Your FREE essential entertainment guide for the Midlands
Shropshire
Your FREE essential entertainment guide for the Midlands
Shropshire
inside:
MAN IN THE MOON Peter Gabriel in the Midlands feature inside: JAZZ AT THE HIVE award-winning saxophonist Emma Rawicz in Shrewsbury STEP BACK IN TIME spend a weekend in the 1940s at Severn Valley Railway JEN BRISTER BRINGSStaffordshire’s New Vic Theatre is hosting a reading of two new short plays this summer. The plays have been inspired by the journeys of local people whose families began their story in the Punjab region before settling in The Potteries. The readings, presented by actors in the venue’s auditorium, take place on Saturday 12 August. To find out more, visit newvictheatre.org.uk
Dame Judi Dench and comedian Jasper Carrott are the high-profile stars featuring at this month’s Ludlow Fringe Festival.
The popular event runs at various venues from Saturday 17 June to Sunday 2 July.
Other festival highlights include Ludlow Carnival and a production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, performed by Flabbergast Theatre. For more information and to book tickets, visit ludlowfringe.co.uk
The Severn Valley Railway has fine-tuned its timetabled services to incorporate earlier first departure times and an extra steam service on selected days.
The revised Timetable B will apply on selected dates during the rest of the season (through to early November).
For more information, visit svr.co.uk
The 350th anniversary of the birth of dance master John Weaver will be celebrated in his home town of Shrewsbury this summer, courtesy of a festival of special events. Commenting on the forthcoming celebrations, festival co-ordinator Maggie Love said: “The performances, dance showcases and workshops will be a great opportunity to experience some of the dance gestures, and indeed capture the ambience of the dancing steps, of many years ago, which have been the foundation of both classical ballet and the English pantomime ballet, which John Weaver revived from Roman times.”
Wolverhampton Art Gallery has partnered with London’s National Portrait Gallery to create a new exhibition entitled Citizen UK Wolverhampton: Punjabi Migration Experiences.
Developed in partnership with Wolverhampton Arts & Culture, visual artist Anand Chhabra, Wolverhampton Poet Laureate Dr Kuli Kohli and a team of local ‘citizen researchers’, the exhibition creatively explores stories of the Punjabi community in Wolverhampton through archive material, newly commissioned portraits, oral histories and poetry.
Citizen UK Wolverhampton is available to view at the art gallery until Sunday 9 July.
ByBoy George will star as Captain Hook this Christmas when a big-budget adaptation of Peter Pan shows at the city’s Resorts World Arena from 22 to 24 December.
Commenting on the news, George said: “I’m really looking forward to playing Captain Hook and showing off my evil side!
“I make my first entrance on a lifesize galleon that sails around the stage in front of an amazing water-wall fountain...
“Although the show has traditional pantomime elements, it is so much more, being a mix of cirque and spectacular event. And I get a chance to fight a giant animatronic crocodile. What’s not to like?”
Shrewsbury is going ‘art crazy’ this summer, with around 590 regional artists participating in 16 exhibitions, eight workshops and five events in venues across the town. Highlights include a bronze sculpture trail featuring works by Salvador Dali and a special exhibition at Shrewsbury Museum & Art Gallery. To find out more about everything that’s happening, visit shropshiremuseums.org.uk
American musical theatre star Melissa Errico visits Lichfield Cathedral next month with her touring show, The Life And Loves Of A Broadway Baby.
Featuring a selection of popular songsincluding ‘a dazzling set of beloved standards, from Rodgers & Hart to Lerner & Lowe’ - the show forms part of the Lichfield Festival and takes place on Tuesday 11 July... For more information and to book tickets, visit lichfieldfestival.org
UK Proms in the Park presents its first concert of 2023 in Shrewsbury this month. Taking place at The West Mid Showground on the evening of Saturday 17 June, the performance features classical favourites from the likes of Mozart, Strauss, Schumann and Bizet, before finishing with standards from Last Night of the Proms and music from the movies.
Samantha Oxborough (mezzo soprano) and Rodney Earl Clarke (baritone) will lead the event which also features local dance duo Rachel Gittins and Ryan Upton alongside a choir of local soloists and a 50 piece orchestra.
For further information and tickets, visit tickettailor.com/events/ ukacproductions.
Birmingham will next month host a special event celebrating the first anniversary of the Commonwealth Games being held in the city. Commissioned and supported by the city council, Birmingham Festival 23 (Friday 28 JulySunday 6 August) will take place in Centenary Square and comprise a programme of free events.
Commenting on the festival, the leader of
The most-streamed classical artist of all time is coming to Birmingham.
Ludovico Einaudi will visit the city’s Resorts World Arena on Thursday 18 October.
Commenting on the news, he said: “While I enjoy the period of contemplation, learning, inspiration and hard work that goes into the composing and recording process, it is in the live arena, in communion with the audience, that my work really comes alive.”
For more information about Ludovico’s visit, check out resortsworldarena.co.uk
Disney On Ice is making a welcome return to the Midlands this autumn, skating into Resorts World Arena in Birmingham from 1 to 5 November with a show that celebrates the company’s 100th anniversary. For more information about the production and to book your seat, check out resortsworldarena.co.uk
Birmingham City Council, Councillor Ian Ward, said: “In addition to 11 days of world-class sport, the Commonwealth Games were a huge celebration of our city's fantastic culture and creativity - and we promised 2022 would be just the start. This year’s festival will once again shine a spotlight on the youth and diversity that make Birmingham such an amazing city.” To find out more, visit birmingham.gov.uk
A celebration of hit US TV comedy series Friends is coming to Birmingham’s NEC next month.
Making its UK debut at the venue on Saturday 8 July, The Friends Experience offers fans the chance to explore set recreationsincluding Joey and Chandler’s apartment, Monica and Rachel’s kitchen, and Central Perk coffee shop - and to check out a selection of props and costumes from the show. To find out more and book tickets, visit birmingham.friendstheexperience.com
News from around the region
Lichfield Cathedral is currently hosting an exhibition exploring the story of its own library collection.
Library & Legacy takes visitors on a journey through the history of the library, providing insights into a wide variety of subjects featured in some of its books, from maps and architecture, to classical literature and swordsmanship. The exhibition is available to view until Sunday 3 September.
More information about the library can be found at lichfield-cathedral.org/library
Lichfield Garrick Theatre will next month present a ‘home-grown’ Community Musical version of Kenneth Grahame’s The Wind In The Willows.
The production follows on from the success of last year’s Community Musical production of Robin Hood and shows at the venue from Thursday 27 to Saturday 29 July.
For more information and to book tickets, visit lichfieldgarrick.com
Alongside its usual impressive displays of flora and fauna, Shrewsbury Flower Show this year features a number of ‘more unusual’ attractions, including a penny farthing biplane - which looks like a plane but flies like, well, a bicycle! - and a mountain-bike aerial display team. Visitors to the popular event should also keep an eye out for giant sloths riding around on tricycles and stopping to take ‘slothies’ with sure-to-be-bewildered passers-by!
Shrewsbury Flower Show takes place in the town’s Quarry Park on Friday 11 & Saturday 12 August. For information about the event’s full line-up of entertainment and to book tickets, shrewsburyflowershow.org.uk
Birmingham Royal Ballet’s brand-new company for top-class new dancers will make the short journey to Wolverhampton late this month to present a gala celebration of classical ballet. Launched earlier this year, BRB2 aims to
Brampton Park & Museum in Newcastleunder-Lyme is hosting a medieval-themed family fun day on Saturday 3 June. Celebrate Newcastle features ‘magical storytelling adventures, dressing up, activities, knights, jesters and dancing’. To find out more about the event, visit appetite.org.uk/whats-on
Acorns Children’s Hospice is holding its biggest-ever Bubble Rush fun run at Walsall Arboretum next month (Sunday 23 July). The hospice is promising that the charity fundraiser will feature ‘more fun, more foam, and even more entertainment than ever before’.
For further information about Acorns and its Bubble Rush event, visit acorns.org.uk
DJ, broadcaster & global dance music legend Pete Tong makes a return to Birmingham later in the year with his critically acclaimed Ibiza Classics show. Taking place at the city’s Utilita Arena on Thursday 30
develop the ballet stars of the future. The company presents Carlos Acosta’s Classical Selection at the Grand Theatre on Saturday 24 June. For more information and to book tickets, visit grandtheatre.co.uk
November, the production features Jules Buckley and The Essential Orchestra. For tickets, visit either gigsandtours.com or ticketmaster.co.uk
Black Country comedian Jonny Cole is bringing a brand-new show to Bilston Town Hall on Saturday 10 June.
Described by Jasper Carrott as ‘the funniest act to come out of the Black Country since Frank Skinner’, Jonny is promising an hour of songs, stories and home-grown hilarity. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit bilstonth.co.uk
Lichfield’s Shakespeare In The Park event is this year celebrating its 40th anniversary by re-creating its first-ever production: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. The much-loved comedy will be presented in the Italian Gardens at Maple Hayes from Wednesday 21 to Saturday 24 June.
To find out more about the production and book your seat, check out ticketsource.co.uk/shakespeare-in-the-parklichfield
The Stafford Shakespeare Festival is taking a somewhat different approach from usual in 2023. For the first time in its 30-year history, this major theatrical event will take place indoors at the Gatehouse theatre rather than in its familiar outdoor setting of Stafford Castle. Another Festival first will see musical theatre favourite Kerry Ellis make her Shakespeare debut, starring as Titania in this year’s production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Kerry chats to What’s On about the challenges of playing the queen of the fairies...
Actress Kerry Ellis is best known for her stellar roles in a host of blockbuster West End shows - including Wicked, Cats, We Will Rock You, Les Misérables and Oliver! - but this summer she’s swapping musical theatre for Shakespeare and starring in A Midsummer Night’s Dream at Stafford Gatehouse Theatre.
Taking the part of fairy queen Titania, Kerry is looking forward to the challenge of playing a lead Shakespearian role for the first time.
“Whenever something unusual comes along, I’m super-excited,” she says. “But then reality hits and I’m also slightly nervous, even slightly daunted by it.
“Shakespeare comes with a massive responsibility. People know and love the plays, a lot of people have studied A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and there’s a big weight that comes with that show. So it took me a few days to think about it, not because I didn’t want to do it, but I was asking myself ‘can I do it, can I deliver a performance like this?’”
Kerry decided to do some research.
“I knew the story and that A Midsummer Night’s Dream was one of the comedies, but I didn’t know it in detail. So I watched a version, with my two kids, in which Michelle Pfeiffer was Titania. I think what blew my mind most about it was that my kids, who are nine and seven-year-old boys, sat and watched the whole thing with me, and I couldn’t believe how engrossed they were in it. They were asking me questions and laughing and really just letting the language go over them.
“So I thought ‘I really need to play this role, I need to push myself and go for it.’ And now I’m really excited about it.”
Often cited as Shakespeare’s most performed play, A Midsummer Night’s Dream is a tale of magic and mixed identities. Two pairs of lovers elope and escape to the forest, but
once there, they have a spell cast on them by a mischief-making fairy named Puck. Also in the forest, fairy queen and king Titania and Oberon are fighting over possession of a changeling child. With Puck’s intervention, who will be triumphant?
Kerry believes the play is a great introduction to Shakespeare.
“Give it a go because you will enjoy it. You’ll laugh and have a good time. A Midsummer Night’s Dream is accessible for people; it’s Shakespeare for everybody, and this production is going to be so much fun.”
She has been working hard to develop her character.
“What I love about the relationship between Titania and Oberon is that they are both like alpha-males and lock horns. The fire in their relationship is what brings them together. It’s almost like a sport; it’s exciting for them to kind of push each other. They are both very feisty, and I think what attracts Titania to Oberon is that he pushes her boundaries. If it was anybody else, she wouldn’t let them get away with it.”
As well as delving into the character, Kerry has also been brushing up on her Shakespeare ahead of the play.
“Shakespeare is something new for me, and I have a responsibility to deliver this language in a way that people understand. So I’ve been doing lots of prep - it’s almost like going back to A-level English! I’ve been doing lots of research and discovering the text. I watched Helen Mirren, who has done some talks on Shakespeare, and she was so brilliant, so insightful and helpful.
“For me, it’s about understanding the text before I go into the rehearsal room because that’s where it all happens. I did my first halfmarathon a few weeks ago, and if I hadn’t trained for it then I wouldn’t have been able to do it. And it’s a similar thing with a show -
if you’ve done your training and you’re prepared, then you can just enjoy creating the performance. When I do a musical, I do all my research, then forget it all and do my own take on it.”
Alongside theatre, Kerry has a successful recording and live-concert career. Last month she released her fourth studio album, Kings & Queens, which was launched with a handful of concerts, one of which took place at Birmingham’s Town Hall.
“I like being busy! And performance is performance - it’s about telling stories and connecting with the audience.
“I remember doing The Importance Of Being Earnest before the pandemic. It was my first proper play, and the thing which struck me the most was that it was all exactly the same as a musical, except that I could hear my footsteps walking on and off stage! You never hear your footsteps in a musical because there’s always underscoring, clapping and noise.
“The Importance Of Being Earnest is also a comedy, and I think the key to a comedy performance is being as truthful and as honest as you can. If you try to be funny, it doesn’t work. If you play the truth and play the character, that will make people laugh.” Kerry has been to the Gatehouse as an audience member in the past, but this will be her first time on stage at the theatre.
“It’s quite an intimate space and the visuals are really good. I’m excited to get up there. It’s been a while since I’ve been so excited to do a show... I think it’s going to be a fun and brilliant production. And Stafford will be a nice place to spend a couple of weeks.”
A Midsummer Night’s Dream runs at Stafford Gatehouse Theatre from Friday 23 June to Sunday 9 JulyThe popular Trentham Taste event makes a welcome return at Trentham Shopping Village this month (Friday 16 June).
The free-to-attend get-together features a selection of street food from the likes of Get Bun’d, stone-baked pizza from Totally Delicious and craft beer from Trentham Craft Bar.
Live music is provided by tribute favourites the Red Hot Chilli Potters.
Independent restaurant owners The Shire Collection have announced the Shrewsbury opening of Shire Residence boutique hotel and Hush, an immersive Greek-themed restaurant inspired by the hit Abba movie, Mamma Mia!.
Located at the old Severn Social site in the town’s Frankwell area, the restaurant will offer a one-of-a-kind dining experience, with a menu inspired by the flavours and ingredients of Greek cuisine, curated by Executive Chef Chris Burt.
Shrewsbury’s thriving food scene will be celebrated in the town’s Quarry Park late this month (Saturday 24 & Sunday 25 June).
Now in its 10th year, Shrewsbury Food Festival features over 200 local food & drink producers, a selection of fun events for the family to enjoy, bars hosted by local brewers and distillers, live performances on the bandstand, free kids’ activities, a circus big top, a range of shopping opportunities, a live music event and more. Festival Head Chef Chris Burt will be running the Cook Along sessions - which will feature an impressive line-up of local talent - and multi-
Shropshire brewery Three Tuns has won two gold awards for its cask ales. The company’s stout took home the Gold Best In Category award in the Cask Session Dark Beer category at the SIBA Wales & West Independent Beer Awards... The brewery also scored a success with its bestselling pale ale, XXX, which was awarded a gold medal in the Standard Pale/Bitter category at the European Beer Challenge Awards. New
Five Rivers Á la Carte Restaurant in Walsall has launched a new Bottomless Brunch menu. Available on the last Saturday of every month, Boujee Brunch will include unlimited prosecco and ‘delicious food options that will satisfy every craving’.
The menu includes lasani chilli chicken, awardwinning saag punjabi and chatpata gosht. There will be two sittings - one from 11.30am and one from 2pm. Tickets start at £39 per person and can be booked by visiting fiveriversalacarte.co.uk
Michelin star and five AA Rosette-winning chef, author & restaurateur Jean-Christophe Novelli will return to the Quarry following a successful debut last year.
Commenting on the festival, organiser Beth Heath said: “Join us for a sunny weekend in Shrewsbury’s gorgeous park. You can learn from talented chefs, try amazing food & drink, shop ’til you drop, enjoy live music, get handson in the field-to-fork area, and let the little ones go wild in our kids’ area, packed with free activities. Non-stop fun is guaranteed!”
For tickets, visit shrewsburyfoodfestival.co.uk
St Mary Magdalene, Bridgnorth, Shropshire, Sat 24 June
One of the city’s oldest and most distinguished musical groups, Birmingham Bach Choir here turn their attention to the work of 19th-century composer Johannes Brahms.
“Our programme will be a heady mixture of sacred and secular music interspersed by piano music,” explains the orchestra’s conductor, Paul Spicer (pictured). “This will be a memorable concert and a rare opportunity to immerse ourselves in music which enriches the soul and warms the heart.”
St Chad’s Church, Shrewsbury, Tues 13 June; St Peter’s Church, Wolverhampton, Thurs 15 June; St Paul’s Church, Birmingham, Tues 20 & Wed 21 June
Associate Conductor Sarah Latto takes charge of Ex Cathedra for a concert which the early music ensemble confidently predict will see audiences heading for home singing of summertime.
The programmes for these annual gettogethers, presented by candlelight as dusk falls, move seamlessly from seasonal favourites to rare, rediscovered,
Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury, Sun 25 June
One of the UK’s most widely acclaimed nonprofessional symphony orchestras, the Birmingham Philharmonic here presents a concert of music from film director Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 masterpiece, 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Michael Lloyd is the man with the baton as the orchestra makes its way through the following works: Selections from ‘Gayane’ (Khachaturian); The Blue Danube (J Strauss II); Ligeti (Lontano); and Also Sprach Zarathustra (R Strauss).
contemporary and lighter repertoire. This year’s offering - taking the theme of ‘joy, and the many ways in which we can find it in our lives’ features, among other compositions, Iam lucis orto sidere - a sixth-century plainchant - the 13th-century Summer is icumen in, and from more recent times, Summertime and Summer Holiday
Lichfield Cathedral, Fri 9 June
If you’ve never experienced the pleasure of a Lichfield Cathedral Chamber Choir concert, then why not make June the month that you break your duck?
The choir’s repertoire covers a broad spectrum, from early music such as Tallis through to more contemporary composers, including Todd and MacMillan. This latest concert - a 40th anniversary celebration - sees the orchestra presenting an evening of music inspired by 17thcentury authors and poets.
Symphony Hall, Birmingham, Wed 14 June
Only a couple of months after becoming the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra’s chief conductor & artistic advisor, Kazuki Yamada (pictured) brings down the curtain on the 2022/23 season with an imaginative programme of work celebrating British music across a period of 100-plus years.
The concert is kickstarted with the world premiere of Dani Howard’s CBSO Centenary Commission, The Butterfly Effect, after which Britten’s Serenade For Tenor, Horn & Strings delights, haunts and terrifies in equal measure.
The evening - and the season - is brought to a close with a performance of Elgar’s energetic and deeply personal First Symphony. The piece was written by the Worcestershire-born composer at the age of 51 - a full decade after he’d first attempted to write a symphony.
Sucker Punch, Roy Williams’ award-winning play about being young and black in Britain, might be set in the 1980s - when Thatcherism and simmering racial tensions were the order of the day - but director Nathan Powell tells What’s On its content continues to resonate in 2023...
Director and writer Nathan Powell might be a boxing enthusiast, but he knows where to draw the line. “I like to think of myself as a casual fan,” he admits. “Because real boxing fans will get angry if I don’t know the answer to a boxing question!”
It’s a sensible stance to take, given that his latest project sees him directing a revival of Sucker Punch, British dramatist Roy Williams’ hard-hitting sports drama about two former friends who step into the ring to face each other as well as their own demons. But is Leon Davidson a Black British champion or an Uncle Tom? And is his onetime ally, Troy Augustus, an American powerhouse or just a naïve cash cow?
As well as being a classic underdog story, the drama tackles themes of identity, prejudice and the financial exploitation of athletestopics just as relevant today as they were in the 1980s, when the play is set.
Sucker Punch debuted at London’s Royal Court in 2010. An instant hit with the critics, it was nominated for an Olivier for Best New Play and scooped a number of other prizes, including The Alfred Fagon Award and The Writers Guild Award for Best Play.
The plaudits are all merited, according Nathan, who was recently appointed artistic director & joint CEO of the National Student Drama Festival.
“I think it’s such a brilliant piece,” he says. “Roy Williams is amazing at telling really detailed, intricate, big and vast stories for everyone in the audience. He’s such a wonderful creator of characters, but also a great creator of stories.”
Nathan is especially taken with the relationship between the two main characters, but just as importantly with their circumstances and the experiences of black men in this country, which aren’t that dissimilar to the period in which the play is set.
“It opens up a really useful dialogue between different generations of black people who grew up in the UK. The challenges now, compared to the ’80s, are different but the same, if that makes any sense? There’s a difference in terms of how what we experience today looks, but they’re the same
challenges. And it’s all about how we approach those challenges.”
And given that those experiences and challenges are universal to black people all over the country, Nathan is keen to bring the production to regions and audiences not necessarily familiar with the play’s London setting and Brixton riots backdrop.
“I’m a Londoner who’s moved out of London, and I have a real commitment and energy and drive to create really excellent work outside of the capital.
“This Theatre Nation Partnership with Wolverhampton Grand and all the other partners allows us to tour such an amazing piece of work outside of London. And that’s powerful, and really special to be able to share with as many audiences across the country as possible.
“Taking this type of work out to the regions is really at the heart of this project - that’s the thing that feels really important and empowering. We’ve just come out of the pandemic, and partnerships like this mean that this might be some people’s first experience of theatre, or their only experience of theatre for a long time.”
Nathan is also thrilled at the chance to work with Roy Williams (“one of the country’s greatest living playwrights”) after their paths first crossed in 2020 on an audio play project by Stratford East called 846. The title came from the eight minutes and 46 seconds it took for George Floyd to die in police custody. The project featured short pieces by 14 different writers, including Nathan, each responding to Floyd’s murder and the Black Lives Matter movement.
“Each was a standalone exploration of racial inequality and oppression, but together they formed a powerful tapestry of voices. That was the first time that Roy and I had worked together, and I’m seriously excited to be working with him again on Sucker Punch.”
Nathan is also keen to make the show a more immersive experience than a typical stage show. He wants audiences to feel like they’re stepping into a boxing gym and “walking into an event rather than a traditional theatre space” - one in which movement direction is
just as important as set design.
“We can’t turn the performers into professional boxers in a four-week rehearsal period, but that’s what the audience want to see. They want to see the beauty of the art that is the sport of boxing. So it’s really interesting how we can make that big and theatrical, but also how we show off the raw skill and beauty that is in boxing.
“I think there are some real key elements we can pull out of that to make it a wonderful theatrical feat but also make the audience feel like they’re experiencing those fights.”
Nathan admits the boxing scenes will need to be stylised, but hopes he can find a middle ground realistic enough for audiences to feel like they’ve seen a real fight. As much as there’s a balancing act between satisfying theatre-goers and fight fans, he’s also keen to highlight the genuine drama of the sport. “As a boxing fan, I wouldn’t want to watch boxing being acted badly in a play, but I would want to experience the energy of being there at a boxing match.
“When you’re at home watching boxing on a TV screen, sometimes you don’t pick up on things like the boxers sweat bouncing off other people, or the sound of a punch landing, or the exhale of a boxer as the final bell goes. Those things are what I want to highlight when people come to watch thisthat idea of being at a live boxing match. I really want to bring those feelings of seeing and hearing a real fight to this play.”
As well as being excited by the piece, he also wants audiences to leave the theatre with a few things to think - and talk - about.
“I hope that they have interesting conversations with the people that they came with about what it means to be black in Britain. I don’t want to answer questions for anyone, I just want to encourage talking and people to start a conversation. That’s all I can ask for and that’s all I hope for.”
Sucker Punch shows at the Grand Theatre, Wolverhampton, from Tuesday 13 to Friday 16 JuneThe Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton, Wed 21 June
Local lad Steve Homer - the CEO of The Halls’ operator, AEG Presents - is delighted to have secured an appearance by Siouxsie Sioux at the venue only weeks after its grand reopening. “When I put in an enquiry,” he reveals, “they came back and said she’s going to do it because it’s her favourite venue she ever played with the Banshees.”
At the time of writing, Siouxsie’s Wolverhampton date will mark the first time she’s performed live in the UK in 10 years. Her appearance at The Halls, coming in the middle of a set of shows in Europe, is part of the punk icon’s first live tour in 15 years.
Student Union Building, Keele University, Newcastle-under-Lyme, Thurs 29 June; The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton, Thurs 6 July
Comprising Alex Trimble, Kevin Baird and Sam Halliday, Two Door Cinema Club released debut album Tourist History back in 2010. Their follow-up offering, Beacon, went to number one in the Irish albums chart and number two in the UK chart.
Re-energised by a self-imposed hiatus, the band returned for an extensive headline tour in support of third studio album Gameshow. Since that time they’ve released a further two records, the most recent being Keep On Smiling, which came out last autumn.
Cannock Chase Forest, Staffordshire, Sun 11 June
“I love performing at these wonderful woodland locations,” says Jack Savoretti in talking about his Forest Live appearance in Cannock Chase Forest. “They are like no other live arenas. I look forward to sharing all our new music with you in this incredible
The Robin, Bilston, Sun 11 June
With support slots under their belts for, among others, Blackmore’s Night, Uriah Heep and Jethro Tull - not to mention a ‘special guest appearance’ at Bryan Adams’ Murrayfield Stadium gig a few years backMostly Autumn take pride in being the best band you’ve probably never heard of. Happiest when playing live, they have developed a sound all their own, drawing on influences from the golden age of ’70s rockmost evidently Genesis and Pink Floyd - to create music which feels both modern and experimental.
Expect to hear tracks from their most recent album, late-2021’s Graveyard Star.
The Hive, Shrewsbury, Sat 17 June
Creating music that fuses multiple influences - from lilting Afro Cuban-inspired grooves to hard-hitting modern jazz & funk numbers - award-winning saxophonist & composer Emma Rawicz is a new star burning brightly in the musical firmament. Last year voted best newcomer at the
setting.”
Inheriting his brooding good looks from his mother - a Polish-German model - and his Italian father, Jack released his debut album in 2007 and is blessed with a husky and hugely captivating voice.
He is joined in the woodlands by Natalie Imbruglia, who recently celebrated the 25th anniversary of her acclaimed debut album, Left Of The Middle.
Parliamentary Jazz Awards and a finalist in the BBC Young Jazz Musician competition, she is joined for this Shrewsbury gig by four star names from the world of jazz: Ant Law (guitar), Ivo Neame (piano), Conor Chaplin (bass) & Asaf Sirkis (drums).
Newhampton Arts Centre, Wolverhampton, Sat 10 June
Wolverhamptonborn singer-songwriter Scott Matthews’ ground-breaking debut album, Passing Stranger, earned serious critical acclaim, with his first single, Elusive, winning the Ivor Novello award for ‘best song musically & lyrically’.
Described by Total Entertainment as ‘the man who specialises in conveying the emotional complexities of love and loss in sparse, warm-hearted acoustic songs’, he’s now released eight albums, the latest of which, Restless Lullabies, came out in late April.
Victoria Hall, Stoke-on-Trent, Wed 14 June; O2 Academy, Birmingham, Thurs 20 & Fri 21 July; Brierley Hill Civic Hall, Wed 26 - Thurs 27 July
Affable Liverpool comedian Paul Smith has waxed lyrical on all manner of topics in his time, including such peculiar subjects as who he’d most like to be haunted by (Ghandi - Paul reckons he’d do it quite quietly) and which is the largest animal he thinks he could beat in a fight (a goose). He’s also ‘died’ on stage in front of a Babylon 5 actress, who made matters worse for him by shaking her head in pity... Widely regarded as one of the comedy circuit’s most accomplished MCs, Paul visits the Midlands with his touring show, Joker.
Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury, Fri 16 June
As she attempted to establish herself on the circuit back in the early noughties, Jen Brister received a much-needed boost from a comedy legend.
The occasion was the BBC New Act semifinals in Brighton. The legend in question: Spike Milligan, who was one of the judges. Although Jen didn’t get through to the final, she did find out from the show’s producer that Spike had voted for her.
“He’d also remarked that I had ‘a great pair of Bristols’,” she recalls. “So clearly he had great taste in comedy and, er, tits!”
Jen visits Shrewsbury with her latest touring show, The Optimist.
“My favourite thing is being relentless,” Australian comedian Rhys Nicholson revealed to broadwaybaby in preparing to tour his brand-new standup offering, Rhys! Rhys! Rhys!. “That’s what you can expect from this show - just me relentlessly talking too quickly.”
Rhys is promising a gig that will aim to steer
The Glee Club, Birmingham, Fri 16 June
Tez Ilyas’ standup has been likened to candyfloss with a razorblade hidden inside, while his television work has brought him to the attention of a whole new audience. The fact that he’s been able to hit the right notes with so many people doesn’t come as a surprise to the man himself, though: “It doesn’t matter what walk of life we’re from, I think we’re all united by the British sense of humour. Whatever creed, colour, sexual orientation or gender type we are, we have a connection based around a mutual appreciation of that sort of comedy.”
clear of every comedian’s favourite subject over the last couple of years: the Covid pandemic. “It’s me banging on about myself for about an hour. It’s just about me. It’s the happiest I’ve ever been with a show, I thinkwhich sounds a bit arrogant, but I really worked hard on jokes per minute, and wanting it to be pretty relentless.”
Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, Sat 24 June
Two comedy heavyweights for the price of one...
Former direct-sales executive Kane Brown kickstarted his current career back in 2006 when he enrolled in a two-week course in standup-comedy, since which time he’s honed his rib-tickling talents to excellent effect. Richard Blackwood, meanwhile, cites Richard Pryor, Eddie Murphy and Chris Rock as his inspirations. He peddles a comedic style that’s been described as ‘an amalgam of these three, with an added healthy dose of Afro Caribbean and South London humour’.
Donington Park, Derby, Thurs 8 - Sun 11 June
With top billing consistently taken by some of the biggest names in rock and metal, it’s not hard to see why Download is one of the most popular and well-attended festivals in the UK.
Conceived as a follow-up to the Monsters Of Rock Festival, Download partly owes its name to the pioneering way in which it uses technology to connect with audiences and build a community.
2023 line-up includes: Metallica, Bring Me The Horizon, Slipknot (pictured), Alter Bridge, Architects, Parkway Drive, Evanescence, Pendulum, Disturbed, Placebo, Alexisonfire, Ghost, Bad Religion, Electric Callboy, Simple Plan and Coheed & Cambria.
West Mid Showground, Shrewsbury, Fri 30 June - Sun 2 July
Music & wellbeing festival Heal returns for a second year.
As well as a diverse main-stage musical lineup, the event also features a bass tent, a health & wellbeing village, a funfair, arts & crafts, street food and optional camping.
Various venues across Lichfield, Sun 4 - Sun 11 June
Now in its 32nd year, Lichfield Blues & Jazz Festival has become a firm favourite on the city’s cultural calendar.
The week-long get-together celebrates the best in local jazz & blues talent, as well as showcasing quality musicianship from further afield.
New for 2023 is the inclusion of Latin and salsa music, while the Lindy Hop dance community will be hosting sure-to-bepopular dance workshops.
2023 line-up includes: Catfish, Remi Harris Trio, Fred T Baker, Funky Velvet, Nick Dewhurst Band, Chris Bowden Quartet, Del Camino (pictured) and Lichfield Jazz Big Band
War Memorial Park, Coventry, Fri 30 June - Sun 2 July
Organisers of Coventry’s Godiva Festival are anticipating another blockbuster year, with veteran performers joining emerging artists across a dazzling array of genres. While the traditional Godiva procession continues to this day, the event has certainly come a long way since its 17th-century origins as a celebration of the medieval Countess of Mercia.
The award-winning original family ravers, Big Fish Little Fish, will be on hand to keep youngsters entertained. The festival will also play host to the Shropshire Music Awards grand final on the Friday evening.
2023 line-up includes: The Enemy, Cast, The Slow Readers Club (pictured), Dub Pistols, Altern8, Mistress Mo, K-Klass, Bryan Gee, Aries and Kelvin Grant of Musical Youth
Due to its continued popularity, the festival is ticketed. Under-fives go free, and concessions are available for students, over-65s, and people who have benefits and asylum-seeker status.
2023 line-up includes: The Enemy, Rudimental, Melanie C, Ella Eyre (pictured), The Selecter, The K’s, Celina Sharma, Cruel Hearts Club and Oneman
Alderford Lake, Whitchurch, Fri 30 June & Sat 1 July
AlderFest returns for a second year after a successful debut event in 2022.
Hosted by AJ and Curtis Pritchard, the event features a live-music line-up and plenty for the family to enjoy, including a roller disco, motorcycle stunt show, Zeus the dinosaur, circus workshops and a football academy. An ‘extraordinary’ 120-person aquapark will be open throughout the day, with other attractions including raft building, wild swimming and paddleboards.
2023 line-up includes: McFly, Sam Ryder, Heather Small, Aston Merrygold, Artful Dodger, The Royston Club, Sonique, NTrance, Dave Pearce, Baby D and Ultrabeat
Peter Gabriel brings his first European tour in a decade to Birmingham this month, and is set to play songs from his first new album in twice that time. As usual it looks like he’s doing things his own way and to his own schedule - but it turns out that a certain celestial body is influencing proceedings too, as What’s On discovers...
Peter Gabriel has never been an artist to do things by halves, or follow anything resembling a predictable career path. He wore bizarre costumes on stage with Genesis, quit as they were starting to gain some success, and called his first four solo albums by the same name (his own). He also made an album containing no cymbals (Peter Gabriel 3), was an early champion of World Music, hired a theatre stage director (Robert Lepage) to work on his rock shows and much more. He’s also not one to be rushed. The gaps between new music have grown exponentially, and forthcoming album i/o is his first in over 20 years - if you don’t count LPs of cover versions, live recordings, orchestral recordings, live recordings of orchestral recordings, or a compilation of songs used in movies. And so far, i/o isn’t even an album. The title might have been revealed - Gabriel originally announced it in 2002 for what was intended to be a prompt follow-up to his last studio album, Up - but there’s still no official release date. Which is even more surprising given that the accompanying tour, which visits Birmingham this month, is already under way. It’s somewhat typical of the contrary musician (he recently described himself as an “old awkward sod”), who has opted to drip-feed new material to eager fans (who he calls his ‘Lunatics’) based on lunar phases, with a new song revealed on each full moon.
Gabriel says there’s a method to the luna-cy in terms of the album’s concept.
“Some of what I’m writing about this time is the idea that we seem incredibly capable of destroying the planet that gave us birth, and that unless we find ways to reconnect ourselves to nature and the natural world, we are going to lose a lot. A simple way of thinking about where we fit in to all of this is looking up at the sky… and the moon has always drawn me to it.”
There have been five full moons so far this year, and as a result there have been five new songs - Panopticom, The Court, Playing For Time, i/o and, most recently, Four Kinds Of Horses. In yet another novel approach, at least two mixes of each track have been issued, a tactic Gabriel hopes will give listeners a window into the way the music was created.
“I quite like this idea of the multiple mix approach because for most artists it’s the process, not the product, that is most important. In some ways I’m trying to open up the process a little more for those that are interested.”
The key word above is artist, because although the 73-year-old is arguably one of our greatest rock singers, courtesy of a uniquely soulful voice, he is very much a creative individual, with interests that extend way beyond singing and songwriting. There are way too many to list here, but a fundamental one is an ongoing fascination with technology that has kept him at the cutting-edge when it comes to its musical applications. Gabriel was one of the first musicians to use a Fairlight CMI synthesizer in the late 1970s and recently launched a competition encouraging fans to create an Artificial Intelligence (AI)-generated video inspired by, and set to, his music.
“These powerful, transformative AI tools are for the first time within reach of all of us - we have the chance to weave new realities together from the threads of our own imagination and creativity. I’ve built my world out of sound, and I’m now asking the visual artist community to create its own uncharted audio-visual dreamscapes with a carpet of my music.”
The competition has drawn criticism from some quarters - largely due to fears over copyright infringement - but Gabriel’s response is that the world is about to be fundamentally transformed by AI, and there’s no stopping it.
“Many people see AI as the enemy, but along with extraordinary scientific, functional and creative tools, it can provide great education and better healthcare to billions.
“It also has many inherent potential dangers that we urgently need to address. Like the wheel, or the Industrial Revolution, I believe the changes coming with AI are unstoppable, but we can clearly influence them.”
Panopticom, the first track released from the new album, is also based on a potential positive use for technology, and sounds like a rival for Wikipedia into the bargain.
“The first song is based on an idea I’ve been working on to initiate the creation of an
infinitely expandable accessible data globeThe Panopticom. We are beginning to connect a like-minded group of people who might be able to bring this to life, to allow the world to see itself better and understand more of what’s really going on.”
The project is typically ambitious of the onceshy private boarding school pupil, who says the desire to recognise, as well as forge, connections also inspired the album’s title track - which contains yet another technological, or at least technical, reference. “i/o means input/output - you see it on the back of a lot of electrical equipment, and it just triggered some ideas about the stuff we put in and pull out of ourselves, in physical and non-physical ways.
“That was the starting point of this idea, and then trying to talk about the interconnectedness of everything. The older I get, I probably don’t get any smarter, but I have learned a few things and it makes a lot of sense to me that we are not these independent islands we like to think we are; that we are part of a whole. If we can see ourselves as better connected, still messedup individuals, but as part of a whole, then maybe there’s something to learn.”
Often a solitary creator, being part of a ‘whole’ is clearly one of the main joys of touring, and Gabriel’s current backing band includes long-time cohorts David Rhodes (guitar), Tony Levin (bass) and Manu Katché (drums) - all of whom performed on his breakthrough solo album, So, as well as the Back To Front shows to celebrate its 25th anniversary in 2013.
That was last time Gabriel played gigs in Europe, and he’s clearly excited to be back on the road, especially now he has new material to play.
“It’s been a while, and I am now surrounded by a whole lot of new songs and excited to be taking them out on the road for a spin. I look forward to seeing you out there.”
Peter Gabriel plays Utilita Arena Birmingham on Saturday 17 JuneSister Act Wolverhampton Grand Theatre, Mon 5 - Sat 10 June; Regent Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent, Tues 25 - Sat 30 September; Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, Tues 9 - Sat 14 October
After seeing her gangster boyfriend kill an employee, Reno lounge singer Deloris Van Cartier is placed on a witness protection programme and hidden in a convent, where she proceeds to take over the rehearsals of the in-house choir of nuns. Thanks to her musical expertise, the choir becomes a huge success and church attendances go through the roof.
Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, Tues 13 - Sat 17 June
Best known from its 2011 film version starring Judi Dench and Maggie Smith, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel tells the story of an eclectic group of British retirees as they embark on a new life in India... Belinda Lang (2 Point 4 Children), Paul Nicholas (Just Good Friends), Tessa Peake-Jones (Only Fools And Horses) and Graham Seed (The Archers) star.
But in giving the church a new lease of life, Deloris may inadvertently have jeopardised her own safety...
Based on the hit Whoopi Goldberg movie of the same name, this fun-filled spectacular of a show boasts a real feelgood factor and stars Lesley Joseph and Sandra Marvin.
Birmingham Hippodrome, Tues 20 - Sun 25 June; Wolverhampton Grand Theatre, Tues 27 February - Sat 3 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 Rep, Birmingham, Wed 7 - Sat 10 June; Malvern Theatres, Tues 18 - Sat 22 July Harry Hill’s critically acclaimed offering (cowritten with Steve Brown) has been described as a cross between Yes, Minister and The Rocky Horror Show. Playing fast and loose with the truth, the production follows the journey of Tony Blair from peace-loving hippie and would-be pop star to warmongering multimillionaire. A rock & roll soundtrack adds to the fun of a show which, as you’d expect, offers up plenty of laughs.
A loud and colourful celebration of girl power that sits somewhere between a Girls Aloud gig and a traditional musical, the production sees the cast being ably supported by all-female band The Ladies In Waiting.
The Alexandra, Birmingham, Sun 4 June
Mrs Kapoor’s Daughter’s Wedding scored a big hit when it toured to the Midlands, and there’s every chance that this sequelfeaturing the same winning blend of relatable comedy and Bollywood-style glamour - will be accompanied by a similar cascade of well-deserved plaudits. The show’s storyline is wafer-thin, but where the production really scores is with its highenergy feelgood factor, imaginatively blending dancing and singing to create a party atmosphere that’s clearly enjoyed by audiences and performers alike.
Wolverhampton Grand Theatre, Tues 27 June - Sat 1 July
Popular Nickleodeon animated television star SpongeBob SquarePants takes centrestage in a production that’s being described as ‘an all-singing, all-dancing, deep-sea pearl of a show’.
Featuring ‘irresistible characters, magical choreography and dazzling costumes’ - not to mention ‘wave after wave of original songs by the world’s most iconic rock and pop artists’the show made a splash when it played Broadway back in 2017, picking up an impressive 12 Tony Award nominations in the process.
If you’ve not caught the television series, SpongeBob is a yellow sea sponge who lives with a host of other quirky characters in the undersea city of Bikini Bottom. The show has proved enormously popular since debuting in 1999 and was last year renewed for a 14th season. Celebs Go Dating’s Tom Read Wilson and RuPaul’s Drag Race UK star Divina De Campo take top billing.
New Vic Theatre, Newcastle-under-Lyme, until Sat 10 June
Claybody Theatre here revive their stage adaptation of Potteries-born author Arnold Bennett’s classic comic novel. Set in a fictionalised Stokeon-Trent known as The Five Towns, the story follows the fortunes of loveable rogue Denry Machin, a washerwoman’s son who refuses to allow his humble beginnings to thwart his ambition to live the high life.
Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-uponAvon, Sat 17 June - Sat 5 August Omar Elerian directs this ‘playful and provocative’ new version of Shakespeare’s highly likable comedy. In a move away from a more traditional presentation of the play, the production sees the stage transformed into a rehearsal room, where actors gather to recall a past show and share out between them the roles in As You Like It.
The comedy’s storyline revolves around the character of Rosalind, banished by her usurping uncle to the Forest Of Arden, where her exiled father is already living. Revelling in the naturalness of her surroundings - and accompanied by her cousin, Celia, and Touchstone the fool - the young woman finds a happiness she didn’t know existed... In an example of age-blind casting, 72-year-old Geraldine James - making her RSC debutstars as Rosalind and leads a company of veteran actors.
Albany Theatre, Coventry, Fri 16 June
Inspired by the life of jazz icon Nina Simone, Black Is The Color Of My Voice follows a successful singer and civil rights activist seeking redemption after the death of her father. Her grief provides an opportunity to reflect on the journey that took her from a piano prodigy destined for a life in the service of the church, to a renowned jazz vocalist at the forefront of the Civil Rights Movement.
Featuring classic tunes such as Feeling Good, I Put A Spell On You, Mississippi Goddamn, I Love You Porgy and See-Line Woman, this acclaimed one-woman show currently stars its creator, Apphia Campbell.
“I was inspired by Nina Simone as a woman,” says Apphia. “I wanted to show the woman behind the music because I felt like there was a lot of mystery around her, and a lot of myth as well. People had all these stories about her and her erratic behaviour. I just felt really moved by it, and I wanted to know where all that pain and all the feeling she put into her songs came from.”
Regent Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent, Tues 30 May - Sat 3 June
In 1862, Anna Leonowens, upon whose reallife experiences The King And I is based, was employed by King Mongkut of Siam to serve as governess to his 67 children. Anna wrote of her experiences in two books, The English Governess At The Siamese Court and The Romance Of The Harem.
Published in the 1870s, the books became significant sources of information about Siam and its culture for Western readers.
The stage musical tells Anna’s story, showing the way in which she wins the trust of the barbaric but inquisitive King as she makes her presence felt in the royal court.
Boasting spectacular sets, breathtaking costumes, all the splendour of Rodgers & Hammerstein’s memorable score and a royal palace’s-worth of awards, the show currently stars Annalene Beechey and Darren Lee.
New Vic Theatre, Newcastle-under-Lyme, Mon 19 - Sat 24 June
“Come and be part of an exciting experiment in sustainability, as this has never been done before in the UK,” urges Holly Rose Roughan, artistic director of Headlong, the theatre company co-producing this climate-crisis drama by American writer Miranda Rose Hall.
The ‘exciting experiment’ to which Holly is referring involves the show being powered by bicycles. And an innovative touring model means that the only element which actually tours is the script - people and materials do not.
In each city a blueprint of the show will be brought to life by local creative teams as part of a ground-breaking experiment in making theatre more eco-friendly.
“Theatre allows us to collectively imagine an alternative future, “ says Holly, “and I firmly believe that touring companies can be pollinators of that national imagination.”
The Rep, Birmingham, Wed 28 June - Sat 1 July
Siobhán McSweeney here takes the role of Winnie - a woman literally buried up to her waist in a mound of earth - in Samuel Beckett’s critically acclaimed 1961 play. Widely considered to be a reflection on, among other themes, the passing of time and the endless repetition of dying moments, the work has been named by the Independent newspaper as one of the 40 greatest plays of all time.
Tamworth Castle, Sun 18 June; Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, Mon 19 - Wed 21 June; Midlands Arts Centre (MAC), Birmingham, Sat 8 - Sun 9 July
Much Ado About Nothing revolves around the stumbling romance between Benedick and Beatrice, a liaison strewn with difficulties - not least among which is an unwillingness on the part of either to admit a liking for the other...
Not that the plot of Much Ado is likely to be overly important in this particular production, given the fact that it’s zany funsters Oddsocks who’re at the helm! Expect plenty of madcap mayhem and laughter from this always-value-for-money ensemble.
Midlands Arts Centre, Birmingham, Wed 21 & Thurs 22 June
A new comedy-drama by Birmingham-based
writer Hayley Davis, 5 Years asks what price people would pay for the perfect body. Hayley was inspired to write the play after being shocked by national research which revealed what people would sacrifice for the ideal physique.
“Some people are trading their lives in a search for perfection,” says Hayley. “They are having surgery, going and doing really dangerous things, taking skin-lightening creams that can cause cancer, having Brazilian butt-lifts which mean you can die on the table, or ‘Turkey teeth’, where people are living in agony because they’ve shaved down perfectly healthy teeth. It’s just torturous.”
Wolverhampton Grand Theatre, Tues 13 - Fri 16 June
Leading dramatist Roy Williams explores the experience of being young and black in 1980s Thatcherite Britain.
As simmering racial tensions threaten to spill over, best pals and promising boxers Troy and Leon hope that trainer Charlie can help them punch their way to a better life...
A new children’s show featuring AA Milne’s much-loved characters is coming to Birmingham Hippodrome this month...
As a child, actor Alex Cardall’s second home was Birmingham Hippodrome. Each Saturday he would join a weekly amateur dramatics club for youngsters and, together with his family, regularly watch productions at the theatre.
So this month, when he steps onto the Hippodrome stage in the touring production of Winnie The Pooh, it will be a very special moment for the 26-year-old from Solihull.
“Birmingham Hippodrome was where it all started for me,” says Alex. “I began with BSS Spotlight, which became BSS Showbiz, and it was where I started to sing, act and dance. It was such a special place for me because it’s where I started to learn that this was what I wanted to do as a career.
“I was five when I first went to do am-dram with Ian Sandy, who used to do BSS Spotlight. My dad was a trumpet player, a very dramatic showbiz man, and he said it would be good for me and for my confidence. I didn’t think I’d want to do it, as I just wanted to play football, but I walked around with my dad and I saw the classes, saw the acting, saw the dancing, and I fell in love with it. So I did BSS Showbiz on Saturdays, then every fortnight I would go to London to see a show.”
Alex set his sights on a career on the stage and gained a place at Birmingham Ormiston Academy, where he studied for a BTEC in musical theatre. He also performed with National Youth Music Theatre and gained a place at Arts Educational School in Chiswick. Graduating in 2018, he has since performed in a number of shows, including taking the role of singer Andy Williams in the tour of The Osmonds, which visited both Birmingham’s The Alexandra and the Grand Theatre in Wolverhampton.
Winnie The Pooh will be his first time back at the Hippodrome.
“What I always said when I was really young was that I really wanted to do a show on the Hippodrome stage. I remember seeing Slava’s Snowshow there and all the pantomimes, but I never thought I’d be bringing Winnie the Pooh to Birmingham! This is just an amazing experience, an amazing opportunity, and I’m excited to be in a kids’ show at the venue where I started as a kid.”
The hour-long stage adaptation of Disney’s Winnie The Pooh features puppets of all the much-loved characters from AA Milne’s classic stories. It also includes, alongside new music, a number of well-known Sherman Brothers songs, among them The Wonderful Thing About Tiggers and Rumbly In My Tumbly. Premiered off-Broadway in 2021, the production showed at London’s Riverside Studios before embarking on a UK tour this spring.
“It’s primarily a story told through the eyes of Winnie the Pooh, and we are actors with puppets attached to our bodies. We rotate the characters, so one day I play Owl, Eeyore and Rabbit, and that’s mixed in also with Tigger on another day. So each day I’ll have different characters to play.
“The puppets are quite heavy, so it’s a massive challenge. There’s a lot of selfdiscipline needed, to make sure you’re looking after yourself, because you are giving so much. Seeing the amazing responses of the audience, you want to make sure you’re giving the best performance every time, as it makes such a difference to people.”
Alex was keen to add another string to his bow by mastering puppetry on stage.
“Puppetry was new for me, so I had to learn it in four weeks of rehearsal. It was very hard
by Diane Parkeswork to make sure we were lip-syncing as well. But learning a new skill was one of the reasons that I took the job - puppetry is a much-needed skill now in theatres. I feel like I’m learning on a daily basis how to make it better every time.”
Although aimed at children aged three and older, Winnie The Pooh is also attracting adult audiences who are keen to take a walk down memory lane.
“There’s an element of mystery and childhood within it, and it’s a really beautiful show for any person of any age. If you’re a child, you certainly relate to it. If you’re an adult, it just takes you straight back to a memory - like a mug in your nan’s room or a cuddly toy that you had as a kid. I think that’s what we are searching for as peoplean attachment to our childhood; a memory that takes you back.
“There are lots of characters in the show that people can connect to. For me, I loved Tigger as a kid - I thought he was such a wonderful character. I think when I was a kid it was the fact Tigger was so sporadic and so franticbut now I’m older, I feel more Rabbit. I like things to be more inline and tidier!”
Alex is hoping Winnie The Pooh and his part in it will inspire other children to love theatre.
“I’ll be looking at the kids at the meet & greet and thinking ‘that was me’. Being a professional actor and coming back to the Hippodrome and doing a kids’ show there really is a bit of a pinch-me moment.”
Winnie The Pooh shows at Birmingham Hippodrome from Fri 16 to Sun 18 June Children’s favourites Winnie the Pooh, Tigger, Eeyore, Kanga and Roo are taking to the stage in a new family musical set in the Hundred Acre Wood. What’s On recently caught up with one of the show’s actors - former Birmingham Ormiston Academy student Alex Cardall...Swan Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, until Sat 17 June
Author Maggie O’Farrell scored an unlikely hit when her 2020 novel, Hamnet, became an international bestseller.
Set in 1582, the story follows the lives of William Shakespeare (unnamed in the novel) and Anne (in the book, Agnes) Hathaway as they fall in love and start a family.
William moves to London to forge his career in the world of theatre while Agnes stays at home in Warwickshire to raise their three children. But then tragedy strikes, as their only son, 11-year-old Hamnet, succumbs to the bubonic plague.
This stage adaptation of O’Farrell’s novel is the first production to be mounted in the Royal Shakespeare Company’s newly restored Swan Theatre. RSC Acting Artistic Director Erica Whyman helms the show.
Midlands Arts Centre, Birmingham, Thurs 15 June
Award-winning Birmingham theatre company Quick Duck make ‘ridiculous queer shows with a lot of heart and a killer soundtrack’ - and this latest production can very definitely be described as such. A warm, funny and impressively nuanced celebration of the traditional rom-com movie, Confetti’s story is based around the lead-up to a wedding and pays homage to the often overlooked character of ‘the gay best friend’. The production stars its writer, Will Jackson, and shows in Birmingham - Will’s home town - as part of a UK tour.
Lichfield Garrick, Fri 23 & Sat 24 June
Audience members as young as eight could well be saying ‘fangs for the advice’ after watching this cautionary tale about the dangers of vampires.
Presented by highly regarded Devon-based theatre company Le Navet Bete, it follows the
desperate - and comic - attempts of Dracula’s nemesis, Professor Abraham Van Helsing, to warn the audience not to tangle with the prince of the undead. Sound advice, we’d say, and delivered with plenty of family-friendly laughs along the way. It’s probably best to pack some garlic, though - just in case...
Albany Theatre, Coventry, Fri 9 June Now, if you feel you really should pay more attention to the works of the world’s greatest-ever playwright, but really don’t fancy hour upon endless hour spent listening to some terribly serious actors theeing and thou-ing in your general direction, then this is the show for you! All of Shakespeare’s 30-plus plays are covered in the blink of an eye, allowing you not only to become very learned very quickly, but also to get down the pub in time for last orders!
Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury, Wed 28 June - Sat 1 July
Although her 1994 play, Art, is probably French playwright Yasmina Reza’s most decorated work, this sharp-edged black comedy has certainly picked up its fair share of coveted silverware.
The winner of the 2009 Oliver Award for best comedy, it focuses on two sets of parents who meet up to deal with the unruly behaviour of their children. It soon becomes apparent, however, that it isn’t only the youngsters who resort to hysteria, name-calling, tantrums and tears before bedtime...
Malvern Theatres, Mon 12 - Sat 17 June; The Alexandra, Birmingham, Tues 20 - Sat 24 June
Bestselling crime writer Peter James has scored major successes on stage as well as in print, with adaptations of his novels having played to appreciative audiences at venues across the UK. This latest offering sees Detective Superintendent Roy Grace - the Brighton-based policeman who’s headed up murder investigations in a number of James’ most popular works - heading off on holiday with Senior Anatomical Pathology Technician Cleo Morey. It’s their first vacation together, and they’re very much looking forward to a few days away from the dark worlds of murder and the mortuary. But fate, it would seem, has other plans for them... Clive Mantle and George Rainsford star.
Birmingham Festival 23, a 10-day programme of free live music, performance and other events, kicks off late next month and is organised by the team behind the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games Festival. Creative Director Raidene Carter, who was executive producer of last year’s event, chats to What’s On about how the new festival came about, what audiences can expect, and why it’s important for Birmingham...
Where did the idea for an anniversary festival come from, Raidene, or was it something that was envisioned all along? It was an evolving idea that brought together a few conversations, ideas and strategic plans. Birmingham 2022 Festival had legacy ambitions that were developed with funders and strategic partners, and one thread was exploring a new international festival that could be a future platform for some of the outcomes achieved and ambitions raised through staging the 2022 festival. There was undeniably a shared joyful experience of being in the city during Games time; people felt good, and this was a collective energy that would not have been the same if culture hadn’t occupied the city in the way it did.
Given the cost-of-living crisis, it’s great that the festival is free to attend. Do you see this as a positive statement of intent by Birmingham City Council in terms of a commitment to funding culture in the region?
Possibly… hopefully! That said, I think the cost-of-living ‘crisis’ and commitments to funding culture are related, but I choose not
to see them side by side, as this tends to unfairly make us question the value of culture. Culture has, time and time again, proven a return on investment both in terms of the financial value that can be calculated and the non-tangible value it gives back over time - happiness, wellbeing, sense of pride and place, making places attractive for visitors and businesses. It’s not a myth - last year the six-month festival cost roughly £16million and the independent festival evaluation calculated a £100million direct return with a further £87million in gross value added. So while we should absolutely celebrate that the City Council is funding the festival this year, we should also recognise that it’s a smart move - culture is a good investment!
Do you hope that making the festival free will encourage people who may not usually attend arts & cultural events to check them out?
For sure. Honestly, while we want everyone and anyone to come out and enjoy the festival, we’re working hard to make sure that the audiences we reached last year - of which
70 per cent were from lower and low-income households - come back again, because the diversity and profile of the audiences we reached wasn’t the same as those who regularly attend arts & cultural events. We’d love for those who felt they took a risk last year, to come out again this year, and it will hopefully seem less of a risk and more familiar this time.
This year’s event follows a similar pattern to 2022 in terms of utilising local talent, including a Made In Brum element. Can we expect to see some of last year’s favourites as well as new faces?
Yes, there’ll be familiar faces and loads of new talent, too. We’re right in the thick of programming, so I can’t say too much about what’s confirmed, but we are leaning into what worked last year - local artists and groups went down so well, and we know they want to build on that experience. We also had work happen all over the place and not come into the city centre, so if you think ‘I will have seen it all before’, you won’t haveunless you managed to be at every single site and day of the festival last year!
Is it more of a challenge to put the event on this year without the Commonwealth Games, or is there a benefit to having less pressure?
It’s a bit of both! The speed of this year is a bit terrifying, but the familiarity is really helping those of us who were involved before. The pressure is much higher, even though our event is much smaller, as we really raised the bar last year. We’re not trying to compete or compare, as that would be silly - and disrespectful too, I think, as thousands of people came together last year to make it all happen. Instead, we’re paying homage to the Games by inviting people to come out and mark its one-year anniversary.
There will obviously be fewer tourists and international visitors this time around. Will that influence the style and content of the festival, in terms of gearing it more towards local people?
Not having a global mega event in town is one of the things that will make this year’s festival very different, but it’s not the only reason. We’re still inviting visitors from further afield and working closely with the region’s tourism & growth programme to make sure we’re part of that outward narrative this summer. The majority of the festival’s audiences last year were from the city and region, so we’re not changing the
script too much in terms of audience development - we still want local people to turn up and know it’s for them, plus tourists.
How important is it to continue the legacy of the Games and last year’s festival, particularly in terms of celebrating the region’s creative community?
I keep saying there’s big-L legacy and small-l legacy but all of it is important. The smaller threads of activity that go under the radar are propping up or leading to the bigger outcomes. Birmingham Festival 23 will cover both little-l and big-L legacy for the Games. It’s happening one year on as a reminder of all that goodwill and intention, and we’re platforming lots of the creatives and work that developed last year, plus loads of new stuff and younger creatives as a nod to the future. The city and region needs major platforms to express the ridiculously broad range and amount of culture and talent here. When it comes together, it’s so powerful. Are there any events you’re especially excited about?
As I said, we’re right in the thick of confirming the programme, so it’d be a bit unfair to reveal details when the artists and companies aren’t completely sure of the plans themselves! We had an amazing glut of applications for Made In Brum, and the
by Steve Adamsproposals for the Twilight Takeover were really inspiring. It’s always nerve-wracking putting a brief out to the creative sector, as you never know if it will strike the right chord with where they’re at and the current ambition in the air, but the ideas that came back were on the nose. It’s really difficult deciding what to programme for that reasonthe hardest job is turning ideas down!
And the million-dollar question - will the iconic Raging Bull be playing a part in proceedings?
Well, we already know that Raging Bull will take up a permanent home at New Street Station, and given it’s probably the Games’ biggest cultural icon, I can’t wait for it to return - it’s a feat of puppetry engineering that we don’t often get to see up close. You’ll have to wait and see what happens… but we can’t actually fit him on Centenary Square during the festival as you wouldn’t be able to see the screen! Plus, we have Perry the Bull, who can dance and smiles a lot more than his angry cousin!
Birmingham Festival 23 takes place in Centenary Square from Friday 28 July to Sunday 6 August
Theatre for younger audiences...
Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry, Thurs 1 - Sun 4 June; Swan Theatre, Worcester, Wed 7 - Thurs 8 June; Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, Tues 31 October - Wed 1 November
Another Tall Stories adaptation of a picture book by award-winning collaborators Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler, The Smeds And The
Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, until Sun 4 June; Malvern Theatres, Sat 10 & Sun 11 June
This hour-long stage production, starring the late Judith Kerr’s much-loved creation, is presented by Bristol-based theatre group The Wardrobe Ensemble.
Suitable for children aged three-plus, the show takes audiences on a journey through one year in the life of forgetful feline Mog, whose adventures see her catching a burglar, gatecrashing a cat show, going to the vet, and eating a considerable number of eggs.
Although Kerr is perhaps best known for her 1968 children’s story, The Tiger Who Came To Tea, her character of Mog is certainly no
Smoos tells the intergalactic tale of a young Smed and a young Smoo who fall hopelessly in love. Problem is... the red-coloured Smeds and the blue-coloured Smoos never mix, causing Romeo & Juliet-style complications for the star-crossed lovers... Created for children aged three-plus, this theatrical presentation of Donaldson and Scheffler’s delightful space romance comes complete with a powerful but gently conveyed message about difference and tolerance.
slouch when it comes to the serious business of exciting and delighting young readers; indeed, the original Mog story, published in 1970, has never been out of print.
Lichfield Garrick, Sun 25 June
Combining visual effects, music and comedy, this 60-minute show features elephants from Africa, saltwater crocodiles from Australia, orangutans from Indonesia and dinosaurs from the past.
The production is presented by the Animal Guyz, who scored a big hit last year with their previous touring show, Animal Antics.
The Alexandra, Birmingham, Wed 28 June - Sat 1 July
David Walliams’ Demon Dentist tells a toothy tale of dental disaster and finds Alfie and his pal, Gabz, doing their level best to solve a disturbing mystery: Why is it that children who leave their teeth for the tooth fairy are then waking up to find horrible things under their pillow?...
Could it have anything to do with the town’s new dentist - the aptly named Miss Root?
The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton, Thurs 1 June; The Alexandra, Birmingham, Thurs 8 & Fri 9 June
“We’ve been working together 45 years and are now coming out of the longest break we’ve ever had from working together.”
So says Penn Jillette, in talking about his Emmy award-winning magic act with Teller, who goes only by that one name. “We are so excited to start touring in the UK, playing our favourite theatres. Is this our last UK tour? We don’t know, but you’re welcome to buy tickets and hope for that, while we’ll be hoping for more final tours than the Stones and Cher put together. Wouldn’t you like to see the Stones and Cher put together?”
Titled The First Final UK Tour, the show will combine stunning magic tricks with plenty of humour and audience participation.
Old Joint Stock Theatre, Birmingham, Thurs 8 - Sat 10 June
A ‘raucous, wild and tantalising’ drag revue show paying homage to the magic and madness of musical theatre, Send In The Clowns is hosted by cabaret performer and Drag Idol UK winner Fatt Butcher. This latest show features some of the Midlands’ bestknown drag & cabaret entertainers engaging in what’s being described as ‘a celebrationcum-assassination’ of the work of Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Telford Theatre, Oakengates, Shropshire, Thurs 15 June
Drag fans can enjoy two acts for the price of one in Telford mid-month, when Vanity Milan and Elektra Fence team up to present an evening of near-the-knuckle cabaret. It isn’t the first time South London’s Vanity and Burnley’s Elektra have performed together - the pair both featured in the third season of RuPaul’s Drag Race UK. The duo are promising a show that’s ‘sexy, savage, sugar & spice and everything nice’.
Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, Wed 14 - Sat 17 June
Hip-hop-infused, politically charged protest cabaret Hot Brown Honey returns with The Remix, a celebration of female power that promises its audience ‘you’ll laugh until you cry, clap until your hands bleed... and shake every part of what your mama gave you’. An impressively inventive exploration of everyday racism and sexism, the show blends burlesque, dance, circus and music to excellent effect, its unapologetically feminist manifesto seeking not only to entertain and educate but also to challenge and inspire.
Symphony Hall, Birmingham, Fri 2 June
Best known for extremely funny Game Of Thrones online recaps (titled Gay Of Thrones) and from rebooted Netflix makeover show Queer Eye, Emmy-nominated Jonathan Van Ness heads for the Midlands early this month with a show that’s promising an evening of ‘queer joy and side-splitting comedy’.
Lichfield Garrick, Sat 10 June; Wolverhampton Grand Theatre, Sun 25 June; Birmingham Town Hall, Sat 1 July
A coming together of musical theatre and jaw-dropping circus, this intriguing touring show features stars of the West End performing alongside ‘amazing aerialists and incredible contortionists’ as they undertake ‘thrilling feats of agility and flair’... Cirque is certainly an interesting concept, and it’s to be hoped that the performers really embrace the challenge of seamlessly combining two such hugely popular art forms.
Resorts World Arena, Birmingham, Tues 6 June
Strictly star and Disney super-fan Janette Manrara hosts this centenary celebration of the much-loved Mouse House, presenting a concert that features hit songs from a wealth of classic films plus highlights from the worlds of Pixar, Star Wars and Marvel.
“It’s no secret I’m a big Disney fan,” says Janette, “so to be able to celebrate all the beautiful music of the last 100 years that Disney’s storytelling has brought us, is an absolute joy!”
Omar Elerian talks about his playful approach to one of Shakespeare’s most popular comedies...
by Diane ParkesOne of Shakespeare’s ‘most joyous tales’ is being approached very differently in a brand-new RSC production directed by Omar Elerian. Staged as ‘a play within a play’, Omar’s version of As You Like It takes place in a rehearsal-room setting and features a cast of RSC veterans - as he recently explained to What’s On...
A new production of Shakespeare’s comedy, As You Like It - which opens in Stratfordupon-Avon this month - is aiming to throw a fresh light on the story by featuring a cast of actors who are mainly over 70.
Directed by Olivier Award-nominated Omar Elerian, the show hopes not only to challenge the stereotypes around older actors but also bring something new to a familiar play by examining the idea of memory and imagination.
“When the Royal Shakespeare Company approached me about directing As You Like It, I was intrigued,” says Omar. “It’s a comedy, it’s a bit disjointed, it’s full of tongue-in-cheek references and jokes to the audience - but I didn’t want to do it in a straight way.
“I was struck by reading the play how these ideas of love and freedom are normally associated to youth, and actually how I found that older actors, and in fact older people, were excluded by this vision of freedom and love. So I thought maybe that could be an interesting lens to look at the play. It’s a play a lot of people love and know very well, and whether this would be an opportunity to see something new, and whether that might unlock something in it that we hadn’t heard before.” And so the production becomes a play within a play.
“There is a framing device... there is a company of actors who are coming together some 40 to 45 years after they last performed a production of As You Like It. But nothing is left of that production apart from the memories they hold of it - and of course their memories are very different.
“I was interested in this idea of conjuring a memory of a show, and how actors are able to recreate something that is not there, to make the invisible visible to an audience, and how quickly the audience can go on that journey of belief and conspiracy with the performers.”
The production begins in an empty space, a rehearsal room, where the actors try to recall the previous production and their roles.
“By doing this, they little by little get back into habiting that production. Some of the elements can’t be there anymore, or just very simply the actors cannot do the things they were doing years ago. Or they are different people, and what they felt about playing a specific role or a specific line when they were in their 20s sounds very different once they speak those same lines or inhabit those same roles having had that lifelong experience.
“The idea is that theatre is a place where conventions can be challenged and a place of the imagination. Of all Shakespeare’s plays, As You Like It plays the most with this subversion of order, and class and gender and birth - and I thought one thing that we don’t see quite often is how perhaps age is a construct to which we apportion a social value as much as race or gender.”
One of the benefits of Omar’s idea is that the RSC has assembled a host of hugely skilled and respected actors for the show - many of whom have appeared in RSC productions over several decades. The cast includes Maureen Beattie, Oliver Cotton, Celia Bannerman, David Fielder, Geraldine James, David Sibley, Malcolm Sinclair, James Hayes, Robin Soans, Cleo Sylvestre, Ewart James Walters and Michael Bertenshaw.
“It was a very beautiful and humbling experience being able to speak with so many actors of that generation, people I have looked up to for a long time. They were very excited - a lot of them are perhaps not being asked to play roles of that age now. And also for the opportunity to be in a room where you go through a creative process which is not particularly traditional, in which there is a lot of playing, a lot of improvisation.
“Many told me it was like going back to their roots as a younger actor and starting off and kind of learning the craft. So for them it was a case of going back to the roots of their work, being in this big ensemble company, this repertoire company, all over the UK in the ’70s.”
And they are supported by a cast of four younger actors.
“The meeting of these two generations on
stage is very touching but also very playful and funny. I think that will be an added dimension of the production that I hope the audience will enjoy.”
Much of Omar’s thinking about the play was inspired by the famous ‘Seven Ages of Man’ speech - given by the exiled lord, Jacqueswhich sits at the heart of As You Like It.
“I was really intrigued by this play because Shakespeare in many plays mentions the craft of theatre - in The Tempest and in Hamlet - but the ‘Seven Ages of Man’ feels so much a declaration. When Jacques says ‘all the world’s a stage, and all the men and women are merely players’, it’s an acknowledgement of how the microcosm that Shakespeare builds on stage was his daily breath; as a writer, an actor, a company manager, he lived and breathed for it.
“He just tells the audience ‘you are watching a play and you are watching the world.’ And the world as well can be a play, and the boundaries between representation and life can be very thin, and the emotions that we invest in these fictions actually help us to understand better our own real lives.
“I hope audiences take away a sense of joy and wonder and playfulness. I think, for me, perhaps the playfulness is at the heart of what we are trying to do. It’s the idea that, regardless of the age and regardless of the status that we apportion to a piece of work or a writer, when we gather for a few hours in a space like a theatre, what we are there to do is to exercise our imagination and to regress in a way, to have this state of childhood. A state where we can really experience wonder and imagine something different, and then perhaps we are able to bring this back into the real world and our daily lives and approach them with more imagination, playfulness and openness.”
The RSC’s As You Like It shows at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratfordupon-Avon, from Saturday 17 June to Saturday 5 August
Dance previews from across the region
This mouthwatering triple bill features three very different pieces: former BRB Artistic Director David Bintley’s ‘Still Life’ At The Penguin Café, George Balanchine’s Apollo and Juliano Nunes’ Interlinked.
“The programme aims to ensure that there’s something for everyone to enjoy,” says BRB Director Carlos Acosta. “In the context of this triple bill, there’s what could be seen as the beginning, which is Apollo by George Balanchine. It is a 1928 piece, but it’s still very relevant today, feels very modern, and it’s one of my favourite pieces.”
Carlos was also keen to include Nunes’ Interlinked, which formed part of the Birmingham 2022 Festival last summer.
“Interlinked shows the company very well, it’s modern but classically
Birmingham Hippodrome, Tues 13 & Wed 14 June
Touring festival Breakin’ Convention is the brainchild of pioneering dancer, director & poet Jonzi D.
Uniting top international acts with local talent, it aims to enhance the profile of hiphop as an art form, presenting a mix of professional development, youth and education projects in addition to its worldrenowned events.
This year’s show features South Korea’s breakin’ crew Mover, Netherland’s influential forces of funk, Ghetto Funk Collective, and Dutch international hip-hop pole champion Yvonne Smink.
based, and was a great hit with the audience. Its theme of being gender neutral is something that is so much in discussion at the moment, so it’s very inclusive from that perspective. This feels very much that it is showing the company now.”
The triple bill’s finale - ‘Still Life’ At The Penguin Café - features a range of endangered creatures in different guises, including a morrisdancing flea and penguin waiters.
“Penguin Café is more relevant than ever, as it looks at climate change,” says Carlos. “It’s a very popular work, so we are delighted to be bringing it back.”
New Vic Theatre, Newcastle-under-Lyme, Mon 5 June; Malvern Theatres, Thurs 8 June; The Roses, Tewkesbury, Fri 23 June
Touring to an impressive number of venues throughout the UK on an annual basis, Ballet Cymru has garnered a reputation for presenting innovative, challenging and original productions. The company was founded in 1986 and prides itself on presenting ‘a high standard of classical ballet in an unpretentious and original way’. Ballet Cymru’s latest show sees them performing two of Roald Dahl’s much-loved Revolting Rhymes - a 1982 collection of reinterpreted fairytales featuring surprise endings.
Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury, Thurs 29 & Fri 30 June; Regent Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent, Sat 15 July; Symphony Hall, Birmingham, Sat 29 July With the next series of Strictly Come Dancing still some time away, you may be in urgent need of a summertime booster-jab to keep you going. If so, then Anton Du Beke and Giovanni Pernice’s Him & Me is most definitely the production for you.
Two of the hit BBC TV series’ biggest and alltime best-loved professional dancers, Anton and Giovanni here present a show that’s being described as a true dance extravaganza. A ‘world-class’ cast of dancers and singers further add to the magic.
(112 mins)
Starring Aisling Bea, Alice Lowe, Amaka Okafor, Jayde Adams, Marc Wootton, Lara McDonnell Directed by Coky Giedroyc
Despite being executive-produced by Take That and featuring their music, Greatest Days isn’t a film about Gary Barlow and co. It’s actually a story about the fans, the power music can have over people, and - as writer Tim Firth says - how music ‘makes time travellers of us all’. For five teenage girls, their favourite boyband and the music they play are everything. Twenty-five years later, the quintet attempt to rekindle their friendship with a trip to a concert by the band they loved so dearly as teenagers. But none of the ladies’ lives have turned out quite the way they were expecting...
The film is based on the hit musical of the same name, which was originally titled The Band.
Released Fri 16 June
CERT tbc
With the voices of Shameik Moore, Hailee Steinfeld, Oscar Isaac, Jake Johnson, Issa Rae, Brian Tyree Henry
Directed by Joaquim Dos Santos, Kemp Powers and Justin K Thompson
Everybody’s favourite wall-crawling webslinger makes a welcome return in another animated tale. And if it’s even half as good as its 2018 predecessor, Into The SpiderVerse, it’s going to be one hell of a film. This one finds Spidey battling to complete a mission to save every universe of SpiderPeople from the evil-doings of The Spot - a supervillain with the ability to open interdimensional portals via which he travels long distances and commits crimes. A third film in the series, Spider-Man: Beyond The Spider-Verse, is slated for release in spring of next year.
Released Fri 2 June
CERT tbc (220 mins)
With the voices of Michelle Yeoh, Pete Davidson, Ron Perlman, Peter Dinklage, John DiMaggio, Cristo Fernández
Directed by Steven Caple Jr
Having eagerly anticipated this film for more than four years, Transformers’ hugely committed fans will no doubt be beyond ecstatic to see their favourites finally return to the cinema screen.
Following on from the highly successful Bumblebee movie of 2018, Rise Of The Beasts is the seventh installment in a series which kickstarted in 2007 and has been gathering pace ever since.
Inspired, of course, by Hasbro’s Transformers toy line, the films feature a traditional story of good versus evil, as the heroic Autobots battle against the evil Decepticons.
Released Fri 8 June
Starring Ezra Miller, Ben Affleck, Michael Shannon, Michael Keaton, Temuera Morrison, Sasha Calle Directed by Andy Muschietti
This first film about The Flash (a superfast superhero who’s been around since the 1930s) is also the 13th movie in the DC Extended Universe.
And the comic-book giants will certainly be hoping this latest release is no slouch when it comes to the serious box-office business of putting bums on seats.
Broadly speaking, DC has struggled to make the same cinematic impact as its traditional rivals, Marvel, but The Flash has impressive form when it comes to successfully accessing a significant audience - the samenamed television series ran for a total of nine seasons.
The film sees Flash travelling back in time to prevent his mother’s murder - an action that leaves him trapped in an alternate reality threatened with annihilation by the seriously unpleasant General Zod. If ever a superhero needed to move fast...
Released Fri 16 June
tbc
Starring Jason Schwartzman, Scarlett Johansson, Tom Hanks, Jeffrey Wright, Tilda Swinton, Bryan Cranston Directed by Wes Anderson
Director Wes Anderson’s fertile imagination is firing on all cylinders in this eagerly anticipated sci-fi rom-com. A star-studded story about stargazers, the film is set in a fictional desert town in 1955, where students and parents come together for an annual junior stargazer/space cadet convention. Rest, recreation, scholarly competition and an appreciation of ‘the clear skies above’ all feature on the convention’s agenda. But thanks to a series of profoundly affecting ‘unspecified events’, not everything goes according to plan...
Released Fri 23 June
CERT tbc (142 mins)
Starring Harrison Ford, Mads Mikkelsen, Boyd Holbrook, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Antonio Banderas, John Rhys-Davies Directed by James Mangold
Starring Jennifer Lawrence, Natalie Morales, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Matthew Broderick, Laura Benanti, Danielia Maximillian
Directed by Gene Stupnitsky
Jennifer Lawrence produces as well as stars in this coming-of-age sex comedy, taking the lead role of Maddie, an Uber driver facing bankruptcy when her car is repossessed. Needing to sort out her life fast, she finds herself taking on an unusual job - working for a couple who want her to help their introverted son enjoy the pleasures of adult life by ‘dating his brains out’. In exchange for making a man of him, she will receive a Buick Regal. Maddie’s expecting the gig to be a walk in the park, but much to her surprise she soon discovers that the painfully awkward Percy is no sure thing...
Released Fri 23 June
Age has not withered him... Or at least that’s what Harrison Ford fans will be hoping is the case as he returns, in his 81st year, to the role of whip-wielding actionadventurer Indiana Jones.
This is the fifth Indy film, with Harrison declaring that it will also be his final outing in the role. As such, he’ll no doubt be hoping to make a fond farewell with all guns blazing. With a solid supporting cast giving it their all, and an imaginative storyline that brings together NASA and Nazis, there’s plenty of reason to think this latest entry in the franchise will be a summer blockbuster well worth catching.
Released Fri 30 June
at
If you’re the sort of person who’s always in the kitchen at parties, then Rifco Theatre Company’s family comedy-drama, Happy Birthday Sunita, could be right up your (g)alley. Much of the play takes place between the sink and cooker of the Johal residence, where daughter Sunita’s 40th birthday party is the catalyst for a wild night of revelations, realisations, recriminations and ramifications, albeit with a hearty helping of food, fun and frolics along the way.
A sell-out success on its first outing in 2014, the play is being revived by the same team that created the original, but with a new cast and revised script by actress and writer Harvey Virdi. Harvey has starred in a number of films, including Bend It Like Beckham, but is probably best known as Dr Misbah Maalik in Channel Four soap Hollyoaks. The play will be directed by Pravesh Kumar MBE, founder & artistic director of Rifco, which has a stated remit to develop vibrant and accessible new plays and musicals that reflect and celebrate British South Asian experiences. Happy Birthday Sunita ticks all of those boxes, and while it might no longer be new, the script has undergone some major revisions that not only freshen it up but make it even better, according to Harvey.
“When Pravesh spoke to me last year and said he’d like to bring it back and have another go at it, I thought that’d be brilliant,” she says. “Since then we’ve had Brexit and Covid, and they’ve really affected people and how they think about what they want to do with their lives.”
Harvey admits she also jumped at the chance to tweak some of those things she wasn’t totally happy with first time around.
“It’s just trying to do it better, because that’s the whole point, isn’t it? I’m not saying it wasn’t good last time, because I was so happy with it, but it’s always nice to have another go.”
She also believes that a finished script is never set in stone, because it becomes a living thing for the cast to potentially tinker with and reinterpret at every performance.
“The wonderful thing about theatre is that every night it’s going to be different because the reaction from the audience is different. Sometimes they laugh at bits you didn’t
expect people to laugh at, or the reaction is different, and that affects how you play it as the actor. That’s the joy for me.”
Commitments to her day job on Hollyoaks mean Harvey won’t be performing - she missed out first time round too while touring another project - but she’s happy to have spent time in the rehearsal room seeing it taking shape, and is hugely excited by the new cast.
“They’re completely different [to the original cast] but equally amazing. Individual actors bring their own interpretation to a piece, and it’s wonderful watching actors bring a character to life. Sometimes in my head I can hear the rhythm of how I envisaged the scene going, and then when it happens you think ‘Yes! Yes!’”
As well as becoming the characters she envisioned, Harvey knows that actors in a touring company invariably become like a family, developing bonds that can spill over into their performances.
“It’s funny how that happens because it doesn’t matter who you are or what you’re doing, as soon as a little company comes together you become a family for the length of that show. It might just be a few weeks or a year’s tour, but it’s joyous.”
She also delights in bringing characters we all grew up with - “aunties and uncles that are part of your life” - to the stage. “You grow up observing them and their characteristics, and they’re all people we recognise, but we don’t get to see them on TV or on stage that often.”
The characters in the play might be based on an amalgamation of her own ‘aunties’ (a generic term for older women connected to her family) and grandmas, according to Harvey, but she’s confident no one will see themselves on the stage. But even if they do, it’s not necessarily a bad thing, as the play features three especially strong female leads, all at potential turning points in their lives. “There’s a mother, a daughter-in-law and Sunita, whose birthday it is. All three women are at different stages in their lives, trying to work out or discover who they are, what they’ve done with their lives and what they’re going to do with their lives.”
The birthday party sees a variety of long-
hidden truths and feelings come to a head, and even though the characters and story might be fictional, Harvey genuinely, and adorably, gets infuriated just talking about them.
“They’ve just avoided talking about the one thing they all should’ve bloody talked about 20 years ago,” she says with more than an air of consternation. “And the longer you avoid it, the more … urrgghh [makes noise of acute exasperation] it becomes.”
All those elements remain at the heart of the revised version of the drama, but as well as feeding in a number of contemporary references - Brexit, Covid, etc - Harvey’s been able to flesh out some of the characters by extending the show. Formerly a one-act play, it’s now two acts with an interval.
“Having two acts gives us time to explore the characters a bit more and find out why they are the way they are and what they’ve experienced to get to this point in their lives. It’s been nice to have the space to explore that.”
And while those experiences might be specific to the Johal family, the story is very much a universal one. Harvey is keen for the play not to be pigeonholed as an Asian family drama but rather just a family drama. “The family might happen to be Punjabi but they could be anybody. For me, the story is really important because it’s about three women who are standing up and saying, this is how I want to live my life, and I’m not going to do what you want me to do.
“It’s scary for anyone to do that, and say ‘I’m going to live my life like this’, because the repercussions can be huge. It takes a lot of bravery.
“And that’s all of us, isn’t it? We’re all brought up with a certain way to behave and live our lives, and it takes a brave person to do something different and outside the family or community.
“In a way it’s got nothing to do with being Indian - it’s about all of us.”
June
Happy Birthday Sunita shows at Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry, from Tues 20 to Sat 24A new version of acclaimed comedy-drama Happy Birthday Sunita shows
Warwick Arts Centre this month. The play tells the story of one Punjabi household,but the
complicated dynamics at its heart are something that everyone with a family will understand- as its
writer, Harvey Virdi, tells What’s On...
Wolverhampton Art Gallery, until Sun 9 July
More than 30 artworks - including paintings, works on paper, mixed media, sculpture and film - are here presented in celebration of a very special collective of artists.
The More Things Change... tells the story of the student-inspired Blk Art Group, who hosted the First National Convention of Black Art at Wolverhampton Polytechnic in 1982 and were instrumental in shaping the British Black Arts Movement. The show is accompanied by a public programme and symposia, which explores the Group’s relationship to the wider movement.
“The Blk Art Group was relatively short-lived,” recalls one of its members, Keith Piper, in an article which he originally wrote for Frieze magazine. “By 1984, its momentum had dissipated and its members had become increasingly engaged in solo projects and broader survey exhibitions.
“Its legacy remains significant largely because of the network of artists who converged in Wolverhampton in October 1982, and their wider impact on the Black Arts Movement in general, and Black Women’s practices in particular, which have gone on to so radically shape contemporary art in the UK and beyond.”
Compton Verney, Warwickshire, until Sun 31 December
Historic works from Compton Verney’s Naples Collection are rehung and reimagined in this interactive exhibition, which aims to bring to life the sights, smells, sounds, tastes and sensations experienced by those who visit the famous Italian city.
Midlands Arts Centre (MAC), Birmingham, Thurs 29 June - Sun 5 November
The relationship between Birmingham and Elan Valley in Wales, which has provided the second city with water since the early 20th century, comes under consideration in this group exhibition. The show aims to explore the cultural and social connections between the two locations, in the process homing in on
The show comes complete with two new contemporary sculptures. Created by DYSPLA - an award-winning, neurodivergent-led arts studio - and Aaron McPeake - an artist who makes works that deal with his own experience of sight loss - the sculptures have been commissioned in partnership with Unlimited, an organisation that supports, funds and promotes new work by disabled artists.
The Barber Institute of Fine Arts, University of Birmingham, Sat 17 June - Sun 24 September
Now here’s an exhibition that’s well worth catching - a dazzling selection of Dutch and Flemish 17th-century masterpieces which usually reside in Woburn Abbey.
Featuring a dozen Old Master paintings, Mastering The Market focuses on the themes of patronage and collecting.
The artworks are visiting Birmingham while the Abbey is undergoing an extensive refurbishment. Commenting on the exhibition, Robert Wenley, Barber Institute Deputy Director, Research and Collections, said: “Mastering The Market will present the public with the rare opportunity to view these works up close in a gallery setting, and facilitate an appreciation of the ways in which patronage and collecting reflected and contributed to a dynamic period of European history.”
Mead Gallery, Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry, until Sun 25 June
Warwick Arts Centre’s The Reason For Painting aims to provide visitors with a brief but welcome escape from ‘the social and economic crisis we are living in today’.
their distinctive landscapes and the part that people play in nature’s balance. Among the artists whose work is featured in the show is Birmingham-based Rowena Harris. Rowena’s art explores parallels between the way that Elan Valley has managed water’s energy ‘as a design for health for Birmingham’, and the way that bodies with energy-limiting disabilities also manage energy ‘as a method for health’.
The exhibition features works which share the contributing artists’ experiences of experimenting with colour, mark and form.
The artists’ aim is to create ‘moments of joy’ through their practice, in the process redefining the meaning of ‘abstract’.
As part of the exhibition, an active space has been made available, in which visitors can respond to the artworks on display and discover their own reasons for painting. The space is fully equipped with a range of materials and resources, including paint, brushes and paper.
NEC, Birmingham, Wed 21 - Fri 23 June
With the support of over 100 organisations, The Big Bang Fair is an annual celebration of science, technology, engineering and maths (STEM) for 10 to 13-year-olds.
The event offers a combination of theatre shows, interactive exhibits and careers information, along the way providing young people with the chance to meet hundreds of scientists and engineers.
Children younger or older than the show’s key audience can attend the after-hours Big Bang Fair Unlocked session on Wednesday 21 June, running from 4.30pm to 7.30pm.
NEC, Birmingham, Thurs 15 - Sun 18 June
Boasting tasty food, mouthwatering recipes, and in-the-kitchen entertainment served up by some of the nation’s most celebrated chefs, the summer edition of the BBC Good Food Show makes a welcome return midmonth.
TV chefs including James Martin (pictured), Ainsley Harriott and Nadiya Hussain will be
NEC, Birmingham, Thurs 15 - Sun 18 June
Green-fingered visitors to BBC Gardeners’ World Live will, as usual, find plenty to delight them.
As well as taking ideas and inspiration from the show gardens and displays, attendees can also pick up tips and tricks from TV gardeners including Monty Don, Frances Tophill and Alan Titchmarsh.
Meanwhile, the Floral Marquee and Plant Village will have a vast array of top-quality nurseries from which to make purchases for your next gardening project.
sharing their culinary skills and cooking live on stage.
The show’s ever-popular shopping village returns too, providing visitors with plenty of opportunity to ‘taste, try and buy’ a wide range of delicious produce from an impressive selection of food & drink suppliers.
NEC, Birmingham, Fri 23 - Sun 25 June
A dream for knitting, cross stitching, paper crafting, jewellery & dressmaking enthusiasts, the Creative Craft Show boasts more than 100 stalls and offers the very latest in supplies and innovative ideas. As well as getting their hands on all sorts of goodies at the event - from kits, charts and patterns, to fabrics, yarns, threads and buttons - crafters can also seek out advice from industry experts and take part in a selection of interactive workshops being held across the weekend.
NEC, Birmingham, Sat 17 & Sun 18 June
Described as an ‘immersive retail experience’, the National Cycling Show is a one-stop shop for all your cycling needs. The event brings together experts from across the industry, with this year’s special guests including Sir Chris Hoy, Team GB’s Ed Clancy OBE, Lizzie Deignan MBE, and pro BMX athlete Kriss Kyle.
Other show highlights include a meet & greet zone, fusion freestyle performances by Fusion Extreme, The Bike Clinic and a Wheels For All hub covering inclusivity and accessibility.
Legoland Discovery Centre Birmingham, until Sun 9 July
The Lego City Minifigure team - Ricky Rocket Racer, Mech-Max, Go-To Gary and Fearless Fi - have taken over Legoland Discovery Centre to set epic missions for little ones and their families to complete.
Testing your skills with each mission, you will rescue animals, find messages in the street art and have a go at brick-building games, in the process earning an exclusive limited-edition card and sticker.
For £5 per person, there will also be the chance to build your own police car or fire engine in the on-site creative workshop.
Tamworth Castle, Sat 10 - Sun 11 June
This annual living-history event celebrates Tamworth’s rich history - the town was the capital of the Kingdom of Mercia during the Saxon period - and features a variety of attractions and activities for families to enjoy.
Highlights across the two days include an outdoor Saxon encampment with traditional
NAEC Stoneleigh, Warwickshire, Fri 9 - Sun 11 June
As the biggest event of its kind in the UK, The World of Park & Leisure Homes Show provides a fantastic opportunity to discover and consider a leisure lifestyle.
Visitors can view approximately 40 state-ofthe-art leisure lodges and residential park homes, check out the latest designs and innovations, and discover affordable luxury. There’s also the chance to pick up some expert advice and find out more from people already enjoying the leisure lifestyle.
crafts, a chance to test your skills in sword school, contributions by historians and authors, and an opportunity to indulge in a spot of mead tasting. Visitors can also check out the castle’s Saxon exhibition and Staffordshire Hoard collection.
Weston Park, Shropshire, Fri 16 - Sun 18 June
Model and full-sized aircraft taking to the skies, off-road and circuit model-car racing, model boats and helicopters, trade stands, food & drink stalls and a craft fair all feature among the attractions at this three-day show. Youngsters are catered for too, courtesy of a funfair, and there’s live music to enjoy in the evenings.
Pyrotechnics, gliders and fireworks light up the sky on the Saturday night.
Three Counties Showground, Malvern, Fri 16 - Sun 18 June
Hailed as one of the UK’s biggest celebrations of the great British countryside, the Royal Three Counties Show offers three days of animal encounters, interesting displays and expert agricultural insights.
TV presenter and Cotswold farming royalty Adam Henson returns as show ambassador in the Farming Village, where more than 6,000 animals will feature.
Other highlights include The Future of Farming Zone, hosting a line-up of informative talks and Q&A sessions. The show also features the Food & Drink Theatre, the Equine Village, the all-new Stable Yard, the Countryside Arena and the Fur, Feather & Farm area.
Thinktank Birmingham Science Museum, Thurs 15 June
Particle/Wave is a special adults-only planetarium show telling the story of gravitational waves.
The immersive multimedia experience is presented through the collaboration of poets, musicians and sound & video artists alongside renowned scientists.
RAF Museum Midlands, Cosford, Sun 11 June
Severn Valley Railway, Bewdley, Nr Kidderminster, Sat 24 & Sun 25 and Sat 1 & Sun 2 July
A taste of all things vintage comes to the Severn Valley Railway this month, as the 16mile line and all of its stations host a festival of 1940s-themed fun.
Taking place across two weekends, the event features an array of attractions and entertainment, including 1940s singers & dancers, a wartime wedding and jitterbug sessions. There’s even the chance to hear a rousing speech by Winston Churchill! Vintage traders will be selling their wares at
National SEA LIFE Birmingham, until Sun 4 June
Sharklife provides families with the opportunity to get up close and personal with SEA LIFE’s fin-tastic Black Tip Reef Sharks.
The event also includes the chance to learn more about the species from the venue’s resident marine biologist.
A special themed Sharklife trail around the aquarium further adds to the fun.
The Engine House at Highley, with the June weekend seeing a replica Spitfire plane going on display outside the venue, along with a Merlin engine. During the July weekend, this space will be taken up by a range of vintage fairground games such as swing boats, hook-a-duck and tin can alley. Big Band shows take place at Kidderminster station on the Saturday evening of both weekends.
Coventry Cathedral Ruins, Sat 3 & Sun 4 June MotoFest’s annual Coventry Concours event returns to the Cathedral Ruins this month and celebrates the life of Queen Elizabeth II. The free-to-attend weekend features cars and motorcycles from the 1950s through to the present day and boasts a strong Coventry theme. The vehicle line-up includes manufacturer models from Jaguar, Daimler, Standard, Triumph, Rootes Group and Armstrong Sideley.
The RAF Cosford Air Show returns this month with an action-packed flying display, featuring powerful demonstrations of modern military aircraft from the Royal Air Force and international military partners, including the Supermarine Spitfire IX, RAF Falcons and the ever-popular Red Arrows. On-the-ground entertainment comes in the form of, among other attractions, static displays of aircraft, a Vintage Village with reenactors, and STEM hangars offering family-friendly interactive activities.
Compton Verney, Warwickshire, Fri 23 - Sun 25 June
An artisan ceramics market, showcasing the work of 80 of the UK’s finest ceramics makers, Potfest returns to Compton Verney for a third year and has become a highlight in every potter’s calendar. Work by local and continental makers also features.
Midlands Arts Centre, Edgbaston, Birmingham
BEDLAM: THE EXHIBITION Group show featuring compelling artworks and short films created by people in Birmingham and Solihull during their personal journeys with mental health, until Sun 18 June
GRAYSON’S ART CLUB: THE EXHIBITION III Major exhibition featuring over 100 artworks selected by Grayson Perry, his wife Philippa, and guest celebrities during season three of the popular TV series, Grayson’s Art Club, until Sun 25 June
New Art Gallery, Walsall
WALSALL CREATIVE FACTORY
Celebrating the richness and creativity of a range of groups and individuals who benefit from the use of a safe and supportive workshop environment, until Sun 18 June
JOHN BECK AND MATTHEW CORNFORD
Exhibition offering an opportunity to reflect on the changing nature of art education and the value of creativity... until Sun 2 July
KARLA BLACK Major solo exhibition from the critically acclaimed Scottish artist, featuring previously unseen sculptures, until Sun 29 October
Wolverhampton Art Gallery
BLACK COUNTRY LANDSCAPES A selection of art and objects from Wolverhampton’s collections, exploring relationships between the Black Country’s industries and landscapes, until Sun 3 Sept
POP PARADE Showcasing the gallery’s most iconic pop artworks by leading British and American artists, until Sun 31 December
The Potteries Museum & Art Gallery, Stoke-on-Trent
AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 DOLLS
Family-friendly exhibition inspired by Jules Verne’s adventure novel and exploring the museum’s extensive doll collection, until Sun 27 August
DRESSING THE ROYALS Costumes from film and TV, spanning over 400 years of royal fashion, until Sun 3 September
Shrewsbury Museum & Art Gallery
MONUMENT TO THE VANQUISHED Artist
Leah Gordon and researcher
Annabel Edwards explore the social history of land enclosure in England and Wales, until Sun 25 June
ON THE LAND AN OAK WILL GROW
Photography exhibition showcasing the award-winning work of Henry Woide and Vanessa Fairfax-Woods, until Fri 30 June
BORDERLAND VISUAL ARTS & OPEN
STUDIOS This annual event provides a great opportunity for the public to explore usually private studios and workplaces, see works-in-progress, learn about different creative processes and buy unique pieces, until Sat 24 June, Willow Gallery, Oswestry, North Shropshire
I GREW UP 80S Travel through the cultural landscape of 1980s Britain via the eyes of a child, revisiting the vibrancy, quirkiness and innovation that defined the decade, until Sat 1 July, The Hub at St Mary’s, Lichfield
THE CHANGE IN FASHION FROM 1066 TO 1980 Exhibition taking visitors on a journey from Anglo Saxon style and Elizabethan ruffs to post-war fashion and 1980s couture, until Sun 2 July, Bantock House & Museum, Wolverhampton
LIBRARY AND LEGACY The story of Lichfield Cathedral Library and the Seymour Family, until Sun 3 September, Lichfield Cathedral
MELATI SURYODARMO: PASSIONATE
PILGRIM The first UK exhibition by one of Indonesia’s ‘most important’ living artists, known for her strenuous durational performances that last several hours, until Sun 3 September, Ikon Gallery, Birmingham
NATURE AND ARTIFICE: DUTCH AND FLEMISH LANDSCAPE PRINTS Display exploring the subject of landscape in etchings and engravings made in the Netherlands during the first half of the 17th century, until Sun 23 July, The Barber Institute, University of Birmingham
STORYTELLING: A LIFE OF CHRIST ON PAPER Featuring Italian prints and drawings from the 15th to the 17th century, until Sun 24 September, The Barber Institute, University of Birmingham
CARNIVAL GLASS SOCIETY 40TH
ANNIVERSARY EXHIBITION Showcase of work exploring the history and inspirations of carnival glass manufacture, until Sun 5 November, Stourbridge Glass Museum
(AFTERMATH) POST GRADUATE SHOW
2023 Works from a diverse group of artists brought together by shared university experiences in a postElizabeth II, post-Brexit, post-pandemic era, Fri 2 - Fri 23 June, The Asylum Art Gallery, Wolverhampton
OPEN ART EXHIBITION Annual exhibition - this year’s theme is New Beginnings, Mon 5 June - Sat 22 July, Qube Gallery, Oswestry, North Shropshire
IAN MOSS Thurs 1 June, Hare & Hounds, B’ham
THE JERSEY BEATS Thurs
1 June, Brierley Hill
Civic, Dudley
SHANIA - 25 LIVE Thurs 1 June, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
SOULKINDA WONDERFUL - THE SONGS OF THE DRIFTERS Thurs 1 June, Stafford Gatehouse Theatre
HARRIET Thurs 1 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
Telford Theatre, Oakengates, Shrops
A DIFFERENT THREAD Fri
2 June, Herman Arts, Oswestry, North Shrops
SOCIAL EXPERIMENT +
SYSTEM OF SLAVES +
PICASSO BLOT Fri 2
June, Percy’s Cafe Bar, Whitchurch, North Shropshire
DODGY Sat 3 June, O2 Institute, Birmingham
SIMULATION THEORY + MORTIS + CULCHA +
KRYPTIC + EVER Sat 3
June, O2 Institute, Birmingham
HASAN RAHEEM Sat 3
June, O2 Institute, Birmingham
HORACE ANDY Sat 3
June, Midlands Arts Centre, Birmingham
METAL 2 THE MASSES Sat
3 June, The Underground, Stokeon-Trent
RACHID Sat 3 June, Two Gates Club, Tamworth AND FINALLY - PHIL
COLLINS TRIBUTE Sat 3
June, Lichfield Garrick
THE 4 ROSSIS Fri 2 June, The Feathers Inn, Lichfield
THE BOOTLEG ROCK
SHOW Sat 3 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
THOMAS ATLAS Sat 3
June, Albert’s Shed, Shrewsbury
EMPIRE OF LIGHTS + SMOKING ESKIMO Sat 3
June, Albert’s Shed, Southwater, Telford
THE BLACK FEATHERS Sat 3 June, Herman Arts, Oswestry, North Shrops
DMA’S Fri 2 June, The Mill, Digbeth, B’ham
MADE IN TENNESSEE Fri 2 June, Sutton Coldfield Town Hall
ELLIE JONES & THE GIANTS Fri 2 June, The Rhodehouse, Sutton Coldfield
DUBLINERS EXPERIENCE
Fri 2 June, Halesowen Town Hall
THE JOHNNY CASH
EXPERIENCE Fri 2 June, The Robin, Bilston
JULIE JULY BAND Fri 2
June, Newhampton Arts Centre, Wolverhampton
SACK SABBATH Fri 2 June, Eleven, Stoke-onTrent
THE MERSEY BEATLES Fri 2 June, The Prince Of Wales Theatre, Cannock
THE BEATLES SOUND Fri 2 June, The Feathers Inn, Lichfield
TALON Fri 2 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
MEZZOTONIC + NATIONAL
MILK BAR + ROBBIE
JONES Fri 2 June, Albert’s Shed, Shrewsbury
SECRET ELEPHANT +
BLACK MARKET Fri 2
June, Albert’s Shed, Southwater, Telford
THE KING OF REGGAETHE MUSIC OF BOB
MARLEY Fri 2 June,
THE DUBLINERS
EXPERIENCE Sat 3 June, Sutton Coldfield Town Hall
SIGNING OFF - UB40
TRIBUTE Sat 3 June, The Rhodehouse, Sutton Coldfield
LA VIVAS Sat 3 June, 45Live, Kidderminster
VINNY PECULIAR Sat 3
June, West Malvern Social Club
THE WEEKEND ANTHEMS
80S SHOW Sat 3 June, The River Rooms, Stourbridge
ODYSSEY Sat 3 June, The Robin, Bilston
BIG JIM AND THE ALABAMA BOOGIE BOYS
Sat 3 June, Katie
Fitzgerald’s, Stourbridge
LEFTFIELD Sat 3 June, The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton
MARTIN SPEAKE Sat 3
June, Newhampton Arts Centre, Wolverhampton
KIRA MAC Sat 3 June, The Sugarmill, Stokeon-Trent
TRUE GOLD - THE SPANDAU BALLET
EXPERIENCE Sat 3 June, Eleven, Stoke-on-Trent
WAVE OF SHEEP + RESTING B!TCH FACE + THE PLATITUDES Sat 3
June, Percy’s Cafe Bar, Whitchurch, North Shropshire
SARABETH TUCEK Sun 4
June, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
JAMES WALSH Sun 4
June, The Dark Horse, Moseley
SUN RECORDS, THE CONCERT: 70TH ANNIVERSARY Sun 4 June, Birmingham
Town Hall
GEORGIA CÉCILE Sun 4 June, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
ATIF ASLAM Sun 4 June, Utilita Arena B’ham
LESSER FORKBEARD
BAND Sun 4 June, The Rhodehouse, Sutton Coldfield
ERIC BELL TRIO Sun 4 June, The Robin, Bilston
NIC PARKER Sun 4 June, Katie Fitzgerald’s, Stourbridge
BENJAMIIN GROSVENOR AND THE CBSO PLAY CHOPIN Riccardo Minasi conducts. Programme includes works by Schubert, Chopin & Mozart, Thurs 1 June, Symphony Hall, B’ham
SENIOR CITIZENS ORCHESTRA CONCERT
Thurs 1 June, Walsall Arena
KELL WIND TRIO Music for flute, clarinet & bassoon featuring Alastair Roberts, Geoffrey Smith and Ian Harvey, Fri 2 June, St Chad’s Church, Shrewsbury
ALEX MASON ORGAN CONCERT Sat 3 June, Shrewsbury Abbey
CBSO FAMILY CONCERT: PETER AND THE WOLF Featuring Julian Wilkins (conductor), Jane Wright (presenter), the CBSO Youth Chorus, CBSO Children’s Chorus & Sarah Butt (BSL Interpreter). Programme includes Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf, 25 & Patterson’s Little Red Riding Hood, 27, Sun 4 June, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
THE MARCHES CHOIR: CORONATION REJOICING! Featuring Handel’s coronation anthems & Mozart’s Regina Coeli, Sun 4 June, Walcott Hall, Lydbury North, Shropshire
TIM VINE Thurs 1 June, The Alexandra, Birmingham
SEAN HEYDON, SULLY O’SULLIVAN, ORLANDO GIBBS & TONY COWARDS
Thurs 1 June, Foxlowe Arts Centre, Leek, Staffs
STEVE ROYLE, JOSH PUGH, ANNA
THOMAS & ANDREW WHITE Thurs 1 June, Lichfield Sports Club
BILL WOOLLAND, PAUL JENNINGS, ASHLEY FRIEZE & DAN SMITH Thurs 1 June, Dudley Town Hall
CHLOE PETTS Fri 2 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
PETER KAY Fri 2 June, Utilita Arena
Birmingham
RICH HALL Fri 2 June, Stafford Gatehouse Theatre
TIM VINE Sat 3 June, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
THE CARD Claybody Theatre present a new version of Arnold Bennett’s classic comic novel, until Sat 10 June, New Vic Theatre, Newcastleunder-Lyme
HAMNET Stage adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s bestselling novel, pulling back the curtain on the imagined life of William Shakespeare, until Sat 17 June, Swan Theatre, Stratford-uponAvon
THE KING AND I West End performer Annalene Beechey stars alongside Darren Lee in a new version of Bartlett Sher’s iconic musical, Tues 30 May - Sat 3 June, Regent Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent
MATILDA JR Amateur version presented by Stage Productions, Tues 30 May - Sat 3 June, Stoke Repertory Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent STARS - AN AFROFUTURIST SPACE
ODYSSEY A new play about an old lady who goes into outer space in search of her own orgasm, Thurs 1Sat 3 June, Old Rep, Birmingham
MRS KAPOOR’S DAUGHTER’S WEDDING 2
MAURITIUS British Asian ‘laugh-outloud’ theatre production promising comedy, singing, dancing and dhol, Sun 4 June, The Alexandra, B’ham
SPINSTER OF THE PARISH Theatre(ish) present a new show about life in the West Midlands during the previous century, Sat 3 June, Stourbridge Town Hall
DRAGONS AND MYTHICAL BEASTS A ‘fantastical’ family show where audiences are invited into a magical world of myths & legends, Wed 31 May - Fri 2 June, The Rep, B’ham MINISTRY OF SCIENCE LIVE Educating and entertaining show for younger audiences. Expect 20ft liquid nitrogen clouds, exploding oxygen and hydrogen balloons, fire tornadoes, hydrogen bottle rockets, ignited methane and even a self-built hovercraft!, Thurs 1 June, Crewe Lyceum Theatre
MADAGASCAR: A MUSICAL ADVENTURE
Amateur version of the popular family musical, presented by Get Your Wigle On, Fri 2 - Sun 4 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
FLEXUS DANCE COLLECTIVE
Showcasing and celebrating youth dance from across the Midlands, Sat 3 June, Arena Theatre, Wolverhampton
THAT’LL BE THE DAY Featuring comedy sketches, impersonations and a packed programme of nostalgic music from the 1950s through to the 1980s, Wed 31 May - Thurs 1 June, Lichfield Garrick
RICHARD JONES: AN EVENING OF MAGIC
Cutting-edge magic, mind-reading and psychological illusion, Thurs 1
June, Stourbridge Town Hall
FUN & SLUTTY WITH JONATHAN VAN NESS ‘Queer joy and side-splitting comedy’, Fri 2 June, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
HIGH JINX Fast-paced family show featuring magic, illusion and circus acts, Fri 2 June, Tamworth Assembly Rooms
GRAFFITI CLASSICS - THE COMEDY STRING QUARTET A classical concert, gypsy folk romp, opera, stand-up comedy and dance show all rolled into one, Fri 2 June, Silvester Horne Institute, Church Stretton, South Shropshire
SATURDAY CABARET Featuring vocalist Champagne Shirley and ‘Tamworth’s premier hostess’, Miss Trisha Birmingham, Sat 3 June, Tamworth Assembly Rooms
FUNNY GIRLS ON TOUR STARRING BETTY
LEGS DIAMOND Evening of glamour, feathers and top hats, Sat 3 June, Mitchell Arts Centre, Hanley, Stokeon-Trent
JEZO - COMEDY MAGIC Interactive show featuring magic, music, illusions & comedy, Sun 4 June, Theatre on the Steps, Bridgnorth
1940S WEEK Explore life in the 1940s via workshops, displays and activities, until Thurs 1 June, RAF Museum Midlands, Cosford
STAFFORDSHIRE COUNTY SHOW A twoday agricultural show with competitions for livestock & horses, until Thurs 1 June, Staffordshire County Showground
PEPPA PIG AT SEA LIFE Meet Peppa as she dives into a new adventure, making friends with thousands of sea creatures, until Fri 2 June, National SEA LIFE Centre, Birmingham
HALF-TERM ACTIVITY - BACKYARD
SURVIVAL Find out about surviving outdoors. Filter water, pick ‘spring greens’ to taste, make a one-minute fire and build a den, until Fri 2 June, Shropshire Hills Discovery Centre, Craven Arms
FREDDO’S MAGIC SHOW Freddo hosts his very own magic show, until Fri 2 June, Cadbury World, Bournville, Birmingham
MAYBEES TRAIL Create a buzz as you follow this self-led 10-point nature trail around Powis Castle’s colourful garden, until Sun 4 June, Powis Castle, Welshpool
BRICKLIVE BRICKOSAURS Get ready for a ‘roar-some display on a T-Rex scale’, until Sun 4 June, Severn Valley Railway, Bewdley, Nr Kidderminster
SHARKLIFE Learn the truth about sharks, until Sun 4 June, National
DINO WEEK Open the gates to the new Raptor Ranch, where the T-Rex, velociraptor, triceratops and spinosaurus are waiting to meet you, until Sun 4 June, National Forest Adventure Farm, Burton upon Trent LEGO CITY Join the Lego City Minifigure team - Ricky Rocket Racer, Mech-Max, Go-To Gary and Fearless Fi - as they set epic missions for you to complete, until Sat 9 July, Legoland Discovery Centre
Birmingham
VANLIFE FESTIVAL For free spirits who enjoy vanlife and the great outdoors, Fri 2 June, West Mid Showground, Shrewsbury
NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM - A LEGO WORKSHOP Get creative with Lego and make your own ‘night in the museum’ scene, Fri 2 June, Shrewsbury Museum & Art Gallery
UK GAMES EXPO All aspects of the tabletop gaming hobby are represented under one roof, Fri 2Sun 4 June, NEC, Birmingham
HOME FRONT CRAFTS Brush up on your needlework or felting skills, Fri 2 - Sun 4 June, RAF Museum
Midlands, Cosford
REGGAE IN THE SCULPTURE PARK A full day of reggae, dancehall, world music and hip-hop, Sat 3 June, British Ironwork Centre, Oswestry, North Shropshire
VOLKSWAGEN MEET A Volkswagen owners meet-up, Sat 3 June, British Ironwork Centre, Oswestry, North Shropshire
WORLD DINOSAUR WEEKEND WITH NIGEL MARVEN Including Q&A sessions with Nigel, Sat 3 - Sun 4 June, Hoo Zoo and Dinosaur World, Telford
ANTIQUES FAIR Dozens of traders descend on Bantock to offer everything from costume jewellery to ceramics and furniture, Sun 4 June, Bantock House, Wolverhampton
FORBIDDEN FOREST Line-up includes Andy C, Camelphat, High Contrast, Marco Carola, Fri 2 - Sun 4 June, Belvoir Castle, Nottinghamshire
WYCHWOOD MUSIC FESTIVAL Line-up includes Happy Mondays, Travis, Sam Ryder, The Proclaimers, Fri 2Sun 4 June, Cheltenham Racecourse
LICHFIELD BLUES & JAZZ Line-up includes Catfish, Remi Harris Trio, Fred T Baker, Funky Velvet, Sun 4Sun 11 June, various locations across Lichfield
MELVINS + TAIPEI
HOUSTON Mon 5 June, O2 Institute, B’ham
DEAN LEWIS Mon 5
June, O2 Academy, Birmingham
KISS + SKINDRED + THE WILD THINGS Mon 5
June, Resorts World Arena, Birmingham
THE SCRIPT Mon 5
June, The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton
SIR CHLOE Tues 6 June, O2 Institute, B’ham
TUNDE - VOICE OF LIGHTHOUSE FAMILY
Tues 6 June, Theatre
Severn, Shrewsbury
USHA UTHUP Wed 7
June, Birmingham
Town Hall
JAMES BAY Wed 7
June, The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton
CHRIS BOWDEN QUARTET
Wed 7 June, Cathedral
Hotel, Lichfield
THE SEARCHERS Wed 7
June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
APCE + SOAPER + DRASTIC//AUTOMATIC
Wed 7 June, Albert’s Shed, Shrewsbury
CAMEL Thurs 8 June, Symphony Hall, B’ham
CIRCA WAVES + CASSIA + COURTING Thurs 8
June, KK’s Steel Mill, Wolverhampton
CHRIS LESLIE Thurs 8
June, Foxlowe Arts
Centre, Leek, Staffs
ELTON JOHN Thurs 8, Sat 10 - Sun 11 June, Utilita Arena B’ham
LUCKY NUMBER YOU +
MONDAY CLUB + DUKE
KEATS Fri 9 June, The Night Owl, Birmingham
SWIM DEEP + JAWS Fri 9 June, O2 Institute,
Birmingham
THE CHERRY APES +
FAIZED, RING O’ROSES +
MALBORO DRIVE + THE
CAGE Fri 9 June, O2 Academy, Birmingham
TRANSMISSION - JOY
DIVISION TRIBUTE Fri 9
June, 45Live, Kidderminster
PALE RED + JON£S +
DEEJAY Fri 9 June, The Sugarmill, Stoke-onTrent
BON GIOVI Fri 9 June, Eleven, Stoke-on-Trent
STEP INSIDE THE 60S Fri 9 June, The Prince Of Wales Theatre, Cannock
NICK DEWHURST BAND
Fri 9 June, Cathedral Hotel, Lichfield
JACK READ AND THE SHADERS Fri 9 June, The Feathers Inn, Lichfield
ELO AGAIN Fri 9 June, The Buttermarket, Shrewsbury
THE SCRIBES +
TRADEMARK BLUD +
BEAT CLEAVER Fri 9
June, Albert’s Shed, Shrewsbury
BREAK THE RECORD Fri 9
June, Albert’s Shed, Southwater, Telford
BYE BYE BABY - THE
MUSIC OF FRANKIE VALLI
Fri 9 June, Telford Theatre, Oakengates, Shropshire
THE TEN DECKS + THE SLEEPERS Fri 9 June, Percy’s Cafe Bar, Whitchurch, North Shropshire
ZIGGY ALBERTS Sat 10 June, O2 Institute, Birmingham
ELOISE + JAMES SMITH
Sat 10 June, O2 Institute, Birmingham
THE SOUTHMARTINS Sat 10 June, O2 Academy,
Birmingham
ROBERT CRAY BAND Sat 10 June, Birmingham Town Hall
A COUNTRY NIGHT IN NASHVILLE Sat 10 June, The Alexandra, B’ham
SPECIAL KINDA MADNESS Sat 10 June, The Rhodehouse, Sutton Coldfield
SPANDAU BALLET VS DURAN DURAN Sat 10 June, The River Rooms, Stourbridge
T.REXTASY Sat 10 June, The Robin, Bilston GIANT AND THE GEORGES Sat 10 June, Katie Fitzgerald’s, Stourbridge
SCOTT MATTHEWS Sat
10 June, Newhampton Arts Centre, Wolverhampton
THE VAMPS Sat 10
June, The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton
FOO FIGHTERS GB Sat 10 June, Eleven, Stokeon-Trent
THE LADS FROM MACC Sat 10 June, The Underground, Stokeon-Trent
THE BON JOVI EXPERIENCE Sat 10 June, Tamworth
Assembly Rooms
NORTHERN LIVE - DO I LOVE YOU Sat 10 June, The Prince Of Wales Theatre, Cannock
GREG MURRAY AND THE SEVEN WONDERS Sat 10 June, The Hub at St Mary’s, Lichfield
THE SUPERSKAS Sat 10 June, The Buttermarket, Shrewsbury
MR BLACK Sat 10 June, Albert’s Shed, Shrewsbury
THE NEW RUFFIANS Sat 10 June, Albert’s Shed, Southwater, Telford
LAUREN SANDERSON Sun 11 June, O2 Institute, Birmingham
RANJIT BAWA Sun 11
June, The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton
REMI HARRIS TRIO Sun 11 June, Lichfield
Guildhall
JIM MORAY Sun 11 June, The Hive, Shrewsbury
LUNCHTIME ORGAN CONCERT WITH THOMAS TROTTER & CELIA CRAIG (OBOE) Programme includes works by Anne Cawrse, C.H.H Parry, H. Schindler, J. Noyon, J.L Krebs & Robert AMPT, Mon 5 June, Birmingham Town Hall
CBSO AND KAZUKI YAMADA Also featuring Seong-Jin Cho (piano). Programme includes works by Holst, Beethoven & Rachmaninoff, Wed 7 June, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
BEST OF THE WEST END WITH THE CBSO Featuring Michael England (conductor), Sophie Evans & Scott Davies (vocalists), Paul Whittaker (BSL Interpreter) & the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. Programme includes music from The Phantom of the Opera, Cabaret, Les Misérables, Dear Evan Hansen, The Lion King & Wicked, amongst others... Fri 9 June, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
LICHFIELD CATHEDRAL CHAMBER CHOIR
ANNIVERSARY CONCERT Fri 9 June, Lichfield Cathedral
SHREWSBURY SCHOOL COMMUNITY
CHOIR Programme includes works by Esenvalds, Rutter, Chilcott, Fauré, Vaughan Williams & Finzi, Sat 10 June, Shrewsbury Abbey
LUDLOW CHORAL SOCIETY: A SHINING
NIGHT OF AMERICAN SONG Sat 10 June, St Laurence Church, Ludlow, South Shropshire
MUSIC FOR HARP & VIOLIN Featuring Emily Hopper (harp) & Ricardo Brown-Roger (violin), Sun 11 June, The Gateway Arts Centre, Shrewsbury
LAURA BELBIN Wed 7 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
JACK CARROLL Wed 7 June, Theatre
On The Steps, Bridgnorth, South Shropshire
COMEDY CAROUSEL WITH ANDY ROBINSON, STEPHEN BUCHANAN & TAMER KATTAN Thurs 8 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
STEVE ROYLE, GERRY KYEI, SAMMY
DOBSON & WAYNE BEESE Thurs 8 June, Katie Fitzgerald’s, Stourbridge
HELEN BAUER, ALEX KEALY, STEPHEN BUCHANAN, TAMER KATTAN & PREET
SINGH Fri 9 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
FIN TAYLOR Fri 9 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
JOHN ROBERTSON, LOU CONRAN, ANDREW MENSAH & WAYNE BEESE Fri 9 June, Katie Fitzgerald’s, Stourbridge
TIM KEY Fri 9 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
HELEN BAUER, ALEX KEALY, STEPHEN BUCHANAN & TAMER KATTAN Sat 10 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
JONNY COLE Sat 10 June, Bilston Town Hall
JIMMY CARR Sun 11 June, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
SISTER ACT TV & West End legend Lesley Joseph stars alongside Lizzie Bea and Sandra Marvin, Mon 5 - Sat 10 June, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
ACTING OUT: IRRECONCILABLE Thoughtprovoking, tender and emotionally charged play, written by local playwright Greg Andrews, Tues 6Thurs 8 June, Old Rep, Birmingham
THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME Trinity Players present an amateur version of Victor Hugo’s epic novel, Tues 6Sat 10 June, Sutton Coldfield Town Hall
SENSE & SENSIBILITY Heartbreak Productions present an outdoor version of Jane Austen’s biting social satire, Wed 7 June, Bantock House, Wolverhampton
THE BIG O + Q&A Join Lucy on her personal voyage into sex, healing, and connection after a diagnosis of lifelong Anorgasmia (with a Trunchbull-esque psychosexual consultant), Wed 7 - Thurs 8 June, Midlands Arts Centre (MAC), Birmingham
JACK, JILL AND THE GIANT BEANSTALK
Written by Ian Adams, adapted by Fran Richards, and performed by Grand Arena Youth Theatre Juniors, Wed 7 - Thurs 8 June, Arena Theatre, Wolverhampton
TONY! (THE TONY BLAIR ROCK OPERA)
New show by Harry Hill & Steve Brown which looks at how one man went from peace-loving, long-haired hippie and would-be pop star to warmongering multimillionaire in just a couple of decades, Wed 7 - Sat 10 June, The Rep, Birmingham
CAN I LIVE? Fehinti Balogun presents a vital new digital performance about the climate catastrophe, sharing his personal journey into the biggest challenge of our times, Wed 7 - Sat 10 June, The Rep, Birmingham
JANE AUSTEN’S EMMA Pantaloons Theatre Company present a fastpaced Regency romp, Thurs 8 June, Stanton upon Hine Heath Village
Hall, Nr Shrewsbury
BRONTË Royal Birmingham Conservatoire Theatre Company present a literary detective story about the turbulent lives of the Brontë sisters, Thurs 8 - Sat 10 June, Crescent Theatre, Birmingham
THE ENCHANTED PIG Singers from Royal Birmingham Conservatoire perform Jonathan Dove’s operatic version of an enchanting fairytale with a humorous twist, Thurs 8 - Sat 10 June, The Bradshaw Hall, Royal Birmingham Conservatoire
THE VICAR OF DIBLEY Ludwig Theatre Company present a two-act play based on the BBC sitcom, Thurs 8Sat 10 June, Ludlow Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
IN THE HEIGHTS Amateur version of Lin Manuel Miranda’s ‘21st-century musical’, Sat 10 - Sun 11 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
B-SIDE HIP HOP FESTIVAL 2023 Annual festival bringing together artists from all four elements of hip-hop: breakin, graffiti, DJ’ing and MC’ing, Thurs 8Wed 14 June, Birmingham
Hippodrome - plus various events at Bullring and Grand Central
BRB: APOLLO / INTERLINKED / STILL LIFE
AT THE PENGUIN CAFE A triple bill of works to showcase the Company’s ‘classical skill and artistry’, Thurs 8Sat 10 June, Birmingham
Hippodrome
DISNEY 100 - THE CONCERT Featuring legendary film scenes on a giant screen and magical musical moments brought to life by the Hollywood Sound Orchestra, Tues 6 June, Resorts World Arena, B’ham
AN EVENING WITH USHA UTHUP An inconversation event in which The Queen of Indian Pop discusses her inspirational life and music, Wed 7 June, Birmingham Town Hall
AN AUDIENCE WITH MANCHESTER
UNITED LEGENDS Jed Stone hosts an evening of entertaining banter with Bryan Robson and Brian McClair, Wed 7 June, Crewe Lyceum Theatre
FORBIDDEN NIGHTS Circus acts and ‘forbidden tease’ combine in a show featuring seductive choreography and a comedian compere, Thurs 8 June, Telford Theatre, Oakengates, Shropshire
PENN & TELLER Featuring classic magic tricks, audience participation and plenty of humour, Thurs 8 - Fri 9 June, The Alexandra, Birmingham
SEND IN THE CLOWNS TW*TS A ‘raucous, wild and tantalising’ drag revue show celebrating the magic and madness of musical theatre, Thurs 8 - Sat 10 June, Old Joint Stock Theatre, Birmingham
G4 LIVE Fri 9 June, Old Rep, Birmingham
SOLVE-A-LONG-A-MURDER-SHE-WROTE
Evening of entertainment featuring games, prizes and audience participation, Fri 9 June, Stourbridge Town Hall
JONNY COLE: STONE-COLE-SOBER
Songs, jokes and the promise of lots of laughs, Sat 10 June, Bilston Town Hall
CIRQUE: THE GREATEST SHOW Musical theatre meets circus in a show featuring ‘breath-taking’ aerialists and contortionists... Sat 10 June, Lichfield Garrick
A CENTURY OF SONG Shrewsbury
Musical Theatre Company present 100 years of musical theatre favourites, Sat 10 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
KEITH BRYMER JONES: LIFE, CLAY AND EVERYTHING The bestselling author and judge of Great Pottery Throw Down shares stories of life in front of and behind the potter’s wheel, Sun 11 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
Monday 5 - Sunday 11 June
of 50 leisure & residential homes, Fri 9 - Sun 11 June, NAEC Stoneleigh, Warwickshire
BOMBAY EXPRESS An evening celebrating Britain’s second favourite dish, Sat 10 June, Churnet Valley Railway, Staffordshire
SHREWSBURY MORRIS DANCERS
Performing a selection of dances in the traditional style, Sat 10 June, British Ironwork Centre, Oswestry, North Shropshire
AETHELFEST The town’s rich Saxon history is celebrated via a livinghistory encampment located in the castle grounds, Sat 10 - Sun 11 June, Tamworth Castle
out for a wedding, Sun 11 June, Bantock House, Wolverhampton
THE RAF COSFORD AIR SHOW Actionpacked day of aircraft-related entertainment, Sun 11 June, Royal Air Force Museum Midlands, Cosford MADE IN SHROPSHIRE CRAFT FAIR
Browse the stalls and meet local producers, makers & artists from around the county, Sun 11 June, Dudmaston Estate, Shropshire
5K SUPERHERO FUN RUN Join The Dudley Group NHS Charity to raise money for their children’s appeal, Sun 11 June, Himley Hall, Dudley BEHIND THE SCENES TOUR Join informative guides for a peek behind closed doors, to learn some of the royal secrets of the Bradford family, Sun 11 June, Weston Park, Shropshire
WEDDING OPEN DAY See the venue set
DOWNLOAD FESTIVAL Line-up includes Metallica, Bring Me The Horizon, Slipknot, Thurs 8 - Sun 11 June, Donington Park, Derby
CHELTENHAM SCIENCE FESTIVAL
Featuring the world’s greatest scientists, futurologists and thoughtleaders, Tues 6 - Sun 11 June, various venues in Cheltenham
BIRMINGHAM DESIGN FESTIVAL Twoday event featuring talks and workshops by internationally renowned designers and artists, Thurs 8 - Fri 9 June, various venues in Birmingham
REAL ALE FESTIVAL Featuring more than 20 cask ales from a selection of UK breweries, Fri 9 - Sat 10 June, Severn Valley Railway, Bewdley, Nr Kidderminster
WORLD OF PARK & LEISURE HOME
SHOW A three-day event offering visitors the chance to view in excess
Telford Theatre, Oakengates, Shropshire
ROWLAND JONES Fri 16
June, Herman Arts, Oswestry, North Shropshire
ROGUE TURPIN + THE MISSED + HOMERSAPIEN Fri 16
June, Percy’s Cafe Bar, Whitchurch, North Shropshire
SABRINA CARPENTER
Sat 17 June, O2
Academy, Birmingham
STEVE EARL Sat 17
June, Birmingham Town Hall
PETER GABRIEL Sat 17
June, Utilita Arena
Birmingham
EX CATHEDRA: SUMMER MUSIC BY CANDLELIGHT Featuring Sarah Latto (conductor). Programme includes works by William Byrd, George Gershwin, Alec Roth & Herbert Howells, Tues 13 June, St Chad’s Church, Shrewsbury
CBSO SEASON FINALE: KAZUKI
CONDUCTS ELGAR’S FIRST SYMPHONY
Also featuring Ian Bostridge (tenor), Elspeth Dutch (horn) & the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. Programme includes works by Howard, Britten & Elgar, Wed 14 June, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
AQUILAE DUO Featuring Eleanor Turner & Lisa Nelson, Wed 14 June, Ludlow Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
PLACEBO + CRUEL
HEARTS CLUB Mon 12
June, O2 Academy, Birmingham
THE BEAT + BOW WOW
WOW Mon 12 June, Birmingham Town Hall
SPIERS & BODEN Tues
13 June, Symphony
Hall, Birmingham
PINK Tues 13 June, Villa Park, Birmingham
FIVE STAR SWING Tues
13 June, Dudley Town Hall
AMON AMARTH + BLEED
FROM WITHIN Wed 14
June, The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton
LUKAS NELSON + POTR
Wed 14 June, The Wulfrun at The Halls Wolverhampton
JIM MORAY Wed 14
June, Brewhouse Arts
Centre, Burton upon Trent
THE MCCARTNEY
SONGBOOK Wed 14
June, Lichfield Garrick
GOO GOO DOLLS Thurs
15 June, O2 Institute, Birmingham
BONNIE RAITT Thurs 15
June, Birmingham
Town Hall
THE DRIFTERS Thurs 15
June, Lichfield Garrick
KRIS DREVER BAND
Thurs 15 June, Theatre
Severn, Shrewsbury
THE SIMON & GARFUNKEL STORY
Thurs 15 June, Theatre
Severn, Shrewsbury
LOREN GRAY Fri 16
June, O2 Institute, Birmingham
PORKPIE Fri 16 June, O2 Academy, B’ham
MILES HUNT Fri 16
June, Midlands Arts Centre, Birmingham
THE 80S SHOW Fri 16
June, Dudley Town Hall
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN & THE E STREET BAND Fri
16 June, Villa Park, Birmingham
NIRVANA UK Fri 16
June, The River Rooms, Stourbridge
ALIVE & KICKINGSIMPLE MINDS TRIBUTE
Fri 16 June, The Robin, Bilston
THE WINERY DOGS +
JARED JAMES NICHOLS Fri 16 June, KK’s Steel Mill, Wolverhampton
MCFLY Fri 16 June, The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton
THE SHIRES Fri 16 June, The Wulfrun at The Halls Wolverhampton
WOLVES IN ALCATRAZ Fri 16 June, The Underground, Stokeon-Trent
THIS IS CELINE Fri 16
June, The Buttermarket, Shrewsbury
BLACK BEAR KISS +
SHEEPY + AARON W
EVANS Fri 16 June, Albert’s Shed, Shrewsbury
GUTTERSNIPE Fri 16
June, Albert’s Shed, Southwater, Telford
LIVE/WIRE: THE AC/DC
SHOW Fri 16 June,
THE FATHER TEDS Sat 17
June, The Rhodehouse, Sutton Coldfield
RISING FROM THE DEEP
Sat 17 June, 45Live, Kidderminster
A CELEBRATION OF GLADYS KNIGHT Sat 17
June, Dudley Town Hall
THE D-DAY DARLINGS
Sat 17 June, Halesowen Town Hall
THE SUBTERRANEANS
Sat 17 June, The River Rooms, Stourbridge
DURAN + A BAND
CALLED MALICE Sat 17
June, The Robin, Bilston
VICKY JACKSON AS PINK
Sat 17 June, Eleven, Stoke-on-Trent
DE’LOUR + GLASS CAVE Sat 17 June, The Underground, Stokeon-Trent
THE OVERTONES Sat 17
June, Tamworth
Assembly Rooms
ARRIVAL: THE HITS OF ABBA Sat 17 June, Lichfield Garrick
EMMA RAWICZ QUINTET
Sat 17 June, The Hive, Shrewsbury
GORDON HENDRICKS IS ELVIS Sat 17 June, The Buttermarket, Shrewsbury
THE ORIGINAL WANTED Sat 17 June, Albert’s Shed, Southwater, Telford
MICHAEL STARRING BEN Sun 18 June, Lichfield Garrick
EX CATHEDRA: SUMMER MUSIC BY CANDLELIGHT Featuring Sarah Latto (conductor). Programme includes works by William Byrd, George Gershwin, Alec Roth & Herbert Howells, Thurs 15 June, St Peter’s Church, Wolverhampton
JONATHAN HOPE ORGAN CONCERT Fri 16 June, St Chad’s Church, Shrewsbury
THE MUSIC OF ZIMMER VS WILLIAMS
Performed by the London Concert Orchestra, Sat 17 June, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
CASSIOPEIA ENSEMBLE SUMMER
CONCERT Programme includes works by Mozart & Dvorak, Sat 17 June, Shrewsbury Abbey
THE UK PROMS IN THE PARK Performed by the UK Proms Orchestra and featuring a host of special guests, Sat 17 June, The West Mid Showground, Shrewsbury
SYMPHONIC SUNDAY GALA CONCERT
Sun 18 June, Alington Hall, Shrewsbury
PAUL SMITH Wed 14 June, Victoria Hall, Stoke-on-Trent
AHIR SHAH & GLEN MOORE Wed 14 June, The Hub at St Mary’s, Lichfield
THOMAS GREEN, ROB DEERING, JAY
CORCORAN & COMIC TBC Thurs 15 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
JONNY AWSUM, WAYNE BEESE & COMIC
TBC Thurs 15 June, Katie Fitzgerald’s, Stourbridge
TEZ ILYAS Fri 16 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
THOMAS GREEN, ROB DEERING, JO
ENRIGHT, HANNAH WEETMAN & ROGER
O’SULLIVAN Fri 16 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
CURTIS WALKER Fri 16 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
JEN BRISTER Fri 16 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
THOMAS GREEN, ROB DEERING, JO
ENRIGHT & COMIC TBC Sat 17 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
SALLY ANNE HAYWARD, ROSS SMITH, DAMION LARKIN & COMIC TBC Sat 17
June, Regent Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent
JONNY COLE Sat 17 June, The Court House, Dudley
IMPROV WOLVES Sat 17 June, Theatre On The Steps, Bridgnorth, Shropshire
RHYS NICHOLSON Sun 18 June, Old Rep, Birmingham
9 TO 5 THE MUSICAL Birmingham
Musical Operatic Society present an amateur version of the Dolly Parton musical, Tues 13 - Sat 17 June, The Alexandra, Birmingham
THE BEEKEEPER OF ALEPPO Christy Lefteri’s powerful and compassionate story of connection between family, friends and strangers... Tues 13 - Sat 17 June, The Rep, Birmingham
SUCKER PUNCH Roy Williams’ ‘tender, bruising and funny play’, which explores the experience of being young and black in the 1980s, Tues 13 - Fri 16 June, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
TRIVIAL PURSUITS Stoke-on-Trent Repertory Players present an amateur version of Frank Vickery’s comedic look at the world of amateur dramatics, Tues 13 - Sat 17 June, Stoke Repertory Theatre, Stoke-onTrent
I, DANIEL BLAKE Based on Ken Loach’s iconic film, described as ‘one of the most important stories of a generation’, Tues 13 - Sat 24 June, The Rep, Birmingham
ALICE’S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND
Amateur version presented by Central Youth Theatre, Wed 14Thurs 15 June, Newhampton Arts Centre, Wolverhampton
CONFETTI Will Jackson’s Edinburgh Fringe smash-hit follows weddingplanner Felix on his personal journey on the road to romance, Thurs 15 June, Midlands Arts Centre (MAC), Birmingham
ALAN TURING: A MUSICAL BIOGRAPHY A theatrical journey through the extraordinary life of the codebreaker and mathematician who’s best known for cracking the Enigma Code, Thurs 15 June, The Hub at St Mary’s, Lichfield
ROBIN HOOD Illyria fuses
‘swashbuckling action with riotous comedy’ in a classic tale of camaraderie, Fri 16 June, Attingham Park, Shrewsbury
MENOPAUSE THE MUSICAL 2 The menopause ladies take to the high seas to share tales of their lives,
Bonnie Rait - Birmingham Town Hallloves and losses, Sat 17 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
BETWEEN US: SEX, LIES & IMPROVISATION A black comedy about lying together. The audience picks the lie, award-winning comedians produce the show, Sat 17 June, Oscars, Ludlow Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
SHERLOCK’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE
Follow Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson as they present a previously unpublished case, Sat 17 June, Brewhouse Arts Centre, Burton upon Trent
BREAKIN’ CONVENTION Showcasing inspiring performances from internationally celebrated poppers, lockers, b-boys and b-girls, with local talent performing alongside global sensations, Tues 13 - Wed 14 June, Birmingham Hippodrome
TONY STOCKWELL An evening with the star of TV’s Street Psychic, Psychic Private Eyes and Psychic Academy, Tues 13 June, Telford Theatre, Oakengates, Shropshire
A NIGHT AT THE MUSICALS Showcasing a variety of songs from the world of musical theatre, Wed 14 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
Monday 12 - Sunday 18 June
SET TO MUSIC Music & dance accompany the reading of two wellknown children’s classics. Sophie Price narrates a performance by BRB soloist Laura Tye, Sun 18 June, Jennifer Blackwell Performance Space, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
SCOTTISH FALSETTO SOCKS: EUROVISION SOCK CONTEST Earth’s funniest footwear returns with a new comedy tour, Sun 18 June, The Women’s Centre, Ludlow, South Shropshire
KEITH BRYMER JONES: LIFE, CLAY AND EVERYTHING The bestselling author and judge of Great Pottery Throw Down shares stories of life in front of and behind the potter’s wheel, Tues 13 June, Crewe Lyceum Theatre
TRENTHAM TASTE Featuring street food from the likes of Get Bun’d, stonebaked pizza from Totally Delicious and craft beer from Trentham Craft Bar, Fri 16 June, Trentham Estate, Staffordshire
EXPLORE ASTON HALL Immerse yourself in 400 years of history as you learn about the people who lived in the Hall, Fri 16 June, Aston Hall, Birmingham
WESTON PARK AIR SHOW
INTERNATIONAL Featuring model and full-sized aircraft displays, off-road and circuit model car racing, model boats and helicopters, Fri 16 - Sun 18 June, Weston Park, Shropshire
LUDLOW CARNIVAL Back for 2023 with a ‘myths, legends & fairytales’ theme, Sat 17 June, Ludlow, Shropshire
WESTON PARK FIREWORK & AERIAL
BAD DAD Heartbreak Productions present an open-air version of David Walliams’ warm-hearted tale about a father/son relationship, Sat 17 June, Bewdley Museum
FLUX Premiere showing of a new contemporary opera by Joel Baldwin, Sat 17 June, Ludlow Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM
Flabbergast Theatre fuse folk song, physical comedy and dance in an outdoor version of Shakespeare’s magical tale, Sat 17 - Sat 24 June, Ludlow Castle, South Shropshire
AS YOU LIKE IT Geraldine James stars in Omar Elerian’s playful new take on one of Shakespeare’s most joyous tales, Sat 17 June - Sat 5 Aug, Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratfordupon-Avon
TREASURE ISLAND Company Theatre
School presents an amateur version of Robert Louis Stevenson’s swashbuckling tale, Sun 18 June, Crescent Theatre, Birmingham
MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING
Shakespeare’s romantic romp gets the Oddsocks treatment in an outdoor production featuring songs and silliness, Sun 18 June, Tamworth Castle
DIRTY DUSTING Crissy Rock, Leah Bell, Vanessa Karon and Paul Dunn star in a comedy about a team of cleaning ladies who turn to an alternative way of earning cash when threatened with redundancy, Sun 18 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
WINNIE THE POOH New musical based on AA Milne’s much-loved characters and their adventures in the Hundred Acre Wood, Fri 16 - Sun 18 June, Birmingham Hippodrome
CLIVE ANDERSON: ME, MACBETH & I The host of BBC Radio Four’s Loose Ends embarks on his first-ever solo tour - a one-man show that promises ‘to be funnier than Shakespeare’s greatest tragedy’, Thurs 15 June, Crewe Lyceum Theatre
HISTORY’S A DRAG FEAT. VANITY MILAN AND ELEKTRA FENCE Two popular drag queens - for the price of one - present a show that’s promising to be ‘sexy, savage, sugar & spice and everything nice’, Thurs 15 June, Telford Theatre, Oakengates, Shropshire
THE SERIAL KILLER NEXT DOOR Victimology specialist Emma Kenny explores what creates a serial killer, and why some people choose a murderous path, Wed 14 June, Telford Theatre
THE MAKING OF A MURDERER Scottish detective David Swindle shares his unique insight into the minds of some of Britain’s biggest serial killers, Thurs 15 June, Birmingham Town Hall
REVEALING THE MASK TEACHER
WORKSHOP Mask workshops featuring games, exercises and shared exploration, Tues 13 June, Arena Theatre, Wolverhampton
PYRO SPECTACULAR The organisers of the Weston Park Air Show International bring you ‘a very special aerial show’, Sat 17 June, Weston Park, Shropshire
LICHFIELD WINE FESTIVAL Featuring an array of local and national wine merchants, as well as local vineyards and distillers, Sat 17 June, The Hub at St Mary’s, Lichfield
ANIMECON UK A showcase of the best of Asian pop culture, Sat 17 - Sun 18 June, NEC, Birmingham
NATIONAL CYCLING SHOW A show aiming to educate, inspire and motivate, Sat 17 - Sun 18 June, NEC, Birmingham
DACHSHUND PUP UP CAFE Special Hawaiian-themed pup cafe for Dachshunds and their crosses, Sun 18 June, The Lost & Found, Birmingham
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTORS FAIR
CLIVE ANDERSON: ME, MACBETH & I
The host of BBC Radio Four’s Loose Ends embarks on his first-ever solo tour - a one-man show that promises ‘to be funnier than Shakespeare’s greatest tragedy’, Fri 16 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
ELVIS LESLEY: BURNIN’ LOVE BINGO Join award-winning character comedian Tracey Collins (Shell Suit Cher, Audrey Heartburn) as she brings her latest ‘ridiculous’ act to the stage, Sat 17 June, Old Joint Stock Theatre, Birmingham
THE D-DAY DARLINGS - KING’S CORONATION TOUR 2023 Song & dance extravaganza for all the family, Sat 17 June, Halesowen Town Hall
IMPROV WOLVES New comedy sketches made up on the spot, based entirely on audience suggestions, Sat 17 June, Theatre on the Steps, Bridgnorth, Shropshire
TOSCANA STRINGS: MONKEY PUZZLE AND PETER AND THE WOLF - STORIES
PLANETARIUM LATES: PARTICLE/WAVE A look at gravitational waves via a collaboration between poets, musicians, sound & video artists and scientists, Thurs 15 June, Thinktank Birmingham Science Museum
BBC GARDENERS’ WORLD LIVE
Featuring top TV gardenersincluding Alan Titchmarsh (pictured), shopping opportunities and expert advice, Thurs 15 - Sun 18 June, NEC, Birmingham
Featuring traders from across the UK selling a wide range of items from yesteryear, Sun 18 June, Himley Hall, Dudley
NOCTURNE LIVE AT BLENHEIM PALACE
Line-up includes Lionel Richie, Pete Tong presents Ibiza Classics, Gregory Porter, Emeli Sande, Wed 14 - Sun 18 June, Blenheim Palace, Oxfordshire
BEARDY FOLK FESTIVAL Line-up includes Skerryvore, Seth Lakeman, Rusty Shackle, Valtos, Thurs 15 - Sun 18 June, Hopton Court, Cleobury Mortimer, Shropshire
BBC GOOD FOOD SHOW SUMMER
Featuring hundreds of brands, plenty of inspiration and a line-up of popular chefs and experts, Thurs 15 - Sun 18 June, NEC, Birmingham
SONIC ROCK SOLSTICE Line-up includes Henge, Keepers Brew, Eat Static, David Smale, Thurs 15 - Mon 19 June, Stoke Prior Sports and Country Club, Bromsgrove
LUNCHTIME ORGAN CONCERT WITH THOMAS TROTTER Programme includes works by P Grainger, E Coates, A Ketelby, J Ireland, S Torch, M Dring, R Binge & P Fletcher, Mon 19 June, Birmingham Town Hall
SHREWSBURY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA:
BIZET’S CARMEN Also featuring North Wales Opera Studio, Kiefer Jones (baritone) & Natasha HendrickseWelsh (soprano), Wed 21 June, Christchurch, Bayston Hill, Shrewsbury
SHREWSBURY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA:
JAMES Tues 20 June, The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton
SPECTRAL WOUND + THE SUN’S JOURNEY
THROUGH THE NIGHT
Wed 21 June, The Asylum, Birmingham
SIOUXSIE Wed 21 June, The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton
ELLEN ANDREA
WANG/ROB LUFT/JOHN
FÄLT Thurs 22 June, Midlands Arts Centre, Birmingham
THE SPIRIT OF RUSH
Thurs 22 June, The Robin, Bilston
SPARKS Thurs 22 June, The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton
FOOLPROOF + INWARD
STRANGE Thurs 22
June, Albert’s Shed, Shrewsbury
KURT VILE & THE VIOLATORS + KING
HANNAH Fri 23 June,
O2 Institute, B’ham
AMIGO THE DEVIL Fri 23
June, O2 Institute, Birmingham
DEVOUT - DEPECHE
MODE TRIBUTE Fri 23
June, O2 Academy, Birmingham
BARRINGTON LEVY Fri 23
June, O2 Academy, Birmingham
THE HIGH KINGS Fri 23
June, Birmingham
Town Hall
GO YOUR OWN WAYTHE FLEETWOOD MAC
LEGACY Fri 23 June, Sutton Coldfield Town Hall
THE FOO FIGHTERS UK
Fri 23 June, The River Rooms, Stourbridge
ENJOY THE SILENCE UK
Fri 23 June, The Robin, Bilston
STARVING RASCALS Fri 23 June, Katie
Fitzgerald’s, Stourbridge
RICHARD THOMPSON +
MEMORIAL Fri 23 June, The Wulfrun at The Halls Wolverhampton
Shropshire
ARRIVAL - THE HITS OF ABBA Sat 24 June, Walsall Arena & Arts Centre
SHANIA 25 LIVE Sat 24 June, Dudley Town Hall
ULTRA 90S Sat 24 June, The River Rooms, Stourbridge
REPUBLICA + THE LOOSE
CUT Sat 24 June, The Robin, Bilston
THE KILLERZ Sat 24
June, Eleven, Stokeon-Trent
HELLO AGAIN - THE NEIL DIAMOND SONGBOOK
Sat 24 June, Victoria Hall, Stoke-on-Trent
MIDNITE CITY + STAR
CIRCUS Fri 23 June, Eleven, Stoke-on-Trent
NEXUS Fri 23 June, Two Gates Club,Tamworth
PEASHOOTER Fri 23
June, The Feathers Inn, Lichfield
QUEEN II Fri 23 June, The Buttermarket, Shrewsbury
BC ALLSKAS + HOTRODS
Fri 23 June, Albert’s Shed, Shrewsbury
PAUL PARKER & ALL THE RIGHT FRIENDS Fri 23
June, Albert’s Shed, Southwater, Telford
A HEAD FULL OF COLDPLAY Fri 23 June, Theatre On The Steps, Bridgnorth
JODIE MARIE Fri 23
June, Herman Arts, Oswestry, North Shropshire
THIS ELEGANT CHAOS + VALIUM GORILLAS + HOLLOW ILLUSION Fri 23
June, Percy’s Cafe Bar, Whitchurch, North
EBAN BROWNSSTYLISTICS SONGBOOK
TOUR Sat 24 June, Tamworth Assembly Rooms
MARK DARK Sat 24
June, Two Gates Club, Tamworth
AUDIO THIEVES Sat 24 June, Albert’s Shed, Shrewsbury
SOUL BROTHERS
SYNDICATE FT. JOHNNY BOY PRYERS Sat 24 June, Telford Theatre, Oakengates, Shropshire
HOSPITAL FOOD + DEAD CITY REBELS +
AUTHORITY CRACKS Sat 24 June, Percy’s Cafe Bar, Whitchurch, North Shropshire
SHALAMAR Sun 25 June, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
FASTLOVE - A TRIBUTE
TO GEORGE MICHAEL
Sun 25 June, The Alexandra, B’ham
BIZET’S CARMEN Also featuring North Wales Opera Studio, Kiefer Jones (baritone) & Natasha HendrickseWelsh (soprano), Thurs 22 June, Whitchurch Civic Centre
PAUL MOCROFT (BARITONE) & JOHN
JENKIN (PIANO) Fri 23 June, St Chad’s Church, Shrewsbury
BIRMINGHAM BACH CHOIR; BEAUTIFUL
BRAHMS Featuring Paul Spicer (conductor) & John Thwaites (pianist). Programme comprises Brahms’ motets and part-songs, Sat 24 June, St Mary Magdalene, Bridgnorth, Shropshire
NORTH STAFFORDSHIRE SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA Featuring Juan Ortuño (conductor) & Robert Thompson (piano solo). Programme includes works by Beethoven, Chopin & Dvorak, Sat 24 June, Saint John Fisher Catholic College, Newcastleunder-Lyme
LUDLOW MALE VOICE CHOIR WITH JANE
HUGHES AND FRIENDS Sat 24 June, Ludlow Methodist Church, South Shropshire
SHREWSBURY FESTIVAL CHORUS & ORCHESTRA: ELIJAH Also featuring Shrewsbury Cantata Choir & Shrewsbury Choral, Sat 24 June, Shrewsbury Abbey
BIRMINGHAM PHILHARMONIC
ORCHESTRA Conducted by Michael Lloyd. Programme includes works by Khachaturian, J Strauss II, Ligeti and R Strauss, Sun 25 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
CANTIONES CHOIR: MUSIC FOR A SUMMER EVENING Featuring Martin Bussey (conductor), Sun 25 June, St John the Baptist Church, Whittington, Shropshire
SARAH MILLICAN’S COMEDY PLAYGROUND Mon 19 June, Stafford Gatehouse Theatre
PREACHER LAWSON Tues 20 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
COMEDY CAROUSEL WITH ANDY
ROBINSON, GARY LITTLE & COMIC TBC Thurs 22 June, The Glee Club,
Birmingham
CATHERINE YOUNG, DAVE EAGLE & PETER BRUSH Fri 23 June, Brewhouse Arts Centre, Burton upon Trent
PAUL SINHA, FIONA ALLEN & MAD RON Fri 23 June, Tamworth Assembly Rooms
GARY POWNDLAND & FRIENDS Fri 23 June, The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton
MARK STEEL Fri 23 June, Telford Theatre, Oakengates, South Shropshire
JOSH PUGH, MICHAEL MAY, GARY LITTLE & SAMMY DOBSON Fri 23 - Sat 24 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
MARK SIMMONS Sat 24 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
WAYNE BEESE Sat 24 June, Katie Fitzgerald’s, Stourbridge
A PLAY FOR THE LIVING IN A TIME OF EXTINCTION Miranda Rose Hall’s onewoman show confronts ‘the urgent ecological disaster unfolding around us’, Mon 19 - Sat 24 June, New Vic Theatre, Newcastle-under-Lyme
WISH YOU WERE DEAD Clive Mantle and George Rainsford star in Peter James’ hit thriller, Tues 20 - Sat 24 June, The Alexandra, Birmingham
SCHOOL OF ROCK Five Towns Theatre present an amateur version of the smash-hit musical, Tues 20 - Sat 24 June, Stoke Repertory Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent
SIX THE MUSICAL Smash-hit musical in which the six wives of Henry VIII take to the stage to tell their tales... Tues 20 - Sun 25 June, Birmingham
Hippodrome
5 YEARS A new comic drama asking ‘what do we lose in the pursuit of perfection?’, Wed 21 - Thurs 22 June, Midlands Arts Centre (MAC), B’ham
TADEUS TOAD Side By Side Theatre Company tell the story of a toad whose life is threatened by monsters on the motorway, Wed 21 - Sat 24 June, Stourbridge Town Hall
THE HUNGER Northern International Theatre present a theatrical exploration of Roger Elkin’s epic cycle of poems about the great Irish famine, Thurs 22 June, Foxlowe Arts Centre, Leek, Staffs
HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL JR Amateur version presented by St Dominic’s School, Thurs 22 - Fri 23 June, Arena Theatre, Wolverhampton
THE WEDDING SINGER Curtain Call Theatre Company present an amateur version of the musical comedy, Thurs 22 - Sat 24 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
DRACULA: THE BLOODY TRUTH Four actors play over 40 characters in an innovative and humorous production based on ‘the true events of Dracula’, Fri 23 - Sat 24 June, Lichfield Garrick
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM West
End favourite Kerry Ellis stars alongside Jonathan Hyde (Titanic, Jumanji) and Milly Zero (EastEnders, The Foreigner) in a new version of Shakespeare’s most popular comedy, Fri 23 June - Sun 9 July, Stafford Gatehouse Theatre
THE HERO NEXT DOOR BY ONJALI Q.
RAÚF New play for seven to 10-yearolds exploring themes of friendship, and empathy, Sun 25 June, Midlands Arts Centre (MAC), Birmingham
ANIMALS UNLEASHED Fast-paced theatre show for the whole family featuring visual effects, comedy, music and life-sized animals, Sun 25 June, Lichfield Garrick
BRB2: CARLOS ACOSTA’S CLASSICAL
SELECTION A gala celebration of classical ballet, with Frederick Ashton’s Rhapsody and Carlos’ new interpretation of Fokine’s The Dying Swan featuring amongst the highlights, Sat 24 June, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
THE TALES OF BEATRIX POTTER
Presented by Stephanie Parrott’s Midland Youth Ballet, Sat 24 June, Brewhouse Arts Centre, Burton upon Trent
SAMARPAN MAHOTSAV Celebrating
Queer voices in Indian classical dance and live music, Sat 24 June, Arena Theatre, Wolverhampton
MARIE LLOYD STOLE MY LIFE A tale of tempestuous relationships, a scandalous divorce, an infamous jewellery heist and a rescue at sea, Mon 19 June, Oscars, Ludlow
Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
THE LADYBOYS OF BANGKOK Fastpaced, large-scale production filled with ‘star-spangled sassiness’, Wed 21 June, Telford Theatre, Oakengates, Shropshire
WINDRUSH 75TH YEAR CELEBRATION
One-off event featuring
performances, guest speakers and presentations. The evening culminates with a jamboree of music from the 1950s to the present day, Thurs 22 June, The Rep, Birmingham
KENDAL MOUNTAIN TOUR 2023 An evening celebrating adventure and featuring some of the most spectacular places on earth... Thurs
22 June, Crewe Lyceum Theatre
RUSH - A JOYOUS JAMAICAN JOURNEY
Comedian John Simmit narrates the story of reggae music and the Windrush Generation, Thurs 22 June, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
AN AUDIENCE WITH LIVERPOOL LEGENDS
Jed Stone hosts an evening of entertaining banter featuring Ronnie Whelan, Steve McMahon and Jan Molby, Thurs 22 June, Tamworth Assembly Rooms
IT JUST SO HAPPENED: AN ALTERNATIVE
HISTORY SHOW Comedians and history buffs explore some possible alternative histories of Ludlow people and events, Sat 24 June, Oscars, Ludlow Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
TRES TRES CABARET The promise of a silly & saucy night of entertainment, Sat 24 June, The Hub at St Mary’s, Lichfield
STORY BAZAAR: THE BRUMJABI
BROTHERS Chris Lowe and Peter Chand fuse mayhem and silliness to tell stories from Brum, the Punjab and beyond... Sun 25 June, Newhampton Arts Centre, Wolverhampton
MADAME CHANDELIER’S NIGHT AT THE OPERA Featuring jokes, party games and lots of dramatic death scenes, Sun 25 June, The Women’s Centre, Ludlow, South Shropshire
CIRQUE: THE GREATEST SHOW Musical theatre meets circus in a show featuring ‘breath-taking’ aerialists and contortionists... Sun 25 June, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
THE MAKING OF A MURDERER Scottish detective David Swindle shares his unique insight into the minds of some of Britain’s biggest serial killers, Wed 21 June, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
SUSIE DENT PRESENTS THE SECRET LIFE OF WORDS Join the Queen of Dictionary Corner as she explores the surreal origins of words we use everyday, Thurs 22 June, Ludlow Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
AN EVENING WITH CHRIS HADFIELD A mind-expanding evening of exploration, imagery, stories and music, Fri 23 June, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
Monday 19 - Sunday 25 June
KENTON COOL Join the non-Sherpa world-record holder as he offers an insight into the highs and lows of summit attempts on one of the world’s most magnificent mountains, Fri 23 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
THE LUDLOW POETRY SLAM A ‘knockout night’ as poets compete for points that lead to prizes, Sat 24 June, Ludlow Brewery, Ludlow, South Shropshire
ALAN FLETCHER: THE DOCTOR WILL SEE YOU NOW Join Ramsey Street’s most famous doctor as he looks back on and celebrates almost three decades of hit TV series Neighbours, Sun 25 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
LIFE WITH THE ENGLAND FOOTBALL TEAM Nick Owen interviews David Davies OBE about his eventful career in television journalism and the oftenturbulent world of football, Sun 25 June, Ludlow Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
REVEALING THE MASK TEACHER WORKSHOP Mask workshops featuring games, exercises and shared exploration, Tues 20 June, Arena Theatre, Wolverhampton
EVENING OPENING: DUDMASTON AFTER HOURS Visit Dudmaston after hours and see the garden and galleries in a different light, Wed 21 June, Dudmaston Estate, Shropshire
THE BIG BANG FAIR The UK’s biggest STEM celebration for young people, Wed 21 - Fri 23 June, NEC, Birmingham
ADULT NIGHT Chance to enjoy ‘the ultimate’ indoor Lego playground completely kid-free! Fri 23 June, Legoland Discovery Centre
Birmingham
UNDER 5S DAY Enjoy baby & toddler sessions throughout the day and all the fun of the seaside at Himley’s Beach, Fri 23 June, Himley Hall, Dudley
THE CREATIVE CRAFT SHOW A haven for crafters, offering all the latest supplies, ideas and innovations, Fri 23 - Sun 25 June, NEC, Birmingham
POTFEST BY THE LAKE Showcasing the work of 80 of the UK’s finest ceramics makers, Fri 23 - Sun 25 June, Compton Verney, Warwickshire
BEHIND THE SCENES TOUR A guided tour of Aston Hall, with the rare opportunity to see some sections of the building not usually open to the public, Sat 24 June, Aston Hall, Birmingham
BIRMINGHAM RUM FESTIVAL Featuring over 100 rums, including heritage brands such as Appleton Estate and Havana Club, Sat 24 June, The Cuban Embassy, Moseley, B’ham
STEP BACK TO THE 1940S Feel the spirit of the British home front as you travel by heritage steam train to each station, Sat 24 - Sun 25 June, Severn Valley Railway, Bewdley, Nr Kidderminster
ARTISAN, CRAFT AND GIFT MARKET
Talented makers, creators and enterprises from across the region sell their wares, Sat 24 - Sun 25 June, Bantock House, Wolverhampton
STEAMPUNK WEEKEND Featuring elaborate costumes on parade, traders selling accessories and clothing, and ‘fascinating’ exhibits, Sat 24 - Sun 25 June, Blists Hill
Victorian Town, Ironbridge
ARMED FORCES WEEKEND Featuring fun family activities, a service of tribute and a food & craft fair, Sat 24Sun 25 June, National Memorial Arboretum, Staffordshire
SANDWELL PRIDE FESTIVAL LGBT+ community celebration featuring music, performances and activities, Sun 25 June, Dartmouth Park, West Bromwich
MR MOTIVATOR PRESENTS THE MOTIVATIONAL EXPERIENCE A day of activities aiming to improve your sense of wellbeing, Sun 25 June, Halesowen Town Hall
TECH ROOTZ Immersive experience in the worlds of gaming, design thinking, music production and more, Sun 25 June, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
ARMED FORCES DAY Free family day out honouring those in the armed forces, Sun 25 June, Himley Hall, Dudley
BEHIND THE SCENES TOUR Join informative guides for a peek behind closed doors, to learn some of the royal secrets of the Bradford family, Sun 25 June, Weston Park, Shropshire
BIRMINGHAM RUM FESTIVAL Featuring over 100 rums, including heritage brands such as Appleton Estate and Havana Club, Sat 24 June, The Cuban Embassy, Moseley
SHREWSBURY FOOD FESTIVAL
Featuring hundreds of food & drink stalls, street-food trucks, bars, chef stages and chef schools, Sat 24Sun 25 June, The Quarry Park, Shrewsbury
UPTON JAZZ FESTIVAL Featuring Ben Holder’s Hot Club Quartet, Jake Leg Jug Band, Sarah Spencer’s Transatlantic Jazz Band, Hotsy Totsy, Sat 24 - Sun 25 June, various venues in Upton-upon-Severn, Worcestershire
JARUALDA QUARTET & FRIENDS
Programme includes works by Beethoven, Shostakovich & Schubert, Thurs 29 June, The Gateway Arts Centre, Shrewsbury
FRANKIE BOYLE Mon 26 June, The Alexandra, Birmingham
SARAH MILLICAN’S COMEDY
PLAYGROUND Mon 26 June, Stafford Gatehouse Theatre
ISMO Wed 28 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
NELL BRYDEN Tues 27
June, Justham Family Room & Jane How Room, Symphony Hall, Birmingham
TASH SULTANA Tues 27
June, The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton
EINSTELLUNG + ZYGGURAT + WILDFORMS Wed 28
June, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
THE PERSPECTIVE
COLLECTIVE Wed 28
June,The Hub at St Mary’s, Lichfield
CAN’T SWIM + JETSKI
Thurs 29 June, O2 Academy, Birmingham
CLOUDBUSTING - THE MUSIC OF KATE BUSH
Thurs 29 June, The Robin, Bilston
SUGABABES Thurs 29
June, The Civic at The Halls Wolverhampton
THE ELTON JOHN SHOW
Thurs 29 June, Mitchell
Arts Centre, Stoke-onTrent
LEGEND - THE MUSIC OF BOB MARLEY Thurs 29
June, Lichfield Garrick
EVERYTHING CHANGES: TAKE THAT TRIBUTE
Thurs 29 June, Telford
Theatre, Oakengates, Shropshire
SHOW ME THE BODY Fri 30 June, The Asylum, Birmingham
LEGEND: THE MUSIC OF BOB MARLEY Fri 30
June, Birmingham Town Hall
SHOWADDYWADDY Fri
30 June, Brierley Hill
Civic, Dudley
THE COUNTERFEIT
BEATLES Fri 30 June, The Robin, Bilston
IAN PARKER BAND Fri 30
June, Katie
Fitzgerald’s, Stourbridge
CHRIS ISAAK Fri 30
June, The Civic at The
Halls Wolverhampton
WHITESNAKE’S JOURNEY
Fri 30 June, Eleven, Stoke-on-Trent
TALON Fri 30 June, Tamworth Assembly Rooms
THE UK ROCK SHOW Fri 30 June, Lichfield Garrick
JACK GOODALL AND THE KICK + LF + ROWAN
LAWSON Fri 30 June, Albert’s Shed, Shrewsbury
CANTALOOP Fri 30 June, Albert’s Shed, Southwater, Telford
SIMON & OSCAR FROM OCEAN COLOUR SCENE
Fri 30 June, Telford Theatre, Oakengates, Shropshire
ROTHSCHILD + SUCCOUR + ETERNUM
JOY Fri 30 June, Percy’s Cafe Bar, Whitchurch, North Shropshire
COMEDY CAROUSEL WITH ANDY ROBINSON, ANNA MANN (COLIN HOULT) & TATTY MACLEOD Thurs 29 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
RUSSELL HOWARD Thurs 29 June, Birmingham Hippodrome
JOSH PUGH & SCOTT BENNET Thurs 29 June, Station Pub, Sutton Coldfield
DARREN HARRIOTT, DAVE LONGLEY, ANNA MANN (COLIN HOULT), TATTY MACLEOD & ROMAN HARRIS Fri 30 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
JONNY COLE Fri 30 June, The Glee Club, Birmingham
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM
Presented by Studio 61, Tues 25Thurs 29 June, Newhampton Arts Centre, Wolverhampton
THE SPONGEBOB MUSICAL Tom Read Wilson and RuPaul’s Drag Race UK star Divina De Campo take top billing in an ‘all-singing, all-dancing, deepsea pearl of a show’, Tues 27 JuneSat 1 July, Wolverhampton Grand Theatre
BUDDY - THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY
Smash-hit musical charting the rise to fame of one of rock & roll’s most iconic musicians, Tues 27 June - Sat
1 July, Regent Theatre, Stoke-onTrent
PRIVATE PEACEFUL Little Theatre Company present Michael Morpurgo’s classic wartime story, Tues 27 June - Sat 1 July, Brewhouse Arts Centre, Burton upon Trent
HARVEY GREENFIELD IS RUNNING LATE
Award-winning writer/performer Paul Richards explores our need to please, and why sometimes it’s healthy to just ‘stop, sit in a shed, eat biscuits and pretend to be Meat Loaf’, Wed 28 June, Oscars, Ludlow Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
HAPPY DAYS Siobhán McSweeney
(Derry Girls/The Great Pottery Throw Down) plays Winnie in Samuel Beckett’s masterpiece, Wed 28 June - Sat 1 July, The Rep, Birmingham
GOD OF CARNAGE Here To There Productions present Yasmina Reza’s comedy of manners - without the manners! Wed 28 June - Sat 1 July, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
GERTRUDE LAWRENCE: A LOVELY WAY TO SPEND AN EVENING A play with music telling the story of one of Britain’s brightest theatrical stars, Thurs 29 June, The Hub at St Mary’s, Lichfield
MARK STRATFORD: MACREADY!
DICKENS’ THEATRICAL FRIEND New show that tells the story of great Victorian actor-manager Macreadythe man to whom Charles Dickens’ dedicated Nicholas Nickleby, Thurs 29 June, Oscars, Ludlow Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
WIND YER NECK IN KATE The Old Dic Theatre Company presents a tale of young lovers, who head to the woods to escape the frustration of lockdown and end up away with the fairies, Thurs 29 June, Chang Thai, Market Street, Ludlow, South Shropshire
MAYBE DICK Herman Melville’s classic tale of revenge and retribution, Moby Dick, is shared in ‘an inventive, comic retelling on the high seas’... Fri 30 June, Oscars, Ludlow Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
DINNER WITH GATSBY New musical based on F Scott Fitzgerald’s classic novel. Note that the show contains explicit language and depictions of and reference to domestic violence, abuse, misogyny, sexism and suicide, Fri 30 June - Sat 1 July, The Hub at St Mary’s, Lichfield
DEMON DENTIST David Walliams’ ‘hilarious and thrilling’ story, live on stage, Wed 28 June - Sat 1 July, The Alexandra, Birmingham
BELLA ME Dance fuse dance theatre, visual projection and music to tell the
story of a woman who lost everything in one breath, Wed 28 June, Walsall Arena
ANTON & GIOVANNI Dance
extravaganza featuring Strictly favourites Anton du Beke and Giovanni Pernice, alongside a cast of professional singers and dancers, Thurs 29 - Fri 30 June, Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
FORBIDDEN NIGHTS Circus acts and ‘forbidden tease’ combine in a show featuring seductive choreography and a comedian compere, Wed 28 June, Crewe Lyceum Theatre
KANE AND ABEL: TWINPOSSIBLE
Comedy and magic based on the cliche of being twins, Thurs 29 June, Oscars, Ludlow Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
CABARET AT THE BREWERY Featuring ‘bold burlesque, daring drag and marvellous magic’, Fri 30 June, Ludlow Brewery, South Shropshire
THE BASTARD ENBY SHOW Gender-
defiant performance collective bringing together the ‘creme-de-lathems of cabaret’, Fri 30 June, Old Joint Stock Theatre, Birmingham
JUDI DENCH ON PERFORMING SHAKESPEARE An in-conversation event with one of Britain’s most versatile actors, Thurs 29 June, Ludlow Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
REVEALING THE MASK TEACHER
WORKSHOP Mask workshops featuring games, exercises and shared exploration, Tues 27 June, Arena Theatre, Wolverhampton
UNDER-5S TEDDY BEARS PICNIC PARTY
The popular annual event returns with plenty of children’s entertainment, Wed 28 - Thurs 29 June, Dudley Zoo & Castle
ALDERFEST 2023 Back for its second year, with a two-day festival features McFly, Sam Ryder and numerous other artists, until Fri 30 June - Sat 1 July, Alderford Lake, Shropshire
JOHN INVERDALE: TALKING SPORTS Join the popular sports broadcaster as he chats about his career to comedian and impressionist Alistair McGowan, Fri 30 June, Ludlow Assembly Rooms, South Shropshire
GATE TO SOUTHWELL Line-up includes Raghu Dixit Project, Dog Show Sessions, Nine Below Zero, London Afrobeat Collective, Thurs 29 JuneSun 2 July, Kirklington, Southwell, Nottinghamshire
BACK 2 FESTIVAL Line-up includes Blue, Basshunter, Cascada, A1, Boyzlife, Thurs 29 June - Mon 3 July,
Catton Hall & Park, Derbyshire
ALDERFEST Line-up includes McFly, Sam Ryder, Aston Merrygold, Sonique, Fri 30 June - Sat 1 July, Alderford Lake, Shropshire
PUB IN THE PARK Line-up includes Bananarama, Toploader, Ronan Keating, Soul II Soul, Fri 30 JuneSun 2 July, Victoria Park, Leamington Spa
HEAL FESTIVAL Line-up includes The Enemy (pictured), Cast, Dub Pistols, The Slow Readers Club , Fri 30 June - Sun 2 July, Greenhous West Mid Showground, Shrewsbury
GODIVA FESTIVAL Line-up includes The Enemy, Melanie C, Rudimental, Ella Eyre, Fri 20 June - Sun 2 July, War Memorial Park, Coventry