JUST in time - Theatresouth
Transcription
JUST in time - Theatresouth
arts & current issue events around Brighton & Hove and the South East in the next 7 days plus Reviews Fri 3-9 June RECLAIMING THEIR HUMANITY HOLDING THE MAN Directed by Neil Armfield, with Ryan Corr, Craig Stott, Geoffrey Rush, Guy Pearce. Australia 2015. 127mins. Australia is in the news for all the wrong reasons - the Federal Government removing references to the Great Barrier Reef, Tasmanian old growth forests and Kakadu National Park from a UN climate change report, and two asylum seekers selfimmolating in one or other of the holding facilities (jails) on Manus Island and Nauru. One of these was a 21 year old Somali girl. The desperation that would drive such a person to this kind of act cannot be imagined. Are these things linked, and what does this have to do with an Australian film set in the 1970s and 80s? The film is about two young men, lovers, who have AIDS. One, Tim Conigrave, writes about their experience, which becomes a best selling book. This film is based on the book, and both film and book are fairly explicit. It’s perhaps hard for anyone who wasn’t there to imagine the hysteria that surrounded the AIDS epidemic in the early 80s, and that hysteria didn’t just affect Australia. To be dying of an incurable disease is bad enough, but to be de-humanised, ostracised, made into some kind of symbol of retribution for the sins of humankind, to be rendered ‘other’, literally untouchable, and that all this actually occurred, beggars belief. If Tim Conigrave could have looked a mere 20 years into his future and seen that he and his lover could have got married, that their illness could have been managed, that they could have led productive lives, he may not have been able to believe it. Apart from being a writer, Tim Conigrave was also an actor, who attended the prestigious National Institute of Dramatic Art, alumni including Mel Gibson, Cate Blancett and other internationally famous film stars. (Interestingly, Antony LaPaglia, Guy Pearce and Geoffrey Rush, who play supporting roles here, didn’t attend NIDA.) This period, the 70s and 80s, was the great flowering of the arts in Australia (don’t laugh). This was the time of Peter Weir, Fred Schepisi, the first Mad Max films, Neighbours… OK, some good, some not so, but the hope, the expectation was sky high. After a fairly brief interregnum when the Labor Government of Gough Whitlam, a regime of lovable galahs, was dismissed, effectively in a coup in all but name, by the Governor General, the that we can see him thinking through his experience. What could be seen as weak, and it’s not really the performance, the apparent weakness is in the book too, is that he doesn’t go beyond that experience to something larger, more universal. And yet the film achieves something universal, almost against its best intentions, in spite of itself. Queen’s representative (if you sense this is still a pretty raw wound, you’d be right) in 1975, normal service was resumed with Bob Hawke and Labor in 1983 and Australia found its voice. WHAT WAS THAT VOICE SAYING? America was founded on the basis of a principle - religious freedom. What was the principle on which Australia was founded? A giant, continent sized prison settlement - it’s hard to be proud of that. And hard to make that the basis of a national artistic expression which we can export to the rest of the world. What to do? When looking outside doesn’t yield anything promising what’s left but to look inside. And this is what Australia did. Australia created an artistic tradition based on how you feel. Soap Opera as imagined by Americans is a species of melodrama, everything is larger than life. Soap as imagined by Australians is a unique beast, everything internal is made explicit. Feelings usually hidden are revealed. In a way, it’s less than life and remarkably consoling for all that. Australia has given the world an art form that has nothing to say beyond itself. It is expression as self-obsession. You might be Australian, you twit, but that’s harsh. Uncalled for. Let me finish. This film seems to encapsulate precisely this argument in microcosm. The success of Holding the Man really depends on the performance of Ryan Corr as Tim Conigrave. His character wrote the book so, given the book’s frame of reference, it’s inevitable it will be from his point of view. What’s strong in his performance is THIS WEEK The art critic, Robert Hughes, from a slightly older generation than Conigrave, was moved to write, in a break from his usual speciality, an influential, in Australia at least, and entertaining history of the Australian convict experience, The Fatal Shore. The colourful horrors he elucidates, in places like Port Arthur and Norfolk Island, were news to most of the population of Australia when it was published in 1986. To me, the experience of the two young men mirrors that of the convicts. The horror of their sentence, their de-humanisation, their ostracism, their being made a symbol of some kind of divine retribution, is a modern re-creation of the founding of Australia. And Australia seems just as adept at sweeping all this under the carpet, of only looking inside, at how they personally feel, now as they were in the 1980s, as they were in the Nineteenth Century. An artistic tradition based on feeling isn’t enough to confront a country with the true extent of what they’ve done in the past. And what they are doing right now. This is a very honest film, based on a very honest book, which was written when its author felt he had little left but honesty. He sets out to reclaim his humanity, and he succeeds in reclaiming something important for us all. He transcends the artistic tradition in which he writes in a way that is quite breathtaking. Paul Corcoran HOLDING THE MAN is screening Mon 27 Jun 8.45pm DUKE OF YORK’S PICTUREHOUSE Preston Road Brighton BN1 4NA picturehouses.com a delicate balance Departure (15) Written and Directed by Andrew Steggall, with Juliet Stephenson, Alex Lawther and Phénix Brossard. UK/FR 2015 109mins. and digital held out the possibility of transforming the cinema experience into something utterly new and different from what went before. Except it didn’t. Before digital, films came and went from the cinema with dizzying speed; after digital, the films still come and go from the cinema with dizzying speed. That’s if they come at all. In the old days there were only so many prints of a film, hundreds for a big Hollywood extravaganza, down to only a couple for an arthouse flick. Cinemas were in a queue for a print and the print had to move on to the next cinema no matter what. I think it was Glenda Jackson, the actor and MP, who said, ‘you watch a play with other people but you watch a film alone’, or something like that. (If it wasn’t Glenda Jackson, I apologise, but I’m only quoting her so I can disagree. I’m not sure what the context was. Perhaps she was making a case for the primacy of theatre. Whatever.) The whole point of watching a film in a cinema is to watch it with other people, people who you don’t necessarily know. It’s not just the big screen and the big sound, it’s the getting ready and going out, the occasion of it all, that makes the experience special. You can have a coffee, or a drink, eat a meal at home, but people go out for all these things. Everyone knows this of course. Except there’s something about the cinema experience that seems not to be social, that seems, well, the only word I can think of is industrial. The film industry. Making a film is expensive. Even a cheap film is expensive. Building a cinema is expensive. The projector is designed to run day and night, industrial. But you know, kitting out a restaurant is expensive. The kitchen is filled with industrial stuff, churning out meals day and night. So what’s your point? It’s almost exactly 10 years since digital projection became widely available in cinemas. Yes, the yellows were deeper in the old analogue film, yadda, yadda (I love vinyl, too) but the essential experience of cinema is social, not the character of the colour, Digital means that there are an infinite number of prints, as many as you like, and cinemas can hold onto the print for as long as they like, or as long as they have storage on their servers. And we all know that digital storage these days is cheap as chips. So what’s the story? The story is you, the audience. Cinemas don’t know who you are. Or what you want. You’re joking! The film industry has a number of layers: financial (they fund the film), production (they make the film), distribution (they market the film) and exhibition (they show the film). Which of these layers listens to the audience? The short answer is none or them. They each listen to the layer immediately above themselves. (Financial doesn’t listen to anybody.) But don’t they all listen to the box office? That’s the voice of the audience. Ah, yes, the box office. That binary interaction, either I buy a ticket or I don’t. Yes or no. A one or a zero. A concept which negates the essential character of cinema as social. A film is both product and social experience. Just like any art work, its dual nature is, or should be, in everlasting conflict. That’s it in a nutshell for the film industrial complex. Trying to make sense of it all are filmmakers. products, they are much more than that, but they are in danger of being ignored, lost, discarded. In the case of Departure, Andrew Steggall, who wrote and directed, and Brian Fawcett, cinematographer, have both done a number of short films, but this is a feature debut for both of them. It’s your first feature film. Which way do you go? Horror, zombies, sci-fi, a combination of all three? What do you have in the way of resources? A picturesque house in the south of France, a few really good actors; that’s about it really. A truly risky thing to do is to film a domestic drama using a series of metaphors and motifs, some so subtle they are easy to miss, like the plastered up crack in the wall behind the boy’s bed. Others are more overt, like the bridges, one from which the local boy dives into the reservoir, another, larger, in Grasse. There is the bonfire of the furniture, the motor bike which won’t start, the truck which will never move again, the dresser with the crockery, I could go on. Mother and son have come to France to pack up their holiday house which is being sold. Elliot, the son, strikes up a friendship with Clément, from Paris but staying in the local village with his aunt. The Mother, Juliet Stevenson, is barely holding on to a disintegrating marriage. Such a story could be told with dialogue, as a play. But rather than giving the story a subPinteresque, or melodramatic bent, Director and Cinematographer have, to an extent, created a new style, a genuinely visual kind of storytelling that adds layers to a film which is deceptively simple, satisfyingly natural, delicately balanced. Film is an art form. Every now and again something comes along which transcends the arms race of more money, more effects, more roller coaster. This film is gentle, subtle, visual and, in its way, devastating. At last we might get to the film review. I don’t care about any of this. I just want to see good films. See it - in the cinema! OK, fine. This film, along with the other two films reviewed here, needs to be seen, and seen in a cinema. These films aren’t DEPARTURE commences Fri 3 Jun DUKES AT KOMEDIA 44–47 Gardner Street Brighton BN1 1UN picturehouses.com HELPING WAKE UP TO ORGANIC ONE FREE BREAKFAST AT A TIME. A nationwide campaign to get the UK enjoying an organic breakfast on WEDNESDAY JUNE 15TH 2016 Many wholefood stores and organic cafes are taking part in this exciting campaign, which will see independent retailers all over the country offering the nation free organic mini-breakfasts. BRIGHTON: Grocer & Grain, Hisbe Food, Infinity Foods, Jasmine Grocers, Raw Health Bar, Seed n’ Sprout, Wild Cherry, 42 Juice HOVE: Black Radish, Down to Earth, Gratitude Tree Grocers LEWES: Laportes Paul Corcoran June. Tickets available on a first-comefirst-served basis from the box office on the day. DUKES AT KOMEDIA 44–47 Gardner Street Brighton BN1 1UN picturehouses.com play is an epic drama which reveals the unusual and deeply conflicted Englishman behind the heroic legend: Lawrence of Arabia. Former RSC Artistic Director Adrian Noble directs this new production. Previews from Fri 3 Jun. Tickets from £10. FESTIVAL THEATRE Oaklands Park Chichester PO19 6AP cft.org.uk THE HOT TOPIC: A life-changing look at the Change of Life by Christa D’Souza is published by Short Books and AVAILABLE NOW for £8.99 from all good bookshops. Friday 3rd June FILM Fri 3 & Sat 4 Jun 6.30pm: DEPARTURE (15) UK/Fr 2016 109mins. Directed by Andrew Steggall. Juliet Stevenson (Truly Madly Deeply) and Alex Lawther (The Imitation Game) star in this new British drama about a mother and son - both of whom are coming of age in their own ways. They have come to their holiday home in the French countryside where they are getting ready to pack up and sell the house. Whilst on the trip, Elliot meets the handsome French bad boy, Clement (Phénix Brossard)... ’sensitive, sensual’ Empire. DUKES AT KOMEDIA 44–47 Gardner Street Brighton BN1 1UN picturehouses.com THE ART OF BABY-MAKING: THE HOLISTIC APPROACH TO FERTILITY Monday 6th June MUSIC Mon 6 Jun 8pm: STEVE VAI - Passion and Warfare 25th Anniversary. Highly regarded as one of the greatest instrumental rock guitar recordings of all time. Voted the 10th Greatest Guitarist by Guitar World magazine the three-time Grammy Award winner, will be performing the entire Passion and Warfare record for the first time in this world tour celebrating the groundbreaking recording. Tickets from £24.50. BRIGHTON DOME CONCERT HALL Church Street Brighton BN1 1UE brightondome.org Saturday 4th June Thursday 9th June EXHIBITION Thu 9 Jun 10am-6pm: WILLEM SANDBERG FROM TYPE TO IMAGE. Curated by Carolien Glazenburg, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, in collaboration with Fraser Muggeridge and De La Warr Pavilion. The first UK survey of an internationally renowned icon of graphic design. Sandberg was director of the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam from 1945 to 1963 where he championed new artists and developed one of the most important collections of modern art in Europe. Until Sun 4 Sep. Free entry. Gallery 1 DE LA WARR PAVILION Marina Bexhill On Sea TN40 1DP dlwp.com by Gerad Kite is published by Short Books and AVAILABLE NOW for £8.99 from all good bookshops. THEATRE Sat 4 & Sun 5 Jun 3.30pm: NORTHANGER ABBEY. With just two performers and seven puppets, Box Tale Soup’s unique version of the book ignites the imagination and brings out every last drop of Austen’s wit, playfulness and humour. “We have tried to remain as faithful to the original work as possible, taking the vast majority of the dialogue verbatim from the novel. This, combined with the use of puppetry, has made the production a favourite of Austen lovers.” ‘They are wonderful.’ The Times. Tickets £10/8.50. THE WARREN: THEATRE BOX St Peter’s Church North, York Place Brighton BN1 4GU brightonfringe.org Tuesday 7th June THEATRE Tue 7 Jun 7.45pm: BRIDESHEAD REVISITED. English Touring Theatre and York Theatre Royal present the world premiere of Evelyn Waugh’s classic novel reimagined for the stage by Tony Award nominee Bryony Lavery and Olivier Award winning director Damian Cruden. During the midst of World War II, Captain Charles Ryder finds his past and present blur as he confronts memories of his first youthful encounter with the Marchmain family at Brideshead Castle. Until Sat 11 Jun. THEATRE ROYAL New Road Brighton BN1 1SD atgtickets.com EMBRACE OF THE SERPENT (15) Academy Award nominee 2016, Best Foreign Language Film, Colombia. picturehouses.com DIRECTOR EVENT Sunday 5th June PAY-WHAT-YOU-CAN Sun 5 Jun 3pm: VERSUS: THE LIFE AND FILMS OF KEN LOACH (12A). Director Louise Osmond enjoyed unprecedented access to the making of legendary auteur Ken Loach’s new and final film, I, Daniel Blake (Palme d’Or Cannes 2016). The result is this biography ‘an insightful, surprising and moving portrait of a quiet man with a will of steel.’ Time Out. To celebrate the release of Versus: The Life and Films of Ken Loach, cinema-goers are invited to pay-what-they-can for matinee screenings of the film on Sunday 5 Coming Soon! Wednesday 8th June THEATRE Wed 8 Jun 7.30pm: ROSS starring Joseph Fiennes. Arrogant, flippant, withdrawn and with a talent for self-concealment, the mysterious Aircraftman Ross seems an odd recruit for the Royal Air Force. In fact the truth is even stranger than the man himself. Firstly, he’s not officially part of the military at all, and secondly he’s certainly not called Ross. Terence Rattigan’s 1960 Fri 3 Jun 3pm-9pm: ANDREA ARNOLD: IN CONVERSATION. An afternoon of presentations on Arnold’s award-winning films, including Red Road (2006), Fish Tank (2009) and Wuthering Heights (2011). The presentations will be followed by an exclusive on-stage conversation with the director who will be discussing her career and her forthcoming film AMERICAN HONEY, which recently premiered at Cannes 2016, winning the Jury Prize. The British film director was appointed Associate Fellow of the School of Media, Film and Music at the University of Sussex in 2015. Free but email to book. ACCA: Attenborough Centre for the Creative Arts, University of Sussex, Gardner Centre Road, Falmer, Brighton BN1 9RA onlineshop.sussex.ac.uk HISTORY EVENT Tue 7 Jun 7.30pm: AN AUDIENCE WITH KATE WILLIAMS. Professor of Modern History at Reading University specialising in modern history, royal and constitutional affairs, the historian, broadcaster and best-selling author examines the reign of Queen Elizabeth II in the year of her 90th birthday, 2016. Her books include biographies of some of history’s most influential women: Young Elizabeth, her account of Queen Elizabeth’s early life and Becoming Queen, her biography of Queen Victoria’s ascension to the throne. Her biography of Josephine Bonaparte is being made into a major TV series and her biography of Emma Hamilton is being made into a film. Tickets £20/18 conc. CONNAUGHT THEATRE 3 Union Place Worthing, West Sussex BN11 1LG worthingtheatres.co.uk Fri 3-9 June CONCERT Fri 3 & Sat 4 Jun 7.30pm: MOZART IN Time Out of Mind EMBRACE OF THE SERPENT (15) Directed by Ciro Guerra, with Nilbio Torres, Jan Bijvoet, Antonio Bolivar. Colombia/Venezuela/Argentina 2015. 124 mins. Spanish with English subtitles. The recent commemorations in Dublin of the centenary of the Easter Rising are a reminder of the involvement of Roger Casement, whose activities in attempting to encourage Germany to allow those prisoners of war who were Irish to join in the uprising against British rule were unsuccessful, and who was arrested on an Irish beach where he was deposited by a German submarine apparently on his way to try to stop the uprising as it would, in his opinion, fail. Sounds complicated? He was tried for treason and, ultimately, executed in London. Roger Casement was very famous in the pre-war years for exposing the activities of the companies which ran the rubber plantations, first in Belgian controlled Congo and then in the Amazon. The treatment of those who worked for these companies was beyond cruel, beyond inhuman, beyond imagination really. Failure to deliver the sap from the rubber trees would result in having hands, feet, limbs cut off. They were beaten, their families were beaten and killed. It was horrific. The exploitation of the local population for the rubber trade is confronted directly in this film. Deep in the rainforest we meet a man who has had an arm cut off. When he discovers that his containers of sap have been emptied onto the ground, he begs to be shot as he knows he will be tortured and killed by those for whom he works. Further along, on the journey up river, we arrive at a Christian mission, the lone priest attempting to look after a large number of children, orphans whose parents have been murdered by the rubber traders. Embrace of the Serpent concerns two journeys by canoe, both in search of the same elusive plant, Yakruna. Unlike Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, where the journey is towards something more horrific than can be imagined, Yakruna is a source of healing, of salvation. The first journey, set roughly in Roger Casement’s time, concerns a European who is dying and Yakruna is his only hope of a cure. The journey in the indefinite present also involves a European, also in search of Yakruna, about which he has learnt from the journals of the earlier explorer. Sounds complicated? It isn’t and it is. The sting in the tail is the way the film plays with time. Some of these characters seem impossibly old. The two journeys seem to cross over in strange ways. Intrigued? Two weeks ago I wrote about Complicité’s theatre production, Encounter, an individual take on a European’s experiences in the Amazon jungle. That production used sound to take the audience out of their comfort zone, to make them experience the story in a new way, to take them out of time. RUSSIA & OTHER TALL TALES. Soprano Sophie Pullen, Mezzo soprano Amanda Martikainen and pianist Helen Ridout explore the stranger-than-fiction characters that propel opera’s most fantastical tales. Featuring the music of Tchaikovsky, Mozart, Donizetti, Bernstein, Bizet and Bellini. A mischievous musical romp through history in the magical setting of Kino Teatr. Tickets £15/14/13. KINO-TEATR Norman Road St Leonards-on-Sea TN38 0EQ kino-teatr.co.uk MUSIC Fri 3 Jun 7.30pm: MOVIN’ MELVIN BROWN presents ‘Me and Otis’. An extravaganza of song, tap-dance and soulful funk! ‘A singing, tapping, tail-feather-shaking entertainment machine.’ Time Out. Brown was featured at Oprah’s party for Maya Angelou and has opened for Harry Connick JR, appeared with BB King, Stevie Wonder, James Brown and in movies with Willie Nelson. Also Sat 4 Jun 6pm & Sun 5 Jun 4pm. Tickets £14/12.50. THE WARREN: MAIN HOUSE St Peter’s Church North, York Place Brighton BN1 4GU CONCERT Sat 4 Jun 7pm: FROM PALESTINE TO BRIGHTON: Brighton and Palestinian Artists Together. An unique opportunity to hear some of the best young musicians from the Gaza Music School, part of the Edward Said National Conservatory of Music. They will perform classical and contemporary Middle Eastern music with the support of the Oriental Music Ensemble. Tickets £10/8. ST MICHAEL AND ALL THE ANGELS CHURCH Victoria Road Brighton BN1 3FU brightonfringe.org EXHIBITION Sat 4 & Sun 5 Jun 1030am - 5pm: CONTEMPORARY CRAFT SHOW WITH THE SUSSEX GUILD at Parham House. The Sussex Guild Contemporary Craft Show is sited in a large marquee in the Pleasure Grounds adjacent to the house in the ancient deer park. Here members of the Sussex Guild plus a few selected guest exhibitors, will be exhibiting and selling their fine crafts. Four of the exhibitors will be demonstrating their craft, in the marquee, at various times throughout the day. PARHAM HOUSE Pulborough West Sussex RH20 4HS thesussexguild.co.uk SHOW Sat 4 - Sun 12 Jun: ARTS AND HUMANITIES GRADUATE SHOW 2016. Art, Design, Architecture and Media exhibition at the University of Brighton will, this year, take place over nine days when the entire Grand Parade campus will be open to the public - a huge gallery showing a wide range of work by students from art, design, architecture, media and critical historical courses. BRIGHTON UNIVERSITY Grand Parade BN2 0JY arts.brighton.ac.uk EXHIBITION Sat 4 - Tue 14 Jun: RACHAEL PLUMMER: LOCUS. After the success of Incident in 2013 Rachael reoccupies the gallery with Locus: a series of small studies, large format landscapes and discovered materials that explore the line between domestic and wild. Gallery open Mon to Sat 11am–6pm. HOP GALLERY Star Brewery, Castle Ditch Lane Lewes BN7 1YJ hopgallery.com LITERARY Sun 5 Jun 10am-12pm: SHORT STORY READING CLUB - The Library of Babel by Jorge Luis Borges (Argentina, 1941), The Fifth Story by Clarice Lispector (Brazil, 1964), Invierbo by Junot Diaz (USA/Dominican Republic, 2012). Free and informal Short Story Reading Club Every first Sunday 10 -12am Lewes Waterstones. No need to book or read in advance, just turn up on a Sunday morning, drink coffee and listen to a selection of This film does something similar in a different way. It doesn’t retreat from the horror, or from the fact that so much that was the Amazon, the jungle, people, the world of that place and time is now lost. It takes that time and our time and melds them together, that what is lost is still there in some way, that it isn’t too late, that there is some kind of hope. This is a film which you need to see more than once. And the black and white cinematography is a joy to behold. See it on the big screen - before it’s too late! Paul Corcoran EMBRACE OF THE SERPENT is screening from Fri 10 Jun DUKES AT KOMEDIA three stories. Enjoy well-loved classics and discover little-known gems, with time for discussion and thoughts between readings. Open to all. WATERSTONES LEWES 220/221 High Street, Lewes, BN7 2AF lewesshortstory.co.uk BOOK EVENT Tue 7 Jun 6.30pm: ‘THIS IS WHO I AM’ tour presented by MyKindaBookClub. The stellar lineup of writers of young adult literature includes Steve Camden (It’s About Love), Alice Oseman (Radio Silence), Harriet Reuter Hapgood (The Square Root Of Summer) and Leila Sales (Tonight The Streets Are Ours). Tickets £2. WATERSTONES BRIGHTON 71-74 North Street, Brighton, BN1 1ZA waterstones.com/events LIVE SCREENING Wed 8 Jun 7pm: RSC Live: HAMLET (12A) Simon Godwin directs Paapa Essiedu as Hamlet in Shakespeare’s searing tragedy. ★★★★ ‘Paapa Essiedu is in thrillingly unforced command of the role … radiates the impudent charisma, energy and wounded idealism of youth’ Independent. ‘The percussive music of Sola Akingbola makes a vital contribution to a production that makes you feel, even if you are seeing Hamlet for the 50th time, that you are experiencing it anew.’ Guardian. DUKES AT KOMEDIA BRIGHTON picturehouses.com CONNAUGHT THEATRE WORTHING worthingtheatres.co.uk COMEDY Tue 7 Jun 8pm: JOANNA NEARY: FACEFUL OF ISSUES. Nominated for Best Show at Dave’s Leicester Comedy Festival! The much-loved Celia, housewife and host, returns on tour with her Toxborough Village Hall Chat Show in aid of the Animal Hospital for a kitten who needs an iron lung. Topical talks, showbiz exclusives, celebrity interviews plus a local locksmith’s bawdy confessions, a recipe for air soup and a photograph of a conker. Live music from Centre-Parting Martin. ‘A smart, fun and exquisitely crafted show.’ The List. Tickets £6. TOM’s BAR 11a Upper Market Street Hove BN3 1AS theoldmarket.com ENCORE SCREENING Thu 9 Jun 7pm: NT Live: THE AUDIENCE. For sixty years, Queen Elizabeth II has met with each of her twelve Prime Ministers in a private weekly meeting. This meeting is known as The Audience. No one knows what they discuss, not even their spouses. Written by Peter Morgan (The Queen) and directed by Stephen Daldry (Billy Elliot, The Hours). Encore screenings feature a live performance recorded during the original run of the production in London’s West End in 2013, and feature the original West End cast as well as an exclusive Q&A with Stephen Daldry and Helen Mirren. SEAFORD COMMUNITY CINEMA seafordcinema.org HURST VILLAGE CINEMA hurstfilms.com EXHIBITION Until Wed 6 Jul: JERWOOD COLLECTION: COAST. The current Jerwood Collection display in Room 2 revisits Coast, Jerwood Gallery’s exhibition at the London Art Fair in January 2016. Works featured in this exhibition including paintings by Barbara Hepworth, Ben Nicholson, John Piper, John Tunnard and Christopher Wood, were chosen for their particular connection with the British coastline. Jerwood Gallery was the Museum Partner for London Art Fair 2016. JERWOOD GALLERY Rock-a-Nore Road Hastings Old Town TN34 3DW jerwoodgallery.org WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU! OnRequest is an online space for spreading the word! Enter ‘JUST in time’ - select ‘explore’ and any suggestions or listings added will be included in the weekly JUST in time email out & paper where possible. DISCOVER KEMPTOWN’S ALL ORGANIC HIDDEN GEM SEED N SPROUT OPEN 7 DAYS PAUL IS ALWAYS GOOD FOR A CHAT & WILL ORDER IN! 82 St Georges Road Brighton BN2 1EF Information is as supplied or sourced and while every effort is made to ensure it is correct please check websites for further information and updates. The views expressed in reviews, editorial and advertising are not necessarily those of the editor and publisher. General distribution & advertising enquiries please contact The Editor justintime@theatresouth.org.uk. To contribute content: add your suggestions to onrequest.org or contact the editor. Subscribe to the JUST in time weekly email at: theatresouth.org.uk Design: A Stones Throw. Printing: Sharman & Co. Publisher: Theatre South. Editor: Helen Jones.
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