOLK MUSIC FESTIVAL Growing in stature every year, East Anglia’s fast-rising FolkEast is back for the sixth time this August, proving why it is nothing like other music festivals. The three day festival will return to the glorious 300-acre Suffolk estate of 16th century Glemham Hall, the home of Major Philip Hope – Cobbold, from 18th to 20th august. This year’s festival will be packing a punch with a plethora of BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards winners and nominees including folk legend Jon Boden and Sam Kelly & The Lost Boys. Winner of the Horizon (Best Emerging Act) award at the 2016 Folk Awards, East Anglian-born Sam Kelly will bring his Lost Boys band and unmistakable voice to the main stage on Saturday night, building on their success last year. With a third headliner still to be announced, the line-up will also include acclaimed singer guitarist Michael Chapman, esteemed veteran duo Martin Carthy & John Kirkpatrick and another outstanding duo from the younger generation, Will Pound and Eddy Jay, who made waves with their debut album Ignite last year. Lau, three times winners of Best Group at the Folk Awards, have also been announced. The acclaimed trio comprises Martin Green, Aidan O’Rourke and Kris Drever, whose song If Wishes Were Horses is nominated for Best Original Track at the 2017 Folk Awards. Another duo making their first appearance at FolkEast will be Dorset’s Ninebarrow (Jon Whitley and Jay LaBouchardiere), their songwriting skills and perfect harmonies having won them a nomination for the 2017 Folk Awards Horizon Award (Best New Act). Nominated in the same category is former Folk Singer of the Year Nancy Kerr, for her song Fragile Water ; Nancy will be heading to FolkEast in the star-studded trio of Simpson, Cutting and Kerr. Keeping the Irish flag flying will be the stand out Damien O’Kane Band. Coleraineborn Damien’s exciting modern spin on traditional Irish folk music saw his latest album Areas of High Traffic nominated for Best Album at the 2016 Folk Awards – Friday 18th, Saturday 19th & Sunday 20th August 2017, Folk East, Glemham Hall Grounds, Suffolk

A DAY AT THE RACES The very popular family fun day is back and bigger and better than ever with loads of fun activities for children of all ages to enjoy. This fun filled day out is guaranteed to keep the whole family entertained Great Yarmouth racecourse offers a relaxed atmosphere with plenty of facilities, including the modern grandstand, a children’s playground and expansive family lawns. Children under 18 years old, enjoy free admission to all fixtures. – August bank holiday family fun day at Great Yarmouth Racecourse Sunday 27th August 2017 – Gates open at 11-30am with the first race at 2.00pm 23


- Mannington Gardens Table D’Hote Menu 3 courses £17.00 | 2 courses £14.50

Twelfth Night

Lord and Lady Walpole invite you to enjoy walks, trails, gardens and many special events. Gardens open end May – 31st August Sundays 12-5, Wednesday Thursday and Friday 11-5 Greedy Goose Tearooms on garden open days Adults £6.00; concessions £5.00; accompanied children under 16 free. Season Tickets: £30.00 for families | £18.00 for single Walks and the car park are available every day 9am until dusk. Car park £2.00 (free for garden visitors). Events 13th August Fairy Tales and Fables

· Accommodation · Weddings · Parties · · Evening Meals · Sunday Luncheons · Bar Snacks ·

LARGE FREE CAR PARK

18th August Open Air Theatre ‘Twelfth Night’

North Drive, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk NR30 1EG

Contact us for full details of 2017 events

01493 844568

Mannington Hall, Mannington, Norfolk NR11 7BB Tel 01263 584175 | email admin@walpoleestate.co.uk www.manningtongardens.co.uk

www.burlington-hotel.co.uk For Accommodation, Functions, Weddings, Parties, Evening Meals, Sunday Luncheons and Bar Snacks.

eon Lunch ble y a d Sun g Advisa in Book Table d’ote menu

Three courses and coffee Large choice of Fish and Roasts served to your table Free parking available - ask at reception

North Drive, Great Yarmouth, NR30 1EG Tel: 01493 844568 Email: enquiries@burlington-hotel.co.uk

APEX GIFT VOUCHERS AVAILABLE IN ANY DENOMINATION IN PERSON: FROM THE APEX BOX OFFICE TEL: 01284 758000 ONLINE: WWW.THEAPEX.CO.UK/GIFT-VOUCHERS The Apex, 1 Charter Square Bury St Edmunds IP33 3FD


A U G u s t n O ' s t HA IN

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CLASSIC IBIZA #BlicklingdoesIbiza is returning to Blickling Hall on Friday 11th August – so don’t miss out !! Classic Ibiza will ensure that one of Norfolk’s best-known beauty spots will rival the White Island for party anthems when DJ Goldierocks and the Urban Soul Orchestra (USO) bring some of the biggest dance tracks from the last 20 years to life. The music will start with a chilled set and, as the sun goes down, the vocalists and USO’s dynamic musicians will ramp things up as the evening breaks into festive-club mode with accompanying lasers. The inaugural event in 2016 was declared a smash hit by organisers and thousands of revellers from across the region have clamoured for its return. So book early if you don’t want to miss the fun! – Friday 11th August Gates will open at 6pm, Blickling Hall

TRIBUTE ACT This toe-tapping show brings together the beloved glamour and personality of Dolly, along with Kenny’s charisma and energy with hit after hit including: Jolene, Ruby, 9 to 5 Lucille, Here You Come Again, The Gambler, I Will Always Love You, plus the smash hit Islands in the Stream. – Norwich Theatre Royal, Sunday 10th September, 7.30pm

CIRCUS AND WATER SPECTACULAR The Hippodrome’s Brand New Circus and Water Summer blockbuster with amazing International Circus Artists, Dancers, Show Swimmers, Acrobats plus comedians Jack Jay and Johnny Mac and mind blowing feats from the amazing Globe Motor Bike Riders and the thrilling Wheel of Death. The mind blowing Finale Water Spectacular is one of only three in the world and the only place in Europe that stages such a show with Swimmers, Aerialists and special effects when the ring turns into a giant pool – an unforgettable experience. – Hippodrome Circus Great Yarmouth. Runs until 17th September

DRAMA The National Theatre’s internationally acclaimed production of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the NightTime returns to The Norwich Theatre Royal in August. Winner of 7 Olivier Awards and 5 Tony Awards® including ‘Best Play’, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time brings Mark Haddon’s best-selling novel to thrilling life on stage, adapted by two-time Olivier Award-winning playwright Simon Stephens and directed by Olivier and Tony Award®-winning director Marianne Elliott. – Tuesday 29th August – Saturday 2nd September, Theatre Royal, Norwich 25


| JULY 2017

Mirth, mayHem & magic

… S T e e r t s e H T e v pa Golden sands, top tourist attraction, unspoilt

countryside. From the beach to the Norfolk Broads, Great Yarmouth is one of the UK’s leading tourist destinations, rich and varied is its offering for visitors. But over recent years, the town has been establishing itself as a mecca of another kind. Great Yarmouth is fast becoming the UK’s capital of street arts and circus. Home to one of the last built circus buildings in the country, the Hippodrome, Great Yarmouth’s emergence as a contemporary circus and street arts capital has largely been forged by SeaChange Arts, a charity based in the town at The Drill House. Over the last decade they have brought hundreds of the world’s best artists to Great Yarmouth and entertained around half a million people with their annual Out There Festival. Out There takes place each September, and this year marks the tenth anniversary of what has

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WHAT’S ON

out there festival become one of the country’s largest and most successful outdoor arts festivals. This year, around one hundred artists and performers from the UK, Spain, France and beyond will bring breath-taking spectacle, comedy and craziness to the streets of Great Yarmouth. “The premise of Out There is simple,” says Joe Mackintosh, the Artistic Director of the festival. “We want to bring everyone together in celebration and serve them up something wonderfully weird, outstanding and amazing. Our overriding ambition is for festival audiences to leave, mouth agape, astounded at what they’ve seen.” Over its ten year life-span, Out There has certainly done that. The amazing international shows they have programmed include a surreal mix from a towering 60 foot high iron man, made from shipping containers to superheroes cellophaned to lampposts; tiny motorised mini-buses ferrying people around the park to shopping trolley ballets. The festival has become a firm family favourite, with people regularly booking their weekend breaks to coincide with the festival. “It’s almost all free, so that’s a big draw for families,” explains Mr Mackintosh. “We’re conscious that times are hard and a family day out can be expensive, so we’ve fought hard to keep it free. We have lots of hands-on workshops, a relaxed festival bar where kids are welcome and this year, we introduce a kid’s zone, jam packed full of silly antics for the little ones.”

The festival regularly attracts around 50,000 visitors from all corners of the UK and 2017’s festival features much more of the same mayhem including Compania Vavel Circus - a Spanish all-female circus troupe complete with bicycle stunts and comedy polar bears; Rear View – a custom built mobile auditorium aboard a double decker bus; cheeky end-of-the-pier humour in Bingo Lingo and a wonderful roaming tumbledown cottage… on chicken legs, from Dizzy O’Dare. This year’s Out There Festival takes place in and around St. George’s Park, Great Yarmouth from Friday 15 to Sunday 17 September.

Out There by Numbers:

10

Years of ‘out there’ performance

500,000 70 3 9

people entertained over that time …hours of free performance at 2017’s festival

UK premiers lined-up for this year

1

Newly commissioned shows coming to Great Yarmouth

Performing Polar Bear (not real!)

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10 | AUGUST 2017

gs n i h T you M ight not Know AbOut:

CHUCK BERRY

PETE GOODRUM’S monthly look at some of the lesser known facts of rock and pop…

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TEN THINGS

chuck berry

J

ohn Lennon once said “If you had to give Rock 'n' Roll another name, you might call it Chuck Berry”. That’s how important Mr Berry is in the history of popular music. His guitar licks and wonderful lyrics defined rock ’n’ roll, painting perfect images of the American teenager. He passed away this year at the age of 90, and leaves a vast legacy. A complex man who led a colourful life – some would say he originated the ‘rock ’n’ roll lifestyle’ – there are some things about him that perhaps you’re not familiar with. I give you – ten things you quite possibly didn’t know about Chuck Berry.

1

FOR ALL HIS PERFORMING LIFE HE WAS ASSOCIATED WITH THE GIBSON GUITAR.

Musicians and fans saw it as the ultimate rock’n’roll combination. A creative alliance. Chuck didn’t. He saw the guitars simply as a tool of his trade. He bought a new one most years and claimed it as just that; a tool for his work. It meant he could claim it as a deductible allowance on his tax returns.

2 3 4

HIS FIRST PUBLIC PERFORMANCE WAS IN 1941.

Although he’s thought of as essentially a 1950s and 1960s star he was actually on stage in the 1940s. He was though still a student at Sumner High School for that first ever gig in 1941. 1947 – HAPPY 21ST BIRTHDAY CHUCK!

It would have been an especially good day for him. October 18 1947 – his 21st birthday – was the day he was released from The Reformatory for Young Men near Jefferson City, Missouri. He’d served three years. For armed robbery. HE WAS A TRAINED BEAUTICIAN!

It’s true. Rock and Roller Chuck Berry had several jobs before becoming a full time musician. He worked in car factories, and as the janitor in the building he lived in with his wife. He’d married ‘Toddy’ Suggs in 1948. He went on to train as a beautician, and hairdresser, at the Poro College of Cosmetology.

5

APART FROM MONEY ONE OF CHUCK’S BIG PASSIONS WAS FOOD.

Favourites included beef, seafood, peaches, home fries, candied yams, chili, grape soda, orange juice, Snickers bars and Dutch apple pie. But – whenever he performed live for a series of gigs in one place Berry always picked a venue near an Indian restaurant. Famously, for his Nottingham concerts in the 1990s he chose the city’s Royal Concert Hall. Why there? Because the stage door faced the front door of the Mogul – E – Azam restaurant.

6

INFLUENCE IS ONE THING, BUT COPYING IS SOMETHING ELSE.

It’s lucrative! It wasn’t the only legal and copyright issue in his career but when The Beach Boys admitted that their song ‘Surfin’ USA’ was just a bit too close to the melody of Berry’s ‘Sweet Little Sixteen’ they had to give Chuck a co-writing credit to escape legal action. He was happy. The Beach Boys record was a hit – and Chuck earned serious money from it.

7

ALL THAT JAZZ…

Not thought of as a jazz musician, nonetheless Chuck Berry played the Newport Jazz Festival in 1958. The event is captured forever in the classic film ‘Jazz on a Summer’s Day’. On a bill that included Louis Armstrong, Dinah Washington and Thelonius Monk, Chuck Berry stole the show. There’s a moment – watch it online or dvd – when, immaculately dressed and impressively cool, he got into his stride in ‘Sweet Little Sixteen’. Even the jazz men are noticeably impressed, and indeed join in. It’s stunning. How important is that movie and that moment? It inspired a young Keith Richards to be a musician!

8

FOR ALL THE YEARS HE TOURED, CHUCK HAD CERTAIN STRICT RULES.

Flying to the city in which he was appearing he would check his guitar in as hand luggage. It was stipulated in his contract that, on his arrival, there would be a hire car for him at the airport. He would pick it up, and drive himself to the gig. He would play with ‘pick up bands’ comprised of local musicians he’d usually never met. He didn’t engage in small talk with the band, and often made life difficult for them by changing key mid song. It’s said that before the applause had ceased he was in the hire car on his way back to the airport! And on the subject of payment. Chuck always got paid in cash. Before he played. It was non negotiable and on more than one occasion caused problems at airports when it was discovered that his luggage included a briefcase full of thousands of dollars in used notes.

9

THE EAST ANGLIAN CONNECTION.

Chuck Berry appeared in East Anglia more than once, including a gig at Ipswich. A stand out moment though is his performing at the legendary West Runton Pavilion on May 31st 1980. All of the stories about the day seem to sit in contrast with Mr Berry’s reputation for being a bit ‘difficult’. He turned up early, with his daughter, and raised no complaint because his dressing room wasn’t ready. After a glass, or two, of wine he strolled down to the beach where he and his daughter sat happily throwing stones into the sea. A man was fishing and Chuck wandered over to ask if he’d caught anything. A lifelong Chuck Berry fan the angler couldn’t believe it when he looked up to see his idol – the one and only Chuck Berry! – standing beside him on a Norfolk beach!

10

APRIL 9TH 2017. The day they buried Chuck

Berry in his home town of St Louis. Thousands filed past the open casket in which he lay. In the coffin with him was the tool of his trade – a red Gibson guitar.

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WI N

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at

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DELIA'S RESTAURANT AND BAR has teamed up with Places&Faces® to offer a wonderful competition prize. The lucky winner of this month’s competition will receive Dinner for 4 with a glass of Prosecco on arrival and a bottle of house wine with the meal from the seasonal three course menu, RRP £198.00. Also included in the prize is a signed copy of Delia’s cookbook of your choice* RRP £50.00. Delia has two main passions in life: food and football. She has supported Norwich City Football Club since the 1970s. Delia, clad in her favourite green and yellow scarf, goes to most home and away matches. She has a real sense of fun and loves sitting with the fans – enthusiastically joining in with some of the less boisterous songs! Delia’s innovation and talent as a cookery writer, author and television personality, brought her huge success and she joined the Norwich City FC board of directors in 1996. For Delia, the club is at the heart of the community and people are at the heart of everything she does.

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| AUGUST 2017

W weSt ENd reVIE

N W BLO a W A Y?

Benet Catty gives an honest assessment of the We s t E n d p r o d u c t i o n o f T h e Wi n d i n t h e Wi l l o w s

S

o much of what makes musicals work is alchemy. The right collaborators, the right motives, the right theatre, the right time. That’s why so many shows with great strengths are undone by their more dominant weaknesses. So the brilliance of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s score for Love Never Dies was concealed by problems with the book. The familiarity

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WHAT’S ON

the wind in the willows

of the story behind The Girls was undercut by the sense of money-for-old-rope. The Wind in the Willows, now playing at London’s most famous theatre The Palladium, is an example of a show being less than the sum of its parts. It’s a pleasant evening out, has some great Stiles and Drewe songs and some nice visuals. Those who take their children for a treat will find it a merry evening out. But it’s not special. It’s “ok”, perhaps “okplus” and the theatre and the source demand something a good deal better than that. Kenneth Grahame’s timeless 1908 novel is an evergreen classic and has been much adapted, although oddly (perhaps tellingly) not as a musical. It is a magical story of various characterful animals trying to manage the irrepressible Mr Toad and

overcome the scarier creatures of the Wild Wood in which the bespectacled, slipper-wearing Badger resides. It’s a funny, whimsical tale about friendship, innocence and responsibility. Julian Fellowes’ script offers none of these qualities. It is incredibly low on gags, gives no flavour of the animal world, and provides not one dash of quirk or splash of eccentricity. This leaves the cast with precious little to do to animate their characters so all talk falls flat. Fellowes did lovely work on adapting Mary Poppins with Stiles and Drewe, and his collaboration with them on Half a Sixpence (which closes in September) is one of London’s most joyous evenings out. But with the execrable School of Rock and now Willows, he proves completely incapable of writing

for characters outside his own well-trodden niche – i.e. upper middle-class snobs. Dropping in a pair of gay dads (which he does here and in Rock – he’s clearly going through a phase) is not the shortcut to relevancy that he thinks it is. The songs are much better news. As expected from Stiles and Drewe, they are all tuneful, catchy, charming and resolutely English. Their trouble, though, is that they are almost all establishing songs that stop the action rather than advance it. So there’s a song about the loveliness of the river, one about Toad liking his car, one (probably the best) about being a hedgehog, one about friendship. If it was a revue of songs inspired by the original story they would be ideal. But for a stage musical – a form for which the point is to tell a story through song – they feel like bolt-ons. In Toad terms, they are the leather seats of the vehicle, not its motor. Rachel Kavanaugh directs (as she did with Sixpence) and the show moves fluidly enough on Peter McKintosh’s sets but without any real inspiration. Those of us who saw what Alan Bennett and Nicholas Hytner were able to achieve with their adaptation of The Wind in the Willows at the National Theatre 25 years ago on Mark Thompson’s awe-inspiringly imaginative designs find ourselves leaving the Palladium with enhanced admiration for what real creativity can make of this story, sadly lacking here. The cast, largely, do no better than the material allows them to do, although Craig Mather and Simon Lipkin give it all they’ve got as Mole and Rat respectively and there’s fun support from Neil McDermott as the villainous Chief Weasel. Rufus Hound provides all possible “poop poop” as Mr Toad but the material is not funny enough to engage his comedian’s skills, nor well written enough to act. Gary Wilmot’s Badger is a charisma-free zone (anyone who saw him in Copacabana 20 years ago will be unsurprised) but he sings his big anthem “A Friend is Still A Friend” well enough to distract from his stage absence. The thirteen-strong orchestra brilliantly handles the many shifts of style that Stiles’ score represents. The Wind in the Willows is a pleasant evening out, and offers enough visual scale and melodic charm to be a worthwhile family trip (if they’ve already seen Matilda anyway). And kids go free (one free under-16 with every adult) which has to be a factor to take into account when making summer theatre choices. But the source material and the talent available could have created something much more worthwhile. Despite the catchy pop songs about Mr Toad and his motorcar, this star vehicle spends too much time in the middle of the road.

WIND IN THE WILLOWS is currently running at The London Palladium. For more information visit www.windinthewillowsthemusical.seetickets.com

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| AUGUST 2017

GIlBERT& sULlIvAN The comic operatic works of librettist W.S. Gilbert and composer Arthur Sullivan enjoy broad appeal internationally and around the UK, and Norfolk audiences are no exception

34

S

o a return to Norwich Theatre Royal by The National Gilbert & Sullivan Company this September, with characters such as the ‘very model of a modern MajorGeneral’ in the Pirates of Penzance and Yum-Yum from The Mikado, is guaranteed to raise some smiles and laughter. While trends and tastes may change, the mix of wonderful language, satirical themes and great songs proves popular with all generations. Gently poking fun at the traditions of grand opera, the company is presenting The Mikado on Thursday, September 14, 7.30pm; Pirates of Penzance on Friday, September 15, 7.30pm; and HMS Pinafore on Saturday, September 16, at 2.30pm and 7.30pm. They last performed on the city stage last September, and will once again perform with live music from the National Gilbert & Sullivan Orchestra, as well as fielding a host of talented actors, including Norfolk’s own panto funny man Richard Gauntlett who will be leaving his dame’s frocks in the wardrobe as he swaps pantomime for light opera. The Mikado is a hilarious story with big, colourful characters and well-known songs. It is set in the Japanese village of Titipu, where flirting becomes an offence and fun is poked at the layers of officialdom who police the community. Nanki-Poo, son of the Mikado of Japan, has fled his father's imperial court to escape marriage with an elderly lady. Disguised as a traveling musician, he meets and falls in love with Yum-Yum, the young ward of a tailor in the town, but YumYum is already betrothed to her guardian.


WHAT’S ON

gilbert & sullivan

In Pirates of Penzance, the audience is treated to swashbuckling pirates, a dotty General, his unwed daughter and a bumbling British bobby, who combine for a laugh-out-loud treat; while HMS Pinafore, one of the most popular of Gilbert & Sullivan’s comic creations, is a nautical romp with well-known songs such as I am the Monarch of the Sea, I’m Called Little Buttercup and He is an Englishman. The National Gilbert & Sullivan Company’s visit to Norwich is part of the company’s 2017 tour. It is the latest chapter of a story which began with the setting up of a Gilbert and Sullivan Festival in Buxton in 1994 to ensure the name and genre of their work survived following the closure of The D’Oyly Carte Opera Company who won worldwide acclaim for staging their work. It began as an amateur festival which saw enthusiasts and lovers of G & S work alongside D’Oyly Carte legends like John Reed, Gillian Knight and Kenneth Sandford. Over the next four years, the festival evolved and The National Gilbert and Sullivan Company was set up and two decades later is still going strong. Neil Smith, one of the producers, said: “We brand our Gilbert and Sullivan as fun, friendly and for all the family. That is what you are going to get when you come and see our shows. There is a lot of humour in them. It is respectful to the piece, the costumes are generally very traditional and we want to keep hold of that because it is part of our heritage. It is something we should be justifiably proud of. “Our directors put their little touch on it and we have Richard Gauntlett, who your audiences will know very well, who also puts his own stamp on the parts he plays for us. That just gives things a bit of freshness as well. People who come to see one of our shows will leave the theatre with a great big smile on their face having enjoyed some traditional British theatre.” Gilbert and Sullivan’s work undoubtedly has a very devoted following, but Neil is also keen to attract more young people to

experience the operas both on-stage and off. “We encourage a wide age-range not just from an audience point of view but from a cast point of view. We work very closely with many of the musical colleges up and down the country. “We are offering the opportunity for youngsters to come into the company and try out Gilbert and Sullivan for the first time alongside people like Richard.” Already well-known for writing, directing and starring in Norwich Theatre Royal pantomimes, Neil said people can enjoy Richard in a very different style of role. “He is really top drawer. There are certain people who have a twinkle in the eye and know how to engage with an audience. I often stand in the wings and watch what he does and wish I could do the same thing. “He is very energetic and he is loved in Norwich. From our point of view, he is great as he is absolutely committed to our opera company, wants it to succeed and wants to help us. You can guarantee he will be delivering 110 per cent every night.” In addition to the five performances over three days, members of the cast are also presenting a Dementia-Friendly Concert, on Friday, July 15 at 2pm, when the orchestra and soloists will sing a selection of well-known G&S favourites, plus popular music hall ditties to sing along to, especially for dementia sufferers and their carers. The £17 ticket price includes tea and cake after the concert.

THE NATIONAL GILBERT & SULLIVAN OPERA COMPANY, THE MIKADO, Thursday September 14, 7.30pm; Pirates of Penzance, Friday September 15, 7.30pm; HMS Pinafore, Saturday September 16, 2.30pm & 7.30pm. Tickets £8-£35. Captioned and Dementia-friendly concert, Friday September 15, 2pm. Tickets £17. Discounts for Friends. Over 60s & Groups. Box Office: 01603 630000. For more info or to book online visit www.theatreroyalnorwich.co.uk

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| AUGUST 2017

a

’S 0 6 f O T As

fe

A I G l a t S No

It is the generation where teenagers truly embraced music and fashion, and being a songwriter was the ultimate job to aspire to. The Sixties will be celebrated in spectacular style this summer when Dreamboats and Petticoats returns to Norwich Theatre Royal as one of the stars, Alistair Higgins, told John Bultitude

I

t is high-energy, packed with great songs and has a great love story at its heart so it's not hard to understand why Alistair Higgins loves being part of Dreamboats and Petticoats. The ultra-enthusiastic performer admits he is loving the chance to star in the hit show which is wowing audiences all over the country and is set to visit Norwich Theatre Royal for what is sure to be a smash-hit summer run from August 7-12. Alistair explained: “I play Bobby who is 17 and fancies himself as a bit of a Roy Orbison wannabee. All he wants to do in life is play the guitar really. He flaunts his talent at the local youth club which is where he spends a lot of his time and he is also trying to write the perfect song.” But that is not his only passion. Both he and his friend Norman are keen to win the affection of the gorgeous Sue, and he also meets the very shy Laura who is an incredible pianist, so the stage is set for love, excitement and rock ‘n’ roll. Alistair admits he does have to play a character who is 10 years younger than him although they do share some traits and

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it is also interesting to have someone else playing his character Bobby in later life. Jimmy Johnston plays the older Bobby and he has a strong performing pedigree which includes two Best Actor Olivier Awards for Oklahoma at the National Theatre and Pirates of Penzance at Regent’s Park Open Air Festival. That is in addition to major West End roles and also singing as a regular lead on BBC Radio 2’s Friday Night Is Music Night. Alistair admits he is in awe of him. “He has done just about everything in musical theatre and is an incredible performer. In terms of the character, we have also tried to match our mannerisms a bit,” he said. As well as a strong cast, the music in the show is also a key part of its success. As well as Roy Orbison, big hits from the likes of Billy Fury, Eddie Cochran and The Shadows are featured, and includes the likes of Let’s Dance, Shaking All Over, Bobby’s Girl, Runaround Sue, C’Mon Everybody and Let’s Twist Again. Alistair thinks the decade inspired many and the musical influences of that era are still felt today. He said: “I think the


WHAT’S ON

Photos: PAMELA RAITH PHOTOGRAPHY

dreamboats and petticoats

Sixties were an important time for music. People were going out and dancing and music was playing a huge part in their lives for the first time. “There was just this big explosion of interest in music and I think there were also these first elements of rebellion among young people. As for the songs I love from that era? I love Roy Orbison, and Runaround Sue is a favourite too.” As well as those iconic songs, the show is penned by Laurence Marks and Maurice Gran who are the hugely successful writing partnership behind the likes of Birds Of A Feather and Shine On Harvey Moon, and Alistair says their dialogue is fantastic. He said: “The writing of Marks and Gran is a joy. The humour in it is absolutely fantastic. There is a great vein of comedy running through the show which you will enjoy. The story is fantastic and there are some great gags in it.” As for Alistair, this is the latest show in a career which has seen him take on a wide range of roles. His passion for performance was nurtured on the Channel Island of Guernsey where he grew up.

“There was a local amateur dramatic society there who were doing Tommy and I ended up getting the lead. In fact, it was on in Sheffield when I was performing in Dreamboats, which certainly brought back some memories,” he said. After qualifying at the Mountview Academy of Dramatic Arts, he has since appeared in a wide range of productions with one of his favourite roles starring in Shadowlands, which followed the love affair between CS Lewis and the American poet Joy Davidman. Alistair recalled: “It was certainly the polar opposite of this show. I was playing an Oxford don so someone very different to me. “Practically, it was also hard in the summer when you were performing with eight layers of clothing on. To do a play like that was really nice and there was also a real difference in ages between the cast which was really great.” Right now though, he is focusing on the future with Dreamboats and is loving the wide age range of audience-members who are coming to see the show. Alistair said: “The music is obviously popular with people who remember it from that time. Many of those songs are also ageless and they remain popular. They just don’t go away. “There are people who come along to see the show for a second time and there are younger people in as well who love the music and the show. There is a real mix in the audience and I think that is why it has stood the test of time.” Dreamboats and Petticoats will also mark his Theatre Royal debut. Alistair said: “It will be my first time in Norwich. I am very much looking forward to it.” So get ready for a summer of love for his character, a feast of Sixties nostalgia and a show guaranteed to put a smile on your face and a spring in your step.

DREAMBOATS AND PETTICOATS, Norwich Theatre Royal, Monday 7-Saturday 12 August at 7.30pm, and Wednesday and Saturday matinees at 2.30pm. Tickets £8-£29. Discounts for Friends, Corporate Club, Over-60s, Under-18s and Groups. To book, visit www.theatreroyalnorwich.co.uk or call the box office on 01603 630000

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| AUGUST 2017

T s e B TWO of the

This summer will see two of the most powerful and award-winning voices of this century appear in concert together for the very first time...

Kerry Ellis and Matt Cardle will take to the stage at The Apex in Bury St Edmunds for an epic evening of entertainment over two nights. Kerry is recognised as the leading lady of West End and Broadway musicals, with a number of starring roles in London, New York and around the world. Meanwhile, Matt has become a multi-platinum recording artist having completed five sold-out tours since winning The X Factor’s highest rating series in 2010, watched by over 19 million. This is very much a homecoming show for the dynamic duo. Kerry was born and raised in Suffolk, while Matt was born in Southampton, raised in Essex and his family now reside in Suffolk. Matt and Kerry met during a run of Broadway In Concert shows in 2016, including a sold-out performance at The London Palladium, where plans for this special show began. Kerry last performed at The Apex to a sell-out crowd in October 2015 while Matt performed to a capacity crowd in July 2016. We caught up with the couple ahead of what promises to be an epic two nights at The Apex. Is this the first time you have worked together?

KERRY: We have done a concert together previously but we didn't actually get to sing a duet so this will be the first time we actually get to sing together which I'm really excited about.

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MATT: I had the pleasure of meeting Kerry at the London Palladium for a special evening last year. We’ve sung on the same stage before but never together, so that’s exciting. Kerry invited me to see her mind-blowing performance in the show Murder Ballad and we got talking after that. She just oozes talent and I’m honoured to be working with her. What can we expect from the show? Will it be a mixture of genres as you both come from very different musical backgrounds? KERRY: I think the show will be a real mixed bag Matt and I will obviously bring our own flavours to the show but also I'm sure there will be a be a few new surprises in there, duets that people haven't heard before and just a lot of fun. MATT: We’re still planning it but it’s going to be a journey for the audience and us. We’ve both had very varied paths that we’ve followed that are connected by our love for music. It’s an exciting show to be doing for me because I’m normally up there on my own. I’ll certainly be performing songs I’m known for, as well as some new stuff, covers and of course duetting with Kerry. It’s going to be so much fun. Is there any connection to Suffolk for either of you?

KERRY: This concert came about because we are both from Suffolk originally. It's what we have in common and the reason for doing the shows at The Apex. We wanted to do something in our home county. MATT: Kerry’s a local girl and I grew up in Colchester, even though I was born in Southampton. Both Kerry and


WHAT'S ON

matt cardle & kerry ellis I have done shows at The Apex before. The atmosphere and the sound inside that place are mind-blowing so we thought it would be great to do something together and something special in Bury. You both have very successful careers. What else have you both been up to this year?

KERRY: I've been on tour with a musical called Wonderland written by Frank Wildhorn who is a musical genius. I've also released a new album with Brian May call ‘Golden Days’ which has been great fun. I have been busy with my solo concerts and performances, I’m also about to start a new project called ‘Heaven on Earth’ which is an Arena tour that's opening in December. MATT: I haven’t seen much more than four walls of a recording studio this year! I’m releasing new music this summer from what will be my forth album. I’ve taken my time over this one and I’m so happy with the results. I’ve done a few live performances here and there to test out some of the new material too. I’ve found in the past that you can record an album and then tour it and wish afterwards that you’d done some of the songs differently. So this time around I’ve wanted to test the waters and perform the demos live first before making some changes and releasing the album. Back to front really but I’ve found it very helpful. What artists did you grow up listening to? Who inspired you? Who are your musical influences?

KERRY: I had a real mixed bag of influences growing up. It was anything from Meatloaf and Queen to the Beatles and Status Quo. Streisand, Liza Minelli, Elaine Paige and Michael Ball. I think this is why I think the way I do today. I love all kinds of music and can appreciate all different styles. MATT: I would listen to a lot of Kate Bush, Peter Gabriel, Elton John and Michael Jackson as a young kid. I used to go out and play touch rugby by ten or eleven and I was listening to Rage Against The Machine and Pearl Jam by that stage! I’m lucky that my music tastes are so varied. Kerry you are a mother. How do you juggle motherhood with a successful musical theatre career?

KERRY: I don’t! I am still trying to figure it all out but I love that I get to have a career that I love doing as well as being a mum - both best jobs in the world. Matt. You dipped your toe in the world of Musical playing the lead in Memphis in the West End. What was that like for you? Would you embark on another Theatre project? MATT: My memories of Memphis only bring a smile to my face. I had the most incredible time doing that show. Beverley Knight was off the scale with her vocal talent so to share a stage, in London’s West End, with her every night is something I will never, ever forget. She had so much faith and belief in me from the word go when I was doubting my own ability and wondering if I’d made the right decision. I accepted the role based on a few scenes, not a two-hour show that if I wasn’t on stage I was doing the quickest quickchange in the wings! I’d love to do another theatre project, definitely. I’ve had a few auditions but the right part hasn’t come my way. When it does I’ll grab it with both hands and dive straight in. Memphis was a magical time for me.

You have both played Arena’s. Do you prefer performing on that scale as opposed to a more intimate venue? Which do you prefer? KERRY: Both have the challenges and excitement. I like the variety and the fact that I get to do both.

MATT: The ‘Intimate & Live Tour’ I did last year – including a show in Bury – is the most fun I’ve ever had on tour. I love both the smaller theatres and the big arenas for different

reasons but you adjust the show you’re doing accordingly. If you weren’t a performer what other career do you think you may have persued? KERRY: I don't think I could do anything else. I'm very fortunate to have a career I love as well as a wonderful family. However I do love working with animals so possibly something to do with that but honestly performing is what I do.

MATT: I grew up wanting to be a marine biologist! I loved the sea, partially sharks. I also wanted to be a professional skateboarder but I couldn’t commit to it as I was in and out of bands. Then, eventually, I found myself on The X Factor and I’ve been very lucky not to have had to think about a career change since. What is the most embarrassing that has happened to you on stage? KERRY: There have been so many things, I've been in theatre a long time so I don't have time to tell you about them all. I have fallen over many times on stage, dealt with pieces of set not arriving, costume dramas, losing wigs, I could go on and on. MATT: I fell down some stairs in the Manchester Arena on tour once. Not my finest hour especially when I heard 14,000 people gasp! Musical collaborations. Other than working with each other obviously, who would you love to collaborate with? KERRY: There were lots of people I haven't done many female collaborations so perhaps someone like Céline Dion would be incredible. Also maybe someone closer to home. I do love Beverly Knight who Matt has also worked with. I think she is fantastic.

MATT: I’ve had the incredible fortune of collaborating with Melanie C and I’m happy to class her as a friend. I’m a huge fan of Hannah Reid from London Grammar, it would be awesome to work with her in any capacity. What was the first album that you bought? KERRY: I think it was that long ago it was a cassette and it was one of them now albums, I also had the cast recording of Les Misérable very early on that I would sing along to. MATT: Music For The Jilted Generation by The Prodigy. I remember it like it was yesterday. I bought it on CD at an airport in Denmark and couldn’t wait to get on the plane and listen to it on my discman! What projects have you got coming up in the future?

KERRY: I'm about to open in an Arena tour of the new show called ‘Heaven on Earth’ which is very exciting. There is also a little more music in the pipeline which I am very excited about. Plus lots more concerts of course. MATT: Finishing off my album will take the next few months to complete. I’ve been out of the music scene for a while in terms of releasing music so I’m looking forward to getting back into the swing of things. I’ve also got some summer festivals with The Trevor Horn Band across the UK. I did some shows with them last year. Their catalogue is beyond incredible and it’s a pleasure to be part of such a legendary band, if only for an hour or so.

The Apex, Bury St Edmunds Matt Cardle and Kerry Ellis will be performing for two nights on Wednesday 23rd and Thursday 24th August

Tickets: Band A: £40, Band B: £32.50, Band C: £27.50 (No Senior Concs) 39


| AUGUST 2017

AN EVENING WITH

Sir Michael Parkinson

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CELEBRITY INTERVIEW

michael parkinson He is arguably the man who put the British chat show front and centre of the entertainment world. Sir Michael Parkinson’s prime-time chats with some of the world’s biggest names became must-see TV. Ahead of him visiting Norfolk to share his memories, John Bultitude looks at the career of the man who is arguably still ‘The King Of Celebrity Conversation.’

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elson Mandela, Marlon Brando and Muhammed Ali. Just three of the people who have been tempted to join Sir Michael Parkinson on his hit chat show over the years. And some of these defining moments in TV and headline-creating interviews are set to be revisited when Parky heads to Norwich Theatre Royal for an evening of reminiscence this autumn. In conversation with his son Mike and with the chance to re-watch extracts of great moments from the Parkinson interview archive, the audience will experience Sir Michael’s journey from his humble beginnings in a Yorkshire mining town through to becoming one of the big names of Saturday night TV. Viewers loved his instinctive ability to draw out the personality behind his guests leading to revelations and new anecdotes about some of the globe’s household names. Sometimes funny, sometimes controversial and sometimes emotional, many of his interviews were literally talking points, and Sir Michael is set to remember many of those great moments as well as reveal more about himself, and his relationships with friends, family and colleagues on September 24. But whatever you do, don’t call him a national treasure. As he once said: “I don’t know about being a national treasure. Frankly, I’m terrified of the implication and anyway, it is a cliché.” But maybe iconic interviewer is a better description particularly when you look at some of his guests like James Cagney, Ingrid Bergman, John Wayne, Jack Nicholson, David Bowie, Fred Astaire, Bette Davis and Orson Welles who were memorably told to throw away his notes and just chat. The big-budget chat shows of 2017 do still attract the big names but are matched by a team of savvy well-connected bookers who work with UK publicists to secure the interviews. Back in the heyday of Parkinson, Michael would often roll his sleeves up himself and once phoned Peter Sellers when he backed out of an appearance at the last minute. He recalled: “We talked for hours and eventually he agreed to come on as that crazy Gestapo soldier in The Producers. He spent the first 10 minutes of the interview completely in character. He was an extraordinary and brilliant man but tricky and a challenge.”

So the big question is how did he end up in the high-profile position he is in? He left school at 16 with a couple of O-Levels and bucked the family trend of going into mining to pursue a career in journalism. One of his other great passions was cricket, playing in the Yorkshire League with the likes of Geoffrey Boycott and Dickie Bird, and at the age of 19 became the youngest captain in the army during the Suez crisis. But it is his passion for the written word which fueled his career working as a reporter for the South Yorkshire Times and the Manchester Guardian before finding a job on Fleet Street itself with the Daily Express in 1960. The TV breakthrough came in 1963 when he was asked to interview Sir Laurence Olivier for a Granada programme called Cinema admitting he was very nervous although the acclaimed actor made it very easy for him with lots of expansive anecdotes. Producers liked his style and his own show called Parkinson was commissioned initially for just eight weeks through the summer in 1971 which was a tough challenge when it came to attracting viewers with the outdoor distractions of the warmer months of the year. But the series continued to run for 11 years with Michael believing the secret of his success was down to two factors. First is thorough research to make sure he had a strong understanding of his guest and also to always remember the mantra that the guest is more important than the interviewer. For six years, he was then absent from the small screen before the BBC recommissioned Parkinson in 1998 and Michael walked down the stairs to launch the new run in typical laidback style with the words “As I was saying before I was so rudely interrupted.” Now it is time for Parky himself to take centre stage with his new show which will be a fresh experience for him being the interviewee rather than interviewer. Despite a long career and lots of memories, he does still have two people he would still like to tempt on the chatshow sofa – Donald Trump and The Queen. So watch this space. Something for the Parkinson guest-bookers to pursue for a couple of TV specials perhaps? In the meantime, Parky can let his reputation do the talking as a Norwich audience can share the story of the man who helped the UK win (and maintain) the title of the country where the chat-show, with an emphasis on chat, is still King.

AN EVENING WITH SIR MICHAEL PARKINSON, Sunday 24 September at 7.30pm. Norwich Theatre Royal Tickets £8-£28.50. Discounts for Friends. To book, call the box office on 01603 630000 or log onto www.theatreroyalnorwich.co.uk

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| AUGUST 2017

Rory Charles Graham better known as Rag’n’Bone Man broke through in late 2016 with his debut single Human. He went on to win the 2017 BRITs Critics Choice Award and finish second in the BBC Sound of 2017. In February 2017 the release of his debut album Human took the Official Charts by storm becoming the decades fastest- selling album so far by a British male soloist even outselling the albums of Sam Smith and Ed Sheeran.

Rag n Bone Man is heading to

Norwich in September to perform at the Sundown Festival and we caught up with the talented Blues singer ahead of his Norwich performance In person, Graham is the dictionary definition of a gentle giant. His appearance suggests one serious dude. He’s a big man, bearded and with tattoos, but instead of Hate and Love, he has the words Soul and Funk inked across his knuckles. “I could’ve had Drum and Bass,” he jokes, in his warm, softly spoken manner, “or maybe Jungle across both hands”. Growing up in Uckfield, 20 miles inland from Brighton, music was always the main focus of Graham’s parental home. His father played guitar, his mum sang (both recreationally), and there would otherwise always be records playing. “My dad was super into blues, and also rock crossover stuff like JJ Cale,” he recalls. “There was also lots of reggae, like Peter Tosh, which eventually got me into the soundclash stuff and jungle”.

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At the age of 15, he MC’d with a drum ‘n’ bass crew, using the handle Rag ‘N’ Bonez, inspired by watching re-runs of ’70s Brit sitcom, ‘Steptoe and Son’. With little else to do in their backwater hometown, the crew jumped the airwaves via their own pirate radio station, but Graham soon realised he’d have to move to Brighton if he was going to get anywhere with music. After testing out his rap skills at hip hop open-mic nights there and bingeing on UK home grown Hip Hop artists like Roots Manuva, he started shuttling up to London to a night at Brixton’s Jamm venue called Slipjam B. There, he hooked up with a couple of performers, Gizmo and DJ Direct, and they formed a crew called The Rum Committee. Over the ensuing few years, they’d support old-skool hip hop luminaries Pharoahe Monch and KRS-One at Brighton’s Concorde 2, and release their own album through Bandcamp, through which Rory learnt the rudiments of recording. At 19, his dad had coaxed him up to the


CELEBRITY INTERVIEW

rag'n'bone man

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CELEBRITY INTERVIEW

rag'n'bone man

mic at a blues jam in a local pub. “Afterwards,” he recalls, “this old geezer came up to me and said, ‘Dude, your voice is insane, you should sing some more’. That feeling of actually getting a reaction had a big effect – ‘Oh, I like this – this is good!’” At the beginning, there was a rather divergent progression between his ruffian rhyming in Rum Committee, and his ‘proper’ singing, which was informed more by his dad’s old blues records. “I’d found my voice through that style of music,” he reasons, “so instantly when I started trying to write my own music, it all sounded very like Muddy Waters, because that’s the stuff I’d grown up with”. He smiles, and ads: “Blues is infectious. No-one’s ever listened to blues, and gone, ‘Nah, don’t like that’, know what I mean? Nobody’s ever listened to BB King and gone, ‘That’s shit’. They haven’t – and if you did, you’re a mug!” Graham duly self-released an EP called ‘Blues Town’. “My voice didn’t sound that great, and it was pretty badly recorded,” he admits, “but it surprisingly got a lot of love”. Doors started opening: he landed acoustic gigs, including one supporting Joan Armatrading at Brighton Dome. In 2011, he got together with UK Hip Hop label High Focus releasing a couple more EP’s where his bluesy stylings were underpinned by the label’s trademark jazzy beats. He’d do gigs solo, with just a DJ backing him, but when he started working with producer Mark Crew Rory’s song-orientated fusion of blues and hip hop really developed. At the time Crew was working on Bastille’s debut album Bad Blood, Rory had been working as a carer for Asperger’s sufferers, but could now afford to do music full-time, on the basis of just a rough demo Crew landed Graham a publishing deal with Warner Chappell. At Crew’s studio bunker in Battersea, they slowly pieced together another EP, 2014’s ‘Wolves’, whose towering ambition was best flagged by the fact that it eventually contained nine tracks – an album, in all but name. Crew’s robust beats echoed Graham’s predilection for jazzy hip hop giants Gang Starr, and guests included rapper Vince Staples, Stig Of The Dump, and Kate Tempest, whom Graham had befriended pre-Mercury award. Within the hip hop-y sound format, the song was paramount, giving Rory free rein to explore song structures, usually with an explosive chorus showcasing his mighty tonsils. “There’s a lot of pain in the lyrics,” he reveals, “but it’s not always necessarily mine. It’s interesting to me, what’s going on in people’s lives. One night I was getting drunk with a mate, and

we were having a proper deep and meaningful conversation, and he told me that his missus had made it so he wasn’t allowed to see his daughter anymore. I was like, ‘I can’t not write a song about this. So the next day I wrote ‘No Mother’. I find myself doing that a lot – something clicks in my head, like, ‘Right, that deserves something to be said about it!’” Graham’s many talents – versatile songwriter, powerhouse singer, conduit for and conveyor of myriad human emotions – led Columbia Records to sign him on the strength of ‘Wolves’. For the ensuing ‘Disfigured’ EP (2015), he and Crew went for a more stripped-back sound, inspired by the spaciousness Rory heard in Al Green’s music, clearing the way for That Voice, without interfering clutter. “I remember thinking, ‘I can just do what I want now, so if I just do something that sounds good, I’m not gonna worry about what genre it is. That’s why there’s one track on there that sounds like Bon Iver, one that’s proper hardcore blues-rock, and one that’s more a hip hop/soul kind of sound. There’s nothing on there that sounds exactly the same as anything else.” Lead track ‘Bitter End’, a tear-jerking realisation of a relationship’s demise, was staunchly supported then playlisted on BBC Radio 1 Xtra, and made it onto Radio One’s ‘In New Music We Trust’ playlist. On the back of the EP, Graham put together a Rag‘n’Bone Man live band, featuring a drummer, bassist, guitarist, keyboard player and backing singer. They toured the UK with hand-picked guests under the banner ‘Rag ‘N’ Bone Man Presents’, selling out shows up and down the country. They made quite a splash across Europe’s festival circuit, too, including Glastonbury, Eurosonic and Loveboxx, bringing fields and tents to a standstill, winning new disciples wherever they went. After a decade and a half of experimenting and learning, focusing and fine-tuning, Rag‘n’Bone Man is primed to become a household name. Rory has spent the winter hatching his debut full-length album, partly with Mark Crew in Battersea, but also with other fresh producers. These include Two Inch Punch, aka Ben Ash, who has worked in a co-songwriter/ producer capacity for Sam Smith, Jesse Ware and Damon Albarn’s Africa Express; and Jonny Coffer, another producercum-tunesmith whose CV ranges from Naughty Boy’s ‘La La La’ to tracks off the recent Beyoncé album. During the painstaking process of assembling his allimportant debut LP, Graham’s untetherable need to perform became so out of control, he took to turning up at open-mic nights, to ‘unleash the beast’ that is his tumultuous singing equipment. Now, finally, the album’s lead single proper is ready for release: as an expression of mortal vulnerability, set to a stark chain-gang rhythm, it is almost impossible not to be moved, stopped dead in your tracks, by ‘Human’. Here is a song which fully encapsulates Graham’s peculiar contradictions: his strength and his gentleness, his staggering vocal mastery yet intuitive soulfulness, his wisdom beyond his tender years. In a post-millennial culture where emerging talents are schooled from an increasingly young age, breeding a certain uniformity of phrasing and technique, Rag‘n’Bone Man arrives as an impulsive antidote, connecting with people on a more direct nigh on spiritual level. Still an obsessive consumer of music, Rory’s Everyman qualities reverberate in every note he sings. As well as Soul and Funk, Rory has Star written all over him – an exceptionally warm and engaging guy with an astonishing natural gift. The world’s going to love getting to know him! The 7th annual Sundown Festival takes place over three days from Friday 1st to Sunday 3rd September at the Norfolk Showground in Costessey with some of the Hottest live performers in the country playing and performing over the three days. For the full line up of performers visit www.sundownfestival.co.uk 45


| AUGUST 2017

46


CELEBRITY INTERVIEW

joe pasquale

Squeaky

Joe Time

Mark Nicholls speaks to JOE PASQUALE as his latest one-man show heads to Great Yarmouth

His squeaky voice is unmistakable.

With his natural high pitch defining his unique brand of comedy, Joe Pasquale is also an entertainer who never seems to shy away from a challenge – whether that is attempting to become King of the Jungle, dance on ice, confront fear and danger, or find himself alone and isolated in the wild. Perhaps there is something in the title of his latest one-man show, Devil in Disguise, which he brings to Great Yarmouth on August 27 that may explain this inner courage, cheekily sprinkled with mischief. Certainly, standing alone on stage before a large audience holds no fear for Joe, though he has come a long way since his first steps in showbiz as a holiday camp entertainer, that included a stint as entertainments manager at Warners holiday village at Corton near Lowestoft not so many years ago. But as he tells me, he’s delighted to be back in a region that he knows well. “I started my career at Warners and I loved it in that part of the world and know the east coast very well. It’s like home from home for me” says Essex-born Joe, “though I like anywhere near the sea.” He explains the Devil in Disguise show will basically be him “mucking about for a couple of hours” with no support act. “There’ll be mindreading, a bit of painting, audience participation, a few songs and some magic, but it is something for all the family” he adds. “I love the fact that you never know what’s going to happen next – because I don’t know what I’m going to do, either! I also love the enthusiasm of the fans.” Carrying the warning that the show “may contain immature themes,” it follows last year’s One Man and His Bog Tour and previous live shows such include as Live and Squeaky, Twin Squeaks, The Crazy World Of Joe Pasquale and Bubble And Squeak. Excited at the prospect of taking his latest show out on the road, he says: “Stand-up is what I’ve done for 30 years and I enjoy it, and that is how it has to be. I am the first person that has to enjoy it because if I am not going to enjoy it, then how I can expect someone else to?” Crowned “King of the Jungle” in the fourth series of I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here! In 2004 and seemingly having no fear of any of the bushtucker trials, he took part in Dancing on Ice, with skating partner Vicky Ogden in 2013 and returned the following year with Robin Johnstone. After leaving school he worked at Smithfield meat market, on a building site and as a welder at the Ford factory in Dagenham before turning his hand to the entertainment world with his big break coming on New Faces in 1987. Asked what his proudest moment is, he doesn’t refer back to his reality TV successes, or some of the more serious parts his has taken on. “If I am honest, what I am proudest of after 30 years in the business is that I am still doing it,” says Joe, now 55. “I was taught by my agent at the start of my career that being a success in the business is earning a living at it, and I’m still doing that.” Over that time, however, he has demonstrated his versatility,

taking on roles in plays such as Rosenkrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, performing in the Mel Brooks West End musical The Producers as Leo Bloom on a UK tour in 2007 and playing the role of King Arthur in Monty Python’s Spamalot. “I have done quite a few straight plays and musicals, I will do anything, that is the nature of the business,” he explains. “I have got a very short attention span and I like to be pushed, I like to test myself. “What is the point of saying I don’t want to go and do that, I will be dead one day and so I would rather take a risk because nobody learns anything from sitting on your backside. “Getting out of your comfort zone is a necessary thing, not just for me, but for everybody. When people push their boundaries they grow a lot more. We are not born scared of anything we learn everything we are scared of from our peers, from parents, brothers and sisters and friends, so you have to break that mould.” This is an integral facet of Joe’s outlook, facing up to fears and confronting and conquering them. Scared of flying, he acquired his pilot’s licence; scared of skating, he joined the cast of Dancing on Ice; scared of exercise, he ran the London Marathon. “Anything that I feel fear for I am going to do it,” adds Joe, who is also three quarters of the way through an Open University course studying for an Earth Sciences degree. It was reading a book called ‘Feel the Fear and Do it Anyway’ by Susan Jeffers that “changed my whole concept of where my boundaries are. “Do I want to be 86 and thinking of all the things I could have done, but didn’t? I’d rather die at 60 and take every opportunity put in front of me,” he adds. More recently, saw him in the South American jungle with the survivalist documentary, Alone in the Wild, and training with ex-SAS soldier Chris Ryan. A regular performer in pantomime over the last few years – frequently playing Smee in Peter Pan and Muddles in Sleeping Beauty – he is in Aladdin in Bristol with Gok Wan at the end of the year and playing Wishy Washy. There is also a book of short horror stories, out later this year too, called Dead Knobs and Doom Sticks. But it is his love of comedy stand-up that is his first love. “I love silliness,” he concedes. “Unfortunately, most adults grow up and forget the kids they once were. Most of us lose touch with the person who made us interesting in the first place. All the pressures of adult life take over, and we start adhering to the things society tells us to do. I’m appealing to that childish person we all once were. I try to stick to silliness!” So, it sounds like we can expect plenty of that as Joe Pasquale brings his own devilish sense of humour to Great Yarmouth. Joe Pasquale’s Devil in Disguise is at the Britannia Pier, Great Yarmouth, on August 27 at 7.30pm. Tickets are £20 (£10 children), for more information call 01493 842914 or visit www.britannia-pier.co.uk 47


Travel time

ADAARAN CLUB RANNALHI is

featured among the best hotels in the Maldives and sits exclusively at the tip of the South Male atoll within the exotic collection of islands known as the Maldives. Its unique location offers access to pristine beaches, excellent scuba diving opportunities and a relaxed environment with easy access to the capital city of Male. With seamlessly blending and breath taking coastal landscapes, the luxurious rooms & water bungalows provide the perfect getaway. Bask in the magnificent sunshine and relax spending lazy days on the soft sandy beaches or diving into the turquoise blue waters of the Indian Ocean. WWW.ADAARAN.COM

THE FIVE STAR HOTEL Inter Continental

Amstel inAmsterdam is every bit as luxurious and elegant as it was when it first opened in 1867. The wonderfully spacious hotel rooms offer a unique blend of contemporary comfort and historic details. The hotel's legendary and well-earned reputation, spanning almost 150 years, is the result of its unique, personal service, homely atmosphere and beautiful setting. The ambience, in all of the 55 executive rooms and 24 suites, of which one is a Royal Suite, breathes grace and elegance reminiscent of a grand European estate. Restaurant La Rive, awarded a Michelin star, is marked by a long tradition of culinary delights and features a FrenchMediterranean cuisine and extensive wine list. The Amstel Bar & Brasserie and terrace offers al fresco dining in an intimate, informal ambiance. An excellent Afternoon Tea can be enjoyed in the Amstel Lounge which is located in the conservatory. All of the restaurants have stunning views over the Amstel River.

inspired hotel, combining the highest quality facilities in a truly unique environment. Located at the heart of Liverpool's 'Beatles Quarter' offering luxurious accommodation and exclusive event space with a twist. Housed in the magnificent Grade II listed Central Buildings, dating back to 1884, the beautifully restored hotel is steeped in history. The hotel was recently named “Best Hotel in the UK” in the Travel Republic Hotel Awards 2017.

WWW.AMSTERDAM.INTERCONTINENTAL.COM

WWW. HARDDAYSNIGHTHOTEL.COM

48

A 'FAB FOUR' STAR Liverpool hotel. Hard Days Night Hotel is the world’s only Beatles


Destination of the month THE ISLAND OF TENERIFE is

one of the most popular all year round holiday destinations and for a holiday to remember you may want to consider the Hotel Botanico and Spa which offers all the services and comforts you could possibly want to enjoy, a wonderful relaxed atmosphere. The hotel features stunning views, immaculate landscaped gardens and serves some of the best Mediterranean and international cuisine on the island. With its classic style and oriental touches and its innovative wellness and beauty treatments, unbeatable facilities and exquisitely personalised service, the hotels spa is considered to be one of the best in Europe. Discover the magic of Tenerife and enjoy an unforgettable stay at the elegant 5-star Hotel Botanico and Spa located in Puerto de la Cruz in northern Tenerife. WWW.HOTELBOTANICO.COM

DROMOLAND CASTLE

is, quite simply, one of Ireland's finest castle hotels. Dromoland offers guests the experience of living like a king, surrounded by luxury, beauty and exceptional service. Dromoland Castle is one of the few estates tracing its history to native Gaelic Irish families of royal heritage. Today, blending old-world elegance with modern-day comforts, the castle serves as one of the most desired destinations in Europe, and you can stay here too.. With its glittering antique chandeliers, grand staircases, elegant hallways and beautifully furnished rooms Dromoland Castle is without question one of the most romantic retreats in Ireland. The Earl of Thomond’s Restaurant offers you a heavenly dining experience you’ll remember forever and the cocktails served in Dromoland’s Library Bar are sublime. Dromoland Castle is ideally located close to Shannon International airport and within easy reach of the wonderful Wild Atlantic Way, the Cliffs of Moher, the Burren and all the delights that County Clare and County Limerick have to offer WWW.DROMOLAND.IE

49


Come and see us at the Green Build Event - Felbrigg Hall on 9th and 10th September

• All-in-one solar solution without complex installation • Efficient power generation: Up to 40% more yield compared to a roof top system of same size • thanks to smart tracking • Ideal when your roof is not an option • Top quality from Austria and excellent service from Green Home Energy Solutions • Available with or without power storage, or with charging station for your e-car

01603 713816

Grove Barn, 19A The Green, Upton, Norwich, NR13 6BA

www.greenhomeenergysolutions.co.uk

introduces

SIMPLY SET-UP, CONNECT AND PRODUCE CLEAN ELEC TRICITY

NEXT LEVEL SOLAR



| AUGUST 2017

COMMUNITY DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING SPECIALISTS The Global Clinic, Norwich offers state-of-the-art scanning facilities FOR MORE INFORMATION on the Global Clinic, Norwich, call 01603 812266, email enquiries@globaldiagnostics.co.uk, www.globaldiagnostics.co.uk

52

W

ith Norfolk being such a rural county, patients can often face journeys of several miles to a main hospital to undergo routine scans or assessments. For older people, or those without their own transport, this can be challenging, particularly when coupled with the potential anxiety of having a test in a major hospital. But in some parts of the county, scans are being conducted in GP surgeries and close to where patients live in an innovative outreach service delivered by the Global Clinic, Norwich. Based at Colney Hall, just west of Norwich and not far from the main Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital (NNUH) site, the Global Clinic is a private independent healthcare provider that is partnering with the NHS to deliver routine scans to patients living in rural parts of Norfolk.� It also offers an extensive MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) and ultrasound scanning service from its main site, as well as conducting plain film x-rays and other consultations with leading healthcare professionals. The Global Clinic was founded in 2006, as a partnership between a group of local clinicians which included consultant surgeons, physicians, radiologists and other specialists.


ADVERTORIAL

global diagnostics

One of the founders, Dr Tom Marshall, who is the present medical director of the Global Clinic and a clinical radiologist at NNUH said “We started the Global Clinic with a philosophy to utilise and harness state-of-the-art scanning to provide diagnostic facilities to patients in their community and closer to where they lived.” In addition, a further aim was to deliver improved pathways for patients to be able to access further relevant clinical care more quickly. It is a move that is continuing to ease the burden on NHS facilities and help cut patient waiting times. Instead of having to wait a long time to see a specialist and then go for further diagnostic imaging in a hospital environment, the Global Clinic allows direct access via a GP referral to the diagnostic imaging service often in a patient’s local GP practice. Surgeries where Global Clinic healthcare personnel currently conduct scans and point-of-care testing are: the Chet Valley Surgery in Loddon, Sheringham Medical Centre, Hoveton and Wroxham Surgery, Fakenham Medical Centre and Acle Medical Centre. Global Clinic manager Max Jennings said: “If you live in the Acle area, for example, and need an ultrasound scan you do not have to come all the way to Norwich to see a clinician. The GP can refer you to have the scan conducted by a clinician closer to where you live with the portable service we offer. The same applies for patients who live in outlying villages elsewhere, or some of the relatively remote parts of North Norfolk. We do this work on behalf of the NHS, which helps patients be seen and diagnosed more quickly.

“At present between 85% and 90% of the work carried out by the Global Clinic Norwich is with NHS patients meaning we are helping to reduce the pressure on waiting times faced by our local hospitals. The rest is with private medical insurance patients or those who wish to self-fund.” Often, a patient needing an ultrasound scan would previously have had to travel to NNUH for the diagnostic test. “We have a very good relationship with local GPs and are continually looking to improve that relationship and find out what GPs need from us so that we can provide that care for their patients,” he added. In addition to the core scanning services and outreach, there are seven consulting rooms at the Colney site that are available to a range of specialists in areas such as: orthopaedics, gastroenterology, dermatology, skin cancer and plastic surgery, psychology and psychiatry, hand therapy, and podiatry. With the scanning service, there are, of course, cases with MRI and ultrasound where patients will still need to be seen at NNUH and be supported by the facilities that a large hospital offers. But as Dr Marshall explained, conducting scans outside of the main hospital setting closer to a patient’s home can also have other benefits in addition to the convenience. “For patients who may not like a hospital environment – for a variety of reasons – it has a range of benefits. We find the Global Clinic setting is aesthetically reassuring for patients, for example,” he added. “Also, it means that by offering this service we can help alleviate pressure on local hospitals while making these tests quick and accessible for the patient. This is particularly useful for elderly patients, possibly with early dementia, so they do not have to travel or have the anxiety of having to come to a busy hospital environment.” The MRI and ultrasound imaging initiative is coupled with a state-of-the-art IT platform which allows clinicians to access images remotely and, via a laptop, be able offer a 24/7 reporting service for patients. It also facilitates a second opinion. “If we have a particularly complex case,” explained Dr Marshall, “it allows us to share the information and obtain a consensus opinion with specialists around the country or even around the world.” Most of the scans are musculoskeletal, such as for back and joint problems but brains scans are also carried out, while ultrasound is used for abdomen and pelvis scans too. The clinic can see about 300 patients a week for scans, which significantly speeds up referrals and eases pressure on the NHS. And with ultrasound scanners now being so small and portable, it is even easier for Global Clinic personnel to visit GP surgeries and see patients. The ultrasound facility is a “one-stop shop” for patients in that it not only identifies a problem area but can also be used to deliver remedial therapies such as ultrasound-guided steroid injects into joints such as the shoulder – all conducted during the same clinical visit. The Global Clinic scanning services truly puts the patient first… offering diagnostics closer to home, with shorter waiting times and helping deliver quicker treatment.

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02.

01.

RUFFLE nia

Ma

Ruffle fashion is still the most popular fashion trend this season, there really is something to flatter everyone, Donna Titcombe selects this range of gorgeous feminine pieces to add a romantic look to your summer wardrobe

01.

Glamorous Light Stone Wash Denim Jacket With Ruffle Trim £54

02.

Adrianna Papell Tangerine Multi Floral Print Wrap Dress With Long Ruffle £140

03.

03.

BADA Ruffled-Edge Gradient Silk Scarf £23

04.

Karen Fox Circle Ruffle Link Earrings £82

05.

Ralph Lauren Ruffled Silk A-Line Skirt £249

04.

05.

06.

06.

Free People Cascades Strappy Cami With Ruffle Detail £50

07.

Alexandre Birman Barbara Ruffled Suede Sandals £470

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08.

10.

09.

11.

Zimmermann Mercer Floating ruffled floral-print silk-chiffon playsuit £580 Jimmy Choo Isabella Clutch £750

Ted Baker Ruffle V-neck cotton-blend skater dress £149 Monsoon Penny Ruffle Top £45

07.


Prices correct at the time of going to press. Items may be available from various retailers and prices may vary so please check online for a full list of local stockists

08.

14.

Ted Baker Verbo Ruffle Waistline Cotton-blend Trousers £130

13.

Faith Silver Ruffle Heeled Sandals £49

LADIES FASHION

12.

10. 11.

09.

12.

13.

14.

Miss Selfridge Grey Ruffle Shift Dress £42

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available with a Harley Street trained professional

For a beautiful way to indulge yourself… Beach Clinic is the place for Botox injections, lip fillers, facial light peels, liquid face lifts, thread vein and skin tag removal. Laser Lipo fat reducing treatment also available - guaranteed to drop a dress size!

BE ACH CL I N IC

Beach House, Beach Rd, Gorleston NR31 6DQ Telephone: 01493 603102 / 07810 272640

SELF YOUR TREAT £10 OFF WITH FIRST YOUR URE T SIGNA ITH AN W L IA C FA KIN IATE S ASSOC PIST A R E TH pply. ’s A

T’s & C

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We believe your shape not size is important and with a unique ‘rescue range’ of clothing we can support women’s choices to look their best. This includes our range from Freddy, currently taking the celebrities by storm with the Unique WRUP technology, with silicon hold and stitching offering incredible lift and shape, whilst also being extremely comfortable.

www.styleshow.co.uk E: enquiries@styleshow.co.uk • T: 07487 796 853 • 115 City Road, Norwich, NR1 2HL • FREE PARKING RIGHT OUTSIDE


Prices correct at the time of going to press. Items may be available from various retailers and prices may vary so please check online for a full list of local stockists

BEAUTY

BEAUTY IN THE

Sky

Flying can wreak havoc on your skin, Donna Titcombe selects this lovely range of beauty products to help you feel refreshed and look gorgeous when you step off the plane

01.

04.

02.

05.

Jack Black Intense Therapy Lip Balm 7g £7.25 Estée Lauder Double Wear Long-Wear Makeup Remover Wipes. £20 for 45 wipes

03. 01. 02.

03.

04.

05.

REN Keep Young And Beautiful™ Instant Brightening Beauty Shot Eye Lift 15ml £30

06.

Neal's Yard Organic Defence Hand Spray, 50ml £6.50 La Mer The Mist 100ml £60

06.

swell Ultimate Volume Dry Shampoo 14.5g £20

07.

Clarins Hydra Essentiel BiPhase Serum 30ml £44

07. 57


sizzle this summer!

n o rw i c h at t l e b o r o u g h dereham h a l e sw o rt h harleston wat t o n w r ox h a m wymondham cecilamey.co.uk

classic & designer sunnies at cecil amey

C ECI L A MEY

Looking Good!


MEN'S FASHION

01.

01.

Tommy Hilfiger Polo shirt £55

02.

Hugo Boss Schino Regular Fit Chino Shorts £69

WARM

WEATHER ls

Essentia

03.

Polo Ralph Lauren Slim Fit Stripe Short Sleeve Pima Polo £60

Whether you are off on holiday or just lounging at the weekend look good and feel comfortable with these summer essentials selected by Donna Titcombe

02. 04.

Tom Ford Sunglasses Tf 462 Chris £147

05.

Prices correct at the time of going to press. Items may be available from various retailers and prices may vary so please check online for a full list of local stockists

Ted Baker Reva Reversible Belt £45

03.

06.

Gant Polo shirt with half length sleeves and piqué £119

07.

Timberland Classic Boat Shoes £105

04. 05. 06.

07.

59


We invite you to dine from our 7 course menu

Michelin award winning Restaurant with Rooms.

‘A TASTE OF NORFOLK’

LUNCH DU JOUR

This is our dedication to Norfolk’s finest seasonal produce, inspired by ingredients from Our Farm.

2 Courses £16.50, 3 Courses £22.50

DINNER DU JOUR

£45pp

2 Courses £22.50, 3 Courses £28.00

01508 492497

www.thewildebeest.co.uk

info@thewildebeest.co.uk

01692 581099

LUNCH DU JOUR 2 Courses £12, 3 Courses £16

warwickstsocial.co.uk

www.theinghamswan.co.uk

info@theinghamswan.co.uk

DINNER DU JOUR 2 Courses £20, 3 Courses £24

01603 627687

info@warwickstsocial.


RECIPE

franck pontais

COU RG E T T E S

WITH GLAZED S HAL L OT S & C HA NTER EL L E MUS HROOM Let our French chef

Franck Pontais cook for your private dinner parties, and for those who really enjoy cooking, he also offers master classes, for all abilities, in your own home. www.franckpontais.com

Photography by ANDREW FLORIDES, www.andrewflorides.co.uk

This delicious starter by Franck Pontais is a tasty alternative for a summer feast

SERVES FOUR

INGREDIENTS • Courgettes

3 medium

• Red onions

1 piece

• Fresh flat parsley

¼ of a bunch

• Small round shallots • Chanterelle mushroom

100g

250g

• Fresh garlic

1 clove

• Red wine

200ml

• Icing sugar

to dust

• Frozen board beans • Caster sugar

• Balsamic vinegar • Unsalted butter • Olive oil

• Salt

• White ground pepper

60g

40 g 1 tsp

30g

a drizzle

METHOD

1. Cut each courgette into four equal segments, scoop out the flesh. 2. Peel the small shallots and slice each one into two, then peel and slice the red onions. 3. Bring a large pan of water to the boil and place a bamboo steamer/basket on top of the pan, place the courgettes, shallots and red onions into the basket and cook covered for 4 minutes. Once cooked, take out the vegetables and reserve until use. 4. Chop finely the flat parsley and the clove of garlic. 5. Melt the butter with the olive oil in a frying pan, once hot, add the chanterelle mushrooms, cook for 1 minute and stir in the parsley and garlic, season to taste.

6. Dust the steamed shallots with icing sugar and sear them side down in a non-stick pan until caramelized and fully glazed. 7. Fill each segment of steamed courgettes with the chanterelle mushrooms, glazed shallots and red onions. 8. Drizzle with the red wine sauce; add a few leaves of your favourite cress and serve.

METHOD for the red wine and balsamic syrup sauce

Pour the red wine in a small saucepan and add the balsamic vinegar and sugar, whisk a little and bring to boil, reduce by half and cool down.

61


| AUGUST 2017

A league of their own Andrew Hirst heads to Delia's restaurant and bar at Carrow Road to sample their summer menu on a warm Saturday evening It had been a while since I visited Norwich City FC

in any capacity, work or pleasure. The last time being the Norwich City v Huddersfield Town match last December which included a delightful pre-match meal in the Boardroom. Saturday night my wife, Lorraine, and I headed to Norwich for a date with Delia's restaurant and bar's summer menu. The traffic heading in to the city on this warm evening was surprisingly light and we parked with ease next to the football ground. The entrance to the restaurant is quiet and understated, with two short flights of stairs taking you to the maitre d's desk. First impressions were good. A welcoming bar area with comfortable seating, a low bubble of guests conversations and a glow of ambient music in the background. We opted to sit on the high stools at the aluminium topped bar so we could better survey the restaurant. The decor was a white and cream delight, with an almost minimalistic slant, was enriched

62

with the intelligent attention to the lighting. Bright enough to be usable, but soft enough to be comfortable, Goldilocks would certainly have said it was “just right”. We ordered a glass of Chardonnay each, which was shortly followed with ‘Nibbles’; homemade sweet potato crisps and a small bowl of olives, sweet peppers, silver skin onions and garlic in a spicy paprika oil which was a triumph. Such a simple surprise but executed so well, so much so our conversation turned to how we could replicate the oil at home. Whilst at the bar we overheard several conversations from other restaurant patrons, one of which harpooned my attention. One lady diner was telling her friends that “this was her favourite restaurant outside of London“. A bold statement, which I would scrutinise at the end of the evening. We ventured through to the restaurant, which is spaced well, to explore the menu. The menu is viewable online, with the current and next months


FOOD REVIEW

delia's restaurant and bar

available should you wish to gain an advantage over your fellow diners before you arrive. With five starters and five main courses to choose from I felt there was just enough to tickle the tastebuds of most diners. My selection didn't take long with an intriguing dish to start and an old favourite for my main. My wife carefully chose alternate dishes, this way she always has the option to sample my plate should she spy anything of interest. I opted for the hot and sour pickled prawns, which were lightly cooked and combined with thinly sliced peppers, red onions and capers then covered in a hot and sour vinaigrette made with lime juice and a daring kick of chilli. Lorraine went with the courgette soufflé. It was fantastically light and included a combination of three cheeses; mature cheddar, gruyere and a vegetarian style parmesan. The soufflé was served with a beautifully buttery foaming hollandaise sauce. We both sampled each other's dishes, which is our custom, and I would have had starter envy had it not been for the exceptional prawn dish, which I may bore people with the account of in the weeks to come. The main courses arrived and were well presented. My choice of the char-grilled matured entrecôte steak came with chunky cut chips and a sublime pot of aioli four of my favourite things; steak, potato, garlic and mayonnaise. The steak was cooked exactly to my liking, a char-grilled finish on the outside and beautifully rare on the inside. Lorraine battled with her choice for main course, finally settling on the pan-fried fillet of grey mullet with Swiss chard and a beurre blanc. This time my head was almost turned by the fish... almost. We had the customary exchange of each other's dishes. Lorraine took a fancy to my chips. The exchange rate seems to have dipped slightly in today's fluctuating market, as seventy percent

of my overall stash of chips only seemed to return three new potatoes from my wife's plate. After both plates were cleared, which is always a good sign, we moved on to the dessert menu. To be honest I almost couldn't manage one but my wife talked me in to it, the story had a different protagonist by the morning. I sided with the vanilla cream terrine with raspberries and a blackcurrant coulis, boasting intense flavours against the backdrop of the cream terrine. Lorraine was already excited by the look of English summer pudding served with chilled pouring Jersey cream when it was served to the next table. Both desserts were enjoyed, however on this course the battle lines were drawn across the crisp white table cloth as we both championed our own plates, mine of course was far superior. The evening came to an end with my black coffee and Lorraine's espresso martini... and why not! The waiting staff were well schooled and should be commended for their skill and professionalism. Head Chef Nigel Ramsbottom did Delia proud with the exceptional dishes we ate - quality ingredients combined with imaginative recipes. If the players of Norwich City FC could replicate this level of skill on the pitch next season they would certainly be a shoo-in for promotion. Looking back over the evening the stand out dish for me was the hot and sour prawns, very different to my normal menu choice and will certainly live long in the memory. As to the over heard comments in the bar at the beginning of the evening from the unknown lady diner? Is this now my favourite restaurant outside of London? Well it is certainly up there in the running... I guess the only way to find out for sure is to go back again, which I will certainly be doing in the not too distant future! 63


OPEN MONDAYSATURDAY 9-5PM SUNDAY 10.30-5PM BANK HOLIDAYS 9-5PM

FULLY BESPOKE HANDMADE KITCHENS, BEDROOMS, OFFICES, BATHROOMS & FREE STANDING FURNITURE

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RECIPE

richard bainbridge

ME R I NG U E

Richard Bainbridge makes little clouds of joy!! Meringues to me are little clouds of joy, from being a child seeing them piled high in Bakeries and Delicatessens, my eyes always being bigger than my belly when my Mum would eventually give in and let me have one. To me a meringue should have that perfectly thin crunch on the outside and a delicate chewy centre, now being a Professional Chef the magic of a meringue has not wavered. The more I learn the more versatile the humble meringue becomes, from classics such as an Eaton Mess or Pavlova to spreading out thinly making beautiful tuilles for dessert garnishes. So with all the delicious late summer berries I can only but urge you to make the perfect accompaniment to extend that taste of Summer.

Richard Bainbridge is the chef proprietor of Benedicts Restaurant in Norwich www.restaurantbenedicts.com info@restaurantbenedicts.com or call 01603 926080.

© KATJA BAINBRIDGE SERVES FOUR

INGREDIENTS • 4 Egg Whites

• 115g Caster Sugar • 115g Icing Sugar

EQUIPMENT

• Kenwood/Kitchen Aid Mixer • Piping Bag

• Nozzle of your choice

• Baking Tray lined with Parchment Paper • Cooling Rack

METHOD

1. Pre-heat oven to 110˚C. 2. Whisk the egg whites using either a Kenwood or Kitchen Aid on the medium setting until the eggs become frothy. 3. Slowly start adding the caster sugar and continue to whisk for another 5 minutes until you have added all the sugar and the mixture has started to form stiff peaks. 4. Add the icing sugar slowly and continue whisking to ensure it has all been incorporated, the mixture should be shiny and resemble

stiff little mountain peaks. 5. At this point transfer the mixture into a piping bag with the nozzle already in the pointed end, begin piping the meringues onto the lined baking tray at a table spoon size or if you would prefer use two large kitchen spoons to make iceberg shaped meringues of the same size on the tray. 6. Cook in the oven for 2-4 hours. 7. Once ready they should feel crisp on the top and soft in the middle (WHAT COLOUR?)

remove your meringues from the oven and allow to cool on a cooling rack to avoid a soggy bottom!

TO SERVE

There are too many serving suggestions to mention so I am leaving it completely up to your imagination! The main thing is to eat and enjoy these little bites of happiness!

65


T: 01362 637483 or 07525 260550 E: W: or www.magicalcamping.co.uk @magicalcamping Magical-Camping


Sunday 27th and Monday 28th August 2017 10am - 5pm | Bury St Edmunds Town Centre

Celebrity Chef

Celebrity Chef

Jack Stein

Paul Rankin

Sunday

Monday

Highlights of the Festival... Celebrity Chefs on Stage

The Beach

Food and Drink Stalls

Punch a & nd Judy Show

Farmer’s Market

Mini Farm

Fairground Rides

Street Entertainment

For more information visit www.ourburystedmunds.com/foodanddrinkfestival Brought to you by


| AUGUST 2017

Peter Clarke executive head chef of the IMPERIAL HOTEL in Great Yarmouth

COFF E E PANNACO T TA Peter Clarke of the Imperial Hotel makes a delectable dessert, perfect for those summer dinner parties

SERVES FOUR

ESPRESSO JELLY • 40ml Espresso Coffee

PANNACOTTA • 100g Caster Sugar

CHOCOLATE SOIL • 35g Cooking Chocolate

CHOCOLATE SAUCE • 5oz Cocoa Powder

• 20g Sugar Brown

• 150ml Milk

• 1 Tbsp Water

• 2oz Sugar

• 150ml Water

• 2 Sheets Gelatine

• 600ml Double Cream • 2 ½ Leaves Gelatine

• 2 Tbsp Instant Coffee • 1 Vanilla Pod

(scrape out the seeds)

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• 50g Sugar

• ¾ Pt Water

Photography by ANDREW HIRST

INGREDIENTS


RECIPE

METHOD

1. First take the gelatine and place in cold water. Then take the double cream, milk, sugar and the vanilla pod seeds and warm to just under boiling point, stirring occasionally, so as not to scorch on the bottom. 2. Take off the heat, stir in the instant coffee. 3. Squeeze the gelatine from the water and add to the double cream mixture. Stir until dissolved. 4. Pour into the 6 125ml dariole moulds and place in the fridge to set for at least 2 hours but preferably overnight. 5. For the espresso jelly, add the water and sugar to a pan, dissolve the sugar and add the espresso. Bring to the boil and take off the heat. 6. Add the gelatine to cold water and once pliable, squeeze the water out and add the coffee mixture. 7. Set in a small shallow dish and set for 2 hours, preferably overnight.

imperial hotel

8. For the chocolate soil, add the water and sugar to a small saucepan, take it to 130°C by the sugar thermometer. 9. Take off the heat and whisk the chocolate in vigorously until it resembles soil. 10. Place the contents of the saucepan onto some baking powder and let it cool naturally. 11. For the chocolate sauce, bring all the ingredients to the boil, stirring all the time. Boil for 3 minutes whilst stirring then strain and cool.

TO FINISH

12. Place the Pannacotta, whilst still in its mould, into warm water to loosen, then turn out onto a small plate, off centre at about 10 o’clock. Place the chocolate soil in a line adjacent to the Pannacotta in a long line. 13. Place 5 droplets of chocolate sauce in and around the chocolate soil. 14. Place some chocolate coated coffee beans & place on the chocolate sauce droplets, then place the fresh raspberries around the garnish. 15. Cut the jelly into 1cm² squares & finish the plate and enjoy.

2008 I Capitelli IGT Anselmi

Nick Mobbs director and wine expert at the IMPERIAL HOTEL

I have chosen quite a rare dessert wine to accompany the coffee Pannacotta from Italy firstly as the dish originates from Italy and I thought it would be good to pair with an Italian dessert wine plus it is rich in flavour to stand up to the coffe flavours in the dessert. The wine is made by Roberto Anselmi, he joined the family firm in 1975 and he continues to maintain his legendary status in Italian winemaking. His father bottled and sold wine but Roberto bought land in the North of Italy in the Veneto region to make his iconic wines. He is a charismatic, motorbike-riding rebel whose uncompromising qualityover-quantity approach has helped redefine the image of northern Italian wines specialising in the gargenega grape. The Grape type for the wine is Gargenega. Selection takes place of the most mature bunches over a couple of weeks which are collected in one layer boxes so as not to crush the grapes before they reach the winery At the winery grapes are hand picked over, separated from each other and left to dry in well aired rooms until December until they have the right degree of noble rot The grapes are gently pressed at the end of December the sweet must is left to ferment in small oak barrels decanted twice and left to mature for a further 8 months. A complex sweet white wine which works well with the sweetness in the dessert and the rich flavours in the coffee.

• A team of brilliant chefs • Superb wine list • Laid-back atmosphere The perfect restaurant for dinner or Sunday lunch. At the Imperial Hotel, North Drive, Gt Yarmouth, NR30 1EQ. To book call 01493 842000

www.cafecru.co.uk

Sunday 12.30 - 2pm Monday - Saturday 6.30 - 10pm The Terrace is open daily. For opening times & menu go to imperialhotel.co.uk

69


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| AUGUST 2017

Go west!

Accommodation-wise, there are 26 individually-styled bedrooms, 15 in the main building and 11 garden rooms with their own terraces, all of which are a contemporary mix of classic style and a modern, fresh approach, many with brand new bathrooms and some even with their own free-standing baths. All rooms are named after flowers from the Mat t T yler enjoys f i ne food , rela xat ion hotel’s garden and all are finished to a very high spec, with each room a nd i ndu lgence at Cong ha m Ha ll having a Nespresso coffee machine, fresh milk, bottled spring water and home-made biscuits; crisp, Egyptian cotton bedlinen; and cosy dressing gowns and slippers. Our room for the night was The Honeysuckle, a bright, spacious room decorated in cool, contemporary white and grey tones. It has ongham Hall is a stunning Georgian manor house set in a vast bed, large screen TV, retro filament big bulb lamps and a truly 30 acres of pastoral countryside in North-West Norfolk. immaculate, white bathroom with a selection of toiletries from the For us that meant a journey of over one-and-a-half hotel spa’s own range. We were particularly impressed with the hours, but as we hadn’t been there for some time and room’s overall finish, from the colonial-style window shutters and had heard good things about it recently, we decided to modern splash of colour blind in the bathroom to the amazing view travel there to see just how much has changed. across the open parkland. As well as the growing reputation of the Built in 1780 and converted into a hotel 200 years later, Congham restaurant, the Hall also boasts a 12 metre indoor swimming pool Hall is situated in Grimston, a short drive from the Queen’s estate complete with fountains, spectacular floor-to-ceiling picture windows in Sandringham, and just a stone’s skim away from the wide, open and an outdoor hot tub with views over the immaculately kept park. beaches of the North Norfolk coast. And what a truly magnificent These are all part of the very popular state-of-the-art Secret Garden country house hotel it is. Spa which also includes a thermal suite, sauna, bio-sauna and steam Checking in was through the porticoed entrance hall which room, two quirky ”experience showers” and even a poolside foot spa. provides a welcoming first impression with Persian rugs covering There is also a wide range of treatments which guests can book during the flag-stoned floors, carriage lamps giving a soft, warm glow, comfy their stay. Much use is made of seasonal herbs and fresh, cut flowers sofas arranged around an open log fire, an abundance of fresh flowers, from the hotel’s gardens in the spa’s own treatments and, thanks to and even a row of complimentary wellies for guests to borrow for a partnership with specialist brand Elemental Herbology, they have those long country walks! Just one of the many little touches to ensure developed products, rich in vitamins, anti-oxidants and proteins, guests have a comfortable and very relaxing stay. which are formulated to counteract the effects of age, Congham Hall is owned by Nicholas Dickinson who lifestyle and the environment, all of which are available to has had an extensive career in the high-end hospitality CONGHAM HALL buy so you can continue the pampering at home. industry, including time at luxury establishments Chewton HOTEL & SPA, For the more energetic guest there is croquet on the Glen and Raymond Blanc’s Le Manoir Aux Quat’ Saisons. Grimston, King’s Lynn, lawns, putting in the orchard, and a variety of mapped He also helped co-develop the Luxury Family Hotels group Norfolk, PE32 1AH walks around the local area and coastline, while for the and Alias Hotels, so he is very experienced in running Tel: 01485 600250 truly energetic there’s even a 14ft trampoline for guests to luxury establishments, clearly evident from the attention to www.congham hallhotel.co.uk bounce to their hearts’ content should the mood take them! detail and high standards all around Congham Hall.

C 72


FOOD & DRINK

congham hall

Having booked for dinner and after freshening up we prised ourselves away from the comfort of our room and headed to the stylish, cool bar area for aperitifs (including some scrummy, handcut vegetable crisps) to look through the menu before being taken to our table. The restaurant was surprisingly busy for a Sunday evening, clearly testimony to its popularity, so if you plan on dining here I would highly recommend booking ahead. Overall the room is bright and airy with a cool and contemporary feel and it overlooks the garden, with floor-to-ceiling doors leading on to a terrace where guest can dine al fresco when the weather permits. Dressed with white table cloths and napery, it’s decorated in subdued, heritage colours with the soft glow of oil lamps and wall lights creating an elegant ambience without being too formal. Executive chef, Norfolk-born James O’Connor, previously worked at The Hoste in Burnham Market and his past career has included spells at the Hotel du Vin and Malmaison group in Cambridge. At Congham Hall he has produced a concise, 2 AA rosette menu which makes maximum use of local and seasonal produce, much of it sourced using vegetables from the hotel’s own kitchen garden. Much use is also made of the abundance of top quality suppliers from the west Norfolk area. The local produce includes rare-breed pork from the Fruit Pig Company, venison from the Holkham estate and Cromer crab, oysters and shellfish fresh from Brancaster. This helps to ensure that the accent remains firmly on flavour, taste and simplicity. The hotel has the laudable aim of sourcing 80 per cent of its ingredients from within a 20-mile radius, with the proviso that it must be the very best available, thus ensuring standards are maintained while at the same time supporting local producers. We liked the sound of most of the starters, particularly the baby beetroot, goat’s curd and pickled shallot, and the smoked salmon in citrus butter, but I opted for smoked haddock risotto with poached hen’s egg (£8), which was rich in flavour, light and beautifully presented. This proved the ideal opener for my main course of grilled haunch of Norfolk venison with pumpkin purée and Savoy cabbage which was served with a brittle shard of smoked bacon, cooked to perfection and robust in flavour, with the blackcurrant jus adding zing to the gamey, full-bodied richness of the meat (and at £24 also good value). My partner decided on shrimp cocktail and champ (creamed potato and spring onion) followed by pan-fried cod fillet served with shrimps in brown butter, capers and lemon (£18.50) which was beautifully presented, with melt-in-the-mouth white flakes of cod. To accompany our main courses we chose a superb Chilean Sauvignon Blanc from the hotel’s comprehensive wine cellar; crisp, bright and ideally suited to our overall dinner choices. We side-stepped the more traditional desserts of warm sticky toffee pudding, rhubarb and custard cinnamon doughnuts and the selection of mini puddings to share. Instead, we opted to complete our meal with a board of four British farmhouse cheeses served with celery, oatcakes and chutney, a superb selection which cleverly mixed the textures and flavours, providing a delightful finish to a superb meal. Dinner over, nightcaps were taken in the laid-back sitting room before heading to our room for one of the best night’s sleeps in ages. Suitably rested and refreshed we headed down to the restaurant for breakfast and, whilst the ambience of the room at dinnertime was warm and cosy, by day the mood is fresh, bright and relaxed. As you would imagine at a hotel of this calibre, breakfast is extensive, with everything from the more usual cereals, yoghurts, granolas, fresh fruit, muffins and pastries to my partner’s choice of poached egg-topped cod (she really does like her fish dishes) while I chose the bespoke Full English, a wholesome, top quality breakfast which was easy on the eye and tasted superb. There is also an impressive choice of speciality teas as well as crusty bread toast and marmalades which set us up nicely for our return journey back along the A47. But before we go, I must mention the hotel’s high level of customer care and thank the entire staff who, throughout our stay, gave the kind of service we really appreciate – friendly, attentive, knowledgeable and helpful without being intrusive. From the warm welcome and tour of the hotel’s facilities with the receptionist when we arrived, to the fact that when we left we found that our car windscreen had been washed, it’s clear that the staff are a real asset to the hotel and so it’s 10 out of 10 for that important aspect alone. Many places claim to be a North Norfolk gem but in my view this is certainly true of Congham Hall, so if you’re thinking of a weekend break to kick back and get away from it all in sumptuous surroundings then this fine country house hotel really is the place to do it. 73


DESIGN • INSTALLATION • MAINTENANCE & AFTERCARE

Perfect Plantings

Luxury cottage holiday accommodation in the beautiful south Norfolk countryside, this sympathetic eightbarn conversion retains many original features. Each barn boasts its own private outdoor seating area and is situated on a working dairy and arable farm in a peaceful rural setting. All properties are well equipped for a real home from home feel. Linen and towels are included, full central heating throughout, cooking and washing facilities, cots and highchairs for the little ones. Relax and unwind in the shared hot tub or have fun with the kids in the onsite games room. Fitness room and soft play area for the little ones. Perfect for families and those who enjoy walking, fishing, golf and cycling, the local area has much to offer for guests of all ages.

al Winning Gold Med Perfect Plantings are the creative specialists offering you bespoke design solutions for your garden borders. Providing full colour layout plans, supply of all the plants and materials, installation of your planted areas, and offering a seasonal maintenance service to keep them looking as good from day one. Full landscaping service also available

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le p o e p y z a r c t f a r c Calling all s t ic d d a l a r o l F and Here at W and M Smith - we carry everything you need - card making. flower arranging, weddings and with our professional and experienced staff we will be able to help with any query or problem you may have.

Craft and F lower Festival

August 12th & 13th, 10am-4pm Flower arranging demonstration and workshop (pre-booked only) Celebration of National Left Handers Day

Face Painting and Bouncy Castle, s Craft & Trade Stalls – Refreshment Competition for any craft display with the title “Suffolk”

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Tel: 01449 711014 Email: enquiries@wandmsmith.co.uk

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| AUGUST 2017

Outdoor fun tıme Summer is heating up and the school holidays are in full swing. Excited children, full of anticipation for the weeks ahead, expect entertainment galore but the parents are perhaps a little more apprehensive and are busy thinking of ways to keep the little ones happy.

Fatboy, Junior £115 Designed exclusively for small fry! Their very own squashy and super-soft outdoor seat

– Days out can be pricey but what’s wrong with the garden for parties and picnics. Fun and games in the open air can be so much fun – a free-and-easy way for the whole family to get healthy.

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HAYLEY & JENNIFER are homeware buyers – Jarrolds, 1-11 London Street, Norwich, NR2 1JF www.jarrold.co.uk The Granary, 5 Bedford Street, Norwich, NR2 1AL www.thegranary.co.uk


INTERIORS

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Professor Puzzle, Giant Toppling Tower £30 How high can you stack before the tower tumbles? Take turns to remove a block and place on the top. It can reach over double its original height!

Fatboy, Headdemock hammock £349 Hang out together in this extravagantly large hammock that fits up to three people, and there’s no need for trees or rope as the frame is super sturdy, and the fabric is water and UV resistant

Navigate, The Hungry Jungle Collection Monkey Snack Pack £8.50, Monkey Drinks Bottle £8.50, Butterfly Snack Pack £8.50, Butterfly Drinks Bottle £8.50 Primary colours and simple jungle favourites bring a touch

All Surface Swingball £30 The original high-energy game which keeps you on your toes. The sky’s the limit with these rackets, pole and ball – for players aged 6 years+

of fun to a kid’s lunch. The Snack Packs are based on the award winning insulated “grab bags” to keep food fresh. With a handy flat-pack design, re-sealable closure and wipe clean lining. The 400ml drinks bottles are in sturdy aluminium

Ridley’s, Hook-a-Duck £20 The classic fairground game will test skill and luck! Ideal for party games and fun-filled summer afternoons. Includes 6 ducks, 2 rods and an inflatable pool – giggles are guaranteed 77



INTERIORS

arcadia home interiors

Fine Furnishings

B

rad Pitt is alleged to have once said, “I'm drawn to furniture design as complete architecture on a minor scale” and I think that makes perfect sense. For those of us who could not begin to contemplate designing a house, and as someone lucky enough to work with many brilliant architects, I regularly see examples of what an extraordinary expertise this is. Furniture, however, is a wonderful form of compact design – and ideally one that works in harmony with your home and makes your life more comfortable. Home should always be your sanctuary – and at the end of a hard day at work you should be rewarded by the embrace of a comfy armchair or sofa. Some of my prized possessions at home are pieces of furniture that have been passed down through the generations – there are two chairs that take pride of place in my drawing room. One is a beautiful Bergere chair with mahogany arms and legs and woven panels on the back and sides that belonged to my grandfather; the other is a nursing chair that belonged to my great grandmother – in Victorian times the nursing chair was a low seated partially upholstered chair for mothers who were breastfeeding. The low seat and absence of arm rests allowed the mother, who would have been wearing a stiff corset, to interact with other small children without bending over.

See more ideas and examples at www.arcadiahomeinteriors.co.uk Instagram @Arcadia_Home_Interiors and @Gilmour_Green

This has been recently reupholstered in a lovely thick woven linen by Ian Mankin (in a rather impractical off white colour – which looks wonderful against the dark grey walls but I have to balance a small wicker basket on the seat so the dogs don’t jump on it!). The rest of the furniture in the drawing room is quite contemporary, but these two pieces have so much history and so many tales to tell, that they bring an element of life to the room. That’s not to say that there isn’t something wonderful about having a bespoke piece of modern furniture made – to fit in a particular spot, or to an exact design you have created – a truly unique piece that can then also be a talking point for future generations. A good joinery firm will be able to sketch something to scale for you from an initial meeting, guide you through the choice of which material would work best and then craft your piece of furniture by hand – this gorgeous elm coffee table is a great example by highly esteemed Norfolk firm, Hawthorn Bespoke Joinery. My other favourite pieces of furniture are desks and dressing tables. As lovely as it would be to have both an office and a dressing room in your home, this is not always feasible!

However these can easily be incorporated into other rooms of the house – my son has a fabulous desk in his bedroom – I’m not sure how much homework takes place on it, but it certainly sees many hours of drawing and sketching and is adorned with endless pots of coloured pens, pencils and paraphernalia. It would look equally stylish in the corner of our open plan dining room or in the corner of the drawing room, which doubles up as ‘work’ space. Mirrored dressing tables seem to be all the rage at the moment, although I can’t help thinking about having to polish it regularly and the fear of inadvertently catching a glimpse of an unflattering double chin, from a peculiar angle, when opening a drawer…! But I do find the idea of sitting at a dressing table wonderfully glamorous and grown up. A stylish and practical console table can, of course, double up as either a desk or a dressing table, so as always – there are no rules in furnishing or decorating your home – one of the side tables next to my sofa is an upturned old apple crate for example. My final admission is one of the singularly most stupid things I have ever done – with two teenage boys and three dogs – in our last house I ordered sofas with non-removable covers. I have no idea what I was thinking – in fact I clearly wasn’t thinking at all and spent the next two years feverishly stretching practical cotton throws over every inch of said sofas for fear of grubbiness – AND they weren’t even comfortable.. Big mistake!

‚ Eliza M i l l e r ’s favourite pieces

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If you’re looking to sell in the NR31 area, please phone the top selling proactive agent who work! (*source Rightmove sales for the first 6 months of 2017)

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P ROPERTY

darby & liffen

“Both buyers and sellers can benefit from attending an open house and from previous experience we believe an Open House is your best option” Chance of a quicker sale By having a busy open house you are able to unintentionally notify buyers of the levels of interest you have in the property, meaning buyers are more likely to put forward an offer quickly out of fear of losing out on the property to other interested buyers.

M A K E YOU R S E L F AT HOM E OPEN HOUSE VIEWINGS CAN BE HELPFUL FOR BUYERS AND SELLERS ALIKE, SAYS SALES NEGOTIATOR HANNAH CLARK OPEN HOUSE VIEWINGS are becoming more and more popular in

the UK, a technique used by many American real estate agents has proved to be a successful way in securing a buyer with as minimum hassle to the vendor as possible. Whilst the idea of having your home filled with strangers may not appeal to all home owners there are far more positives than negatives.

What is an open house? This is your first chance of showing off your property to the open market. A day and time is chosen (usually a weekend) an hour slot is normally sufficient unless demand requires longer. Your agent will advertise this online along with your property details. When viewing requests come in they will be notified of the open house along with their contact details taken so there’s no confusion as to who is viewing your property. Your agent will attend to help you with the viewing and to answer any questions buyers may have. Both buyers and sellers can benefit from attending an open house and from previous experience here is why we believe an Open House is your best option, when selling your home. BENEFITS FOR HOME OWNERS

Time saving If your home has been priced well and your agent is proactive you should have several viewings lined up ready for when your property goes live online. This often means having to take time out of your busy schedule to accommodate viewing requests, by having your home ready to view when you begin marketing you can make sure the house is looking its best without having to keep up the standard for individual viewings. Family & work commitments often restrict availability so by getting the open viewing done in one go you can relax and know you’ve done all you can to sell your home without the hassle factor.

Chance of getting more money If your open house is a success and you start to receive offers buyers are far more likely to put forward higher offers again out of fear of missing out to others. Often bidding wars can arise which can lead to a ‘sealed bid’ process which allows buyers to put forward their ‘best and final offer’ meaning not only do you achieve a higher price it avoids the back and forth approach that comes with negotiating a sale. BENEFITS FOR BUYERS

Clearer understanding of the property When it comes to buying a property there will be lots of questions you’ll want to ask the vendor/agent, by attending an open house you’ll have more time to think about what you’d like to know and chances are other buyers will also have similar questions they want answering. It may be that queries arise that you hadn’t thought of that another buyer has asked which are beneficial to you. A true reflection of the level of interest A question that will always cross your mind is how many other buyers are also interested in this property, there’s nothing worse than being left in the dark or being told there’s more interest than there actually is, with an open house you can gauge this for yourself and make your next move depending on what interest there was. More freedom to look at the house Often buyers can feel intimidated when viewing properties especially if the vendor is present, sometimes there’s a limited time between viewings meaning the buyer can feel rushed, with an open house there’s the freedom to explore the property in a bit more detail and take your time without the next buyer waiting outside for you to finish the viewing. Understanding the process of an open house is something which could benefit you in the future as a buyer and seller and something all good estate agents will be vastly experienced in.

Hannah Clark Darby and Liffen Estate Agents www.darbyandliffenea.co.uk | 01493 600411

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| AUGUST 2017

E njoy i n g t he f r u it s August is the last true month of summer and there is still plenty to do in the garden, advises Ellen Mary our gardening expert

A

ugust is the month of early morning watering in the garden and evening pottering as the sun goes down. The warmth at this time of year means enjoying the fruits of your labour with a drink in hand is more favourable than getting dirty. Keep on top of deadheading, collect seeds for next year whilst listening to the birds. There is nothing more beautiful than morning time in the garden at this time of year. PLANTS & FLOWERS

provides gardening design consultancy, advice and beginner gardening courses at: www.ellenmarygardening.co.uk

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There is always pruning to be done, even in the heat of the Summer. Now is a good time to prune Wisteria in preparation for a burst of blooms next year. Along with Wisteria, rambling Roses can be pruned and to keep those gorgeous flowers coming ensure you deadhead other garden roses. I always leave some Roses that produce gorgeous hips because of their Winter interest and for wildlife to enjoy.

If you have a patio or pathway which needs weeding a great way to control it is to pour boiling water over the weeds growing between any cracks or holes. In general you will see the weeds wilting and die off in only a couple of days. Not to be used on grass or in borders but on a paved area it can really help to control the constant need for weeding. Time to think ahead! Hyacinths and mini Daffodils can be potted up to give you a beautiful display for later in the year. As soon as they are showing about 2.5cm of growth move them into a cool room. When it’s time to put on a festive flower display, move them back into a warm room and enjoy! FRUIT & VEGETABLES

There is still time to plant out some Winter vegetables. If you haven’t already found space for your Brassicas such as Cabbages, Cauliflower, Sprouts and Broccoli, make sure you get them in place this month. Don’t forget caterpillars will be quite happy


GARDENING

ellen mary

munching on them as well, so ensure they are covered in net to keep the cabbage white butterfly away. Check the undersides of the leaves regularly for signs of eggs. August is a great month for harvesting. From sweetcorn to runner beans, main crop potatoes, salads and plenty of juicy fruit. Remember to think about how and where you will store your crops and what delicious recipes to cook with them. Generally they will need a cool dry place to ensure they are kept in good condition for as long as possible. If you have laid straw around your strawberries to keep the fruits dry and suppress weeds, now is the time to remove old dirty straw away from the bed and just leave a thin layer of clean straw behind. This helps to prevent pests and diseases and allows you to weed and replace plants preparing your strawberries for next year. WILDLIFE

It’s absolutely fascinating, magical even,

watching bats on a summer evening when they are at their most active. Just after sunset, enjoy their silhouettes in the sky in woodlands and large gardens. They do need homes, just like birds do, so putting up a bat box in your garden may provide a home to Pipistrelles or Brown Long Eared bats is a great idea and fun for kids to do as well. They eat thousands of mosquitos and other bugs each night, so it’s well worth encouraging them into our gardens. A little pond upkeep is a good idea this month as the warm, sunny weather can contribute to blanket and duck weed in the water. Remove this with some net as soon as you can to keep the water clear and clean. Remove faded, dead or damaged flowers and leaves from aquatic and marginal plants as well. It’s a good idea to allow some flowers and a few vegetables to run to seed. Some of the flowers are actually very attractive and can provide food for birds and other creatures over the months ahead. Some seedbeds do give good coverage rather than having bare soil.

GARDENING PRODUCT OF THE MONTH –

If you don’t fancy trying to make your own bat box, why not put this superb Bat Conservation approved box up from Ark Wildlife. With chambers for multiple species, you could be watching them swoop above your garden on a summers evening. www.arkwildlife.co.uk

W H AT ’ S O N –

The Millennium Garden at Pensthorpe is one of my favourite Norfolk gardens. It is awash with stunning colours, wispy grasses and paths winding through stunning planting. A day out at Pensthorpe will keep you, the kids and just about anyone very happy! Plus it’s all about nature. It’s a great chance to see Piet Ouldolfs landscape designing at its very best. www.pensthorpe.com

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© Shutterstock

ARCTIC HIGHLIGHTS

This coastal voyage journeys within the Arctic Circle for the best chance to see Norway’s stunning Northern Lights and engage in exciting optional winter activities.

Day 2: Spend the morning exploring Tromsø or enjoy an optional excursion such as dog sledding or snowmobiling. Embark on your Hurtigruten ship in the afternoon. Day 3: The highlight of the day is Honningsvåg with an optional afternoon excursion to the North Cape.

Day 5: Visit Hammerfest, the world’s most northern town. Return to Tromsø in the evening and overnight in a hotel.

6 days | Tromsø–Kirkenes–Tromsø

Day 6: Join in an optional excursion in the morning before taking your return fl ight back to Norwich.

6-DAY ARCTIC HIGHLIGHTS

© Blick vom Hausberg

© Shutterstock

Day 1: Fly direct to Tromsø from Norwich and overnight in a hotel.

Day 4: We reach Kirkenes for a range of optional excursions, such as visits to the Russian border or the Snowhotel.

Departs Norwich 4 March 2018

© Ørjan Bertelsen

Itinerary

INCLUDING FLIGHTS FROM NORWICH AND HALF BOARD FROM

£949pp

For further details and bookings please call Travel Norwich Airport on 01603 428700 or pop in and see them at the airport or Castle Mall, Norwich. Price excludes £10/Adult Norwich Airport Development Fee payable at the airport.

Wishing everyone across

Great Yarmouth

a very Happy New Year

Working you in Great Yarmouth &Westminster Westminster Working for Great Yarmouth & Westminster Working for you in Great Yarmouth &of Working for youinround in Great Yarmouth & Westminster Workingfor allyou year for the residents Great Yarmouth Please get inin touch with my team can helphelp you with with any local issues Please get in with my team ifif II can help you any local issues Please getin in touch with my team can you with any local issues Please get touch with my team IIIIcan you any local issues Please get touch with my team can help youwith with any local issues Please get intouch touch with my team if canhelp help you with any local issues 20 Church Plain, Greatififif Yarmouth, Norfolk, NR30 1NE www.brandonlewis.co

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    

   

  


| AUGUST 2017

Hot

dealer details

wheels

Lings Honda

Riverside Road, Lowestoft, Suffolk, NR33 0TQ Tel: 01502 537444 www.lings.com

I

t has already won the Best Hot Hatch award at the Auto Express New Car Awards; and posted the record lap time for front wheel drive cars at the iconic Nurburgring circuit in Germany. What better fanfare, then, for the introduction of the latest Honda Civic Type R, set to hit retail forecourts in August. British built at Swindon, the new Civic Type R was first unveiled at the Paris Motor Show last year, with a mass production version being shown at the Geneva Show in March. It comes with a price tag of £30,995, with the GT version having a £2000 premium add-on. PCP pricing has also been confirmed for the new car, with monthly payments in line with the current car and starting at £299 a month on a three year 5.9 per cent contract for the entry level version.. The new car builds on Honda’s heritage in developing high-performance hatchbacks – with plenty of F1 heritage built in – and represents the segment’s ultimate expression of dynamic purity.

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It comes from a carmaker with a formidable Formula One heritage – David Wakefield takes a look at the new Honda Civic Type R


MOTORING

honda civic type r

It shares the same fundamentals as the new Civic hatchback, but the new Type R has been engineered from the ground up to deliver the most rewarding drive in the hot-hatch segment – both on road and on the race track. At the heart of it all is the 2.0-litre VTEC Turbo engine featured in the multi-awardwinning previous generation Type R but which has been optimised and refined and now produces 320 PS with peak torque of 400 Nm. Throttle response and driveability have improved thanks to improved engine control settings. The smooth and precise six-speed manual transmission is further improved by a rev match control system, ensuring no compromise in the Type R’s intimate, rewarding connection with the driver. The new Type R takes the lighter, more rigid body shell of the new Civic hatchback and adds further use of adhesive in key areas. Compared to the previous Type R, torsional rigidity is further improved by 38 per cent. The front Macpherson strut suspension

of the standard hatchback is revised to minimise torque steer and maximise sporty handling. At the rear, the new independent multi-link system of the standard car is improved with the use of unique high rigidity suspension arms. An enhanced selection of driving modes give the car greater usability compared to the previous Type R. A new ‘Comfort’ setting sits alongside the agile ‘Sport’ and trackfocused ‘+R’ modes. Each selection tailors the adaptive dampers, steering force, gear shift feeling and throttle response of the car on demand. The new car has a more comprehensive aerodynamic package than the previous model, including a smoother underbody, front air curtain, a lightweight rear wing and vortex generators at the trailing edge of the roof line. The muscular, aggressive body has a best-in-class balance between lift and drag, contributing to greater high speed stability. The Type R will be exported across Europe and to other markets around the world, including Japan and the US. Its

arrival in North America will mark the first time that any Honda-badged Type R has been officially sold there. As with the outgoing model, GT drivers will benefit from blind spot information including cross traffic monitor, dual zone climate control, auto dimming rear view mirror, Honda CONNECT with Garmin Navigation, wireless charging, high power audio, and LED front fog lights. The centre console features a piano-black finish, and follows a ‘technology centre’ theme. The lower part in front of the gear lever is configured as a two-tier storage area, with a front tray that provides grab-andgo access to devices, with an integrated wireless smartphone charging pad (on GT specification cars). A second tray behind the centre console provides a more discreet storage area, as well as access to the HDMI and USB ports, and a 12-volt power socket. Cable pass-through enables a connection from the second tray to the first. The seven-inch Honda CONNECT colour touch-screen display, as well as being a touch-control device for the infotainment and climate control functions, also integrates with a reversing camera. It also offers enhanced intuitive operation and full smartphone integration via both Apple CarPlay® and Android Auto. The instrument display layout provides vivid clarity and highly intuitive usability. A seven-inch colour TFT-LCD Driver Information Interface (DII) display makes up the largest central section of the reconfigured instrument binnacle, which includes virtual gauges as well as a switchable section that can display a variety of different function readouts. Unique to the Type R is a driving modespecific illumination function that features specialised readouts, including an LED gearshift indicator light, boost pressure gauge, G-Meter and lap time recorder. Scroll and select functions for the DII are performed via thumbpad controls on the left spoke of the steering wheel. The combination of thumbpad controls and DII display in the driver’s forward line-of-sight helps to minimise distractions for the driver while underway. Also on the left spoke are the integrated Bluetooth® HandsFreeLink® telephone controls, while a second thumbpad on the right spoke of the steering wheel operates the adaptive cruise control and lane keeping assist system settings. In common with the new Civic hatchback, the new Type R features the Honda SENSING suite of safety technologies, one of the most comprehensive safety packages in its class. It uses a combination of radar and camera information, plus a host of hightech sensors to warn and assist the driver in potentially dangerous scenarios. 89


CAR OF THE MONTH GREAT YARMOUTH COACHWORKS CAR SALES

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MOT testing Towbar fitting

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0% APR* MAZDA PERSONAL CONTRACT PURCHASE

M{ZD{ 2 £850 Mazda Deposit Contribution †

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Book a test driveº today – visit www.wrights-mazda.co.uk WRIGHTS MAZDA – NORWICH 101 Cromer Road, Norwich, Norfolk NR6 6XW Tel: 01603 427011

WRIGHTS MAZDA – BECCLES Common Lane North, Beccles, Suffolk NR34 9BL Tel: 01502 713885

The official fuel consumption figures in mpg (l/100km) for the Mazda range: Urban 28.0 (10.1) - 65.7 (4.3). Extra Urban 51.4 (5.5) - 80.7 (3.5). Combined 39.2 (7.2) - 74.3 (3.8). CO 2 emissions (g/km) 167 - 99. The mpg figures quoted are sourced from official EU-regulated test results obtained through laboratory testing. These are provided for comparability purposes only and may not reflect your actual driving results. Retail sales only, subject to availability for vehicles registered between 01.07.17 and 30.09.17 at participating dealers. T&C apply. *0% APR available on all Mazda2 and 2017 Mazda3 models. †Includes £350 dealer contribution, excludes Mazda2 90ps Tech Edition. Finance subject to status. 18s or over. Guarantee may be required. Mazda Financial Services RH1 1SR. Models shown: Mazda2 75ps SE, OTR from £12,695 and 2017 Mazda3 120ps SE, OTR from £17,995. Mazda2 features optional Soul Red Metallic paint (£660). 2017 Mazda3 features optional Soul Red Metallic paint (£670). OTR price includes VAT, number plates, delivery, 12 months’ road fund licence, first registration fee, 3 year or 60,000 mile warranty and 3 years’ European Roadside Assistance. ºTest drives subject to applicant status and availability. Details correct at time of going to print. Not available in conjunction with any other offer unless specified. Calls to 0844/0845 numbers will be charged at 7 pence per minute plus your standard network charge. Wrights Motor Ltd, trading as Wrights Mazda is a credit broker not a lender for this financial promotion. We can introduce you to a limited number of carefully selected finance providers and may receive a commission from them for the introduction.


GOOCH ACCIDENT REPAIR CENTRE LTD

EXCLUSIVE RANGE FOR OUR 24” PROFILES £140 INC FITTED TO ALL FOUR WHEELS

01502 531660

MILL ROAD, LOWESTOFT, SUFFOLK, NR33 0PP

B E O N E O F T H E F I R ST TO O W N

ALL- NEW FORD FIESTA SUMMER 2017

Available to test drive now! Book your appointment today Pertwee & Back - Great Yarmouth Gapton Hall Road Great Yarmouth, NR31 0NJ Tel. 01493 664151 www.pertwee-and-back.co.uk

Important information

Official fuel consumption figures in mpg (l/100km) for the All-New Fiesta range are: urban 40.9-80.7 (6.9-3.5), extra urban 67.3-94.2 (4.2-3.0), combined 54.3-88.3 (5.2-3.2). Official CO2 emissions 118-82g/km. The mpg figures quoted are sourced from official EU-regulated test results (EU Directive and Regulation 692/2008), are provided for comparability purposes and may not reflect your actual driving experience.


| AUGUST 2017

Great and

small!

‚ FIVE NEW FIESTA FACTS SPECIAL SCREENING

IS THIS SEAT TAKEN?

The all-new Fiesta’s heated leather steering wheel has been tested by Ford engineers to ensure it is resistant to damage or staining from sunscreen on the driver’s hands. Sunscreen is just one of the everyday substances that were used to test the Fiesta interior. Leather seats are also designed to resist coffee spills, soil from dirty sports kit and even the dye from jeans.

How does Ford know the Fiesta’s seats will remain comfortable for the lifetime of the car? Robot buttocks “sat” in the seats 25,000 times to prove their durability. The seat bolsters undergo 60,000 test cycles to ensure wear-resistance, and the seat material is checked for flexibility and comfort even after 24 hours at minus 30 degrees C.

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PRESSING ENGAGEMENT

Some of the all-new Fiesta’s body panels are made using a new manufacturing technology that analyses the noise frequencies produced during the stamping process, and can identify a component that will not meet Ford’s quality standards – before it even leaves the stamping machine. The Fiesta factory in Cologne, Germany, produces a new Fiesta every 68 seconds, and can build about 20,000 different variations of Fiesta in total.

GRAND SLAM

PLAY PERFECTION

The all-new Fiesta’s doors now require 20 per cent less effort to close, because of improvements to the air extractors inside the car. Innovative, concealed door edge protectors spring quickly in to place when the doors are opened to protect both the car’s doors and those of cars parked alongside from dings and scrapes. Inside are pressure sensors that enable restraint systems to be activated several milliseconds sooner in the event of a side impact.

Engineers spent a year listening to over 5,000 tracks to ensure the 675watt B&O PLAY audio system sounds great whether enjoying Adele, Foo Fighters or Jay-Z – or classical – no matter at what volume it is played. Tested in city centres, on motorways and in the countryside, the 10-speaker setup features a nine-channel amplifier for precise sound control, a dashboard speaker and 200mm subwoofer in the boot – while optional surround sound delivers a 360-degree sound stage experience.


MOTORING

ford fiesta

It’s Britain’s most favourite small car – ever! Lots of us have owned one in our time, and now the Ford Fiesta, which has sold over 4.5 million since its launch in 1976, is emerging in its seventh generation form, says David Wakefield

dealer details Ludham garage

High street, Ludham Great Yarmouth NR29 5QQ Tel: 01692 678215 www.ludhamgarage.co.uk

T

here are plenty of big new car launches coming in 2017, but perhaps none will be as important to the average UK motorist as this one. The Fiesta is Britain’s best-selling car. Nearly 60,000 - the overwhelming majority of them the older car - have been registered already in 2017 and according to SMMT figures, over 120,000 new Fiestas were registered last year. The current sixth-generation car made its debut in 2008, and this new eighthgeneration car shapes up against other brand new rivals like the SEAT Ibiza and Volkswagen Polo. The new Fiesta range kicks off at £12,715 for the entry level Style model, rising through Zetec and Titanium before topping out at £19,345 for the Vignale. Special edition B&O PLAY models also appear. The range will be completed next year with the arrival of the crossover Active model and the ST hot hatch.

Entry level spec includes 15-inch alloy wheels and body coloured bumpers as standard. Manual air-conditioning and an AM/FM radio with a 4.2-inch TFT screen with Bluetooth connectivity are found in the cabin, while Ford has also fitted the entry level supermini with a suite of driver and safety assistance features, including lane keep assist, hill start assist and automatic headlamps. Ford is offering a wide range of petrol engines, the core trio of which are underpinned by Ford’s 1.0-litre threecylinder EcoBoost turbo petrol offered in 99bhp, 123bhp and 138bhp guises. This will have a six-speed manual gearbox to help keep CO2 emissions down to as little as 95g/ km and will feature cylinder deactivation tech from 2018. There will also be a sixspeed auto with steering wheel paddles for the 98bhp model, while a new entry level naturally aspirated 1.1-litre three-cylinder with either 69bhp or 84bhp makes its debut, emitting 101g/km of CO2. As for the diesels, the new Fiesta will be the first model to get a high-power TDCi unit. Ford’s 118bhp 1.5 TDCi is anticipated to emit 89g/km of CO2, while the more modest 84bhp diesel is predicted to offer even lower

CO2 emissions of 82g/km. The hot Fiesta ST will be powered by a 1.5-litre turbocharged three-cylinder producing 197bhp and 290Nm of torque. Ford claims that the new ST can sprint from 0-62mph in 6.7 seconds, and should be capable of topping 140mph. All engines are offered with stop/start and some editions get an active aero front grille to squeeze out a few more miles per gallon. Red, white and blue are three of the four favourite Fiesta colours among patriotic UK customers. Around 22 per cent of new Fiestas are sold in blue, 18 per cent in black, 16 per cent in white, 15 per cent in red and 10 per cent in silver. For the new Fiesta line-up Chrome Copper plus new Blue Wave and Bohai Mint green shades are among the choices. The new Fiesta is billed as the most technologically advanced small car on sale thanks to 15 high-tech features ensuring a safe and smooth journey such as PreCollision Assist featuring pedestrian detection, meaning that the driver is warned of people who are in or near the road ahead, automatic perpendicular parking, blind spot alert and auto high beam. 93


• Signage • Digital print • Vehicle graphics • Design email: sales@sppdigital.co.uk, web: www.sppdigital.co.uk, telephone: 01493 440292

Imagination into Reality


H A N DL I NG I N V E ST M E N T R ISK YOU INVEST YOUR SAVINGS IN THE HOPE THAT THEY WILL GROW OVER TIME, BUT THERE ARE INHERENT RISKS INVOLVED IN ANY INVESTMENT STRATEGY. CARL LAMB LOOKS AT HOW WE ENSURE THAT CLIENTS ARE COMFORTABLE WITH THE BALANCE OF RISK AND REWARD ASSOCIATED WITH THEIR INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO.

THERE ARE TWO BASIC TYPES of savings and investments, as far as risk is concerned. Cash savings include accounts with banks, building societies and credit unions as well as certain savings bond products such as those from NS&I. With savings deposits, your returns take the form of interest on the money you have deposited. Importantly, you will not normally get back less than the capital you originally put in, even if interest rates change. Provided your money is held in an institution that is covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme’s deposit guarantee and you have no more than £85,000 saved with any single institution then, even if the institution fails, your deposit will be secure. The FSCS scheme covers most banks, building societies and credit unions, but if you are unsure if your savings are covered, you can do a check on the FSCS website at https://protected. fscs.org.uk/. Investments include a range of solutions such as equity, bonds, property, gilts and derivatives. Equity investments are held in stocks and shares: you buy shares in a company at a certain price, for example, and investment gains occur when they are subsequently sold at a higher price. Holding shares can also bring the investor dividend income, depending on the performance of the company involved. The thing to remember is that investments generally carry an element of risk and you could potentially get back less than you put in or – in the very worst scenario – lose it altogether. However, different types of investment and holdings in

WEALTH MANAGEMENT

almary green

“There are forms of investment management to suit most investors’ pockets.” different companies and funds carry different levels of risk. A financial adviser can ensure that you understand the level of risk involved with any investment strategy you adopt and that it is suitable for your risk profile. Assessing your risk profile is a hugely important part of the work we do. It involves exploring your experience and knowledge of financial matters and assessing two important aspects of your relationship with risk. Firstly, we will look at your attitude to risk. This involves assessing how you react emotionally to the prospect of losses in varying degrees, how relaxed you are about small dips in values and at what point you find potential losses unacceptable. This is about how you think and how you feel. Secondly, we will look at your capacity for loss. This is a much more scientific measurement: it’s about the amount of money you are actually going to need at specific points in your life and the stage at which a loss is not affordable. Once we have these two assessments, we can reconcile the findings and come up with a risk score that is tailored specifically to you. We then take the risk score and match suitable investments to it, so that your portfolio is never exposed to more risk than is appropriate for you. Your portfolio will usually contain a mix of investment types of varying risk levels but the overall profile of your portfolio will match your risk profile. In addition, we may recommend that you adopt investment management – where a specialist Investment Manager adjusts your portfolio in line with market conditions – to help mitigate the risks. There are forms of investment management to suit most investors’ pockets. The value of an investment and the income from it could go down as well as up. The return at the end of the investment period is not guaranteed and you may get back less than you originally invested. The tax treatment of investments depends on individual circumstances and is subject to change.

Carl Lamb

Almary Green Chartered Financial Planners www.almarygreen.com | 01603 706740

For independent financial advice, contact Almary Green on 01603 706740 or email enquiries@almarygreen.com. Please remember that the advice here is generic and we recommend that you get individual personalised advice.

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LEGAL

norton peskett solicitors

“In cases of national tragedy or issues of huge public interest – as with Grenfell Towers – it is not unusual to have an independent enquiry”

T R AGE DI E S & E NQU I R I E S LEGAL EXPERT JULIAN GIBBONS TAKES A CLOSER LOOK AT THE RECENT EVENTS OF THE GRENFELL TOWERS TRAGEDY.

IT IS INEVITABLE THAT THE AWFUL TRAGEDY of Grenfell Towers will generate much legal activity and considerable desire from various bodies to have their say regarding what happened, as is proving to be the case. Not all comment and opinion however is proving to be constructive. The government acted very quickly to announce an independent public enquiry and to appoint a retired Court of Appeal judge, Sir Martin Moore-Bick, to chair it. Almost as soon as his appointment was announced he began to draw criticism, some of it arising from his comments as to the remit of the enquiry. In cases of national tragedy or issues of huge public interest it is not unusual to have an independent enquiry. Yet those who one might assume to be glad of this opportunity to give and hear evidence as to what occurred in an independent judicial setting already seem not to be approving of the process. A few have already called for an inquest instead, before a coroner, apparently ignorant of the fact that there will be an inquest as well. In terms of the enquiry’s remit, the judge is perfectly right to raise questions regarding its scope. In fact, the remit for any public enquiry is ultimately for the appointing minister of the government to determine and not for the judge alone who is chairing it, though he and others will have input and there is public consultation with interested parties before the enquiry’s terms are fixed. There is though a balance to be struck between speed and the desire of some to explore every issue which might have contributed to the disaster, including government cuts to local authorities. However, the harsh truth is that the wider an enquiry the longer it will take. To take some examples, the Chilcott enquiry into the Iraq war looked at so many aspects that it took seven years between the enquiry’s announcement and the delivery of its report. Conversely, the Levison enquiry into phone hacking took just a year. The

Independent Enquiry into Child Sex Abuse has become so controversial that it is now on its fourth chairman and it is anyone’s guess when it might deliver a meaningful report on any of the twelve separate investigations it is undertaking. The judge therefore was quite right to highlight what is a balance for any enquiry, one of detail as against speed. Rather like the Sex Abuse Enquiry, where the first two chairs nominated were hounded out by interest groups, elements who hold themselves out as representing in some way residents and victims of Grenfell Towers (though not it must be said any residents themselves) are starting a similar thing with Sir Martin. One of those involved in this campaign is the local MP, Emma Dent Coad, who has seen fit to criticise him despite having never met him. She should know better, particularly as whatever the scope of the enquiry it will be looking at the role of the Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation (KCTMO) and that of the local council. The KCTMO is the body which assumed responsibility for management of the council’s housing stock in 1996. Membership of the KCTMO committee includes four local councillors, of which Miss Dent Coad was one up to 2012. Between 2013 and 2013 she was then a member of the council’s Housing and Property Scrutiny Committee. Given the criticism already of both the KCTMO and the council’s roles in the tragedy, it seems odd to say the least that Miss Dent Coad believes she has the right to influence who chairs an independent judicial enquiry which will be considering the conduct of two bodies of which in the recent past she was a member and whose members past and present she will be acquainted with, some of whom will be from her political party, which she now represents in parliament. The clue is in the word “independent”. Neither those who may be associated with bodies whose conduct will be under investigation, nor those with personal interest in the outcome should be deciding who chairs such an enquiry. English judges are world renowned for their skill, independence and incorruptibility. It is in everyone’s interest that the enquiry proceeds fairly and delivers its conclusions as quickly as is consistent with everyone have a reasonable opportunity to be heard. Rather than sniping from the side lines politicians should be supporting the process and the judge who will have the difficult task of navigating through what is likely to be substantial evidence. This is about getting the right answers not about someone delivering answers that certain groups want to hear.

Julian Gibbons Norton Peskett Solicitors www.nortonpeskett.co.uk | 01493 849200

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Social Scene

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Places & FacesÂŽ gets out and about to enjoy this months social scene


SOCIAL SCENE

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CAPTAINS DINNER DANCE GREAT YARMOUTH & CAISTER GOLF CLUB

A Captains Invitational Day and Dinner Dance hosted by the Captain of Great Yarmouth & Caister Golf Club, Alistair Low. The evening also included a celebration to Honour Alistair Low's forty-fifth year at HKB Wiltshires Solicitors. HKB Wiltshires are a long established firm of Solicitors providing professional advice and services.

Photos by MALCOLM HIRST

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| AUGUST 2017

THE MASQUERADE BALL ROYAL NORFOLK SHOW, NORWICH

The Masquerade Ball in a Secret Garden theme was organised by Break Charity at the Norfolk Show Ground. As well as enjoying all the traditional glamour of a masquerade ball, the guests were also able to explore an enchanted secret garden and some GoGoHares sculptures - part of the charity art trail that Break is planning for 2018 - also made an appearance.

Photos by MARK IVAN BENFIELD

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| AUGUST 2017

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BEWILDERWOOD 10TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATIONS HOVETON, NORFOLK

Tom Blofeld hosted a fantastic fun filled day to celebrate BeWILDerwood's 10th Anniversary. Guests were treated to talks about the venue, entertainment and activities. After this guests enjoyed a BBQ lunch, ice-cream and a thrilling trip round the award winning forest of family fun and outdoor adventure with the Twiggle Team.

Photos by ANDREW KAHUMBU | WWW.KAHUMBU.CO.UK

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5 MINUTES WITH…

| AUGUST 2017

TOM BLOFELD Founder, Bewilderwood

tom blofeld

swamps, reeds and moorhen. I could not imagine living anywhere else. Is there anything you dislike?

Yes, carrots.

Where do you eat and drink?

H

ow did the concept of Bewilderwood come about?

I had played in the woods as a child and at first wanted to write children’s books about the marshes and all the funny things that went on there. Then it suddenly occurred to me that it would be even cooler to BUILD the book. Which we did. Interestingly, neither the book nor the park came first. Instead we developed both at the same time so that fun things we built were written into the book and fun things I wrote we then built. I am told that this is considered a risky business model! What have been the highlights?

Every day a child smiles from what we have created. There is no greater highlight than that. But, the creation of the Sky Maze with its half a kilometre of walk way and its truly imaginative twists and turns seem to me to be the best thing we have done so far. However, the next project for Norfolk plans to be open next year and is going to be even better than that but is currently a secret! How often do you work at Bewilderwood?

I have never done a day’s work at BeWILDerwood. This is the first job I have ever had that doesn’t seem like work. What do you like about living in Norfolk?

There is only one landscape worth looking at in the universe and it contains marshes, 106

I am very fond of the Recruiting Sargent at Coltishall, The Gunton Arms and The Ship in Brancaster. What do you miss when you are away from Norfolk?

My cats especially. Also, the marshes and there is always a fear that the garden is producing its finest flowers at just the moment that we aren’t there. Tell us about your children’s books?

I have written five and also a poetry book and am in progress on the sixth in the series. Writing them is the moment when BeWILDerwood truly becomes real for me and Mildred, Swampy and their chums, for a brief period, are just as alive as my own children. This is what is wonderful about writing. What is not so wonderful is editing. Do you have any other hobbies?

I am a very keen cook sneaking ever further East in my cooking techniques. I am also married to an international film critic and spend far too much time watching slow art house films with no plot. That I still enjoy this means I must really love film. What happens at Bewilderwood if the weather is poor?

One of the great qualities of building in a heavily forested area is that the leaves provide a natural umbrella for anything but the heaviest downpour. As long as it doesn’t rain all day there’s craft making tents, theatre and other fun things to do.

Most people have come to experience a real wild landscape and part of that is braving the elements and having a giggle anyway. And who doesn’t love jumping up and down in muddy puddles (thank you Peppa for that!) However if it really sluices it down though, then it might be best to come back another day. What are your plans for Bewilderwood?

We really haven’t finished finding new and wonderful things for the Boggles and Twiggles to play on and I don’t imagine we will stop improving the park for a long time. We also have the wonderful opportunity of creating another entirely new world of BeWILDerwood at Cholmondeley Castle in Cheshire. Designs are nearing completion as I speak. Have you had any amusing incidents at the Park?

Some of my cookery demonstrations, involving mud and magic as they do, are slightly inclined to go wrong. I have wound up covered in gloop and bits of insect due to the odd over enthusiastic gesture. What are you working on right now?

What with Cholmondeley and the new book, I have quite enough on my plate just now. But I have just designed Mildred’s Magnificent Musical Camp-Out summer event with Emma (our Head of Magic and Mischief ) and some of the ideas for that, like getting the children to build their own tents out of wool and sticks seem as interesting and fun as anything we’ve done. Can you sum up Bewilderwood in five words?

The best park anywhere, ever.

Can you sum yourself up in five words?

No, no, no, no, no.


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