Jane Eyre - Altrincham Garrick


IT’S almost impossible to believe, by today’s standards, that one of English literature’s most iconic novels had to be written under a pseudonym in order to guarantee its publication.

But so it was with Charlotte Bronte who gave us a tale of courage and quiet determination in the sense of overwhelming odds that would break anyone’s spirit. Jane Eyre is every inch the literary heroine.

Then there’s the romantic stuff - totally devoid of any degree of sentiment or slushiness. The course of true love never did run smooth. And then some.

I really enjoyed watching the relationship between Jane and her initially distant and aloof employer Mr Rochester grow, thanks to the natural chemistry between Melanie Beswick and Loui Quelcutti.

With an engaging effortlessness Beswick makes you care about her character which is remarkable really, when you remember she only exists in the author’s amazing imagination and ability to write from the heart.

It’s also a tribute to director Carole Carr who more than makes the most of a multi-talented cast, including one who plays Rochester’s dog.

The production’s final scene also has the power of a film.

Altrincham Garrick is theatrically the place to be at the moment. Fabulous and unmissable.

Until October 12. Tickets are available from 0161 928 1677 or www.altrinchamgarrick.co.uk.

Star rating - *****

Photo by Martin Ogden.

The Beauty Queen of Leenane - Lauriston Studio at Altrincham Garrick


THE plot of The Beauty Queen of Leenane will strike a chord with far, far too many people.

A 40 year old spinster has been forced to put her life, including her love life, on hold for more years than she’d care to remember to be at the beck and call of her mother, a woman constantly criticising her daughter’s unwavering devotion.

But supposing she had the chance to escape?

Director Mark Goggins has spent decades entertaining theatregoers in these parts with his top class and hugely memorable productions of musicals and he’s just as adept when it comes to straight plays as anyone lucky enough to have tickets for this will testify.

At the time of writing only a few tickets remained for a play that is both warmly funny and in certain parts, deeply disturbing. Let’s face it, nobody tells a tale quite like an Irishman and that gift is certainly part of Martin McDonagh’’s DNA.

Under Goggins’ accomplished direction, the performances are strong and very natural, with Kathryn Worthington have to do very little to win our sympathy as the poor put upon Maureen and Sarah Kirk suitably horrendous as her mother, Mag. Think Hitler in a pinny.

Timmie Lee Murphy and Ryan Jay are also really good value as Ray and Pato Dooley.

I was delighted to hear The Beauty Queen of Leenane attracted the audiences theatre this good richly deserves, even if the play sometimes does depict the ugly side of human nature.

Until Occtober 6. Tickets are available from 0161 928 1677 or www.altrinchamgarrick.co.uk.

Star rating - 4.5 out of 5.

Photo - Martin Ogden.

New Year treat for Sondheim fans from SAMT

I WAS delighted to discover Sale and Altrincham Musical Theatre will perform one of the best modern musicals around when they stage from March 26-29.

As someone who forever feels starved of Stephen Sondheim in these parts, this was great news, the production coming from a company I have a deep seated affection and respect for.

I saw Company for the first tine at the old Library Theatre in Manchester and I’ve been a self-confessed Sondheim nut ever since, without the desire to be cured.

Company will be performed at Altrincham Little Theatre.

The History Boys - Altrincham Garrick


The History Boys.

MY general studies lessons were never as entertaining as this.

The pupils often find themselves acting out scenes from romantic films and literature under the watchful eye of Hector, a teacher who can best be described as unorthodox in terms of his teaching methods.

He evidently believes in nurturing rounded individuals as his charges chase places to read history at Oxford or Cambridge.

But this much loved figure, something of a cult hero among his students also has a seedy side. However, this seediness is played down by the grammar school pupils who have a deep seated love for his lessons.

Alan Bennett’s multi award winning play launches the Garrick’s season in spectacular fashion and the curtain call at the end made me feel I was at a pop concert. The noise, the out pouring of appreciation from the audience very nearly lifted the theatre roof off.

Writing as good as this deserves performances of a similar standard and director Su Mowatt has ensured not one of her cast disappoint, from the actors playing the often rowdy students to Ivor Farley as Hector and Lindsey Barker as Mrs Linott, a female teacher often struggling to make sense of her male dominated working environment.

Ben Walsh makes a sympathetic Irwin and William Teller, a relative newcomer to this theatre has quite a presence as the hot tempered headmaster. I expect offers of future roles to flood in on the basis of this erformance.

We also have Bennett’s script to enjoy, peppered with numerous gems that are the hallmark of a modest man who is a national treasure. And then some.

Until September 21. Tickets are available from 0161 928 1677 or www.altrinchamgarrick.co.uk.

Star rating - *****

Photo by Martin Ogden.

The Importance of Being Earnest - Royal Exchange Theatre


THE Importance of Being Earnest is as light as one of Lady Bracknell’s cucumber sandwiches.

While the RET’s decision to transport Wilde’s comedy to a modern setting doesn’t entirely work because of changes in social etiquette, spending an evening in the company in friends Jack and Algernon is still by and large, great fun even if the majority of the laugh out loud moments come in act two.

Robin Morrissey and Parth Thakerar are perfect for the roles with both displaying an expert comic timing as they pursue their romantic dreams.

Thakerar’s character is by far the most appealing, an incurable upper class layabout with a seemingly unquenchable appetite for food and the good things in life. If there was such a thing as a degree in sitting on your backside and doing nothing, Algy is sure to get a first.

While the social background inhabited by Algy is alien to most of us, we men would secretly like to be him I’m sure, even if we’re scared to admit it.

James Quinn, who seems to have been performing forever, is similarly gifted in the comic timing department as servants Lane and Merriman respectively and I also really enjoyed Rumi Sutton as Cecily.

It’s inevitable that a play that premiered in 1895 is showing its wrinkles. But there are some witty gems to enjoy from the master playwright, renowned for his immaculate turn of phrase.

Anyone looking for an evening in the theatre that will suit those steamy summer nights we will surely get at some point, are sure to enjoy a play that, to coin a phrase made famous by a TV ad from yesteryear, does exactly what it says on the tin.

Until July 20. Tickets are available from 0161 833 9833 or www.royalexchange.co.uk.

Star rating - 3.5 out of 5.

Photo by Johan Persson.

Merrily We Roll Along - Altrincham Garrick


Unmissable - Merrily We Roll Along.

IT was as a fresh faced freelance that I reviewed my first Garrick production, more years ago than I care to remember.

But Merrily We Roll Along, featuring a sumptuous score by the American genius who is Stephen Sondheim, is among the very best.

Sondheim is without doubt, a guilty pleasure of mine and I admire him for the way he doesn’t coax emotion out of audiences even though his songs have their desired emotional impact.

His talent is definitely a unique one and the entire Garrick cast, under the expert direction of Joseph Meighan and musical director Mark Goggins, certainly do it justice. And then some.

Spanning three decades, Merrily is the story in reverse of composer Franklin Shepard who abandons his musical roots and his friends to become a movie producer in Hollywood.

There’s a touching camaraderie between Tom Broughton, in show stealing form as Shephard, and his musical collaborator Charley Kringas, a disarmingly decent character struggling to make sense of Shephard’s change in direction and Meg Brassington as the writer Mary Flynn.

It feels fundamentally wrong to single out individual performances, with the exception of the afore mentioned trio because there simply aren’t any bad ones and the choreography, under the direction of Louise Petit, is just as memorable and full of spectacle.

Had Sondheim himself been in the audience he is sure to have applauded and I would willingly watch this twice.

The show’s rooftop climax is also quite something, a real dose of stage magic, much needed in our miserable times.

Fabulous, flawless and a must see.

Until June 22. The box office is on 0161 928 1677 or www.altrinchamgarrick.co.uk.

Star rating - *****

Photo by Martin Ogden.

2:22 A Ghost Story - The Lowry


2:22 A Ghost Story at The Lowry - spooky stuff.

I CAN’T for the life of me - no pun intended - remember the last time I was so genuinely shocked and scared by a play.

But everyone at The Lowry absolutely loved being spooked, with their shrieks turning into bursts of collective laughter.

Danny Robins ingeniously crafted play also contains one of the cleverest twists I’ve ever seen on a stage. But us critics have been urged by our contacts not to spill the beans.

Jenny and Sam are coming to terms with the pressures of new parenthood and Jenny’s stress levels are boosted by her belief that her house is haunted, a belief Sam rubbishes at ever given opportunity.

The couple invite Lauren and her new boyfriend Ben for drinks and food. Ben is irritating beyond belief at times, overly familiar to Sam who hates the way he calls him “mate.”

As Sam and Jenny, George Rainsford and Fiona Wade exude a very potent chemistry and really sound like a real husband and wife, especially when rowing after initial differences of opinion.

Jay McGuiness is at times hilarious as Ben, especially during his bouts of inflated self worth and I also really liked Vera Chok’s Lauren.

The special effects have maximum impact in the Lowry audience by increasing the emotional ante without warning.

When it comes to spooks I’m probably a member of sceptics anonymous. Hopefully though, nothing will happen to make me change my theory.

Prepare to be shocked, scared and entertained. A must see.

Star rating - 4.5 out of 5.

Until June 8. Tickets are available from 0343 208 6000 or www.thelowry.com.

The Audience - Altrincham Garrick


Stunning - The Audience.

MIKE Shaw take a bow - and your hugely dedicated and gifted team of costume designers.

Between them they’ve recreated a stunning replica of The Queen’s coronation dress and the end result is a visually stunning spectacle that’s sure to live long in the memory of those who see it.

But Mike is a multi talented man whose equally adept in the director’s chair and the end result is a hugely enjoyable evening’s theatre.

The Audience comes from the pen of Peter Morgan who re-imagines what was said during Her Majesty’s weekly meetings with her Prime Ministers.

It’s a work of pure fiction of course. But there’s an air of engaging authenticity in Morgan’s dialogue that made me secretly hope there was a modicum of truth in at least something that was said behind closed doors.

You don’t have to be an admirer of the Royals to enjoy this. But there’s no getting away from the fact HRH came through a host of challenges despite her vast array of privilegrs.

We also meet a younger version of The Queen as she struggles to come to terms with her status and her destiny.

Ros Greenwood gives the performance of her Garrick career as the older version of our late monarch and I really enjoyed her natural rapport with Mark Jephcott who played quite brilliantly our former pipe smoking PM, Harold Wilson.

Equally enjoyable is Nick Sample as Churchill and Steven Finney who gives a show stealing performance as the much maligned John Major. I still laugh when I think of the way Major was so mercilessly lampooned on the brilliant Spitting Image.

The Audience definitely gets my vote. Enjoy.

Until May 25. Tickets are available from 0161 928 1677 or www.altrinchamgarrick.co.uk.

Star rating - ****

Photo by Martin Ogden.