News from around the region
Festive fun at FarGo
Coventry’s FarGo Village is getting in the festive spirit this month with two themed Christmas markets.
The hugely popular Winter Chocolate Market makes a welcome return on Saturday 19 & Sunday 20 November, complete with an impressive array of tasty treats from artisan producers. Then, the following weekend (the 26th & 27th), the Winter Vegan Festival combines ‘handcrafted animal and planetfriendly gifts to fill stockings’, with ‘the finest plant-based treats to enjoy on the day’. Looking further ahead, FarGo’s December attractions include the Village’s biggest-ever Christmas market, taking place on 3 & 4 December and then again two weeks later, on the 17th & 18th.
For more information, visit fargovillage.co.uk
Shakespeare Theatre from Thursday 26 January to Saturday 4 March, forms part of a new season of productions at the RSC that also includes Julius Caesar and Cymbeline. For more information about all three shows and to book tickets, visit rsc.org.uk
Elvis on screen outdoors
The UK’s largest touring outdoor cinema will next summer present a screening of Baz Luhrmann’s hit movie, Elvis, at popular Warwickshire visitor attraction Coombe Abbey (Friday 25 August).
Adventure Cinema’s Elvis Open-Air Cinema Tour ‘will bring together Elvis fans, film enthusiasts and family & friends to provide an unforgettable outdoor experience’. To find out more, visit adventurecinema.co.uk
Behind The Scenes at British Motor Museum
A busy November for Leamington Music
Leamington Music certainly has a busy November, presenting a programme of five concerts in five very different musical fields. Performers include leading viol consort Fretwork, all-female Anglo-American quartet Eusebius (see Classical Music section), this year’s Leamington Music Prize winners Felicite Piano Trio and popular klezmer band She’Koyokh (pictured).
A Remembrance Sunday concert sees three champion brass bands present a programme featuring works by Ralph Vaughan Williams... For more information, visit leamingtonmusic.org
Strictly out on tour again
The live tour of Strictly Come Dancing will be foxtrotting its way around the country again in the new year - and for the first time ever, Anton Du Beke will join fellow TV judges Shirley Ballas and Craig Revel Horwood for the on-the-road version of the show.
The Strictly Live Tour will also feature the welcome return of Janette Manrara as host. As usual the tour kicks off in Birmingham (Utilita Arena) in January (20th to the 22nd). For more information and to book tickets, visit StrictlyComeDancingLive.com
Alex Kingston to star in The Tempest for the RSC
Alex Kingston returns to the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) after Christmas to star in a brand-new version of The Tempest.
The award-winning actress, who’s best known for starring alongside George Clooney in long-running US medical drama ER, will play the part of Prospero.
The show, which runs at the Royal
A car owned by Diana, Princess of Wales, and a vehicle that helped to launch a range of Barbie toys can be seen for the first time in years at Coventry Transport Museum. Thirty vehicles, many of which were made in Coventry, have been brought out of the venue’s storage collection. They can now be viewed in a new gallery called Behind The Scenes: Wheels And Workers.
Sir Ian McKellen to star in Mother Goose at the Wolverhampton Grand
Celebrated star of stage & screen Sir Ian McKellen will take the title role when a pantomime version of Mother Goose stops off at the Wolverhampton Grand Theatre early next year (Wednesday 22 - Sunday 26 February).
Sir Ian, who is perhaps best known globally as Gandalf in the Lord Of The Rings movies and Magneto in the X-Men films, will be joined in the show by John Bishop. To find out more and book tickets, visit grandtheatre.co.uk
New tour dates for Romesh
Comedian Romesh Ranganathan will be hitting the road again in 2024 with a brand-new show entitled Hustle.
The ever-popular laughter merchant’s UK tour will include a stop-off at Birmingham Utilita Arena on 30 May. For more information and to book tickets, visit the venue’s website.
Seasonal singing at Rugby venue
Local vocalists will next month join a 50-strong choir to present a brand-new Christmas event at Rugby venue The Benn Hall.
Taking place on Sunday 18 December, the concert will be led by The Big Sing Choir, who will be performing songs from their established repertoire as well as a selection of festive favourites. Word has it Santa himself will be putting in an appearance too! To find out more about the event, search for Benn Hall Rugby online.
Olly Murs heads to the Midlands
Olly Murs will stop off at Birmingham’s Resorts World Arena next spring as part of a UK tour to promote his new album, Marry Me, which is released early next month (2 December). Olly will be joined at the Thursday 4 May show by Scouting For Girls. To find out more and book tickets, visit resortsworldarena.co.uk
Disney’s The Lion King will return to Birmingham Hippodrome next summer. Showing at the venue from Thursday 6 July to Saturday 16 September, the hit musical has thrilled a combined global audience of more
A Christmas classic at the cathedral
Coventry Cathedral will this Christmas host a special screening of much-loved animated film The Snowman. First televised in 1982 and inspired by the late Raymond Briggs’ 1978 picture book of the same name, the film will be accompanied by a live orchestra (Saturday 17 December).
As an extra-special treat, the event will also feature The Flight Before Christmas - a new Shaun the Sheep film which is being staged with a live orchestra for the first time.
To find out more about the event and book tickets, visit coventrycathedral.org
than 110 million people since premiering on Broadway in 1997.
For more information and to book tickets, visit birminghamhippodrome.com
Escape to adventure at Worcester visitor attraction The Commandery
Worcester visitor attraction The Commandery is this month launching a brand-new Escape Room (Saturday 5 November). Commandery Quest is based around the venue’s role as the Royalist headquarters in the English Civil War. The Escape Room will see teams of two to six players become museum curators. Battling against the clock, they will need to solve a series of puzzles to find King Charles II’s lost treasure before infamous thief Arty Snitch catches up with them. To find out more and book a session, visit commandery-quest.co.uk
Disney’s roar-some musical returns to the MidlandsNews from around the region
Make a date for Danny’s final installment...
Veteran broadcaster Danny Baker will make three February stop-offs in the Midlands with a brand-new show.
At Last… The Sausage Sandwich Tour is the final part of a trilogy which has also featured Cradle To Stage and Good Time Charlie’s Back!
Danny visits Stafford Gatehouse on 8 February, Victoria Hall in Stoke-on-Trent three days later on the 11th, and Walsall’s A3 Arena on the 24th. He then returns to the region in the spring, appearing at the Swan Theatre, Worcester, on 15 April.
For more information and to book tickets, visit DannyBakerLive.com
Christmas craft-away with Dragons’ Den’s Sara
Dragons’ Den star and Strictly Come Dancing contestant Sara Davies is heading for Birmingham next month - complete with a cornucopia of quality Christmas crafting tricks and tips.
Covering everything from gifts and garlands to cards and crackers - all via ‘a peek inside the Den’ and ‘a sprinkling of Strictly sparkle’ - Sara’s show will feature practical demonstrations, creative ideas and a healthy slice of down-to-earth know-how.
The Queen of Crafting stops off at Birmingham Town Hall on Tuesday 6 December. For more information and to book tickets, visit bmusic.co.uk
Big festive programme on offer at Compton Verney
Visitors to Compton Verney can celebrate the magic of Christmas in traditional style next month (1 - 24 December), courtesy of ‘a packed programme of festive delights’. Highlights include a market of hand-made Christmas gifts, a concert of carols performed by the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire
Get ready to run...
Birmingham’s NEC will play host to The National Running Show in January (Saturday the 21st & Sunday the 22nd).
The biggest community meet-up of the year, and perfectly timed for runners who are training for events in the spring, the show features ‘inspirational speakers, cuttingedge technologies and the best in nutrition, all under one roof’. For more information, visit nationalrunningshow.com
A contemporary Romeo & Juliet at the Belgrade
A critically acclaimed contemporary version of Romeo & Juliet will stop off at the Coventry Belgrade Theatre early in the new year.
Sabrina Mahfouz’s adaptation of Malorie Blackman’s Noughts & Crosses explores the subject of forbidden love in a society suffering from racial and social divides. The production is presented by Pilot Theatre and runs at the Belgrade from Tuesday 24 to Saturday 28 January.
For more information and to book tickets, visit the venue’s website.
Chamber Choir, a Warwickshire artists’ advent calendar, abridged performances of The Nutcracker and The Snowman, and the chance to meet Father Christmas and follow a ‘reindeer trail’ through the grounds... For more information about what’s happening and when, visit comptonverney.org.uk
New kids’ festival offering springtime ‘fairytale’ fun
A brand-new event for children under 12 years of age will take place at Staffordshire Showground next spring (Sunday 12 March). Organised by a female-led team with firsthand experience of parenting, The Kids’ Festival is described as an ‘immersive, fairytale experience bursting with a wide range of thrilling and enjoyable interactive activities’. To find out more, visit thekidsfestival.co.uk
A TIMELY REVIVAL
The Royal Shakespeare Company’s festive production could hardly be more pertinent. A Christmas Carol, Charles Dickens’ tale of poverty, social inequality, compassion and redemption, was written in 1843 but resonates louder than ever at the moment, with Britain in the grip of a cost-of-living crisis and economic recession.
The contemporary context isn’t lost on any of the key players in the new production, which is a revival of David Edgar’s socially conscious adaptation that played to packed houses in Stratford in 2017 and ’18. This year’s version features a new cast, led by former Young One Adrian Edmondson as Scrooge and TV regular Sunetra Sarker as the Ghost of Christmas Present. Both are acutely aware of the story’s depressing relevance in 2022.
“A Christmas Carol is an extraordinary book,” says Adrian, who returns to the RSC after starring in Twelfth Night five years ago. “It’s been in print continuously since 1843, so it must be saying something very important that catches our imagination. A lot of people think it’s about Scrooge and ghosts, which of course it is, but at the heart of it, it’s about poverty and our individual reaction to it. So it couldn’t be more relevant today than it has been in the past 30 to 40 years - not since rationing really. Actual poverty in our streets, people at food banks. That’s the driving force of it for Dickens - he’d read a report on poverty and was considering writing this as a dry pamphlet, but wrote it as a story because he thought it would connect more. And, of course, it does. So it’s hard to find a play that’s more relevant, especially one you might enjoy.”
Playwright David Edgar talks of it being a “universal story of how benevolence is stronger than greed”, and of his determination to keep “Dickens and his ambitions” front and centre in the adaptation.
Sunetra, meanwhile, sees the importance of telling a tale that remains so relevant. “Heating and eating are all we see in the newspapers, and the energy crisis is the first headline we’re reading about, hearing about and talking about,” says the actor familiar to millions via roles in TV shows such as Casualty (where she spent 10 years as Dr Zoe
Hanna), Cold Feet, No Angels, Ackley Bridge, Sherwood and The Bay. “The state of society, the way the world ignores and neglects what the real wants and needs are, and how ignorance plays a role in that - it’s all tied up in this story. So without realising it, we’re right on the button.”
The production represents Sunetra’s RSC debut (“it’s an honour to be able to tread the boards where so many great actors have been before”), as well as her first time on stage in nearly two decades. And the likeable scouser - the accent remains strong - is loving every minute of it, even when I point out that she could hardly have chosen a more prestigious or high-profile arena in which to make her return.
“I hadn’t thought about it like that, but now you say it, maybe I should! But it’s been more of an honour really - it’s such a gift to be invited to be part of the company at the RSC.
It’s always been a big deal - even coming from an Indian family, everybody knew about the Royal Shakespeare Company.”
She says her return to the stage has largely been prompted by her children getting olderthe long, inconvenient hours and the travel involved would have been too big a commitment when they were young.
“It wasn’t that I didn’t want to do more stageeveryone wants to do more stage because you get that immediate intensity and reaction from the crowd that’s just joyous. You can’t bottle that sort of stuff because it’s so real.
It’s like having a really good night out with your friends - you can’t pretend to have a really good night out with your friends!
“So it feels like I’ve missed out on some wonderful moments on stage, but I’m here giving it my best. It’s a big show, there are a lot of set pieces, and I’m just getting my stage memory back in shape. But I’ve never felt more welcomed or supported by a company of strangers before - they’ve been absolutely delightful, and I’m just trying to keep up because they’re all so very good.”
Sunetra also acknowledges the importance of her character in the play; the Ghost of Christmas Present is widely regarded as the mouthpiece for Dickens’ own views.
“I’ve chosen to make her a Northern, grounded, earthy activist. She’s like a nosey
news reporter going ‘Look, Scrooge, this is what’s going on in the world today, not yesterday or tomorrow, but today.’ I’d like to say she’s got a sunshine and brightness about her, but she’s also weighted in the reality of ‘You need to get your act together, shape up.’”
And Adrian can’t wait to get his act together as the old miser at the heart of the story.
“I’m really looking forward to playing Scrooge. Why, you might ask, would you watch a show about a really horrible person?
You watch it because you’re cheering him on, urging him to become a better person. You’re on his side, you want him to turn. I think that makes him one of the most fundamentally interesting characters in literature, and a great part to play.”
And as much as we’ve been talking about the disheartening timeliness of the show in terms of the current prevalence of food poverty and economic hardship in society, there’s plenty of positivity to be found throughout the production, as well as in its redeeming denouement.
Sunetra is “loving the magic that a show like this brings - the set design, the music, the dance”, while David Edgar is quick to praise director Rachel Kavanaugh’s “wonderful production - combining a glorious set with dazzling choreography and musical score”. He also believes the tale shines a light on the positives that can be found while living in darker times.
“When we premiered the show in 2017, millions were already relying on food banks, and beggars haunted city streets. Covid and the cost-of-living crisis have made economic inequality - and raw poverty - an even more pressing reality. And yet - in the way the nation came together around the NHS to combat the pandemic - we have been reminded of the selflessness and generosity of spirit which lies at the heart of Dickens’ enduringly optimistic story.”
A Christmas Carol shows at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-uponAvon, until Sun 1 January
With Britain seemingly on the verge of a return to Dickensian times, the RSC’s revival of its acclaimed version of A Christmas Carol could hardly be more opportune. Three of the production’s key players reveal why the enduring tale of redemption and compassion is more relevant than ever this festive season...
Food news from across the region...
Grace & Savour gets four AA Rosettes
Grace & Savour at Solihull’s Hampton Manor has been awarded four AA Rosettes, an accolade bestowed on restaurants that master traditional culinary skills whilst displaying an experimental touch.
Under the guidance of Head Chef David Taylor, the venue’s fifteen-course tasting menu ‘celebrates a food revolution, placing farmers and growers at the forefront of dishes’.
Worcestershire tapas on the menu in Kidderminster
The award-winning King & Castle pub at Severn Valley Railway’s Kidderminster station has unveiled a new food offering, starring its very own Worcestershire take on tapas. Included in the range (which costs £10 for three dishes) are potato skins with Worcester Gold cheddar cheese, flamecooked chicken wings and Worcestershire-reared beef chilli bon bons.
Blitz-themed cuisine at Nineteen 58 restaurant
The Coventry Belgrade Theatre’s refurbished Nineteen 58 restaurant & bar will this month host an exclusive evening of Blitz-themed cuisine, with a tasting menu from acclaimed local chef Sarah Jenkins (Saturday 12 November).
Teaming up with Joel Gore, who’s shared kitchens with Gordon Ramsay, James Martin and Mary Berry, the restaurant will present a menu featuring six dishes: spam fritter, cured sardine, chicken sausage, Jerusalem artichoke ice cream, apple doughnut and petit fours.
Tickets for the event are available at belgrade.co.uk
The Real Greek opens in Solihull’s Touchwood centre
The Real Greek has opened a new restaurant, its 25th in all, in Solihull’s Touchwood shopping centre.
The new 146-cover eatery boasts indoor & outdoor alfresco seating and ‘embodies the culinary heritage of the Eastern Mediterranean’.
Taking in ‘the best of Greece’s gastronomic traditions’, the creative direction in the kitchen is led by Nikos Karathanos, the youngest Greek
Compton Verney launches festive afternoon tea
Compton Verney has launched a Festive Afternoon Tea for winter.
Served in the venue’s beautiful Adam Hall, the new menu option features homemade finger sandwiches, warm scones & clotted cream, ‘tasty savouries, pastries and delicious treats’. There’s also a wide selection of teas to choose from, as well as the chance to enjoy a specially priced glass of prosecco.
Festive Afternoon Tea is available to book on Saturday 10, Sunday 11, Saturday 17, Sunday 18 and Friday 23 December.
Tickets, which cost £24.95 for members, £34.95 for non-members and £12 for children, also include entry to the grounds and the venue’s permanent collections and exhibitions. Tickets on 10 & 11 December include entry to Compton’s Christmas Gift Market.
chef to be awarded a Michelin star (at the age of just 27).
Menu options include: lamb skewers, Tonia’s prawns, halloumi fries, dolmades, a range of flatbreads, and traditional desserts including baklava and Greek filo custard pie.
Children get to eat free every Sunday when an accompanying adult spends £10 in the restaurant.
For writer and director Debbie Isitt, it’s Christmas all year round. As the creator of four hit Nativity! films and a successful stage musical, there’s an element of jingle bells in her life every day.
And from mid-month, she’ll be enjoying sharing the festivities with audiences, when Nativity! The Musical returns to the stage at Birmingham Rep.
Born and brought up in Birmingham, Debbie first launched the story of two schools battling it out for the best Christmas show in her 2009 film, Nativity!
Set in Coventry and starring Martin Freeman, Marc Wootton and Ashley Jensen, the movie rapidly won the hearts of children and adults alike - so much so it was followed by Nativity! 2, 3 and 4, featuring a host of top actors including David Tennant, Martin Clunes, Catherine Tate, Celia Imrie and Meera Syal. The stage show was produced by Birmingham Rep in 2017, and Debbie, who now lives in Coventry, is delighted the new tour again launches back on home turf.
“When we decided to do the show, we wanted to do a co-production with a local theatre because it’s set in Coventry and about the West Midlands. The Birmingham Rep is one of the greatest theatres in the country, and it’s somewhere that’s very important to me. I grew up watching shows at The Rep since I was about six or seven years old, so it felt like home and it felt absolutely right that the show started there.
“Although I’d been on a tremendous journey with the filming, it felt extra-special seeing it on the stage. To think that I was now instrumental in bringing a piece of musical theatre to that very same stage where I had watched shows as a child was really emotional, moving and tremendously exciting. There’s nothing to beat live theatre at its best. Now the musical is coming home again, which is really brilliant, especially after everything we’ve been through with the pandemic.”
Nativity! was inspired by Debbie’s own experiences of childhood Christmas shows.
“I’ve got two sisters, and my mum was keen on each of us being Mary in the nativity at school, so she terrified the teachers to make sure we got the part. So all three of us got to play Mary. We always talk about it at Christmas, me and my sisters!
“It’s funny because Mary’s not actually the best part; there are more entertaining parts. I would’ve loved to have been an angel because I loved the costume with the wings and the long dress. I dreamt of being an angel, but no, it was Mary.”
Debbie believes it’s this shared memory of school plays which has made Nativity! popular with film and theatre audiences.
“The story is so relatable - so many people have either been that child at school doing the Christmas show, or the parent of that child, or the grandparent of that child. It’s a multi-generational story that we all kind of understand and empathise with.
“Since I made the first film, I’ve heard a lot of nativity stories and seen a lot as well. People send me a lot of bits of film of their children in nativities.
“Then there’s the idea of the underdog, the child who is the outsider, overcoming obstacles and showing that everyone is special and everyone has their gifts and talents. That’s what’s really at its heart - the children, and overcoming adversity. It’s a very empowering message, and at Christmas time we want to feel good, we want to feel the world is a lovely place. Nativity! really does offer those messages.”
Central to the story is the madcap teaching assistant Mr Poppy, a child at heart, who is overflowing with enthusiasm for the class he teaches and their Christmas show. So did Debbie have a Mr Poppy when she was a youngster?
“Mr Poppy isn’t based on any teachers I knew, but I wish he had been because I would’ve loved to have a Mr Poppy at school.
But I think he’s a kind of wish-fulfilment character - that imaginary friend or imaginary teacher or imaginary classroom assistant. He’s from my imagination, based on the desire for a Mr Poppy. I’ve since heard lots of people say, ‘I’ve got a teacher that’s just like Mr Poppy,’ and I think, ‘Aren’t you lucky - how brilliant!’”
The production features 37 schoolchildren in the cast, performing in teams on different dates, and Debbie says it’s always a hard decision to choose the young actors.
“One of the highlights for me is auditioning the children because, like within the film and within the show, when children audition they bring their heart and soul and they put it all out on the table. It’s such good fun, and they have a very happy time with a lovely workshop.
“All the children bring something magical, so it’s very tough for me because I would love to cast them all! We have to whittle it down to get there, and it’s quite a process. We have thousands apply, and 37 doesn’t seem so many when you’ve looked at 800 tapes.”
The opening night on 19 November will be particularly special for Debbie, coming as it does after the past few years of Covid and the death of her father.
“It’s going to be very emotional for me because there was a moment there for a couple of years where we thought it might never happen again - not just Nativity! but all theatre. And, like many other people, I lost my dad to Covid. We went through a very, very sad time, and this is hopefully a tribute to him as well. As a Brummie and someone who loved the theatre, it’s a really lovely way of honouring his memory. We are dedicating the whole production to him.”
Nativity! The Musical shows at The Rep, Birmingham, from Saturday 19 November to Saturday 7 January.
A fabulous festive family favourite, Birmingham-born Debbie Isitt’s critically acclaimed Nativity! The Musical is the perfect show to get theatre-goers in the Christmas spirit. Boasting a feelgood storyline, a romantic element, bucketloads of humour and a cast of extremely talented kids, the hit production is showing at Birmingham Rep across the festive season. What’s On recently caught up with Debbie to talk about the show’s enduring appeal...
Classical music from across the region...
Orchestra of the Swan: An English Fantasia
Stratford Play House, Stratford-upon-Avon, Wed 16 November
Jason Lai (pictured) is the conductor and Nick Daniel the oboist for a concert that sees the Orchestra of the Swan presenting a programme of 20th-century English music composed by, among others, Benjamin Britten and Ralph Vaughan Williams. Britten’s Simple Symphony is presented alongside two works by Vaughan Williams: Oboe Concerto In A Minor and Fantasia On A Theme By Thomas Tallis.
Ex Cathedra: Songs Of Protest
Symphony Hall, Birmingham,
Sun 13 November
“Music expresses our deepest thoughts and has the power to change the way we think and feel,” says Ex Cathedra founder and conductor Jeffrey Skidmore. “Songs Of Protest on Remembrance Sunday puts the case for peace, political freedom, compassion for our fellow human beings and the fight against torture.
“Classic works by John Joubert and James MacMillan are performed alongside profoundly moving new works by Sally Beamish and Alec Roth.”
But that’s not all. Purcell’s Chacony In G Minor also features, as does Delius’ Two Aquarelles and James Wilson’s The Green Fuse.
The programme is completed by William Walton’s Two Pieces From Henry V. The featured works formed part of the score that Walton wrote for Laurence Olivier’s 1944 film adaptation of Shakespeare’s famous history play.
Eusebius Quartet
Royal Pump Rooms, Leamington Spa, Fri 4 November
Armonico Consort: JS Bach Christmas Oratorio
Malvern Theatres, Worcestershire, Wed 30 November; Collegiate Church of St Mary, Warwick, Tues 6 December
The always-impressive Armonico Consort visit Malvern to perform Bach’s famous Oratorio. Created in 1734 as a Christmas present for the congregations of St Thomas’s and St Nicholas’s in Leipzig, the beautiful festive classic has since become a firm yuletide favourite.
Written in six sections, the work tells the story of the birth of Jesus, complete with angels, shepherds and the gift-bearing Three Kings. The concert will feature parts one, three, five and six of the Oratorio.
This London-based all-female string quartet are no strangers to five-star reviews, being widely praised for an approach to music which manages to be both full-blooded and flexible.
Calling themselves after the fictional character created by Robert Schumann, Eusebius are here performing in Leamington for the very first time, presenting a programme that features works by Haydn and Beethoven.
Howard Skempton’s Tendrils completes the bill. The piece is being performed to mark the composer’s 75th birthday.
G4 Christmas
Worcester Cathedral, Fri 18 November
After scoring a hit on television talent show The X Factor in 2004, G4 became one of the country’s biggest crossover classical groups. Their debut album went straight to number one and sold more than 245,000 copies, making it the fastestselling record of that year.
Although they disbanded three years and three albums later - citing as the reason their need to pursue individual intereststhey reunited in 2014 for their 10th anniversary and have been making music ever since.
The boys’ Worcester stop-off forms part of a series of 32 festive shows being performed in beautiful churches and cathedrals across the country. Expect Christmas classics and carols aplenty.
Live music from across the region...
Granny’s Attic
Huntingdon Hall, Worcester, Thurs 24 November
Granny’s Attic comprises a trio of young folk musicians who started performing together at Bishop Perone College in Worcester in 2009.
Taking a lively and vibrant approach to traditional English, Irish and Scottish folk music, all three performers are accomplished vocalists who between them also play an impressive array of instruments, including melodeon, concertina, guitar, fiddle and mandolin.
Hannah Woof
hmv Empire, Coventry, Thurs 10 November
Up-and-coming Hannah Woof describes herself as “your friendly neighbourhood twentysomethingyear-old singer-songwriter with issues”.
Hannah has been singing since childhood, and performing solo gigs in and around her home county of Warwickshire for over a decade. Her 2015 debut EP, Sleepless Nights, in which she used her experiences of insomnia to inspire her music, was followed by Sweet Talk, focusing on more ‘sensual’ subject matter.
She’s joined for this Coventry gig by special guests Rosso and Jake Rizzo, in what will be her first headlining show since 2017.
Clearwater Creedence Revival
Leamington Assembly, Sat 12 November
For those not in the know, during the 1960s and early ’70s, Creedence Clearwater Revival were widely considered to be one of America’s greatest rock bands. But although they headlined the legendary Woodstock Festival in 1969, they didn’t feature in either the movie or on the album which followed: Band member John Fogerty felt that their performance on the day hadn’t cut the mustard so didn’t want it preserved for posterity.
Their music, however, has most definitely stood the test of time, and is here brilliantly recreated by these hugely talented tribute stars... Expect all the greatest hits, including Proud Mary, Have You Ever Seen The Rain and Bad Moon Rising.
Soumik Datta
Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry, Weds 9 November
Award-winning musician, producer & television presenter Soumik Datta plays a 19-stringed instrument from the Indiansubcontinent called a sarod, and combines contemporary Indian music with spoken word, arts activism and electronica. Working in collaboration with refugees
Ellie Gowers
Ryepiece Barn, Stratford-upon-Avon, Fri 18 November; Evesham Town Hall, Thurs 24 November
Boasting a strong voice full of expression and maturity, Ellie Gowers writes and performs songs with sociological, ecological and personal themes in mind, her sensitive and tender yet powerful and thoughtprovoking material hinting at the music of Joni Mitchell, Nick Drake and Laura Marling. She’s touring to Midlands venues this month on the back of her debut album, Dwelling By The Weir, an exploration of the folklore, stories and people that made her home county of Warwickshire what it is today.
across the world, Soumik and his company’s full-length production, Hope Notes, challenge social injustices faced by displaced communities from Syria, Afghanistan, Kenya, Bangladesh, Yemen, Cameroon and Uganda.
Warwick Arts Centre ticket holders are invited to attend a free pre-show soundcheck, providing an opportunity to see Soumik’s creative process in action.
Krissy Matthews
Temperance, Leamington Spa, Mon 28 November
British-Norwegian blues singer-songwriter & guitarist Krissy Matthews had released three albums by the age of 18. In the 12 years since, he has continued to build career momentum at a staggering pace. He became a permanent featured member of iconic German outfit Hamburg Blues Band in 2015, and in total has performed in more than 1,000 concerts across Europe, Russia and China. Krissy’s latest studio album, Pizza Man Blues, was released last year and includes songs about how the pandemic and world lockdown affected him personally.
Bean there, done that!
Scottish actor, director, writer & producer Iain Lauchlan is an entertainment-industry veteran. With the best part of 50 years’ experience, he has a CV that features a selection of TV dramas and an array of wellknown children’s programmes such as Play School, Fingermouse and Playdays. He’s also created shows including Boo, Fun Song Factory and the Bafta-winning Tweenies, and recently turned his hand to writing books for pre-school children.
But in his adopted home of Coventry (although he actually lives near Stratfordupon-Avon), he’s best known as the mainstay of the Belgrade Theatre’s annual pantomime, having written, directed and starred - as the dame, naturally - in more than 20 productions.
“I did my first one in 1988/89,” he tells me, in a gentle Scottish accent softened by decades of living south of the border. “Bob Hamlin, who was the artistic director at the time, asked me to write and direct a pantomime. He said ‘We only give people two pantos and then move on to something else,’ and I said that was fine... and here I am still doing it 30 years later!”
Iain first worked at the Belgrade more than 40 years ago, having come down from Kilmarnock to play John Shand in What Every Woman Knows, which opened the theatre’s 1980 season. He then stayed on to appear in that year’s panto, a certain Jack And The Beanstalk.
“I played half the giant, the back of the cow and was part of the chorus,” he chuckles. Although I’m keen to seize on the ‘full circle’ angle, this year’s show isn’t the first time he’s revisited the story. In fact, the 2022 production is a revival of a show he wrote in 2020, which was performed, with a truncated cast, to online audiences during the Covid pandemic. There’ll be plenty of changes in this year’s version but no drifting away from the familiar storyline, he insists.
“Making them different is always the challenge, especially Jack And The Beanstalk, which has a very set story with Jack and the cow and the giant and so on. It’s a very specific fairytale and people don’t want you to stray from that. It’s all the things in between that you try and make different -
the comedy routines, the songs and the dances. And of course you don’t want to be repeating the dialogue and jokes, just in case people remember them!
“That’s the key really. We’ve always got the traditional comedy routines - the ghost gag, the slosh gag, the cow-milking routine and all that sort of stuff - but you always have to make them a little bit different.”
Varying the show is also important because the Belgrade’s annual panto has an incredibly loyal following, with families coming back year after year. Iain believes that such sterling support comes from an expectation of a quality production - not least because the theatre never relies on star names to bring in the punters.
“You have a responsibility to put on as good a show as you possibly can - for people who come regularly, because they have an expectation, and for people who are coming for the first time, because you want them to enjoy it and come back.
“Although some of the Birmingham pantomimes have a huge amount of money thrown at them and look fantastic, the storylines are often quite thin because they’re catering for all the star names. We don’t have that, so our storyline and characters have to be strong. You have to tell a really good story and have really good characters so that people latch on to them and care about them.”
Iain’s longevity in the role has helped create a connection with the audience - a poll once revealed that 90 per cent of theatre-goers didn’t care what the following year’s pantomime would be as long as he was doing it - but he believes being part of the festive furniture brings its own pressure.
“It worries me sometimes because it must be terrible for the people who don’t like me and don’t like what I do and are thinking ‘Oh no, not him again!’
“It’s always in the back of my mind that I’ve been here so long that people are bound to get fed up. But I really do try to make it a different experience each year and just fun… a couple of hours where people can forget all their problems and just enjoy themselves.”
Iain needn’t worry that people are getting tired of him - this year’s panto is the theatre’s
fastest-selling on record, with more than 23,000 tickets already snapped up at the time of writing.
“Oh really?” he says, when I tell him. “That’s very good! I was worried about the impact of the cost-of-living crisis and all that sort of stuff… theatre tickets are a wee bit of a luxury, aren’t they?”
The annual panto is always an important part of the theatrical year in terms of income, but it’s also the chance to engage with youngsters (Iain also writes and directs a Santa show to introduce pre-schoolers to live theatre, this year called Santa’s Christmas Rescue) and people who don’t visit the theatre at any other time of the year.
“That’s the trick of panto - it’s a family show and you have to try and cover all the age groups,” says Iain, who realises parents often “go to watch their children watching the show” but end up enjoying it themselves.
“It’s funny... you speak to people who say they hate panto, and then they’ll go and see it and think it’s a great night.”
And after 30-plus years, he knows that people who first saw one of his shows as children are now coming back with their own offspring.
“And kids who I’ve had in the panto as junior chorus, I’m meeting a lot of them who are now actors in the business! In fact, Vicki Stevenson, my assistant director this year, started out as an eight-year-old in my panto. She did quite a few years in the junior chorus, and then her older daughter did it, and now her younger daughter’s in it!”
Such family loyalty to his panto productions is clearly a source of great pride for Iain, who laughs when I point out how old it must make him feel.
“Oh yeah, absolutely. I can’t believe the years come round so quickly!”
Jack And The Beanstalk shows on the Coventry Belgrade’s main stage from Wednesday 23 November to Saturday 7 January. Santa’s Christmas Rescue runs from Thursday 8 to Saturday 24 December in the Belgrade’s B2 theatre
Iain Lauchlan is Coventry’s Mr Pantomime, writing, directing and performing in productions at the city’s Belgrade Theatre for more than three decades. The latest is Jack And The Beanstalk, a show that takes him back to where it all began - as he explains to What’s On…
Comedy previews from across the region...
Harriet Kemsley
Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry, Sun 13 November
Harriet Kemsley’s new show, Honeysuckle Island, takes its inspiration from a dream travel destination the comedian created and committed to paper when she was 11. Along with having “everything a pre-teen could want’, from waterfalls and ziplines to monkeys, the island also featured a cellulite machine.
When Harriet recently looked at her drawing of the island and saw the machine, it inspired her to write a show about how societal pressure impacts young girls.
“It’s a long, hard squint at the beauty industry through my two remaining false eyelashes,” she explains, “but it’s also lots of funny jokes about me and my life, from having a baby through to being a ridiculous person!”
Ed Gamble
Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry, Sat 19 November; The Alexandra, Birmingham, Sun 20 November
“I’m essentially a great guy delivering humour through your classic microphone/speaker combo,” says a tonguein-cheek Ed Gamble, in describing himself. “As well as being a standup comedian, I’m an actor and a writer - although, to be honest, I very rarely act, and ‘writing’ is a very lofty term for the absolute filth I’ve committed to paper in the past.”
Co-host (with James Acaster) of awardwinning podcast Off Menu, a judge on Great British Menu, Taskmaster champion and host of Taskmaster The Podcast, Ed stops off in the Midlands this month with his touring show, Electric.
Clinton Baptiste: Clinton vs Ramone
Birmingham Town Hall, Wed 23 November
Actor Alex Lowe enjoyed big success with comic creation Clinton Baptiste when the character first appeared more than 20 years ago in Peter Kay’s award-winning television series, Phoenix Nights.
A tacky and inept clairvoyant, medium and psychic, Clinton was Kay’s brainchild but has since been fleshed-out further by the man who plays him.
Despite the serious amount of work he’s put into developing the character, Alex remains appreciative of Clinton’s origin: “The fact
Rich Hall
Foxlowe Arts Centre, Leek, Thurs 10 November; Lichfield Garrick, Fri 11 November; Palace Theatre, Redditch, Wed 23 November
An official biography of Rich Hall modestly describes the American funnyman as ‘a comic genius’, albeit a ‘grouchy, deadpan’ one.
With much of his comedy focusing on making fun of life across the pond in his homeland, Rich is best known for his creation of Otis Lee Crenshaw, a bourbonswilling redneck jailbird from Tennessee whose many wives have all been named Brenda.
Rich returns to the Midlands this month with latest touring show Shot From Cannons, the publicity for which reveals: “You’ll pay for the whole seat, but you’ll only need the edge of it.”
that he’s from Phoenix Nights is great! It’s like having a head start, because I already feel four-nil up before I even get on stage, and I know the audience is going to laugh.” This brand-new touring show sees Clinton pitting his psychic wits against his arch Scottish nemesis, Ramone Tamine, a soothsayer character played by actor, comedian and mimic Lewis Macleod. But which of these two coiffured titans of the ‘unknown’ will be declared Britain’s greatest paranormalist, we wonder?...
Ivo Graham
The Glee Club, Birmingham, Wed 23 November
Seriously posh and admirably selfdeprecating, Ivo Graham won plenty of new fans in 2019 when one of his gags was nominated for the coveted ‘best joke of the Edinburgh Fringe’ award...
“I’ve got an Eton-themed advent calendar,” explained Ivo, “where all the doors are opened for me by my dad’s contacts.”
The Tokyo-born Oxford alumnus visits the Midlands to discuss ‘the heavy-duty pranking, parenting and procrastinating’ which has informed his life over the last few years.
Comedy previews from across the region...
Jon Richardson
Wolverhampton Grand Theatre, Wed 2 & Thurs 3 November; Regent Theatre, Stoke-onTrent, Sun 22 & Mon 23 January; Birmingham Hippodrome, Sun 28 & Mon 29 May
Jon Richardson has been referred to as an OCD-afflicted grumpy young man - a description which will strike chords with anybody who’s ever caught the 40-year-old’s hugely entertaining act.
A familiar television face, Jon is married to fellow comedian Lucy Beaumont, with whom he stars in Dave TV’s Meet The Richardsons - a semi-fictional (and inevitably very funny) account of their life together.
His new touring show, The Knitwit, which he’s bringing to Wolverhampton this month, sees him asking some of life’s big questions: Will the recycling be put out on the right day? Who is going to smooth over the top of the margarine? How many lights are on upstairs when everybody is downstairs?
“I’m neurotic by nature,” admits Jon, “but I’m wary of becoming more of a play than a comic. You don’t want people coming to see a man having a breakdown for two hours. I’d prefer them coming to hear my astute and witty observations.”
“Fresh from finding and proving decisive links between IKEA, the CIA and the Nazis, 1930s throwback and home-schooled investigator
Troy Hawke battles a new enemy on behalf of all people everywhere: the bastard saboteur that lurks in our own minds…”
The above description - the publicity for Troy’s award-winning and currently touring show, Sigmund Troy’d - makes it pretty clear that
Mark Watson
Stafford Gatehouse Theatre, Thurs 10 November; Much Wenlock Arts Centre, Sun 20 November
Well-established on the UK comedy circuit, Mark Watson was born in Bristol to Welsh parents and initially delivered his act with a Welsh accent, claiming he felt “more comfortable talking in a voice that I didn’t quite recognise as my own”.
The Indians Are Coming
Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, Sat 12 November; Glee Club, Birmingham, Sun 13 November; Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry, Fri 25 November
With her life experiences including a teenage suicide attempt, a Spanish-retreat encounter with psychoactive brew ayahuasca, and a train-station breakdown involving a cheese & onion pasty, Sukh Ojla has plenty of fantastic raw material around which to build a standup set... Sukh is joined at all three venues by Anuvab Pal (plus two other comedians) - for a show which is promising ‘belly laughs that are big enough to burn off an entire biryani
A regular contributor to the Edinburgh Fringe, Mark has the curious distinction of having performed standup shows which have lasted for a period in excess of 24 hours.
“Comedy is certainly a time-consuming element of my life,” he admits, “but then while I’m out touring and on stage, there are people at home doing far less glamorous things. There have certainly been times when I’ve been very happy to say, ‘Of course I’d like to stay and help out with that plumbing crisis, but the Midlands awaits!’”
Mark’s latest visit to the region sees him presenting This Can’t Be It, a show which he says will reflect on “a couple of years of pathological overthinking”.
audiences are in for plenty more than a standard evening of standup when they check out this foppish Errol Flynn-lookalike. Comedian Milo McCabe was playing Troy for nearly a decade before finally hitting the online jackpot and going viral on TikTok. Expect an evening of splendidly incongruous, occasionally brain-addling, delivered-withwarmth comedy.
Katherine Ryan
Victoria Hall, Stoke-on-Trent, Fri 11 November
Having experienced motherhood, divorce and MTV, the awardwinning Katherine Ryan is well placed indeed to take a wry look at those aspects of life that can make people feel angry and bitter. But while she often writes and performs material which proves that even the darkest subject matter can have a funny side, she’s also got plenty in her life to feel happy about - not least the fact that she’s now married to her high-school sweetheart. This latest tour by the Canadian star of hit Netflix series The Duchess sees her brandnew life as a wife taking centre-stage. “Magically my high-school boyfriend walked back into my life, and I did everything possible not to marry him,” Katherine told The Sun. “I really was against partnership at that point. I was looking forward to ageing alone with many dogs. And then I just loved him too much. It’s funny that fate has a way of finding you, and what’s meant for you won’t pass you.”
Never-ending story
Emilia Marty seems to have it all. She is successful, beautiful and adored by everyone. And what’s more, she is immortal. Yet Emilia, the lead character in Leoš Janáček’s opera, The Makropulos Affair, is far from happy. After more than 300 years of living, she’s realised that she has nothing left to enjoy.
Being immortal may seem like a dream come true, but, says Spanish soprano Ángeles Blancas Gulín, who plays Emilia in the new Welsh National Opera (WNO) version of the show, her character gradually learns that life without love is meaningless.
“Emilia Marty does a lot of things,” says Ángeles. “She takes cocaine, and she is smoking and drinking because she doesn’t care. She does everything she wants and says everything she wants to say.
“But for her, living 300 years has been hard because she has lost all kind of emotions and feelings. She doesn’t feel anything now because she has had so many huge experiences in her life that she doesn’t care anymore about it. She doesn’t feel love, she doesn’t feel pain, nothing.
“Nobody knows what it would really be like to be immortal; what someone can do, really do, when they are living forever, but also the cost. It would be so tough.”
Czech composer Janáček premiered The Makropulos Affair, which is based on a play of the same name by Czech dramatist Karel Čapek, in 1926. It was last performed by WNO in 1994, in a production by the company’s former artistic director, Sir David Pountney.
Directed by Olivia Fuchs and conducted by WNO Music Director Tomáš Hanus, the new production is set in the 1920s and also features Nicky Spence, Gustáv Beláček, David Stout, Harriet Eyley and Mark Le Brocq in the cast.
The Makropulos Affair is said to be partly inspired by Janáček’s unrequited passion for a married woman. Pouring his emotion into his work, Janáček created one of opera’s most dramatic and enigmatic female roles in Emilia Marty.
“It is an absolutely amazing part,” says Ángeles. “Janáček’s music really gets inside the story, so you are always inside a real drama. Emilia is playing a role because she is the only one who really knows what’s happening.
“Everyone is crazy about this woman, but she knows everything they don’t know, and they are all asking ‘How is this possible?’ This is what makes the story very interesting - she is a really mysterious woman.
“When you play the part of someone who has a really deep life, a spiritual life, you can feel it. And with Emilia Marty, it’s like that. She is so strong; she’s had 300 years of living, so a lot of different experiences, and it is something that people can smell - the energy. When you find somebody who has a different energy inside like this, it’s irresistible.”
Ángeles first played Emilia at La Fenice Opera House in Venice in 2013, and then again at Strasbourg Opera House in 2016. Each time she comes to the part, she learns more about her character.
“I was a completely different woman the first time I played her. Now I am older, I’ve changed, I have so much more experienceand different kinds of experience - so I am different. And that means I understand her so much better now than nine years ago and six years ago.
“And it’s about how you play the role. So for example, sometimes in the opera you want to make a lot of movement. You don’t like the empty moments, so you do things to fill them - but actually, the less you do, the better it is.”
Ángeles was born in Spain and made her debut in concert with Plácido Domingo. Since then she’s performed roles in operas including Mozart’s Magic Flute, Puccini’s Tosca, Verdi’s Aida and Monteverdi’s Coronation Of Poppea. And she has appeared in venues across the globe such as Liceu Opera in Barcelona, Carnegie Hall in New York and the Colón Theatre in Buenos Aires.
The Makropulos Affair is her first engagement with Welsh National Opera. She is looking forward to touring with the company.
“I’ve sung at Covent Garden and the Barbican Centre, but that is all for the UK, so everywhere I go, it will be for the first time.
I’m very excited about this.”
The production is also travelling to Brno in the Czech Republic, where it forms part of the line-up for the prestigious biennial Janáček Brno International Opera & Music Festival.
The Makropulos Affair is the final part of a WNO Janáček trilogy which has also included The Cunning Little Vixen and Jenůfa. Under
the baton of Brno-born Hanus, the company has gained an international reputation for its Janáček works.
For Ángeles, the composer’s work is highly theatrical. “Janáček is very passionate; there is passion inside his music. This opera is very dramatic - the acting is very important because Emilia Marty is such an exhilarating woman that you don’t need to do extra things for the audience to understand her. If you do exactly what is written, it’s going to be wonderful.”
One of the challenges of performing Janáček is mastering the Czech libretto, which is surtitled in Welsh and English on the tour.
“This is a new production and has a wonderful conductor who is Czech, so I feel I am really inside the Czech mood. But learning the Czech language is hard work.
“The first time I met with the Czech language was with the opera Rusalka in 2007. I began to work really hard to get inside the language - I write all the words, I translate, I memorise, I listen to the pronunciation, and I need to understand the music of the language.
“The main thing is to make all the different words have a distinct beginning and end because even though the audience is going to listen just to a line, you must be saying each word separately, and you must feel each word individually. It must come from inside your soul. Only then will it make sense to anyone who understands the language.”
The Makropulos Affair may be nearly 100 years old, but Ángeles believes it has a very current message.
“I think the opera is saying that we need to go to the really important things in life. There is a phrase of Emilia Marty’s in which she says: ‘You are idiots because you don’t understand how important it is just to live one life, a normal life, with the really important things.’”
Welsh National Opera’s The Makropulos Affair shows at Birmingham Hippodrome on Tuesday 8 November. Other WNO productions showing at the venue include La bohème, from Wed 9 to Fri 11
November, and Migrations on Sat 12 November
A contemplation on immortality, Janáček’s The Makropulos Affair this month features in Welsh National Opera’s Birmingham Hippodrome programme of shows. What’s On recently caught up with Spanish soprano Ángeles Blancas Gulín, who plays the lead role of Emilia Marty in the production, to find out what audiences can expect...
Theatre
Theatre previews from around the region
Strictly Ballroom The Musical
Strictly Come Dancing favourites Kevin Clifton and Maisie Smith star in this brand-new Craig Revel Horwood-directed musical, based on Baz Lurhmann’s iconic 1992 film of the same name. “This show introduces people to the backstage world,” says Craig. “Everyone who watches Strictly Come Dancing is seeing the glossy side of it, but Strictly Ballroom delves into the hearts and minds of the
Saturday Night Fever
The Alexandra, Birmingham, Tues 22 - Sat 26 November
Tony Manero knows there’s more to life than he’s got: an unremarkable existence in New York City with family and friends who’ve accepted their lot and expect him to do the same...
But there’s fat chance Tony will do that; he’s way too busy living his very own American Dream, hitting Manhattan’s nightspots with his dancing partner and strutting his funky stuff...
The mother of all disco shows, the 1970s-set Saturday Night Fever pulsates to the music of the Bee Gees’ famous soundtrack. Classic hits like Stayin’ Alive, Jive Talkin’, Night Fever, If I Can’t Have You and Tragedy guarantee an evening of flares-flapping fun for anyone who’s ever enjoyed the pumping sounds of the disco dancefloor. In short, you can expect to find yourself well and truly, er, Lost In Music...
people doing the dance - the trials and tribulations they have to go through in order to get to that competition standard. It’s about the fight and struggle, and all the animosity that’s involved in it to win the day and become a gold medallist. It’s about dancing with your heart rather than just dancing the steps.”
Six The Musical
Regent Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent, Tues 15 - Sun 20 November; Birmingham Hippodrome, Tues 28 February - Sat 4 March
From Tudor queens to battling boss-women, the 2022 Tony Award-winning Six The Musical sees the wives of Henry VIII take to the stage to tell their own versions of their lives.
The one-act production, which premiered at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2017, was enjoying a runaway success until Covid put the brakes on - but being a show that sits somewhere between a Girls Aloud gig and a traditional musical, it’s having no trouble whatsoever re-gaining its momentum.
A loud and colourful celebration of girl power, the production sees the cast being ably supported by allfemale band The Ladies In Waiting.
Theatre
Beautiful: The Carole King Musical
Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, Tues 1 - Sat 5 November
Making another welcome return to the Midlands, the Olivier Award-winning Beautiful is a homage to the life and music of legendary singer-songwriter Carole King. Featured numbers include You Make Me Feel Like A Natural Woman, Take Good Care Of My Baby, You’ve Got A Friend, So Far Away, It Might As Well Rain Until September, Up On The Roof and Locomotion.
Agatha Christie’s The Mirror Crack’d
Malvern Theatres, Mon 14 - Sat 19 November; The Alexandra, Birmingham, Tues 14 - Sat 18 February
The sleepy village of St Mary Mead is changing. A new housing estate is causing disquiet among the residents, and a rich American film star has bought the Manor House.
When a vicious crime takes place, the indomitable Miss Marple suddenly finds herself with yet another baffling murdermystery on her hands...
Susie Blake - whose screen credits include Victoria Wood’s As Seen On TV, Coronation Street and Mrs Brown’s Boys - takes the starring role as Agatha Christie’s legendary spinster sleuth. The show is presented by the well-regarded Original Theatre company.
A Dead Body In Taos
Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry, Tues 15 - Sat 19 November
Theatre previews from around the region
The Memory Of Water
Stafford Gatehouse Theatre, Tues 8 - Sat 12 November
Childhood conflicts re-emerge, memories collide, and the secrets of three separate lives are revealed in Shelagh Stephenson’s Olivier Award-winning play.
Bossy big-sister Teresa, over-achieving Mary and attention-seeking Catherine are siblings with little history of getting along. And when they return to the family home on the Yorkshire coast, it soon becomes evident that even more turmoil is on the cards...
Part mystery, part sci-fi epic and part love story, David Farr’s new play contemplates the ways in which developments in artificial intelligence might impact the human understanding of death, consciousness and the soul.
Set against the backdrop of modern America, the story follows Sam as she travels to a place of pilgrimage in the New Mexico desert, where her estranged 70-year-old mother, Kath, has died.
Julie: The Musical
The Old Joint Stock, Birmingham, Wed 16 - Fri 18 November
Tap-dancing sword fights, twerking nuns and kazoo choruses are not so much the order of the day as the order of the first 30 minutes of this brand-new musical. Talk about being fast out of the traps!
The show is based on the life, times and outrageous adventures of 17th-century operasinging bisexual swordswoman and LGBTQ+ icon Julie D’Aubigny.
Julie was most certainly one of a kind, seducing nuns, duelling multiple men all at once, burning down convents, taking bribes from princes and innovating opera - and all before she’d reached the age of 30!
With all of that and plenty more going on, it’s fair to assume this will be no ordinary evening of musical theatre...
But once arrived in Taos, she discovers that Kath has secretly exercised ‘the ultimate right as a consumer - the right to defy death’ - a fact which leaves Sam with a terrible decision to make...
Co-commissioned by Warwick Arts Centre and Fuel Theatre, A Dead Body In Taos is loosely inspired by Adam Curtis’ The Century Of The Self, a 2002 documentary series which explored the ways in which governments and organisations have used psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud’s ground-breaking theories to try and control people in an age of mass democracy.
Circus Of Horrors: The Witch
Telford Theatre, Thurs 3 November; KK’s Steel Mill, Wolverhampton, Thurs 17 November; Stratford Playhouse, Stratford-upon-Avon, Fri 25 November
An off-kilter affair that bears more resemblance to a freak show than any modern definition of a circus, the one-time Britain’s Got Talent finalists here present a world beyond political correctness and taste. With the performers dressed in a manner reminiscent of The Rocky Horror Show, there’s no denying the skill of those participating - or indeed the ensemble’s sheer ‘wow’ factor.
Latest offering The Witch comes complete with an original rock score and is described as ‘a sensational new phantasmagoria which encompasses amazing & bizarre circus acts’.
Theatre previews from around the region
Done To Death, By Jove!
The Core Theatre, Solihull, Wed 23 November
Fun-loving duo Gavin Robertson and Nicholas Collett blend humour, variety, theatre and dance in a show that pays spoof homage to the ‘great British detective’. Well reviewed in Edinburgh back in the summer, the show is based around the idea that a cast of six has become a cast of two due to an M6 breakdown of the van carrying the props, the set and four of the performers. The intrepid remaining cast members, Messers Robertson and Collett, are therefore left to present the show on their own - an endeavour which, not surprisingly, leads to all manner of mix-ups and mayhem.
mystery of the monstrous moorland beast, the story continues to be rehashed both for stage and screen.
This latest incarnation, marking the story’s 120th anniversary, is being presented by Crime And Comedy Theatre Company as a radio play on stage. One-time Dr Who Colin Baker and Terry Molloy - who played the role of Mike Tucker in The Archers for 40 yearsstar as Holmes and his faithful assistant Dr John Watson.
The Orphanage
Blue Orange Theatre, Birmingham, Fri 11 - Sun 27 November
If Halloween got you in the mood for more spinetingling experiences, then bagging yourself a seat for this brand-new production would definitely be a good idea.
When a young couple dare themselves to spend the night in a spooky old out-of-town building, they soon find that they’ve bitten off considerably more than they can chew... The show is presented by DR1 Theatricals Limited, who scored a hit last year with their adaptation of The Wicked Lady.
The Lavender Hill Mob
The Hound Of The Baskervilles
Tamworth Assembly Rooms, Thurs 10 - Fri 11 November
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes is one of literature’s most enduring characters, The Hound Of The Baskervilles his most famous adventure. And no matter how many actors don the deerstalker and solve the
Malvern Theatres, Mon 7 - Sat 12 November
This stage version of the classic Ealing Comedy of the same name tells the story of an unassuming bank clerk and the team he puts together to steal the gold bullion that he drives across London every day.
Miles Jupp and The Thick Of It’s Justin Edwards take the lead roles in this worldpremiere adaptation of the 1951 movie, which
The Shawshank Redemption
The Alexandra, Birmingham, Mon 7 - Sat 12 November
Given that film critics regard The Shawshank Redemption as one of the greatest movies of all time, it’s hardly surprising to find that its stage version is out on the road yet again and doing good business.
Based on a 1982 Stephen King novella, the story revolves around the character of Andy Dufresne, a man serving a double life sentence at the notorious Shawshank facility. An unlikely friendship with prison fixer Red makes the experience a little more bearable. But when the warden decides to make Andy’s life a living hell, the nothing-to-lose lifer hatches a daring and ingenious plan to escape...
Joe Absolom and Ben Onwukwe star.
the British Film Institute ranked the 17th greatest Brit film of all time.
The Syrian Baker
Newhampton Arts Centre, Wolverhampton, Tues 8 November; SpArC Theatre, Bishops Castle, South Shropshire; Thurs 10 November; Welshampton Parish Hall, North Shropshire, Fri 11 November; Farlow and Oreton Village Hall, South Shropshire, Sat 12 November; Meole Brace Peace Memorial Hall, Shrewsbury, Sun 13 November
“Our shows are written for all to enjoy,” explains Farnham Maltings, the company behind this thought-provoking production. “There is nothing to offend, and we hope everyone will take something special home with them from the evening.”
The Syrian Baker revolves around the experiences of two people who decide to return home despite the state of their country.
Told ‘with affection, irrepressible humour and bread - because without bread nothing happens’, the show reflects on the way in which small actions can make the biggest difference.
The production’s storytelling style and language is considered suitable for audience members aged 10-plus.
Theatre
Theatre previews from around the region
Alice In Wonderland
New Vic Theatre, Newcastle-under-Lyme, Fri 18 November - Sat 28 January
The New Vic theatre is reaching back into its past for this year’s Christmas production, revisiting - and, according to Artistic Director Theresa Heskins, ‘refreshing’ - its acclaimed version of Alice In Wonderland, which was first performed 11 years ago.
“Alice is one of the shows we’re fondest of,” says Theresa. “It was nominated for awards, engaged the imaginations of so many young people who are now adults, and we saw that it had so much impact. We’re also fond of it because it has great music, and it’s very lively, funny and witty. It’s a much-loved story told in a very dramatic and exciting way.”
theatrical magic aplenty, so this is definitely a show that’s well worth catching.
Presented by the team behind two other hit kids’ productions, Dear Zoo Live and Dear Santa, the show features puppetry, toetapping songs and, as a special festive treat, the chance to help Squirrel find everything she needs to build a snowman.
Cinderella
Blue Orange Theatre, Birmingham, Wed 30 November - Sat 10 December
With its comical Ugly Sisters, matchmaking fairy godmother, drop-dead-gorgeous Prince Charming, super-cute mice and fits-one-footonly glass slipper, Cinderella can justifiably lay claim to being the most popular of all pantomimes.
This Blue Orange Arts version brings together ‘romance, comedy, lots of magical songs, dances, sweets, sets, glorious costumes and buckets of audience participation’.
Beauty And The Beast
Old Rep, Birmingham, Fri 18 November - Fri 16 December
The Bear
Midlands Arts Centre, Birmingham, Thurs 17 November - Fri 30 December
The late Raymond Briggs is best known, of course, for his story about a little boy who makes friends with a snowman.
His picture book of The Bear has a similar child-meets-unusual-friend theme - except that in this case, it’s a little girl and an enormous polar bear who take centre stage. Adapted for the theatre by Pins And Needles and already the recipient of enormous critical acclaim, this heartwarming and decidedly wintry tale features puppetry, music, storytelling and plenty of humour. Highly recommended.
Snow White & The Seven Dwarfs
Lichfield Garrick, Fri 25 November - Sat 31 December
Everybody knows the story - the nasty old queen’s less than keen on her younger and more beautiful stepdaughter, who takes refuge from her royal evilness by holing up in the deep, dark forest with a household of small but splendidly friendly miners... The fact that Snow White’s a twenty-four carat classic of a fairytale means that a pantomime version is always a surefire winner. Expect all the usual panto elements, with the Garrick’s ever-popular Dame, Sam Rabone, taking top billing.
Tales From Acorn Wood
At Christmas
Royal Spa Centre, Leamington Spa, Sat 12 & Sun 13 November; Birmingham Hippodrome, Tues 13 - Sat 31 December
Stage adaptations of books by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler invariably offer
“Beauty And The Beast is an inspiring tale, perfect for children and families,” says Old Rep Executive Director Michael Penn. “Our theatre is delighted to be teaming up with the Birmingham Ormiston Academy (BOA) Group, and the creative team behind last year’s wonderful Alice In Wonderland, to bring a fresh and exciting take on this classic story.”
The seventh Christmas show that the Old Rep has produced alongside BOA, Beauty comes complete with ‘spectacular costumes, catchy original songs, creative choreography and plenty of fun’.
Snow White
Roses Theatre, Tewkesbury,
Sat 26 November - Sat 31 December
The creators of the critically acclaimed King Arthur: The Panto! - that’s BAFTA-winning writer Maurice Gran (Birds Of A Feather) and local playwright Nick Wilkes (the Almost series) - this month return to Tewkesbury for another bite of the yuletide apple, this time with a famous fairytale that they’ve brought bang up to date.
Theatre previews from around the region
Beauty And The Beast
Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury, Wed 30 November - Sun 8 January
“There are pantos that go a bit near the knuckle, but I don’t think we do really,” says Brad Fitt, who’s long been a much-loved fixture in Theatre Severn’s annual pantomime production. “I would never tell a joke that was offensive or rude. Sometimes you can use a double entendre - but then that’s in your mind, that’s not me. You have to blame yourself!”
Brad this year takes on the role of Nurse Nelly and also directs the show, his 11th Theatre Severn panto. He’s joined in the cast by Britain’s Got Talent 2022 contestant Tommy J Rollason, who’ll play comedy character Jangles.
Nativity! The Musical
The Rep, Birmingham, Sat 19 November - Sat 7 January
Debbie Isitt’s 2009 movie, Nativity!, proved so popular that it spawned three further films. It also inspired the Birmingham-born writer & director to create this musical stage adaptation, here making a welcome return to The Rep complete with some brand-new songs.
For those unfamiliar with the plot, it concerns the children of St Bernadette’s primary school and their ambition to present a musical version of the nativity. An already big challenge for the kids is made all the
trickier by false promises, a complicated love interest and a rival school vying with St Bernadette’s for the critics’ award. Not surprisingly, chaos ensues!
“I always believed that Nativity! would make a fantastic stage musical,” says Debbie. “It’s so full of joy, the children are so sweet and funny and the songs so catchy that it lends itself to being the perfect Christmas musical. The songs really do change the dynamic. It gives you much more insight into the characters and their backstories. And the emotions are more intense, like with the love story between Mr Maddens and Jennifer - it feels even bigger now because they’re singing duets.”
A Christmas Carol
Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-uponAvon, until Sun 1 January
Of all Dickens’ festive stories, A Christmas Carol reigns supreme. The covetous sinning of the miserly Scrooge, the eternal hope offered by Tiny Tim, and the eerie visions of redemption - visiting Ebenezer in the shape of three yuletide ghosts (four if you count the chain-clanking Jacob Marley) - all combine to give the tale a real olde worlde charm...
Adrian Edmondson stars as Scrooge in this highly acclaimed David Edgar-penned adaptation, which debuted at the RSC five years ago.
Cinderella
Swan Theatre, Worcester, Tues 29 Nov - Mon 2 January
Disney On Ice: Dream Big
Resorts World Arena, Birmingham, 26 & 27 November & 30 November - 4 December
Disney On Ice makes a welcome return to Birmingham with a show that’s encouraging audiences to Dream Big.
Featuring a host of the Mouse House’s most popular characters, including numerous Disney princesses, the production has enjoyed more than its fair share of positive reviews since debuting at the start of the millennium. For tickets, visit theticketfactory.com.
Worcester Repertory Company have an excellent reputation for producing quality family theatre, and they will no doubt be doing so again when they get their collective teeth into the ever-sparkling story of Cinders and her search for true love.
Dream time
The smash-hit Broadway and West End musical Dreamgirls comes to Birmingham theatre The Alexandra next month and shows at the venue across the festive period.
Packed full of catchy songs, including Listen and One Night Only, the show tells the story of three young black women - Effie, Deena and Lorrell - whose dream is to achieve superstardom as singers. But they soon discover that behind the glitter, fame is a rollercoaster ride where love, loyalty and friendship can be put to the test.
Set in the US in the 1960s and ’70s, Dreamgirls is inspired by a host of top Motown acts, including The Supremes, The Marvelettes and The Shirelles. It premiered on Broadway in 1981, was adapted for an Oscarwinning film starring Beyoncé, Jennifer Hudson and Jamie Foxx in 2006, and opened in the West End six years ago.
Nicole Dennis played Effie in London and returns to the role for the tour.
“I love playing Effie, as she’s such a complex character,” says Nicole. “It’s been a long journey with her, because although I started playing her professionally when I was 22, I first played her in amateur dramatics when I was 18.
“We first meet Effie as an 18-year-old who is very sassy, outspoken, and knows what she wants: to be a big star. A lot of people don’t relate to her when they first meet her, and that has been a tricky and difficult thing, allowing people to understand her. But it’s also been the fun of the part, getting to know her and unravel all those layers, and getting to the roots of why she thinks like that and emotes like that.
“I wish I was as brave as she is. She’s very outspoken about the things she wants in her life, and I think playing her has allowed me to take on some of that and be a bit braver in my own life. But in the end she’s just a girl who wants to be loved as much as she wants to be a superstar.”
Dreamgirls was a story Nicole knew well even
before playing the part of Effie.
“I’ve grown up with this show and listening to this music since I was 10 years old. I think that’s what a lot of people find attractive about the show; the soundtrack is some of the best music I’ve ever heard - not just in musical theatre but in all of music - but it also has a very strong story to match it. The characters are so well thought out, developed and relatable. It’s one of the greatest musicals of all time.”
While playing Effie in the West End in 2019, Nicole was scouted to join television talent show The Voice, in which she was mentored by Jennifer Hudson, who played Effie in the Dreamgirls film.
“Having a relationship like that with Jennifer has been a high point of my career. It was like it was written in the universe. It was a massive experience, as she comes from a very similar background to me, where she had to do everything on her own but with the support of her family and her friends. Being on The Voice was a real experience, and I learnt a lot about the industry and how it moves.”
Natalie Kassanga takes the role of Deena, whose friendship with Effie comes under strain when fame arrives.
“At first Effie is pretty much at the forefront of the group, but then Deena ends up becoming the lead,” explains Natalie. “She’s a very ambitious young lady - they all share the same dreams, and any of them will do anything to be at the top. The fact that Deena is given this opportunity to change the black music sound is something she really wants. Even if that means damaging friendships, then she will do it to experience that form of fame. She is ambitious and very determined but also full of love.”
The musical shows the many challenges faced by black women trying to make their way in the music business in the 1960s and ’70s. And, says Natalie, their fight to gain success and recognition is an inspiration to all.
“When the film came out, I remember being so inspired by seeing three black women representing and showing empowerment. They showed that it might be hard along the way, but you always come out stronger. This show is something to relate to even today. It’s about struggling to be who you are, and anyone can relate to that.”
Natalie hopes that seeing the musical will encourage other people to follow their dreams.
“It shows there are trials and tribulations, but as long as you’re able to find your strengths, then it shows you should keep going and never give up. I grew up listening to Motown music, artists like Aretha Franklin, Diana Ross, Stevie Wonder - those were artists I was constantly in awe of; I wanted to be those people.”
And now Natalie is living her dream, taking top roles in a host of musicals. Although Dreamgirls will be the first time she’s been on stage in Birmingham, it’s not her first visit to The Alexandra.
“A couple of my friends were in Birmingham at university and I came to visit. I came to The Alexandra to see Motown. I’d played Diana Ross in Motown in the West End, and it was really fun to be in the audience, seeing their reaction to that show. Now I’m really looking forward to bringing Dreamgirls to the theatre.
“I hope the audience will take away the nostalgia of the Motown era, that they will learn from such a beautiful story about what happens in the music industry and how hard it is, but also that they appreciate the music. I’m sure the audience will have a good night, enjoy the show and be inspired by it.”
Dreamgirls shows at The Alexandra, Birmingham, from Tuesday 6 to Sat 31
Fame, fortune and fandom are at the heart of the musical Dreamgirls, which makes its Midlands debut at Birmingham theatre The Alexandra next month. Set in the 1960s, the story centres on three talented young singers and their rollercoaster ride to stardom. What’s On recently caught up with two of the show’s leading ladies - Nicole Dennis, who plays Effie, and Natalie Kassanga (Deena) - to find out what it’s like to be a Dreamgirl...
Dance previews from across the region
“I want audiences to be awakened; to experience my work from the gut,” says avant-garde Israeli choreographer Hofesh Shechter.
“Trusting the gut is, to me, like trusting nature, or God, or a sense of purpose; a source, a spark. Trusting a higher and better force than our limited, oppressed, cultured minds.”
Hofesh’s award-winning Shechter II company is the ensemble behind this critically acclaimed production, an adapted and extended version
Swan Lake
Stafford Gatehouse Theatre, Mon 7 November
The highly regarded Classical Ballet & Opera House here presents its production of a timeless favourite, set to Tchaikovsky’s mesmerising score.
Swan Lake tells the story of Odette, a beautiful princess who, caught under the spell of the evil Von Rothbart, must spend the daytime hours as a swan, returning to human form only when night falls...
A sumptuous visual feast, the production offers an evening of ballet which is ideal for the first-time trier as well as the more seasoned dance-goer.
of the original 2019 show created for European trailblazers GoteborgsOperans Danskompani.
Hofesh selects the members of his company - all aged between 18 and 25 - every couple of years. His present crop of talented youngsters have been garnering plenty of praise for this currently touring show. The work features an eclectic sound-score that comes complete with ‘euphoric feel and throbbing beats’.
Rhythm Of The Dance: Christmas Special
Regent Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent, Sat 26 November
Unknownrealms Double Bill
Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry, Wed 23 November
Rhythm Of The Dance will be celebrating a quarter-century of touring next year. The production has so far visited four continents and been seen by more than seven million people in over 50 countries.
If you’ve not yet checked out the show, this Potteries performance provides a perfect opportunity to catch up with one of the most popular Irish step dance offerings in the world (which, on this particular occasion, comes complete with a collection of Christmas songs).
ACE Dance & Music bring their inimitable African style to this thought-provoking collaboration with two internationally acclaimed Black male choreographers - Serge Aimé Coulibaly and Vincent Mantsoe. Presenting a double bill featuring six brilliantly creative performers, the show is described by the company as a celebration of mortality and perseverance, and of hope overcoming adversity.
The Nutcracker transformed
Birmingham Royal Ballet’s The Nutcracker is without a doubt one of the company’s most popular shows. The production was gifted to the city in 1990 by the then artistic director, Sir Peter Wright, as a thank you to Birmingham for making the company so welcome when it moved from London. The show has been performed almost every Christmas since.
The Nutcracker is loved for its amazing costumes and sets, from giant Christmas trees through to sweets and snowflakes. And yet its designer, John Macfarlane, admits he was initially reluctant to take up the commission.
“Strangely enough, of the three Tchaikovskys, The Nutcracker was the one I least wanted to do. Sir Peter Wright writes in his book that when he asked me to do it, I ‘was uncertain’.
“But it was such an enormous production to be offered. I asked Sir Peter for a few days to think about it and work out how I would approach it.
“I was anxious that the Rat Battle should be frightening - a band of rats, not little miceand that Clara should take part in the diverts in act two and not just watch them. Above all that the Christmas tree and the fireplace should grow to an enormous scale.”
John managed to achieve all three of those ambitions. His transformation scene, in which the Christmas tree grows and the fireplace rotates, has become a magic moment of ballet staging for dance fans in Birmingham and beyond.
The show has now been performed more than 500 times to a total audience of over one million people. But after being staged for more than 30 years, The Nutcracker had begun to show its age, so every elementincluding lighting, sets and costumes - has been recreated.
This month the newly refurbished production will be unveiled at Birmingham Hippodrome.
“I think the rebuild will be a return to the palette of this show on its first night in 1990,” says John. “This is the first time I’ve
completely re-built an existing production. What is really interesting is that you go into it thinking ‘I’m going to change this and I’m going to change that,’ and then, when you actually start to try and do it, you suddenly remember why you did certain things the way you did.
“I’m not sure the audience has actually realised how much The Nutcracker has worn over the years - but when they see this rebuild, it will be so vibrant; everything will be rich and colourful.”
The update has given John the chance to make some tweaks to costumes and setsincluding updates he has been keen to undertake for years.
“More than 80 per cent is the same, but we have been able to do some changes with new fabrics and materials. And it has given us the chance to come back to some things and improve them.
“So, for example, we have new snowflake wings. When we made them originally, they were made appliqué on net and were extremely difficult to side light. Now the wings are hard and the filigree is cut out of a hard material. So it’s a little bit more scary for dancers because they are running and doing jumps, but it will make the whole thing look absolutely clean and crisp. We are also building 44 new Snowflake costumes and headdresses.
“And there are some other changes. On the front cloth, the little nutcracker is front-on instead of side-on, which I always wanted to change. I’ve made it so that he is now looking straight out at the audience.”
John has created sets for ballet, theatre and opera across the globe, but he admits BRB’s Nutcracker is special for him.
“The ideas and production concept evolved very easily, and I remember feeling that there was something quite special about the process. In your career you can pick out three or four productions that have changed your direction, and you realise you cannot go back to how you did things before. I think that Nutcracker was one of those. It was a huge
learning process, and I didn’t realise it until a long time afterwards.
“When I thought of the objects that you could use to explain the change of scale, the fireplace was the obvious choice. The tree, of course, is explained in the orchestral score, but the fireplace could be dramatic and monumental and prove a great entrance for the King Rat.
“But I do remember being in complete anxiety about what to do with the snowflakes because the thought of big slobbery pine trees with snow on them was just horrible to me. I was building the model in February and March, and at that time I lived in Mid-Wales, and on our property there was a small copse of larch trees. It was one of those mornings where, in the night, there had been a snowfall, no wind and clear sky, and every tiny twig of the larches for about half an hour before the sun melted it had a little line of snow on it. It was this amazing image. And that was the snowflakes.”
The rebuild took more than a year, cost £1million and was made possible thanks to the extraordinary support of hundreds of individuals, numerous trusts & foundations and BRB investment.
“People have really supported this,” says John. “I did an evening at the Hippodrome where we went through all the costumes with an audience. We had the old headdresses and the first of the new ones, and I could show bits of the model. I couldn’t imagine anyone turning out for that on a Tuesday night in December, but they did - and they raised so much money in just that one evening.
“I hope the audience are going to love their new Nutcracker after all the work we’ve done on it. It’s richer and more opulent, but it’s still their Birmingham Nutcracker.”
Birmingham Royal Ballet presents The Nutcracker at Birmingham Hippodrome from Sat 19 November to Sat 10 DecemberBirmingham Royal Ballet’s version of The Nutcracker has been delighting Midlands audiences for more than 30 years. The magical sets and sumptuous costumes, created by designer John Macfarlane, have made a major contribution to the production’s popularity. What’s On caught up with John to find out what’s new for The Nutcracker in 2022...
highlights in
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
CERT 12 (161 mins)
Starring Angela Bassett, Letitia Wright, Winston Duke, Danai Gurira, Florence Kasumba, Lupita Nyong’o, Martin Freeman, Tenoch Huerta, Dominique Thorne, Michaela Coel, Mabel Cadena and Alex Livanalli Directed by Ryan Coogler
With King T’Challa dead, the nation of Wakanda is vulnerable to external forces and needs to be protected. But who will step into the late ruler’s shoes and embrace the role of the Black Panther?
This latest Marvel Cinematic Universe movie has been a source of significant speculation since lead actor Chadwick Boseman died in 2020, with fans eager to know how producers intended to move the story forward.
Boseman played the character four times in all, earning rave reviews along the way, and Marvel Studios confirmed that, in honour of the late actor, the role of T’Challa would not be re-cast.
The movie’s trailers do, however, hint at the introduction of a new Black Panther, with several of the supporting characters firmly in the frame to don the distinctive black & gold suit... Released Fri 11 November
Living CERT 12a (102 mins)
Starring Bill Nighy, Aimee Lou Wood, Alex Sharp, Adrian Rawlins, Hubert Burton, Oliver Chris Directed by Oliver Hermanus
The consistently excellent Bill Nighy is on top form in this Kazuo Ishiguro-scripted remake of a 1952 Japanese film about a man dealing with a terminal diagnosis. Set, like the original, in the 1950s - but relocated to London - the film follows the character of Mr Williams (Nighy) - an impeccably dressed and seemingly immeasurably dull civil servant - as he reacts to a diagnosis of cancer that means he has only a year to live.
Faced with the reality of his imminent demise, Mr Williams realises that he’s been living life in the slow-to-stationery lane. So he determines to make a modest impact on the world in the short time he has left - by forcing the city authorities to build a children’s playground for which local mothers have long been petitioning... This gentle and poignant film was screened to great acclaim at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, in the wake of which it picked up numerous four and five-star reviews.
Released Fri 4 November
Armageddon Time
CERT tbc (115 mins)
Taking place in an early-1980s America on the threshold of voting Ronald Reagan into the White House, acclaimed filmmaker James Gray’s coming-of-age family drama contemplates the generational pursuit of the American Dream.
When 12-year-old Paul Graff and his AfricanAmerican best pal, John Crocker, are caught sharing marijuana, Paul finds himself moved by his parents to a private prep school - an institution not only positively awash with white, privileged kids but also routinely rife with prejudice.
Paul is desperate to escape the misery of his new existence, and it isn’t long before he and John hatch a plan that will see the hitherto inseparable friends running away from their troubled New York lives in pursuit of a better future in Florida...
Released
The Menu
If you like your food served with a succulent side-order of gore, The Menu is the main course you’ve been waiting for.
Playing out on a remote island, the dark comedy-horror follows the fortunes of a group of people who arrive for an exclusive fine-dining experience laid on by a celebrity chef (Ralph Fiennes).
At $1,250 per head, the once-in-a-lifetime culinary extravaganza certainly comes at a cost - but little do the unsuspecting diners realise just how high a price they will soon find themselves paying for the tastebudtantalising experience...
Released Fri 18 November
She Said CERT 15 (128 mins)
Starring Samantha Morton, Tom Pelphrey, Carey Mulligan, Jennifer Ehle, Zoe Kazan, Andre Braugher Directed by Maria Schrader
The latest in a long and distinguished line of films about tenacious journalists breaking sensational stories - think The Post (2017), Spotlight (2015), and surely the headline-maker of the lot, All The President’s Men (1976) - She Said stars Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan as The New York Times’ Megan Twohey and Jodi Kantor, the two women who blew the lid on Harvey Weinstein’s years of sexual misconduct. Brad Pitt is named as executive producer on the film, an involvement which has seen him come in for some significant criticism in the last few months. Social-media users have been pointing out that the Oscar-winning actor twice worked with Weinstein despite knowing about the now-disgraced movie producer’s predatory behaviour around women.
Released Fri 25 November
Bones And All CERT 15 (130 mins)
Starring Timothée Chalamet, Michael Stuhlbarg, Chloë Sevigny, Taylor Russell, Mark Rylance, Jessica Harper Directed by Luca Guadagnino Creepy cannibal caper Bones And All has been voraciously feasting on five-star reviews since its screening at this year’s Venice Film Festival.
Set at the tail end of Ronald Reagan’s eightyear presidency (1980s-set movies seem to be all the rage this month - see Armageddon Time, opposite), the film focuses on the character of shy-but-smart youngster Maren, a girl whose move to a new school soon sees her invited to a sleepover with some other teen females.
But Maren, it turns out, is no ordinary young lady, bringing to the table an alarming propensity for devouring human flesh...
Released
25 November
Strange World CERT PG
With the voices of Jake Gyllenhaal, Jaboukie Young-White, Gabrielle Union, Alan Tudyk, Dennis Quad, Lucy Liu Directed by Don Hall
Roald Dahl’s Matilda the Musical
CERT PG (117 mins)
Starring Alisha Weir, Emma Thompson, Lashana Lynch, Andrea Riseborough, Stephen Graham, Carl Spencer Directed by Matthew Warchus
Matilda is an extraordinary child but unappreciated by her parents.
When not glued to the television set, Matilda’s mum practises ballroom dancing and her dad gloats about his latest dodgy business deal. Life at school isn’t much better for Matilda either. Then, one day, she discovers that she’s got very special powers and decides it’s high time the grown-ups were taught a much-needed lesson...
“I loved reading the old issues of pulps growing up,” reveals Strange World director Don Hall. “They were big adventures in which a group of explorers might discover a hidden world or ancient creatures. They’ve been a huge inspiration for Strange World.” Disney’s 61st animated movie is an actionadventure about a legendary family of explorers. But not every member of the Clade clan is up for a life of outrageous excitement. Although Searcher Clade would much prefer to spend his life quietly farming the land, he instead finds himself journeying deep into an uncharted and dangerous world where fantastical creatures await him...
Released Wed 23 November
Originally adapted for the stage from one of Roald Dahl’s best-loved books, Matilda The Musical has been wowing theatre-goers for over a decade and is now set to delight legions of film fans.
Tim Minchin, who previously wrote songs for the stage version, has penned some new numbers for this big-screen adaptation.
Released Fri 25 November
I’m too old to play the good characters nowmaybe when I was younger! But playing the villain is so much more fun.
EASTENDERS GOOD GUY TURNS PANTO BADDIE
Former EastEnders star Michael Greco talks to What’s On about surviving fame as a soap star, a surprising career change, and returning to a familiar role (not that one) in Aladdin, this year’s pantomime at the Wolverhampton Grand...
Twenty years ago Michael Greco was at the height of his fame - but he wasn’t particularly enjoying it. He adored his five-year stint playing Beppe di Marco in EastEnders, but not the stardom that went with it.
“I kind of got disillusioned with the whole acting business when I left EastEnders,” he says. “I didn’t like the fame, I didn’t like the celebrity status, and I decided I just didn’t want it anymore.
“People don’t understand that the fame we had from EastEnders 20 years ago was completely different to anything now. Back then we had 20 million viewers, so we were recognisable in the street by every man and his dog, from young kids to old people. Everybody would know who you were, even if they didn’t watch the show. We were at its peak - you’ll never get soaps with 20 million viewers ever again.”
After giving up acting, Michael stumbled into an unexpected second career as a professional poker player, touring the world and winning more than $1million along the way.
“I fell into poker at a casino one night and really loved it. Then this company came in and started sponsoring me, so I travelled the world playing poker - with their money, I might add - and was very successful at it for about 10 years.”
He admits his acting skills came in handy in terms of maintaining a poker face in the cauldron-hot atmosphere of competition.
“When you’re playing for millions of dollars, especially somewhere like Las Vegas, it’s like being a swan - serene on top of the water, but your feet are going ten to the dozen underneath. It’s the same with your heartyour heart is going through the roof, but you have to have a poker face because so many great professionals in the world can read you. Your eyes give away a lot - that’s why people wear sunglasses playing poker - the pulse in your neck… everything can give you away.
“There’s a lot of luck in poker, but there’s a lot of skill as well. Being an actor definitely helped.”
The ‘acting’ element contributed to
something of a renaissance with his chosen profession, too. A stint living and working in Los Angeles saw him “get the love for it back”, as well as picking up better and better roles.
He’s recently been filming The Hunger Games: The Ballad Of Songbirds And Snakes, a prequel to the hugely popular film series.
It’s already one of the most anticipated movies of 2023. So much for wanting to avoid fame and stardom!
“I think I’m a bit older and wiser now so can handle it a bit more. I was on set the other day with Viola Davis, who is obviously one of the darlings of Hollywood, and was thinking how lucky I’ve been to have a second bite of the cherry in my career - and being able to do things that I love doing, including theatre and panto.”
Which brings us nicely on to his latest role, as the evil Abanazar in Wolverhampton Grand Theatre’s new production of Aladdin, appearing alongside Zoe Birkett, Ben Cajee, Tam Ryan, Ian Adams and Duane Gooden.
It’s a show Michael knows and loves wellbut having played the baddie twice before, he’s being encouraged to take it to a whole new level this time out.
“It’s a great part to play. I’ve done it before, but this time I’ve been promised by the producers that they’re going to make him even more evil, so I’m really looking forward to that. This is going to be more than just your normal pantomime villain - this is gonna be a proper actor’s stage Abanazar!
“I’m too old to play the good characters nowmaybe when I was younger! But playing the villain is so much more fun.”
Michael would even want to bring a dark side to serially luckless Beppe, if the character ever returned to Albert Square.
“Beppe was a good guy - he was the knight in shining armour most of the time. That was really fun to play at the time, but if I ever went back, I think I’d want him to be a little bit more evil.”
Michael’s not planning any nods to his famous alter-ego in his portrayal of Abanazar, but admits EastEnders’ well-
known cliff-hanger drum beats will almost certainly make an appearance in the show:
“I’m sure there’ll be at least one ‘duff duff’ moment!”
After a couple of difficult post-Covid years for the theatre industry, there’s mercifully little drama hanging over the new production, with a strong, confident cast and ticket sales “through the roof”, according to Michael.
“We could be heading for capacity audiences every night,” he says, delighted that the costof-living crisis has potentially fuelled rather than dented the audience’s appetite.
“I think the tickets are well priced, but at Christmas everybody wants a bit of relief and to get away from this, that and the other. Panto is the ideal way for families to enjoy some escapism, and Aladdin’s the perfect panto for that. Everyone knows the story of Aladdin and the lamp, and I think kids especially will love this kind of magical, theatrical performance.”
And while Michael admits he’s looking forward to getting booed - by kids and adults alike - he expects his villain’s downfall to elicit some sympathy too, given panto’s predilection for a happy, feelgood ending.
“There’s always the demise of the baddie at the end, because there has to be, but there’s a transition along the way, so I’m hoping that when I get my demise, people are going to feel sorry for me as well.”
Throw in a fabulous venue and cast - some of whom have already asked him for poker lessons - and Michael admits the six-week run can’t come soon enough.
“The theatre’s incredible - it’s one of those old-style theatres that I love, with a really close auditorium - and there’s some really great talent in the show as well. I’m really looking forward to it; I can’t wait for the six weeks to start.”
Aladdin shows at Wolverhampton Grand Theatre from Saturday 3 December to Saturday 7 January
Visual Arts previews from around the region
Wildlife Photographer Of The Year
Wolverhampton Art Gallery, until Sat 24 December
“Captured by some of the best photography talent from around the world, the photographs encourage curiosity, connection and wonder. These inspiring images convey human impact on the natural world in a way that words cannotfrom the urgency of declining biodiversity to the inspiring bounce-back of a protected species.”
So says Dr Doug Gurr, director of the Natural History Museum, which has developed & produced the 2022 Wildlife Photographer Of The Year competition.
The hugely prestigious show - visiting Wolverhampton Art Gallery as part of a UK tourfeatures a host of awe-inspiring images capturing fascinating animal behaviour and breathtaking landscapes.
The photos included in the exhibition have been selected from thousands of submissions, with photographers from no fewer than 93 countries taking part.
Image credit: Heikki Nikki
Peasants And Proverbs: Pieter Brueghel The Younger As Moralist And Entrepreneur
The Barber Institute, University of Birmingham, until Sun 22 January
Paintings, drawings, etchings and engravings from both public and private collections feature in this exhibition, which offers a fascinating insight into the work of Pieter Brueghel the Younger.
An artist who laboured in the shadow of his renowned father - Pieter Bruegel the Elder - he was nevertheless a prodigious and skilled painter, albeit one whose prolific output as a copyist led to claims that he was capable of producing only derivative works.
The exhibition focuses on one Brueghel painting in particular, Two Peasants Binding Firewood, a comical yet enigmatic creation which is one of the Barber’s most popular artworks. It’s accompanied in the show by three other versions of the same composition.
Craftspace: Queer + Metals
Midlands Arts Centre (MAC), Birmingham, Sat 12 November - Sun 2 April
The multiplicity of queerness is here explored via metalwork and metalsmithing, in an exhibition that makes visible the ways in which LGBTQIA+ creatives are shaping, disrupting and contributing to
‘Bombed - A Trilogy’
By Saranjit BirdiHerbert Art Gallery & Museum, Coventry, Fri 11 - Mon 21 November
Saranjit Birdi’s immersive and combinedarts installation contemplates the subjects of bombing, war and conflict resolution, making links between the World War Two blitzes of Coventry, Dresden and Birmingham and events taking place in modern times.
Presenting both new and retrospective works and research documentation, the exhibition brings together performance, painting, music and animations with oral testimonies from British and German blitz survivors.
contemporary culture.
Featuring artworks, video interviews and an Instagram campaign, the Craftspace presentation aims to ‘make connections within a diverse, intersectional, complex and fluid community of making’.
Horror In The Modernist Block
Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, Fri 25 November - Mon 1 May
High-rise towers. Concrete buildings. In an exhibition featuring the work of 20 contemporary artists, these modernist structures are viewed through the lens of the horror genre with which they are often associated in dystopian fiction.
Using as its starting point Birmingham - a city renowned for its brutalist architecture - the show also contemplates the architecture of Ikon’s galleries, taking viewers on a journey that highlights how the design and features of a building can shape not only people’s movement and perception, but also their deepest fears.
Breaking The Mould: Sculpture By Women Since 1945
New Art Gallery, Walsall, until 16 April
Surveying the post-war period and exploring the art of more than 40 female sculptors, Breaking The Mould addresses the many accounts of British sculpture that have marginalised women or airbrushed their work from art history altogether. The works on show have been selected from the Arts Council Collection, which holds more than 250 sculptures by over 150 women.
A wide range of digital resources have been developed to accompany the exhibition.
A VENETIAN’S VIEW
A world-class collection of artwork by Giovanni Antonio Canal (better known as Canaletto), is currently on show at Worcester City Art Gallery & Museum. The exhibition features stunning paintings on loan from the Woburn Abbey Collection, as well as artworks from Worcester’s Fine Art Collection and loans from Birmingham Museums, Tate and Compton Verney. What’s On recently caught up with curatorial officer, Claire Cheshire, to find out what visitors can expect from this prestigious exhibition.
Canaletto: A Venetian's View has been called a once-in-a-generation exhibition and the gallery’s most ambitious show ever. Can you explain why it’s so prestigious?
The 24 paintings of Venice commissioned by John Russell, 4th Duke of Bedford (1710-1771), in the 1730s constitute the largest series of paintings ever undertaken by Canaletto. They normally hang in the dining room of Woburn Abbey and in the last 70 years have only left a couple of times. That we have been able to exhibit 20 of them is extraordinary in itself, but we have also brought together three further works by Canaletto and a number of works by other artists who were directly influenced by him, in particular William Marlow, which have never been hung together before.
Historically speaking, why is Canaletto such an important and revered artist?
Canaletto was the leading painter of views of Venice and arguably the greatest of all the eighteenth-century Italian school of ‘view painters’. During the nineteenth century, paintings by Canaletto could be viewed by the public across the country - his first publicly accessible painting, The Stonemason’s Yard, was hung at the newly opened National Gallery in 1828, and the inclusion of Canaletto artworks in subsequent London exhibitions secured his place as a leading influencer on British art.
What will viewers learn about the artist, his life and times, by visiting the exhibition?
Canaletto is particularly noted for weaving the hustle & bustle of daily life into his work.
You can really get a feel of everyday goingson in Venice - from people collecting water in the communal wells, to workmen repairing roofs, to wealthy ladies travelling through the canals in gondolas. The exhibition explores trade and commerce in the busy port, the influence of religion and the importance of the Grand Canal.
Which Canaletto painting is your personal favourite?
It’s very difficult to choose, but there is a view of the Piazza San Marco looking towards the Basilica San Marco and the Campanile which I think really shows Venice at its finest. It features the Church of San Marco, the Cathedral of Venice - and the pink marble front of the Doge’s Palace, once the seat of the Venetian government, is visible beside the belltower. Standing side by side, the church and the palace represent the historic connection between religious and political power in Venice.
In the square, Canaletto has included Levantine merchants, a surprising number of
dogs and, in the centre foreground, what appears to be two young British gentlemen with a guide.
Can you share with us a fascinating and little-known fact about Canaletto?
Canaletto’s real name was Giovanni Antonio Canal, and he was the son of the painter Bernardo Canal, hence his mononym Canaletto (‘little Canal’).
Has the gallery’s process for preparing for the arrival of Canaletto differed from its process when preparing for the arrival of less-prestigious exhibitions?
All our exhibitions are very important to us. We try to do a range of themes every year to appeal to as many people as possible. Each one takes at least 12 to 18 months of planning, and we become very involved with the subject and strive to present the gallery so that it is visually beautiful but also informative and easy to navigate. This exhibition was complex in terms of logistics and layout, but we are very lucky to have such a wonderful team working on it, all of whom take a real pride in the exhibitions.
Can we expect further once-in-ageneration exhibitions at Worcester Art Gallery & Museum?
Our aim is to bring world-class art to people’s doorstep, and we will continue to work hard in order to achieve this.
Canaletto: A Venetian’s View shows at Worcester City Art Gallery & Museum until Sat 7 JanuaryEvents
BBC Good Food Show Winter
NEC, Birmingham, Thurs 24 - Sun 27 November
It’s once again time to eat, drink and be merry as the BBC Good Food Show brings its winter edition to the NEC.
As well as watching celebrity chefsincluding James Martin, Nadiya Hussain, and Ainsley Harriott - cook up a storm on the show’s Big Kitchen stage, visitors can also check out Christmas workshops and pick up
some tasty festive treats from hundreds of hand-picked producers.
Also back by popular demand is the Fabulous Food Finds Tasting Theatre, giving visitors the opportunity to test their tastebuds, expand their foodie knowledge and sample everything from coffee to spices.
Peaky Blinders Nights
Black Country Living Museum, Dudley, Fri 18 & Sat 19 November
Flat caps and flapper dresses at the readythe Black Country Living Museum’s everpopular Peaky Blinders is back for the final time this year.
The immersive experience brings to life the popular BBC television series with the help of 1920s-themed cocktails, live music, street theatre and plenty more.
Festive
The Midlands’ biggest fair of its kind is back at the NEC this month to spread some festive cheer.
The four-day event sees thousands of exhibitors showcasing all manner of gift ideas, from traditional trinkets to the quirky and unusual.
Artisan food & drink stallholders will be
offering everything from prosecco to pickles, with plenty of new additions available to purchase and some ‘fabulous fan favourites’ making a welcome return.
Festive cheer comes courtesy of jazz bands and choirs, with St Nicholas himself further adding to the yuletide magic.
MCM Comic Con Birmingham
NEC, Birmingham, Fri 11 - Sun 13 November
Catering for all areas of pop culture, MCM Comic Con Birmingham is split into different areas, offering fans the chance to create a bespoke day out.
The Treehouse area keeps the kids entertained with workshops, interactive activities and performances, while The Side Quest zone is the home of gaming, featuring both retro and modern consoles.
Meanwhile K-pop, J-pop, Anime and Manga fans can head over to Pop Asia, whilst Artist Alley showcases numerous independent creators.
And, as always, for those who choose to dress up for the event, Cosplay Central will be hosting casual showcases and masquerades.
Christmas Celebration Weekends
Cadbury World, Birmingham, weekends from Sat 19 November - Fri 23 December
Festive celebrations get under way at Cadbury World this month. The popular venue is presenting a whole host of seasonal activities for families to enjoy, all of which come complete with that ever-important chocolately twist.
While Santa himself stars in an exclusive stage show, his super-helpful elves will be handing out gifts to young audience members.
Visitors can also enjoy one of the 10 daily performances of this year’s pantomime: Cinderella. The Santa stage show and panto are both included in the ticket price.
Before heading for home, be sure to swing by the World’s Biggest Cadbury Shop to pick up some handmade Christmas chocolates.
Ice Skate Birmingham
Ice Skate Birmingham and the Big Wheel make a welcome return to Centenary Square this month.
While the wheel offers the opportunity to enjoy fantastic views across the city, the weather-proofed ice rink accommodates up to 300 people per session.
Younger or inexperienced skating enthusiasts can keep upright by using special penguin skating aids.
And when skaters have finished their Torvill & Dean routine, they can warm themselves up with some festive fare in the nearby Ice Lounge and double deck rooftop bar.
Winter Wonderland Stoke-on-Trent
Lichfield Street, Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent, Thurs 24 November - Mon 2 January
Returning for a sixth year, Hanley’s Winter Wonderland features a real undercover ice rink, Santa’s grotto, stomach-churning rollercoasters, a 60m sky swing, a selection of family entertainment, a fully licensed Bavarian bar and a range of festive cuisine. For th0se who’re looking for non-stop fun, there’s the option to purchase a wristband to access unlimited skating and rides.
Lantern Festival
After a successful debut in 2021, West Midland Safari Park’s ‘illuminating’ festival is back for a second year. Discover an epic lantern trail, where you can enjoy ‘mesmerising lighting displays, marvel at a “wild” range of breathtaking lanterns and explore the walk-through areas of the park like never before’.
In total, the festival features more than 40 light groupings - all with a flora & fauna theme - and over 1,000 individual lanterns. The park’s walk-through animal exhibits will remain open for guests to enjoy, as will the Land Of The Living Dinosaurs and Ice Age exhibits.
It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas...
Winter Glow returns this month with a mix of festive fun. Highlights include immersive themed light trail A Christmas Odyssey, transporting visitors from the depths of ancient Atlantis to the fanciful shores of festive islands.
The ever-popular Santa Experiences make a welcome return too (this year in an indoor
location), while a new covered winter market (available to visit without a ticket) showcases a wide range of stalls and a fairground featuring fun rides for all ages. A Bavarian-style bar, one of the region’s largest indoor ice rinks and the 120ft Malvern Observation Wheel further add to the event’s appeal.
Steam In Lights
Severn Valley Railway, selected dates from Sat 18 November - Fri 23 December
Severn Valley Railway’s Steam In Lights is back for 2022 with bigger and better displays then ever before.
The 90-minute adventure begins at Bridgnorth station, where families jump aboard an illuminated train, settle down at a table or in a private compartment, and enjoy on-board narration and music as they journey through a selection of bright and bold light displays, the journey home then features ‘an up-tempo celebration’.
Santa’s Winter Wonderland
Snowdome, Tamworth, Sat 12 November - Sun 1 January
Tamworth’s Snowdome will once again be transformed into a ‘winter wonderland’ this month.
Step into the Christmas Village, where you can say hello to Santa’s real-life furry friends, take a ride on the carousel, and visit Santa’s house, dropping off your list for the big man along the way. Play and slide around in real snow on the Christmas trail, explore the enchanted forest, battle it out in a snowball fight and enjoy a ride on a sledge.
Plus, Santa, Rudolph and the North Pole Players will perform brand-new stage show Alice In Winter Wonderland.
HALLOWEEN FIREWORK SPOOKTACULAR Wear your Halloween costumes for a truly ghoulish experience, Sat 29 Oct, Corporation Meadow, Evesham
FIREWORKS DISPLAY With food stalls, entertainment, bouncy castles and more, Fri 28 Oct, The Warwickshire, Leek Wootton, Warwick
FIREWORKS SPOOK-TACULAR Halloween-themed fireworks and soundtrack, Sun 30 Oct, Drayton Manor Resort, Staffordshire BRITISH OAK FIREWORKS EXTRAVAGANZA With street food, craft beer, cocktails and live music, Wed 2 Nov, The British Oak, Stirchley, Birmingham BONFIRE BONANZA Entertainment includes fire show, street food traders, funfair and live music, Fri 4 Nov, Far Forest Showground, Bewdley TIPICALLY INSPIRED BONFIRE Promising an exciting evening with fire-eating performers, a bonfire, fireworks and live music, Fri 4 Nov, Far Forest Showground, Callow Hill Rock (near Kidderminster) ILLUMINATED GARDEN AND PLAYGROUND BY NIGHT Enjoy the unique experience of play by nightincluding the splash pad! Fri 4 Nov, Dartmouth Park, West Bromwich REDDITCH FIREWORK DISPLAY An event featuring two displays of fireworks, an on-site bar and children’s rides, Fri 4 Nov, Redditch Cricket, Hockey, Rugby and Squash Club
HALESOWEN CRICKET CLUB BONFIRE AND FIREWORKS With toffee apples, candy floss and all the fun of the fair, Fri 4 Nov, Seth Somers Park, Halesowen BROMSGROVE BONFIRE AND FIREWORKS With bonfire, fireworks, live music, food & drink and a fairground for the kids, Fri 4 Nov, Bromsgrove Rugby Football Club
ULTIMATE FIREWORKS SPECTACULAR Featuring music, lights and live-action storytelling, Fri 4 - Sun 6 Nov, Alton Towers, Staffordshire BONFIRE WEEKEND Luxury glamping weekend with fireworks, campfires and mulled wine, Fri 4 - Sun 6 Nov, Barnutopia Glamping & Venue, Oswestry FIREWORKS EVENING Featuring live music & performances, a carnival zone, street food and a shopping bazaar, Sat 5 Nov, Dartmouth Park, West Bromwich
FIREWORKS SPECTACULAR Free event promising an evening of fun and entertainment for all, Sat 5 Nov, Tamworth Castle Grounds
BOMERE HEATH BONFIRE NIGHT With funfair, Sat 5 Nov, Bomere Heath Cricket Club, Shropshire BONFIRE AND FIREWORK EXTRAVAGANZA Two firework displays, a huge bonfire plus all the fun of the fair, Sat 5 Nov, Alderford Lake, Whitchurch, North Shropshire
BRIDGNORTH RFC FIREWORKS DISPLAY With hogroast and a licenced bar, Sat 5 Nov, Bridgnorth Rugby Club, Shropshire
FIREWORKS NIGHT Explore the Victorian streets after dark and enjoy an 18-minute firework display, Sat 5 Nov, Blists Hill Victorian Town, Ironbridge, Shropshire
BONFIRE AND FIREWORK SPECTACULAR Two fireworks displays, a funfair, food, drink and live music, Sat 5 Nov, The West Mid Showground, Shrewsbury FIREWORKS SPECTACULAR & FUN FAIR Complete with food & drink stalls, Sat 5 Nov, Edgbaston Stadium, Birmingham
SOLIHULL ROUNDTABLE FIREWORKS Annual charity fireworks display, Sat 5 Nov, Tudor Grange Park, Solihull
HIMLEY BONFIRE AND FIREWORKS With night market, street entertainers, seasonal refreshments and a funfair, Sat 5 Nov, Himley Hall and Park, Dudley
ANNUAL FIREWORKS GALA Taking place for the first time in three years, Sat 5 Nov, Kenilworth Castle, Warwickshire
WARWICK TOWN BONFIRE With two firework displays, food & drink stalls and live entertainment, Sat 5 Nov, Warwick Racecourse
BONFIRE AND FIREWORKS 2022 An evening of bonfire fun for all the family, Sat 5 Nov, Stourport Rugby Club
WOLVERHAMPTON FIREWORKS SPECTACULAR Complete with funfair, bars, food stalls and two firework displays, Sat 5 Nov, Wolverhampton Racecourse
BEDWORTH CHARITY BONFIRE The annual charity event returns, complete with fireworks, Sat 5 Nov, Miners Welfare Park, Bedworth
WALSALL
BONFIRE
Featuring fireworks, a bonfire, food & drink stalls and a funfair for the kids, Sat 5 Nov, Walsall Arboretum
SUTTON COLDFIELD
BONFIRE & FIREWORKS A family-friendly event popular with the local community. Expect big bangs! Sat 5 Nov, The Roger Smoldon Ground, Sutton Coldfield BONFIRE NIGHT With two firework displays, food & drink stalls and live entertainment, Sat 5 Nov, Warwick Racecourse THE RUGBY FIREWORKS SHOW Includes a child/toddler-friendly display, Sat 5 Nov, Whinfield Recreation Grounds, Rugby WESTON HALL FIREWORK NIGHT With children’s rides, live performances and music, Sat 5 Nov, Weston Hall Hotel, Coventry BONFIRE AND FIREWORK DISPLAY With licenced bar and food, Sat 5 Nov, 3rd Coventry Scout HQ, Coventry
BONFIRE NIGHT SPECTACULAR All profits to Zoe’s Place Baby Hospice & other local charities, Sat 5 Nov, Coventrians
WHODUNNIT?
Having made its debut some 70 years ago, Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap is the ‘ world’s longest-running play’ with a continued capacity to put bums on seats. It’s touring version makes a welcome return to the Midlands this month with former Grange Hill and Eastender actor, Todd Carty, starring alongside Gwyneth Strong (Cassandra in Only Fools And Horses) and Eastender’s baddie, John Altman. What’s On recently caught up with Todd to chat about his current role - and more...
What attracted you to The Mousetrap, Todd?
I saw it about 40 years ago, when I was a much younger man. I remembered it being such a great play, and I’ve always been an Agatha Christie fan, having first gotten hooked on her storytelling by seeing the Margaret Rutherford/Miss Marple films on TV. Now here I am 40 years later playing Major Metcalf in the UK & Ireland tour. It’s fantastic.
How would you describe Major Metcalf and his role in the story?
He’s a retired Army major and one of the guests in a guesthouse in the countryside. All of the characters have a secret and a mysterious background that audiences can’t quite put a finger on. The audience becomes the detective, trying to work out who’s up to no good and who isn’t, along with the real detective on stage. Major Metcalf appears to be a typical ex-Army guy. He enjoys the odd drop of brandy in the evening and maybe the odd drop of Scotch at lunch. On the face of it, he seems to want to help people, but every now and then the characters in the play disappear and we don’t know what they’re up to, Major Metcalf included.
The show is celebrating its 70th anniversary. How do you account for its longevity?
I honestly don’t know. We’re opening at the Theatre Royal, Nottingham, where it premiered back in 1952 before a short tour and then moving to the West End, where it continues to play. I think basically we all like a whodunnit because we’re all amateur detectives; we’re all modern-day Columbos. I’ve been to see the show again recently, and in the audience there are kids of 13 right up to grandmas and granddads, all going ‘He did it’ or ‘No, it was her or him.’ When I first saw it, I couldn’t quite work it out myself, but it’s great fun trying to figure out who the killer is.
You came to fame in Grange Hill. What are your memories of that time?
Not to give my age away, I’d been acting since I was four. I loved doing all those adverts when I first started out, but Grange Hill changed my whole life. One day I was happily going to school, the next day I was Tucker Jenkins. The day before it first aired in 1978, nobody on the tube knew who I was, then the next day it was ‘Bang!’. Anonymity was a thing of the past.
What have been your favourite jobs over the years?
I loved doing EastEnders and The Bill. I also did five years on and off playing Patsy in Spamalot, and that was brilliant. I’d sing Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life every night and there’d be seven and eight-yearolds singing along, Mum and Dad singing it, Granny and Granddad, and they all knew the words.
What do you most enjoy about doing stage work?
It sounds obvious and clichéd but it’s the audience. When you’re doing a panto and all the kids are getting involved and shouting back, going ‘Oh yes he did!’ and ‘Oh no he didn’t!’, it’s a great feeling. Plays are different, but the audience is listening to every word, and with The Mousetrap they’re thinking ‘Ooh, I thought it was so and so.’ I love live theatre, and it’s especially pleasing now, after the pandemic, when people who work in theatre had a really tough time. It’s great being around other actors and crew members again. I can’t tell you how much it warms our hearts to be back in front of an audience.
What are you most looking forward to about taking the show around the country?
Just the different reactions from different
audiences. They always vary depending on where you are in the country, and every night is different, with different reactions to different parts of the show. There’s a real appetite now for seeing good shows and supporting theatre. A lot of the people coming along will be Agatha Christie fans, but they also tend to bring family members and friends with them, saying ‘You’ve got to come and see this.’ That means a whole new audience is introduced to the show, as well as existing fans. As for the cast and crew, we’ve been really happy during rehearsals, and I’m sure we’ll be just as happy when we’re on the road.
The Mousetrap shows at The Alexandra, Birmingham, from Mon 31 October - Sat 5 November; Malvern Theatre, Worcestershire, from Mon 30 JanuarySat 4 February; Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, from Mon 13 - Sat 18 February; Lichfield Garrick, from Mon 27 March - Sat 1 April and Regent Theatre, Stoke-onTrent, Mon 3 - Sat 8 April
Visual Arts
Compton Verney, WarwickshirePORTRAIT MINIATURES: HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE GRANTCHESTER COLLECTION
Showcasing over 40 exquisite and intriguing miniatures from the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, until Sun 31 Dec
DUTCH FLOWERS Exhibition exploring the development of Dutch flower painting from its beginnings in the early 17th century to its blossoming in the late 18th century. Works include Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder, Rachel Ruysch and Jan van Huysum, until Sun 15 Jan
REENA KALLAT: COMMON GROUND A carefully woven tapestry of themes, investigating notions of borders, migration, inequity and citizenship, until Sun 22 Jan
Herbert Art Gallery & Museum, Coventry
ALI CHERRY: IF YOU PRICK US, DO WE NOT BLEED? Series of mixed media and sculptural installations which consider how histories of trauma can be explored through a response to museum & art gallery collections, until Sun 8 Jan
BROUGHT TO LIGHT The chance to explore a selection of paintings, drawings and sculptures which the venue has collected over the past 65 years, until Sun 8 Jan
GROWN UP BRITAIN An exhibition that chronicles the everyday experiences and cultural impact of young people through photographs, objects and stories, until Sun 12 Feb
Leamington Spa Art Gallery & Museum
OPEN 2022 Showcasing an eclectic mix of artistic forms from artists living and working in the West Midlands until Sun 8 Jan
The Mead Gallery, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
SIMON AND TOM BLOOR: PALLET STACK Minimalist art which closely resembles structures found in adventure playgrounds, where children and play workers use found materials to build apparatus for play, until Sun 18 Dec
Tuesday
RADICAL LANDSCAPES Featuring more than 100 works by leading modern and contemporary artists, including Turner Prize 2022 nominees Ingrid Pollard and Veronica Ryan, until Sun 18 Dec
Nuneaton Museum & Art Gallery
SHATTERED SILK: JINI RAWLINGS
Projections and silks are used to suggest the multi-layering of memory and meaning while focusing on creating poetic responses to stories found in original archives, until Sun 6 Nov
Rugby Art Gallery & Museum
LOUISE BOURGEOIS EXHIBITION
Selection of prints, drawings and sculptures from one of the most celebrated and influential artists of the 20th century, until Sat 19 Nov
Elsewhere:
NRITYA: COLLECTING THE STORY OF INDIAN DANCE IN THE BLACK COUNTRY 1960 - 2000 Featuring shared stories, memories, photographs, films and objects collected from pioneer dancers, teachers and choreographers, until Sun 13 Nov
WONDERLAND: BIRMINGHAM’S CINEMA STORIES Featuring unseen photographs and cinema memorabilia, alongside historic magic lanterns and optical toys from Birmingham’s collection, until Sun 13 Nov
COLLECTION STORIES Featuring internationally important showstoppers and everyday items, as well as objects from around the world and some made in Birmingham, until Sun 13 Nov
CANALETTO: A VENETIAN’S VIEW
Featuring stunning paintings on loan from the Woburn Abbey Collection as well as artworks from Worcester’s Fine Collection and loans from Birmingham Museums, Tate and Compton Verney, until Sat 7 Jan, Worcester City Art Gallery & Museum
PEASANTS AND PROVERBS: PIETER BRUEGHEL THE YOUNGER AS MORALIST AND ENTREPRENEUR Featuring 17 artworks drawn from public and private collections in the UK and Europe. Paintings, drawings, etchings and engravings all feature, until Sat 21 Jan, The Barber Institute, University of Birmingham
SHOUT FESTIVAL SHOWCASE WITH JOHN YEADON Solo exhibition by Coventrybased artist John Yeadon, whose artistic practice explores issues of politics, sexuality, food, national identity, grotesque and carnival, Wed 9 - Sun 13 Nov, Ikon Gallery, Brum
Gigs
KIEFER SUTHERLAND +
FINELINES Tues 1 Nov, O2 Institute, B’ham
PIP MILLETT Tues 1 Nov, O2 Academy
SUGABABES Tues 1 Nov, O2 Academy
ANASTACIA Tues 1 Nov, Symphony Hall, B’ham WARMDUSCHER Tues 1 Nov, The Mill, Digbeth, Birmingham
REMI HARRIS & TOM MOORE Tues 1 Nov, The Roses Theatre, Tewkesbury
Thurs 3 Nov, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
PETE JOSEF Thurs 3 Nov, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
TOVE LO + MIYA FOLICK Thurs 3 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
POP EVIL Thurs 3 Nov, O2 Institute, B’ham JOHN CALE Thurs 3 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
THE SIMON & GARFUNKEL STORY Thurs 3 Nov, Royal Spa Centre, Leamington Spa RESOLUTION 88 Thurs 3 Nov, Marrs Bar, Worcester
Leamington Spa
PEANESS Fri 4 Nov, The Tin Music and Arts, The Canal Basin, Coventry
THE STYLE COUNCILLORS Fri 4 Nov, hmv Empire, Coventry
TREACLE TOWN SKANKFEST Fri 4 Nov, Queens Hall, Nuneaton
ULTIMATE COLDPLAY Fri 4 Nov, Marrs Bar, Worcester
DYLAN Sat 5 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
KENDRICK LAMAR Sat 5 Nov, Utilita Arena Birmingham
FINN FOXELL Wed 2 Nov, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
JAKE CLEMONS Wed 2 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
JACK HARLOW Wed 2 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
40 WATT SUN Wed 2 Nov, The Flapper, Birmingham
CONNOR SELBY Wed 2 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
BEN HOLDER AND DAVE BROWNING Wed 2 Nov, Drapers’ Hall, Coventry
VEKTOR + CRYPTOSIS Wed 2 Nov, Queens Hall, Nuneaton
WESLEY GONZALEZ
VOODOO ROOM Thurs 3 Nov, Huntingdon Hall, Worcester BARBARA DICKSON Thurs 3 Nov, Swan Theatre, Worcester
THE UPBEAT BEATLES Thurs 3 Nov, Palace Theatre, Redditch
THE DOORS ALIVE Fri 4 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
MAGGIE ROGERS + SAMIA Fri 4 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham LEO SAYER Fri 4 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall KASABIAN + THE LATHUMS Fri 4 Nov, Utilita Arena Birmingham
DOWN FOR THE COUNTA CENTURY OF SWING Fri 4 Nov, The Roses Theatre, Tewkesbury
EMILY PORTMAN AND ROB HARBRON Fri 4 Nov, Temperance,
THE HUNNA Sat 5 Nov, The Mill, Digbeth, Birmingham
MCHALE’S PERMANENT BREW Sat 5 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
THE ENEMY Sat 5 Nov, hmv Empire, Coventry
THE BELGRAVE HOUSE BAND Sat 5 Nov, Queens Hall, Nuneaton
FAUX FIGHTERS Sat 5 Nov, Marrs Bar, Worcester
THE DRIFTERS Sun 6 Nov, Royal Spa Centre, Leamington Spa
FUNKE AND THE TWO TONE BABY Sun 6 Nov, Marrs Bar, Worcester
Classical Music
FRETWORK Featuring Emilia Benjamin, Jonathan Rees, Joanna Levine, Sam Stadlen & Richard Boothby. Programme includes works by Locke, Purcell, Jenkins & Lawes, Tues 1 Nov, St Mary’s Church, Warwick
RBC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Featuring Michael Seal (conductor), Wed 2 Nov, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
RBC CHAMBER CHOIR: FRENCH CONNECTIONS - FROM MACHAUT TO MESSIAEN Featuring Jeffrey Skidmore (conductor). Programme includes works by Charpentier, De Lalande, Fauré, Saint-Saëns, Debussy and Poulenc, Thurs 3 Nov, The Bradshaw Hall, Royal Birmingham Conservatoire
CITY OF BIRMINGHAM SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Featuring Ryan Bancroft (conductor) & Oliver Janes (clarinet). Programme includes works by Adams, Finzi & Rachmaninov, Thurs 3 Nov, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS AT 150: A SEA SYMPHONY Featuring the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, City of Birmingham Choir, Alexandra Lowe (soprano) & Benson Wilson (baritone), Sun 6 Nov, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
MANCHESTER CAMERATA ENSEMBLE: UNQUIET Featuring Carmen Villain. Programme includes works by Bryce Dessner, Hildur Gudnadottir, Philip Glass & Mica Levi, Sun 6 Nov, Jennifer Blackwell Performance Space, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
Comedy
JON RICHARDSON Wed 2 - Thurs 3 Nov, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
STEVE GRIBBIN, MARK NELSON, CARL HUTCHINSON, ELEANOR TIERNAN & INGRID DAHLE Fri 4 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
DARA O’BRIAIN Fri 4 - Sat 5 Nov, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
STEVE GRIBBIN, MARK NELSON, CARL HUTCHINSON & ELEANOR TIERNAN Sat 5 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
ZOE LYONS, BRENNAN REECE, NOEL JAMES & SCOTT BENNETT Sat 5 Nov, The Albany Theatre, Coventry
MILTON JONES Sat 5 Nov, Swan Theatre, Worcester
LUISA OMIELAN Sun 6 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
HARRY HILL Sun 6 Nov, The Alexandra, Birmingham
PAUL CHOWDHRY Sun 6 Nov, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
Sat 5 Nov, Loft Theatre, Leamington Spa
TARTUFFE The return of Iqbal Khan’s acclaimed production, in which Moliere’s classic farce is set in the Sparkhill area of Birmingham, until Sat 5 Nov, The Rep, Birmingham O, ISLAND! Nina Segal’s funny & furious modern myth, exploring how borders can be changed by people, by nature and by accident, until Sat 5 Nov, Studio Theatre, The Other Place, Stratford-upon-Avon
DEAR JACK, DEAR LOUISE The Nonentities present an amateur production of Ken Ludwig’s heartwarming story of his parents’ courtship during World War Two, until Sat 5 Nov, The Rose Theatre, Kidderminster
EUSEBIUS QUARTET Featuring Beatrice Philips and Venetia Jollands (violins), Hannah Shaw (viola) and Hannah Sloane (cello). Programme includes works by Haydn, Howard Skempton & Beethoven, Fri 4 Nov, Royal Pump Rooms, Leamington Spa
RBC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Featuring Michael Seal and Yannick Mayaud (conductors). Programme includes works by Angela Elizabeth Slater, Errollyn Wallen, Doreen Carwithen and Leonard Bernstein, Fri 4 Nov, The Bradshaw Hall, Royal Birmingham Conservatoire
BROMPTON STRING QUARTET: ILLUMINATING WOMEN Featuring Sarah Parkin (soprano). Programme includes works by Florence Price, Angela Elizabeth Slater, Errollyn Wallen and Grażyna Bacewicz, Fri 4 Nov, Recital Hall, Royal Birmingham Conservatoire
THE ELGAR CHORALE OF WORCESTER: ELGAR & THE GERMAN ROMANTICS Featuring Piers Maxim (conductor), Christopher Allsop (organist) & Shulah Oliver (violinst), Sat 5 Nov, St Martin’s Church, London Road, Worcester
Theatre
TILL I DIE An exploration of the gender stereotypes of the slasher genre. Expect ‘fake blood, that famous phone-call scene, and an outspoken feminist’, until Tues 1 Nov, The Rep, Birmingham
THE HAUNTING A spine-chilling play, based on several original ghost stories by Charles Dickens, until Fri 4 Nov, Criterion Theatre, Coventry
STRICTLY BALLROOM THE MUSICAL Kevin Clifton and Maisie Smith star in a brand-new musical directed and co-choreographed by Craig Revel Horwood, until Sat 5 Nov, Birmingham Hippodrome
THE BIRTHDAY PARTY Amateur staging of Harold Pinter’s classic play, until
IVY TILLER: VICAR’S DAUGHTER, SQUIRREL KILLER Bea Roberts’ darkly comic play, which challenges who belongs and who thrives, until Sat 5 Nov, Studio Theatre, The Other Place, Stratford-upon-Avon
THE MOUSETRAP Agatha Christie’s ‘genre-defying’ murder-mystery - and the world’s longest-running play, until Sat 5 Nov, The Alexandra, Birmingham
two gays, Satan and the ghost of Margaret Thatcher, Tues 1 Nov, The Old Joint Stock, Birmingham
SHE’S ROYAL A brand-new stage production revealing the untold relationship between Her Majesty Queen Victoria and two extraordinary women of colour: Sarah Forbes Bonetta and Sophia Duleep Singh, Tues 1 Nov, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
BEAUTIFUL: THE CAROLE KING MUSICAL Award-winning production telling the inspiring true story of King’s remarkable rise to stardom, Tues 1Sat 5 Nov, Belgrade Theatre, Coventry
A CHRISTMAS CAROL Adrian Edmondson plays Ebenezer Scrooge in David Edgar’s critically acclaimed adaptation of Charles Dickens’ muchloved classic, until Sun 1 Jan, Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratfordupon-Avon
THATCHER’S NOT DEAD, SHE’S LIVING IN MY COUNCIL FLAT! Spooktacular comedy treat featuring a ouijja board,
WUTHERING HEIGHTS Caramba Theatre Company presents its version of Charlotte Bronte’s haunting tale of love, family, betrayal, passion and heartbreak, Wed 2 - Sat 5 Nov, The Bear Pitt Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon
THE HAUNTING OF GIBSIDE FOLLY Projected imagery and special effects combine to create a live performance that contains ‘moments of extreme tension and terror’, Thurs 3 - Sat 5 Nov, The Old Joint Stock, Birmingham
MATILDA THE MUSICAL JR Stratford Musical Theatre Company present an amateur staging of Roald Dahl’s much-loved story, Thurs 3 - Sun 6 Nov, Stratford Play House, Stratfordupon-Avon
Kids Theatre
THE NAUGHTY FOX Toucan Theatre present a multisensory show for younger audiences. Set in a magical forest, follow Fox as he goes on an adventure and learns that sharing is caring, Tues 1 Nov, The Albany Theatre, Coventry
PEPPA PIG’S BEST DAY EVER Live theatre for younger audiences, packed with adventure, fun, songs, games and laughter, Wed 2 - Thurs 3 Nov, Malvern Theatres
Events
WHAT A PICTURE TRAIL Reimagine yourself with this guide to drawing amazing ears, freaky hairstyles and much more, until Sat 21 Jan, Worcester City Art Gallery & Museum
SIMPLY CHRISTMAS - THE CRAFTY CHRISTMAS SHOW Exhibitors showcase exclusive ranges of bespoke and unusual gifts, Thurs 3Sun 6 Nov, NEC, Birmingham
THE CREATIVE CRAFT SHOW A haven for knitting, cross stitch, paper crafting, jewellery, dressmaking and stitching enthusiasts, offering all the latest supplies as well as festive ideas and inspiration, Thurs 3 - Sun 6 Nov, NEC, Birmingham
Dance
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST Join Ballet Theatre UK for one of the most enchanting love stories of all time, Wed 2 Nov, The Albany Theatre, Coventry
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST Join Ballet Theatre UK for one of the most enchanting love stories of all time, Fri 4 Nov, Swan Theatre, Worcester
THE NUTCRACKER Crown Ballet presents its version of the ultimate fairytale, where goodness and beauty triumph over evil, Sat 5 Nov, The Roses, Tewkesbury
Light Entertainment
DAN HAGLEY: HALFWAY ROUND THE BEND ‘Honest and bonkers’ new solo comedy show about living with mental illness, Fri 4 Nov, Midlands Arts Centre (MAC), Birmingham
Talks & Spoken
Word
NED BOULTING: RETOUR DE NED ITV’s Tour de France commentator talks about the peaks and troughs of ‘the silliest and grandest month of the year’, Fri 4 Nov, Royal Pump Rooms, Leamington Spa
AN EVENING WITH DEBBIE HARRY & CHRIS STEIN Find out about five decades of Blondie and gain insight into the duo’s lives as artists and creative partners, Sun 6 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
BIRMINGHAM FRANKFURT CHRISTMAS MARKET The largest authentic German Christmas market outside of Germany or Austria, offering a large range of traditional goods and gifts and a selection of tempting food & drink, Thurs 3 Nov - Fri 23 Dec, throughout Birmingham city centre
ICE SKATE BIRMINGHAM Enjoy an ice skate session or take a ride on the big wheel and marvel at the views across the city, Thurs 3 Nov - Sun 8 Jan, Centenary Square, Birmingham
AFTER HOURS Exploration of fire, death and regeneration, taking place between All Souls Day and Bonfire Night, Fri 4 Nov, Compton Verney, Warwickshire
COVENTRY CATHEDRAL TOWER CLIMB Challenge yourself to climb 180 steps to enjoy magnificent views of Coventry and the surrounding area, Fri 4 - Sat 5 Nov, Coventry Cathedral
ULTIMATE FIREWORKS SPECTACULAR An event taking the electrifying bursts, bangs and howls of amazing fireworks to another level with music, lights and live-action storytelling, Fri 4 - Sun 6 Nov, Alton Towers Resort, Staffordshire
BAKE INTERNATIONAL Featuring ‘the very best suppliers, the biggest baking stars’, demos, workshops, and a dedicated baking competition, Fri 4 - Sun 6 Nov, NEC, Birmingham
THE BABY & TODDLER SHOW Featuring hundreds of products and essentials at the best prices, all under one roof, Fri 4 - Sun 6 Nov, NAEC, Stoneleigh
CAKE INTERNATIONAL Join thousands of cake decorating and cake art lovers, Fri 4 - Sun 6 Nov, NEC, Birmingham
SHOUT FESTIVAL Birmingham’s annual festival of queer art & culture, Fri 4Sat 12 Nov, various venues across Birmingham
ROALD DAHL DAY Celebrate the author with storytime, games, craft activities and poetry, Sat 5 Nov, The Hive, Worcester
The biggest fireworks display in Birmingham, plus an on-site funfair, Sat 5 Nov, Edgbaston Stadium
LET’S WATCH AND MAKE: WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE Start the morning adorning your very own royal crowns, then head into the chapter house for a fun-filled film, Sat 5 Nov, Coventry Cathedral
YOUNG DRIVER EXPERIENCES Classic
car and fire engine-driving experiences, Sun 6 Nov, British Motor Museum, Gaydon
QUIET AT THE AQUARIUM A quieter SEA LIFE experience that aims to provide a more comfortable visit for those with autism and other sensory requirements, Sun 6 Nov, National SEA LIFE Centre, Birmingham
Gigs
KEEP OF KALESSIN + DØDHEIMSGARD + CADAVERS + BORNHOLM + TEMPLE OF EVIL Mon 7 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
THE AUSTRALIAN PINK FLOYD Mon 7 Nov, Symphony Hall, B’ham
JULIA JACKLIN Mon 7 Nov, The Mill, Digbeth, Birmingham
LUST FOR YOUTH Tues 8 Nov, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
PJ MORTON Tues 8 Nov, O2 Institute, B’ham
ALY & AJ + HAZEL ENGLISH Tues 8 Nov, O2 Academy, B’ham
SAM LEWIS Tues 8 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
PETER KNIGHT’S GIGSPANNER Tues 8 Nov, The Fleece Inn, Bretforton, Nr Evesham
STILL WOOZY Wed 9 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
JAMIE WEBSTER Wed 9 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
THE WONDER YEARS Wed 9 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
RIC SANDERS AND VO FLETCHER + ANNA RYDER Wed 9 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
A BEAUTIFUL NOISENEIL DIAMOND TRIBUTE Wed 9 Nov, Belgrade Theatre, Coventry
SOUMIK DATTA Wed 9 Nov, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
CHRISTINA ALDEN & ALEX PATTERSON Wed 9 Nov, The Fleece Inn,
Bretforton, Nr Evesham
ROB KEMP’S THE ELVIS DEAD Thurs 10 Nov, Hare & Hounds, B’ham SET IT OFF + CEMETERY SUN + LIZZY FARRALL + WEATHERS Thurs 10 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
STICK TO YOUR GUNS + LANDMVRKS + SCOWL Thurs 10 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
LIGHTNING SEEDS + BADLY DRAWN BOY Thurs 10 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall SCARECROW Thurs 10 Nov, Bromsgrove Folk Club
HANNAH WOOF Thurs 10 Nov, hmv Empire, Coventry
CHRIS THILE + SAM AMIDON Thurs 10 Nov, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
GAZ BROOKFIELD + HEARTWORK Thurs 10 Nov, Marrs Bar, Worcester
YOUTH KILLED IT Thurs 10 Nov, Drummonds, Worcester
THE SENSATIONAL 60S EXPERIENCE Thurs 10 Nov, Palace Theatre, Redditch
ABSOLUTE REGGAE Thurs 10 Nov, Malvern Theatres
REMA Fri 11 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
ABSOLUTE BOWIE Fri 11 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
JAMIE T Fri 11 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham BIFFY CLYRO + ARCHITECTS Fri 11 Nov, Resorts World Arena, Birmingham
TALON Fri 11 Nov, The Roses Theatre,
Tewkesbury NORTHERN LIVE Fri 11 Nov, The Assembly, Leamington Spa
NILE + KRISIUN + INELEMENT + DECREPID Fri 11 Nov, hmv Empire, Coventry GOGO PENGUIN Fri 11 Nov, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
EBONY BUCKLE Fri 11 Nov, Queens Hall, Nuneaton
HUMDRUM EXPRESS Fri 11 Nov, Marrs Bar, Worcester
TOYAH Fri 11 Nov, Huntingdon Hall, Worcester
ALEXANDER 23 Sat 12 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
THE CLONE ROSES + THE JAMES EXPERIENCE Sat 12 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
N-DUBZ + WES NELSON Sat 12 Nov, Utilita Arena Birmingham
CLEARWATER CREEDENCE REVIVAL + JOE MARTIN Sat 12 Nov, The Assembly, Leamington Spa
BEAUX GRIS GRIS & THE APOCALYPSE Sat 12 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
TURIN BRAKES Sat 12 Nov, hmv Empire, Coventry
GOSPEL REVISITED PROJECT Sat 12 Nov, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
STATE OF QUO Sat 12 Nov, Queens Hall, Nuneaton
OLLY IRWIN FEST Sat 12 Nov, Marrs Bar, Worcester
STRONG ENOUGH - CHER TRIBUTE Sat 12 Nov, Palace Theatre, Redditch
MARTIN SIMPSON Sat 12 Nov, West Malvern Social Club
SQUEEZE + DR JOHN COOPER CLARKE Sat 12 - Sun 13 Nov, Symphony Hall, B’ham
THE STYLISTICS Sun 13 Nov, The Alexandra, Birmingham
ANNA RYDER Sun 13 Nov, The Tin Music and Arts, The Canal Basin, Coventry
Classical
LUNCHTIME ORGAN CONCERT WITH THOMAS TROTTER: CELEBRATING THE BICENTENARY OF THE BIRTH OF CÉSAR FRANCK Mon 7 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
NOBUYUKI TSUJII Programme includes works by Beethoven, Liszt, Ravel & Kapustin, Mon 7 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
BELGIAN NATIONAL ORCHESTRA Featuring Roberto González-Monjas (conductor) & Paul Lewis (piano). Programme includes works by Respighi, Mozart & Saint-Saëns, Tues 8 Nov, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
CBSO CENTRE STAGE: VAUGHAN WILLIAMS AT 150 Featuring Philip Brett & Charlotte Skinner (violins), Christopher Yates & Catherine Bower (violas) & Eduardo Vassallo (cello). Programme includes works by Vaughan Williams & Beethoven, Thurs 10 Nov, CBSO Centre, Birmingham
ORCHESTRA OF THE SWAN: FROM THE NEW WORLD Featuring Priya Mitchell (violin) & Michael Collins (conductor). Programme includes works by Copland, Jessie Montgomery, Barber & Dvorak, Thurs 10 Nov, Warwick Hall, Warwick School
CBSO VAUGHAN WILLIAMS AT 150: MYSTICAL SONGS Featuring Michael Seal (conductor), Roderick Williams (baritone), City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and CBSO Choir, Thurs 10 Nov, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
CBSO: VAUGHAN WILLIAMS AT 150: SCOTT OF THE ANTARTIC Featuring Martyn Brabbins (conductor), Katie Trethewey (soprano), CBSO Youth Chorus and City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Fri 11 Nov, Symphony Hall, Birmingham WORCESTER PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA 50TH ANNIVERSARY CONCERT Programme includes George Owen’s prize-winning Worcestershire Rhapsody, alongside works by Elgar & Dvorak, Sat 12 Nov, Pershore Abbey, Worcestershire
Emma Denton (cello). Programme includes works by Mendelssohn, Shostakovich & Beethoven, Sun 13 Nov, Huntingdon Hall, Worcester
EX CATHEDRA: SONGS OF PROTEST Featuring Backbeat Percussion Quartet, Jeffrey Skidmore (conductor), Imogen Russell (soprano) and Lawrence White (bass). Programme includes works by MacMillan, Beamish. Joubert & Roth, Sun 13 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
Comedy
MARK SIMMONS Tues 8 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
TOM STADE Wed 9 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
OLGA KOCH Wed 9 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
ZOE LYONS, JEN BRISTER, KATE MCCABE & MAUREEN YOUNGER Thurs 10 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
COMEDY CAROUSEL WITH ANDY ROBINSON, CRAIG HILL & SCOTT
BENNETT Thurs 10 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
JASON MANFORD Thurs 10 Nov, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
JASON BYRNE Fri 11 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
CHANDOS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Featuring Michael Lloyd (conductor). Programme includes works by Nicolai, Wood & Tchaikovsky, Sun 13 Nov, Malvern Theatres
CARDUCCI STRING QUARTET Featuring Matthew Denton & Michelle Fleming (violin), Eoin Schmidt-Martin (viola) &
RUDI LICKWOOD, CHRISTOPHER MACARTHUR-BOYD, CRAIG HILL, SCOTT BENNETT & HARRY WRIGHT Fri 11 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
ROB AUTON Fri 11 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
JASON MANFORD Fri 11 Nov, Utilita Arena Birmingham
OMID DJALILI Fri 11 Nov, Palace Theatre, Redditch
RUDI LICKWOOD, CHRISTOPHER MACARTHUR-BOYD, CRAIG HILL & SCOTT BENNETT Sat 12 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
ROB NEWMAN Sat 12 Nov, Midlands Arts Centre, Birmingham
ROB AUTON Sat 12 Nov, Royal Spa Centre, Leamington Spa
OMID DJALILI Sat 12 Nov, Stratford Playhouse, Stratford-upon-Avon
SUKH OJLA, ANUVAB PAL, KAI SAMRA & RAJ POOJARA Sat 12 Nov, Belgrade Theatre, Coventry
HENNING WEHN Sat 12 Nov, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
JACK CARROLL Sun 13 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
RAJ POOJARA, SUKH OJLA, JAY
SODAGAR & ANUVAB PAL Sun 13 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
HARRIET KEMSLEY Sun 13 Nov, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
Theatre
THE SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION Joe Absolom and Ben Onwukwe star in a new stage version of Stephen King’s famous story, Mon 7 - Sat 12 Nov, The Alexandra, Birmingham
CHILDREN OF THE WOLF Amateur staging of John Peacock’s psychological thriller, Mon 7 - Sat 12 Nov, Talisman Theatre, Kenilworth
THE LAVENDER HILL MOB Miles Jupp & Justin Edwards star in a new staging of the classic Ealing Comedy, Mon 7Sat 12 Nov, Malvern Theatres
WELSH NATIONAL OPERA - THE MAKROPULAS AFFAIR Janáček’s tale of immortal diva Emilia Marty and her desire to be the greatest singer of all times. Sung in Czech, with English surtitles, Tues 8 Nov, Birmingham Hippodrome
THE ODYSSEY Simon Kemp performs Tony Peters’ dramatisation of an epic story, Tues 8 - Wed 9 Nov, The Bear Pitt Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon
THE SECOND BEST BED One-woman show in which Liz Grand stars as Anne Hathaway on the night of Shakespeare’s funeral, Tues 8 - Wed 9 Nov, Malvern Theatres
PETER PAN Bilston Operatic Company present an amateur staging of JM Barrie’s swashbuckling adventure, Tues 8 - Sat 12 Nov, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
DON’T STOP BELIEVING Worcester Musical Theatre Company present an ‘evening of entertainment full of inspiring songs, spectacular dance and laugh-out-loud comedy’, Tues 8Sun 13 Nov, Swan Theatre, Worcester
LA BOHEME Welsh National Opera present Puccini’s tale of love, loss, rebellion and freedom, Wed 9 - Fri 11 Nov, Birmingham Hippodrome
JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR A Warwick School & King’s High School joint senior production, Wed 9 - Sat 12 Nov, Bridge House Theatre, Warwick NATIVITY! THE MUSICAL Amateur staging of the festive favourite, Wed 9 - Sat 12 Nov, The Albany Theatre, Coventry
AN IMPROVISED MURDER Foghorn Unscripted present an old-fashioned night of mystery and mayhem, Thurs 10 - Fri 11 Nov, Vesta Tilley Studio, Worcester
MRS CHURCHILL - MY LIFE WITH WINSTON Liz Grand’s informative portrayal of Clementine Churchill, Thurs 10 - Fri 11 Nov, Malvern
Theatres
THE HOUSE THAT DRIPPED BLOOD A new version of Oresteia - a trilogy of Greek tragedies telling the story of the Trojan Wars and the shocking aftermath, Thurs 10 - Sat 12 Nov, Playbox Theatre, The Dream Factory, Warwick
THE ORPHANAGE ‘Spine-chilling’ theatre which promises to be the ‘ghost story of the year’, Fri 11 - Sun 27 Nov, The Blue Orange Theatre, Birmingham
MIGRATIONS Welsh National Opera present a new opera exploring the highs and lows of migration, Sat 12 Nov, Birmingham Hippodrome
WHERE IS MRS CHRISTIE? One-woman show exploring the mystery of one of the biggest and most extensive police hunts in history - the 11-day search for missing crime writer Agatha Christie, Sat 12 Nov, Malvern Theatres
Recital Hall, Royal Birmingham Conservatoire
BLACK, QUEER AND DONE An intense, emotive, unfiltered documentary exploring the experiences of Black Queer people within arts, culture & media, Fri 11 Nov, Belgrade Theatre, Coventry
ones, Fri 11 Nov, Worcester Cathedral
COVENTRY CATHEDRAL TOWER CLIMB Challenge yourself to climb 180 steps to enjoy magnificent views of Coventry and the surrounding area, Fri 11 - Sat 12 Nov, Coventry Cathedral
THE 39 STEPS Four actors take on a multitude of roles in a reworking of the classic Hitchcock film, Sat 12Sat 19 Nov, Rugby Theatre
Kids Theatre
TALES FROM ACORN WOOD Theatre for younger audiences based on favourite stories by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler, Sat 12 - Sun 13 Nov, Royal Spa Centre, Leamington Spa
Light Entertainment
BOB BROLLY AND FRIENDS Midday variety show featuring vocalist Lisa Jane Kelsey, comedian Paul Boardman and host Andy Eastwood, Tues 8 Nov, Belgrade Theatre, Coventry
TWIST AND SHOUT Music, theatre and dance combine in a nostalgic look at the golden age of British pop, Thurs 10 Nov, The Core Theatre, Solihull
STRICTLY CHARLESTON: A 1920S MURDER MYSTERY Interactive evening of murder, mystery and food, Thurs 10 Nov, The Roses, Tewkesbury BABY LAME - FINAL BABY GIRL! This debut solo show from the awardwinning cabaret star promises ‘bombastic bad taste with kinky roleplays, trash-tastic original songs and camp film clips...’, Fri 11 Nov,
QUEENZ THE SHOW WITH BALLS Deathdropping divas present reimagined classics from the Spice Girls, Lady Gaga, Little Mix, Britney Spears and more... X-Factor and Union J pop sensation Jaymi Hensley stars, Sat 12 Nov, The Roses, Tewkesbury
YOUR HORSE LIVE Featuring over 300 exhibitors, talented riders and stars, ‘the best masterclasses around’ and a chance to get closer to the celebs than at any other equine show, Fri 11 - Sun 13 Nov, NAEC, Stoneleigh
LANCASTER INSURANCE CLASSIC MOTOR SHOW The ultimate season finale for classic car/bike owners, collectors, club members and enthusiasts, Fri 11 - Sun 13 Nov, NEC, Birmingham
MCM COMIC CON BIRMINGHAM A weekend celebration of all things pop culture, Fri 11 - Sun 13 Nov, NEC, Birmingham
THINKING DRINKERS Cabaret-style show hosted by an award-winning duo described as ‘experts, comedians, alco-demics and hooch historians’, Sat 12 Nov, Huntingdon Hall, Worcester
Talks & Spoken Word
AN EVENING WITH SNOOKER GREATS Steve Davis and Dennis Taylor recreate the classic 1985 black ball final... Thurs 10 Nov, Stratford Playhouse, Stratford-upon-Avon
Events
CRIMES OF PASSION Featuring true stories of queer crime and imprisonment, Wed 9 Nov, West Midlands Police Museum, B’ham ST RICHARD’S HOSPICE LIGHTS OF LOVE Hundreds of twinkling lights will be lit in memory and celebration of loved
LANTERN FESTIVAL Discover an epic lantern trail and explore the walkthrough areas of the park, Fri 11 Nov - Sun 8 Jan, West Midland Safari Park, Bewdley, Nr Kidderminster
THE TEXTILE FAIR Support local artists and makers by shopping for Christmas, Sat 12 - Sun 13 Nov, Compton Verney, Warwickshire
VINTAGE VERA KILO SALE Featuring clothing from brands including Nike, Adidas and Ralph Lauren, Sat 12Sun 13 Nov, FarGo Village, Coventry
SANTA’S WINTER WONDERLAND With real snow, real animals and the allnew winter wonderland show, Sat 12 Nov - Sun 1 Jan, Snowdome, Staffs
Gigs
JILL ANDREWS Mon 14
Nov, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
FUTURE ISLANDS Mon 14 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
JANICE BURNS & JON DORAN Mon 14 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
KEZIA GILL Tues 15 Nov, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
EVANESCENCE & WITHIN TEMPTATION Tues 15 Nov, Utilita Arena Birmingham
SKINNER AND T’WITCH Tues 15 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
WIDOWSPEAK Wed 16 Nov, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
BRETT YOUNG Wed 16 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
LOW Wed 16 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
WISHBONE ASH Wed 16 Nov, The Assembly, Leamington Spa
DAISY BRAIN Thurs 17 Nov, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
RAINBOW KITTEN
SURPRISE Thurs 17 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
MARTIN SIMPSON Thurs 17 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
SKIDS Thurs 17 Nov, hmv Empire, Coventry
JESSIE REID Fri 18 Nov, The Sunflower Lounge, Birmingham
NINA NESBITT Fri 18 Nov, O2 Institute,
Birmingham
PI’ERRE BOURNE Fri 18 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
SEA GIRLS + LAURAN HIBBERD Fri 18 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
THE ICICLE WORKS Fri 18 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
BIG JIM & THE ALABAMA BOOGIE BOYS Fri 18 Nov, The Core Theatre, Solihull
KAISER CHIEFS + THE FRATELLIS + THE SHERLOCKS Fri 18 Nov, Utilita Arena Birmingham
FEROCIOUS DOG Fri 18 Nov, The Assembly, Leamington Spa
EMMA WILSON BLUES BAND Fri 18 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
WE THREE KINGS OF ROCK ‘N’ ROLL Fri 18 Nov, Stratford Playhouse
WE ARE REVIVAL + NIGHTWALKER Fri 18 Nov, The Tin Music and Arts, The Canal Basin, Coventry
ULTIMATE R’N’B Fri 18 Nov, The Rialto, Coventry
THE MERSEY BEATLES Fri 18 Nov, Albany Theatre, Coventry
JOHNNY MOPED Fri 18 Nov, Queens Hall, Nuneaton
THE ORB Fri 18 Nov, Marrs Bar, Worcester
BACK INTO HELL - MEAT LOAF AND JIM STEINMAN TRIBUTE Fri 18 Nov, Malvern Theatres
THE ASSIST Sat 19 Nov, O2 Institute, B’ham
MARCUS MUMFORD Sat 19 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
UK FOO FIGHTERS Sat 19 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
HYDE PROJECT Sat 19 Nov, The Asylum, Birmingham
JUDY COLLINS Sat 19 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
THE DUNWELLS + ABI ROWBERRY Sat 19 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
THE SELECTER Sat 19 Nov, hmv Empire, Coventry
SIMON GOODALL & THE BOURNE AGAIN SHADOWS Sat 19 Nov, Number 8, Pershore VARDIS Sat 19 Nov, Queens Hall, Nuneaton KINGS OF LYON Sat 19 Nov, Drummonds, Worcester
SHOWADDYWADDY Sat 19 Nov, Malvern Theatres
LAURA ASTON Sun 20 Nov, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
CHRIS CLEVERLEY Sun 20 Nov, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham MUNA + BIMINI Sun 20 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
LUNA KELLER & DOM MALIN Sun 20 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
MARTI PELLOW Sun 20 Nov, Albany Theatre, Coventry
RIVAL CONSOLES + PENGUIN CAFE + HATIS NOIT + DOUGLAS DARE Sun 20 Nov, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
Classical
CBSO PLAYS PROKOFIEV & DVORÁK Featuring Elena Schwarz (conductor) & Clara-Jumi Kang (violin). Programme includes works by Dukas, Prokofiev & Dvorák, Tues 15 Nov, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
ORCHESTRA OF THE SWAN: AN ENGLISH FANTASIA Featuring Nick Daniel (oboe) and Jason Lai (conductor). Programme includes works by Britten, Purcell, Vaughan Williams, Delius, Walton & James Wilson, Wed 16 Nov, Stratford Play House, Stratford-upon-Avon
FÉLICITÉ PIANO TRIO Featuring Ricardo Brown Roger (violin), Lucy Samuels (cello) & Lucy Eccleshall (piano). Programme includes works by Beamish, Schumann, Mendelssohn & Boulanger, Fri 18 Nov, The Hall at Kingsley School, Leamington Spa WARWICKSHIRE SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA: THE JOY OF DANCE Family concert featuring Hannah Young (narrator) & Paul Leddington Wright (conductor), Sun 20 Nov, Royal Spa Centre, Leamington Spa ORCHESTRA OF THE SWAN: INTO THE WOODS Featuring Andrew Griffiths (conductor) & Toyal Willcox (narrator). Programme comprises Paul Patterson’s Three Little Pigs and Little Red Riding Hood, Sun 20 Nov, Stratford Play House, Stratford-uponAvon
Comedy
RAY BRADSHAW Tues 15 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham ANDY ROBINSON, NATHAN CATON & ABIGOLIAH SCHAMAUN Thurs 17 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham TOM STADE Thurs 17 Nov, Huntingdon Hall, Worcester
MAUREEN YOUNGER, BEN VAN DER VELDE, NATHAN CATON, ABIGOLIAH SCHAMAUN & FARHAN SOLO Fri 18 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham ANDY ZALTZMAN Fri 18 Nov, Huntingdon Hall, Worcester
MAUREEN YOUNGER, BEN VAN DER VELDE, NATHAN CATON & ABIGOLIAH SCHAMAUN Sat 19 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
ED GAMBLE Sat 19 Nov, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
FAMILY COMEDY WITH BEN VAN DER VELDE, BARBARA NICE & MAT RICARDO Sun 20 Nov, The Glee Club, B’ham ED GAMBLE Sun 20 Nov, The Alexandra, Birmingham
Theatre
SHERLOCK HOLMES: THE VALLEY OF FEAR Blackeyed Theatre bring Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle’s final Sherlock Holmes novel to life in a brand-new production, Mon 14 - Tues 15 Nov, Royal Spa Centre, Leamington Spa AGATHA CHRISTIE’S THE MIRROR CRACK’D Susie Blake stars as Miss Marple in a brand-new stage adaptation of Agatha Christie’s famous novel, Mon 14 - Sat 19 Nov, Malvern Theatres
NOUGHTS AND CROSSES Pilot Theatre present a story of love, revolution, and what it means to grow up in a divided world, Tues 15 - Sat 19 Nov, The Alexandra, Birmingham KIPPS THE NEW HALF A SIXPENCE MUSICAL Amateur staging presented by St Augustine’s Musical Theatre Company, Tues 15 - Sat 19 Nov, The Core Theatre, Solihull
SHREK THE MUSICAL Amateur production presented by Redditch Operatic Society, Tues 15 - Sat 19 Nov, Palace Theatre, Redditch DRACULA Don’t Go Into The Cellar present a one-man show adapted from Bram Stoker’s Gothic novel, Thurs 17 Nov, The Albany Theatre, Coventry
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST A reimagining of the classic fairytale that promises to leave audiences ‘spellbound’, Fri 18 Nov - Fri 16 Dec, The Old Rep, Birmingham
THE BLUEBIRD Join Mary Berylune, a Seer, and her tree spirit, Micky, on their quest to find the elusive bluebird and help unlock its mystery, Sat 19 Nov, The Rep, Birmingham
NATIVITY! THE MUSICAL Debbie Isitt’s heart-warming festive musical, Sat 19 Nov - Sat 7 Jan, The Rep, B’ham
Kids Theatre
THE BEAR Pins And Needles’ heartwarming stage show, based on Raymond Briggs’ classic children’s book, Thurs 17 - Fri 30 Dec, Midlands Arts Centre (MAC), Birmingham
Dance
THE NUTCRACKER Birmingham Royal Ballet present Sir Peter Wright’s world-famous production, Sat 19 Nov - Sat 10 Dec, Birmingham Hippodrome
Light Entertainment
SING-A-LONG-A-GARETH Gareth Malone will be joined by his band and a group of stellar singers as he guides you through an evening of song, Mon 14 Nov, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
GARY BARLOW - A DIFFERENT STAGE
Gary talks about his life and career, Wed 16 - Sun 20 Nov, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
BINGO AT TIFFANY’S Join awardwinning comedian Tracey Collins (Tina T’urner Tea Lady) for an evening of ‘hilarious bingo games, raucous singalongs and glamorous dancing’, Sat 19 Nov, Old Joint Stock Theatre, Birmingham
Talks & Spoken
Word
AN EVENING WITH RICKY HATTON Gary Newbon MBE interviews one of the greatest European fighters of all time... Mon 14 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
Events
WORLD NURSERY RHYME WEEK
SPECIAL: RHYMETASTIC CRAFTS Sing along to a selection of nursery rhymes and play along with movement, sensory toys and Makaton, Tues 15 Nov, Herbert Art Gallery & Museum, Coventry
CHRISTMAS AT CATHEDRAL SQUARE
Featuring craft, gift and food & drink stalls, Wed 16 Nov - Sun 18 Dec, Cathedral Square, Birmingham
PLANETARIUM
LATES: EXPERIENCING
THE NORTHERN LIGHTS See and hear about the experiences of Birmingham-based photographer and hiker Martin Kulhavý, on his trips to Norway to photograph the Northern Lights, Thurs 17 Nov, Thinktank Birmingham Science Museum
FESTIVE GIFT FAIR Featuring hundreds of colourful stalls and lots of live entertainment, Thurs 17 - Sun 20 Nov, NEC, Birmingham
THE MURDER OF WALTER FELLOWS Consider the evidence, follow the clues and interrogate the suspects in their cells as you attempt to get to the bottom of a murder-mystery, Fri 18
Nov, West Midlands Police Museum, Birmingham
STEAM IN LIGHTS Immersive nighttime experience turning the Severn Valley into a colourful light trail, Fri 18 - Sat 19 Nov, Severn Valley Railway, Bewdley, Nr Kidderminster
artisans and independent retailers, Sat 19 Nov, Belgrade Theatre, Coventry
WINTER CHOCOLATE MARKET An event bringing together the finest quality artisan producers of chocolate, Sat 19 - Sun 20 Nov, FarGo Village, Coventry
MOTORCYCLE LIVE IN ASSOCIATION WITH BIKESURE The UK’s largest motorcycle show, supported by over 50 motorcycle and scooter manufacturers, Sat 19 - Sun 27 Nov, NEC, Birmingham
PEAKY BLINDERS NIGHT Grab your flatcap, don your finest threads and step into the smoky underworld of the 1920s, Fri 18 - Sat 19 Nov, Black Country Living Museum, Dudley COVENTRY CATHEDRAL TOWER CLIMB Challenge yourself to climb 180 steps to enjoy magnificent views of Coventry and the surrounding area, 19 Nov, Coventry Cathedral
LUMINATE COOMBE Captivating light trail through Coombe’s stunning and historic grounds, Fri 18 Nov - Mon 2 Jan, Coombe Abbey, Coventry WINTER HANDMADE AND GIFT FAIR Featuring a curated range of local
CHRISTMAS CELEBRATION WEEKENDS Festive celebrations with a Santa stage show and this year’s pantomime, Cinderella, Sat 19 NovFri 23 Dec, Cadbury World, Birmingham
SANTA’S GROTTO EXPERIENCE Get ready to dive into the ultimate underwater fish-massy adventure with Santa and his elves, Sat 19 NovSat 24 Dec, National SEA LIFE Centre, Birmingham
GREAT BRITISH LAND ROVER SHOW
Featuring everything from parts and accessories to bespoke vehicle builds and incredible restorations, Sun 20 Nov, NAEC, Stoneleigh
Gigs
WET LEG Mon 21 Nov, O2 Institute, B’ham FONTAINES D.C. + WUNDERHORSE Mon 21 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
BELLOWHEAD Mon 21 Nov, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
MARTIN STEPHENSON & THE DAINTEES Tues 22 Nov, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
NOTHING,NOWHERE. + GUCCIHIGHWATERS + SADEYES Tues 22 Nov, O2 Academy, B’ham NIGHTWISH Tues 22 Nov, Resorts World Arena, Birmingham SHE’KOYOKH Tues 22 Nov, Playbox Theatre, Warwick
PROJECT BLACKBIRD Tues 22 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
HELLO AGAIN…THE STORY OF NEIL DIAMOND Tues 22 Nov, Malvern Theatres
RED RUM CLUB Wed 23 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
UPSAHL + ALISSIC + LIZZIE ESAU Wed 23 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
CONFIDENCE MAN Wed 23 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham RISE AGAINST + THE STORY SO FAR Wed 23 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
THE RILLS Thurs 24 Nov, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
THE BRASS FUNKEYS + DIDDY SWEG Thurs 24 Nov, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
JIM BOB Thurs 24 Nov, O2 Academy, B’ham
BEVERLEY CRAVEN, JUDIE TZUKE, JULIA FORDHAM & RUMER Thurs 24 Nov, Symphony Hall, B’ham FLORENCE + THE MACHINE Thurs 24 Nov, Utilita Arena B’ham
MAIR THOMAS Thurs 24 Nov, Bromsgrove Folk Club
FAIRYTALE OF NEW YORK Thurs 24 Nov, Albany
Theatre, Coventry COWBOY JUNKIES Thurs 24 Nov, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
MIDNIGHT TRAIN TO GEORGIA - GLADYS KNIGHT TRIBUTE Thurs 24 Nov, Palace Theatre, Redditch SABRINA CLAUDIO + JAMES VICKERY + ETHAM Fri 25 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
DAVID RODIGAN Fri 25 Nov, The Assembly, Leamington Spa
BIRDS AND BEASTS + BITY BOOKER Fri 25 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
FROM THE JAM & THE BUZZCOCKS Fri 25 Nov, hmv Empire, Coventry CONFLICT Fri 25 Nov, Queens Hall, Nuneaton TASHA LEAPER AS MADONNA Fri 25 Nov, Palace Theatre, Redditch
CAM COLE Sat 26 Nov, O2 Institute, B’ham HOLLY HUMBERSTONE Sat 26 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
KIRA MAC + EMPYRE Sat 26 Nov, The Asylum, Birmingham
NATION OF LANGUAGE Sat 26 Nov, Forum, Birmingham
SLADE UK Sat 26 Nov, Arches Venue, Coventry
LINK N PARK + WINK 182 Sat 26 Nov, Queens Hall, Nuneaton
THE MANFREDS Sat 26 Nov, The Benn Hall, Rugby
THE U2 EXPERIENCE Sat 26 Nov, Marrs Bar, Worcester MATT WOOSEY Sat 26 Nov, West Malvern Social Club
THE MUSIC OF ROY
Monday 21- Wed 30 November
Classical
LUNCHTIME ORGAN CONCERT WITH THOMAS TROTTER Programme includes works by Bach, Bonnet, Merkel, Bourgeois & Dupré, Mon 21 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
CBSO AND PEKKA KUUSISTO (CONDUCTOR): THE LARK ASCENDING Programme includes works by Tarrodi, Vaughan Williams, WallerBridge, Sibelius & Rautavaara, Wed 23 Nov, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
works by Corelli, Handel, Bach, Clarke, Charpentier, Mozart & Vivaldi, Sun 27 Nov, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
LUNCHTIME MUSIC: CHOPIN, PIAZZOLLA & KALLIWODA Featuring Rebecca Taylor (oboe), Joanne Sealey & Yifan Chen (pianos), Mon 28 Nov, Recital Hall, Royal Birmingham Conservatoire
ORBISON WITH BARRY STEELE & FRIENDS Sat 26 Nov, Palace Theatre, Redditch K-TRAP Sat 26 - Sun 27 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
EARTHGANG Sun 27 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
TIM GALLAGHER Sun 27 Nov, O2 Institute, Birmingham
CATFISH KEITH Sat 27 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
THE ROCK ORCHESTRA BY CANDLELIGHT Sat 27 Nov, hmv Empire, Coventry BELLE & SEBASTIAN Mon 28 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
THE AUSTRALIAN PINK FLOYD Mon 28 Nov, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
KRISSY MATTHEWS Mon 28 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
BLOSSOMS Tues 29 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
GONG + OZRIC TENTACLES Tues 29 Nov, O2 Academy, Birmingham
MARK HARRISON Tues 29 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
JOANNE SHAW TAYLOR Wed 30 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
FELIX RABIN Wed 30 Nov, Temperance, Leamington Spa
CAMILLA SPARKSSS Wed 30 Nov, The Tin Music and Arts, The Canal Basin, Coventry
DUDLEY INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION Featuring Michael Seal (conductor), Thurs 24 Nov, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
THE ENGLISH CONCERT: MESSIAH Featuring Lisette Oropesa (sopranopictured), Alex Potter (countertenor), Michael Spyres (tenor) & Matthew Brook (bass), Thurs 24 Nov, The New Cathedral, Coventry
SOUL STRINGS Featuring Amaan Ali Bangash & Ayaan Ali Bangash (sarod) plus Jennifer Pike (violin). Programme includes works by JS Bach & Trad, Wed 30 Nov, Elgar Concert Hall, The Bramall, University of Birmingham
SOLEM QUARTET Wed 30 Nov, The Bradshaw Hall, Royal Birmingham Conservatoire
ARMONICO CONSORT: JS BACH
CHRISTMAS ORATORIO Featuring Christopher Monks (director), Wed 30 Nov, Malvern Theatres, Worcestershire
Comedy
CLINTON BAPTISTE: CLINTON VS. RAMONE Wed 23 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
IVO GRAHAM Wed 23 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
CHRIS MCCAUSLAND Wed 23 Nov, Royal Spa Centre, Leamington Spa RICH HALL Wed 23 Nov, Palace Theatre, Redditch
TRIO WANDERER Featuring Vincent Coq (piano), Jean-Marc PhillipsVarjabédian (violin) & Raphaël Pidoux (cello). Programme includes works by Beethoven, Liszt & SaintSaëns, Thurs 24 Nov, Malvern Theatres
TURINI ENSEMBLE Featuring Annabel Knight (traverso & recorder), Miki Takahashi (baroque violin), Zaynab Martin (violone in G) and Robin Bigwood (harpsichord), Fri 25 Nov, Elgar Concert Hall, The Bramall, University of Birmingham
CBSO FAMILY CONCERT: A WINTER
PARTY Featuring Michael Seal (conductor), Lucy Drever (presenter) and Sarah Butt (BSL Interpreter). Programme includes works by Vivaldi & Montgomery plus Lopez, Anderson-Lopez & Beck, Sat 26 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
SINFONIA OF LONDON Featuring John Wilson (conductor) & Martin James Bartlett (piano). Programme includes works by Walton, Ravel, Gershwin & Debussy, Sat 26 Nov, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
WORCESTER FESTIVAL CHORAL SOCIETY: VAUGHAN WILLIAMS, A SEA SYMPHONY Sat 26 Nov, Worcester Cathedral
MOZART FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA Featuring David Juritz (violin/director). Programme includes
MARK THOMAS Wed 23 - Thurs 24 Nov, Midlands Arts Centre, Birmingham
COMEDY CAROUSEL WITH ANDY ROBINSON, THE RAYMOND & MR TIMPKINS REVUE & COMIC TBC Thurs 24 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
JIMMY CARR Fri 25 Nov, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
ADAM HESS, ALASDAIR BECKETT-KING, AMY MATTHEWS, THE RAYMOND & MR TIMPKINS REVUE & VICTOR DANIELS Fri 25 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
ANUVAB PAL, SUKH OJLA (PICTURED), PREET SINGH & KAI SAMRA Fri 25 Nov, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry
ADAM HESS, ALASDAIR BECKETT-KING, AMY MATTHEWS & THE RAYMOND & MR TIMPKINS REVUE Sat 26 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
JERRY SADOWITZ Wed 30 Nov, The Glee Club, Birmingham
Theatre
BLITHE SPIRIT Malvern Theatre Players present an amateur version of Noel Coward’s improbable comedy, Mon 21 - Sat 26 Nov, Malvern Theatres
DARKER SHORES Max Caulfield, Juliet Mills and Michael Praed star in a ‘gripping and shadowy tale of suspense’, Mon 21 - Sat 26 Nov, Malvern Theatres
SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER Must-see musical that follows the story of Tony Manero as he embarks on a reckless yet thrilling journey to dancing success... Tues 22 - Sat 26 Nov, The Alexandra, Birmingham
DONE TO DEATH, BY JOVE! Holmes and Watson meet Poirot and Miss Marple in this spoof homage to ‘the great British detective’, Wed 23 Nov, The Core Theatre, Solihull
THE ROCKY HORROR SHOW Richard O’Brien’s legendary rock’n’roll musical, Mon 28 Nov - Wed 3 Dec, Malvern Theatres
Kids Theatre
DISNEY ON ICE PRESENTS DREAM BIG Join Moana, Maui, Anna, Elsa and the Disney Princesses in an ‘enchanting’ show filled with Disney songs and stories, Sat 26 - Sun 27 Nov, Resorts World Arena, Birmingham
MARK THOMPSON’S SPECTACULAR SCIENCE SHOW Interactive and educational show for younger audiences, Sun 27 Nov, Stratford Play House, Stratford-upon-Avon
Dance
THE NUTCRACKER Birmingham Royal Ballet present Sir Peter Wright’s world-famous production, until Sat 10 Dec, Birmingham Hippodrome
FABRIC - CONTEMPORARY DANCE 2.0 Shechter II reimagine a piece created for GöteborgsOperans Danskompani in 2019, which, set to an eclectic sound score, showcases ironic references to pop culture, Thurs 24Fri 25 Nov, Patrick Studio, Birmingham Hippodrome
Light Entertainment
THE VICAR OF DIBLEY 2 The Nonentities Society present an amateur production based on the hit comedy series, Mon 28 Nov - Sat 3 Dec, The Rose Theatre, Kidderminster CINDERELLA Presented by Worcester Repertory Company, Tues 29 NovMon 2 Jan, Swan Theatre, Worcester
AN INSPECTOR CALLS JB Priestley’s classic thriller, Tues 29 Nov - Sat 3 Dec, The Alexandra, Birmingham
THE PERMANENT WAY David Hare’s gripping drama highlighting the chaos and tragedy that followed the privatisation of the railways, Wed 30 Nov - Sat 3 Dec, Malvern Theatres
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM New staging which transports Shakespeare’s drama to the colourful 1960s, Wed 30 Nov - Sat 10 Dec, Loft Theatre, Leamington Spa
Pantomime
JACK AND THE BEANSTALK Iain Lauchlan’s last outing as ‘Coventry’s favourite dame’, Wed 23 Nov - Sat 7 Jan, Belgrade Theatre, Coventry SNOW WHITE This classic festive tale is brought bang up to date by BAFTA-winning writer Maurice Gran (Birds Of A Feather) and local playwright Nick Wilkes, Sat 26 NovSat 31 Dec, The Roses, Tewkesbury
AN EVENING OF BURLESQUE Laughter, cabaret, mystery and glamour, Thurs 24 Nov, Royal Spa Centre, Leamington Spa
THAT’LL BE THE DAY CHRISTMAS SHOW
Featuring festive pop classics, traditional Christmas songs, comedy sketches, impersonations and more...
Fri 25 Nov, Royal Spa Centre, Leamington Spa
CIRCUS OF HORRORS: THE WITCH New show fusing bizarre circus acts with an original rock score and a sinister story of witchcraft and magic, Fri 25 Nov, Stratford Play House, Stratfordupon-Avon
Talks & Spoken Word
AN EVENING WITH NOEL FITZPATRICK
Gain an insight into the extraordinary world of the ‘nation’s most loved orthopaedic-neuro veterinary surgeon’, Tues 29 Nov, Birmingham Town Hall
Events
POP UP PAINTING: ANDY WARHOL PORTRAITS Join artist Kay Mullett for an informal evening of painting and create your own version of an iconic
1960s’ Andy Warhol-inspired portrait, Thurs 24 Nov, Number 8, Pershore ART & ANTIQUES FOR EVERYONE Featuring specialist dealers offering a huge variety of desirable, rare and quirky items, Thurs 24 - Sun 27 Nov, NEC, Birmingham BBC GOOD FOOD SHOW WINTER Featuring TV chefs and hundreds of producers, Thurs 24 - Sun 27 Nov, NEC, Birmingham ADULT NIGHT Discover LEGOLAND Discovery Centre after hours, with no little ones in sight, Fri 25 Nov, LEGOLAND Discovery Centre, Birmingham
STEAM IN LIGHTS Immersive nighttime experience turning the Severn Valley into a colourful light trail, Fri 25 - Sat 26 Nov & Wed 30 Nov - Fri 23 Dec, Severn Valley Railway, Bewdley, Nr Kidderminster
COVENTRY CATHEDRAL TOWER CLIMB Challenge yourself to climb 180 steps to enjoy magnificent views of Coventry and the surrounding area, Fri 25 - Sat 26 Nov, Coventry Cathedral
LOOK GOOD LIVE Showcasing the most popular and upcoming brands from across the beauty, hair, fitness, fashion & accessories, home style, aesthetics and wellness industries, Fri 25 - Sun 27 Nov, Coventry Building Society Arena
SANTA SAFARI Featuring a four-mile winter safari and a visit to Santa’s grotto, Fri 25 Nov - Sat 24 Dec, West Midland Safari Park, Bewdley, Nr Kidderminster
CHRISTMAS AT ALTON TOWERS Make magical memories with a Santa Sleepover or explore the Towers Street Christmas Market. The hugely popular Lightopia Seasonal Wonderland light & lantern trail also returns, Fri 25 Nov - Mon 2 Jan, Alton Towers Resort, Staffordshire WINTER GLOW Immerse yourself in all things seasonal via an impressive
line-up of activities, Fri 25 Nov - Mon 2 Jan, Three Counties Showground, Malvern
CAROL TRAINS A festive four-course meal, on board a heritage train and curated by executive head chef Lucy Kelly, Sat 26 Nov, Severn Valley Railway, Nr Kidderminster
WARLEY NATIONAL MODEL RAILWAY EXHIBITION 2022 Featuring model railway layouts from gauges N to 1 and bigger, Sat 26 - Sun 27 Nov, NEC, Birmingham
WINTER VEGAN MARKET A carefully curated line-up of ‘the finest vegan producers around’, Sat 26 - Sun 27 Nov, FarGo Village, Coventry
AUDIENCE WITH FATHER CHRISTMAS AT KENILWORTH CASTLE Meet Father Christmas as he tells festive tales, Sat 26 - Sun 27 Nov, Kenilworth Castle, Warwickshire
SANTA TRAINS Join Christmas characters for a vintage steam train ride and all-new pantomime, Sat 26Sun 27 Nov, Severn Valley Railway, Bewdley, Nr Kidderminster ENCHANTED EXPRESS Inspired by the classic poem ’Twas The Night Before Christmas, Dame Julie Walters returns as narrator of The Enchanted Express, her iconic voice accompanying you throughout your heritage steam train journey, Sat 26Sun 27 Nov, Severn Valley Railway, Bewdley, Nr Kidderminster
CHRISTMAS AT THE CASTLE Visit the castle and discover ‘twinkling trees, dazzling decorations and festive flourishes at every turn’, Sat 26 NovMon 2 Jan, Warwick Castle