it`s Liverpool magazine
Transcription
it`s Liverpool magazine
EAT / DRINK / SEE / SHOP Why Liverpool Loves Winter And 62 reasons why you will too STAY SNUG COSY VICTORIAN PUBS WRAP UP THE CITY’S BIGGEST OUTDOOR PARTY TUCK IN ALL THE BEST CHRISTMAS FOOD Contents Hello! it’s liverpool In association with: Marketing Liverpool, Liverpool ONE, City Central BID, ACC Liverpool Editor: David Lloyd Art Direction: Matthew Barnes Writers: David Lloyd, Joe Shooman Cover photography: Alex Petricca Hands up – who enjoys Christmas Eve more than Christmas Day? It’s that feeling of anticipation, of something magical in the air. Something special about to unfold. Liverpool’s bottled that Christmas Eve feeling and, this year, December 24th officially starts right about now. We’re a warm hearted city, and we love any excuse for a get together – so Christmas, Liverpool-style is about escaping the everyday. Carving out quality time with those we don’t see nearly enough. About unleashing that giddy seven year old child within. Maybe that’s why, in the depths of winter, our city never feels more alive. However you celebrate this time of year, have a great holiday season. Enjoy, Photographers: Alex Petricca, Pete Carr, Jane MacNeil For sales enquiries: sales@itsliverpool.com David Lloyd, Editor CONTENTS 4 Happenings 10 Table Talk 14 Eating Out 16 My Liverpool 19 Brilliant Pubs 22 The Manifesto 25 The Insider 26 Style 33 Spas 36 Liverpool ONE 38 Gifts 42 Showtime 46 Vinyl IS BACK 48 My story 50 The Way I See It LIVERPOOL NOW Happenings A Time to Remember It brought the City of London to a standstill - and silence - when it was installed at the Tower of London. Now a section of the mammoth artwork, Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red is headed for St George’s Hall. Poppies: Weeping Window is a moving installation of ceramic poppies which will be on display on the façade of St George’s Hall from Saturday 7 November for ten weeks until 17 January 2016. The original concept created by artist Paul Cummins and installation designed by Tom Piper, formed part of the 888,246 poppies which were displayed at the Tower – one to honour every death in the British and Colonial forces of the First World War. “14-18 NOW is delighted that people across the UK have the chance to experience these iconic poppies in places which have a particular First World War resonance,” Jenny Waldman, Director of 14-18 NOW tells it’s liverpool. “We believe in the transformative power of art to connect people of all ages with the First World War - the poppies are the perfect example of this and a powerful way to mark the centenary.” Take time out of your day, this winter, to pause, reflect and give thanks. St George’s Hall, free cultureliverpool.co.uk Weeping Window is from the installation ‘Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red’ – poppies and original concept created by artist Paul Cummins and installation designed by Tom Piper – by Paul Cummins Ceramics Limited in conjunction with Historic Royal Palaces, originally at HM Tower of London 2014. 04 Panto Madness Liverpool loves panto. Oh yes it does. Oh no, did we really just write that? Moving swiftly on… Rapunzel: Hairway to Heaven is this year’s song, dance and innuendo-laden Everyman panto. Regular writers Sarah A Nixon and Mark Chatterton have adapted the Brothers Grimm’s tale story, which may get a little ‘Tangled’ along the way. 28 Nov-23 Jan everymanplayhouse. com The Empire sees Coronation Street’s Sally Lindsay and Radio City’s Leanne Campbell take the stage in a thighslapping production of Dick Whittington including an amazing 3D scene. Wait, isn’t theatre in 3D anyway? Oh, what do we know? 12 Dec- 3 Jan atgtickets.com/venues/ liverpool-empire Another star of the cobbles heads over the water, as Coronation Street’s Vicky Entwistle stars in the alwaysenjoyable Floral Pavilion Christmas show - this year Sleeping Beauty gets the New Brighton treatment. 9 Dec - 3 Jan floralpavilion.com Over in the Epstein, Calum Best takes the role he was born to play – Prince Charming, as Cinderella casts a spell on us over the festive season. 10 Dec - 3 Jan liverpooltheatres.com/ epstein Station Approach Christmas screenings at the Phil are exactly the sort of escape route we love, when the shopping all gets too much. Catch a mid-morning film screening with either brunch or two course lunch in the magnificent Art Deco surroundings, and you’ll be ready to face the world again. Our vote? It has to be Brief Encounter. And no, we’re not sniffling. We’ve just got something in our eye. 3rd December Philharmonic Hall liverpoolphil.com Wheels on Fire We’re used to being a city of firsts, but even we were amazed when we became the home to the UK’s first glow-in-thedark wheels park in Everton Park. Evertro is a new public art commission bequeathed to the city for the city by South Korean artist Koo Jeong, commissioned by Liverpool Biennial. Working with Wheelscape Skateparks, Koo enlisted youngsters from North Liverpool to devise the park - but this subtle incursion into the landscape is a space for skaters and dreamers alike. It’s a gorgeous, glowing testament to how art has the power to really move people. High fives and half pipes all round. Everton Park, between Roscommon St and Prince Edwin St Liverpool L5 3NG I’ll be Home for Christmas The festive season sees some of Liverpool’s brightest and best-loved troubadours return to the city to spread some seasonal warmth, with back catalogue singalongs almost obligatory. Dan Croll brings his lilting, lovely electro pop to the all new Buyer’s Club (Hardman Street) on 12 November. That’s a venue - and a gig - you owe it to yourself to put on your must-see list. Bill Ryder-Jones showcases his sublime new album, West Kirby County Primary, at District (Baltic Triangle) on 14 November - expect an intimate, spellbinding set. The original art school rockers, Deaf School hole up at the soon-to-be-demolished Kazimier (Wolstenholme Square) next month. Who’d have thought Deaf School would outlive the Kaz? Check them out on 10 December. And, in what’s become a seasonal fixture as assured as that Coca-Cola lorry hauling up in Liverpool ONE, Echo and The Bunnymen return to the city, to play two dates at the O2 Academy, on 11 and 12 December (Hotham Street). 05 06 How Do We Look? We love a bit of sparkle around here. It’s Glam Up North sees acclaimed photographer Rankin curate work by himself and a selection of invited artists, filmmakers and fashion designers. The fashion-forward chronicler of style shifts his gaze towards life in the north: and it’s all for a good cause. The exhibition’s work will be auctioned for children’s hospice, Claire House (Rankin’s a patron.) “Having lived in the North I loved it. I loved the people, I loved the way that people were funny about everything, had a sense of humour, had a really good, very down to earth attitude towards the world,” Rankin says. Meanwhile, Walker Art Gallery has something divine up its ruched sleeves. Liverpool costume collector Peter Farrer’s cross-dressing wardrobe is the star of Transformation: One Man’s Cross-dressing Wardrobe, part of Homotopia’s season. “Dressing in a taffeta frock didn’t make me want to be a girl, but it certainly made me understand how much pleasure girls and women get from their party frocks,” Peter says. Suddenly, our winter ensemble feels awfully drab. Fright Nights Transformation until February 2017 This Christmas at the Playhouse, following in the creepy footsteps of the terrifying Ghost Stories, which premiered here before its West End blockbuster, Playhouse turns to the dark side once more with The Haunting of Hill House. The production, a collaboration with Sonia Friedman Productions and HAMMER, is the first major UK stage adaptation of Shirley Jackson’s eerily brilliant novel, which became the legendary horror movie The Haunting. With psychological terrors at every twist and turn of the plot, this promises to be a spinechillingly good night - and a very grown-up alternative to the city’s seasonal stew of pantos. The question is - are you brave enough to spend a night in Hill House? liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/mol/ exhibitions/glam-up-north homotopia.com 7 Dec - 16 Jan The Playhouse Williamson Square It’s Glam Up North until 6 December It’s a Wrap You know Christmas is coming when the great Winter Arts Market descends, in all its hand-made goodness, on St George’s Hall. It’s the season’s biggest and the best of a smorgasbord of crafty events. So expect jewellery, prints, accessories, decorations and ceramics - and a cool vintage fair in the Small Concert Room. That present for someone who has everything? It’s right here, waiting. 5-6 December St George’s Hall winterartsmarket.com Made With Love Those ever so sharp furniture people, Made, move out of cyberspace and into the Metquarter, with their first North West showroom this month. And already we’re hooked. Made’s mission? To bring high-end, designer-curated pieces to every home – without that eye-watering price tag. Think burnished copper floor lamps, sleek Scandicoffee tables and reassuringly cocooning arm chairs. Think a whole new look for Christmas if you’re not careful... Metquarter 35 Whitechapel made.com 07 SEE HOW THEY ARE BUILT, THEN TAKE ONE OFF-ROAD At Land Rover Experience Halewood, you can immerse yourself in the complete Land Rover experience. See right into the heart of our award winning factory, with one of our expert guides talking through the assembly process from start to finish. Afterwards, you’ll be taken out with experienced instructors to get behind the wheel of one of our world class vehicles. Our spectacular course is purpose-built to showcase the outstanding capability of each vehicle, using a combination of steep slopes, slippery surfaces and other challenging obstacles. Get in touch with us to find out more. When booking please quote ITSLIV2015 Land Rover Experience Halewood Halewood Visitor Centre, South Road, Liverpool L24 9PZ 0151 448 4023 www.halewood.landroverexperience.co.uk 08 Northern Exposure Go for the home-spun, Scandinavian crafts – stay for the delicious princess cake. The smashing folk at the Nordic Church like nothing better than to put on a festive spread, and their yearly bazaar is part cultural exchange, part charming bring and buy sale. In the market for a brightly painted Swedish horse, or Finnish woollen mittens? We know just the place… 21 November Nordic Church nordicliverpool.co.uk A Christmas to Remember Liverpool promises a warm welcome, whatever time of year you visit. But there’s something special about the city in the depths of winter. Something magical. And this year, the city’s favourite attractions have come together to present One Magical Christmas. Wherever your winter travels take you, One Magical Christmas promises a Christmas adventure for everyone. Whether that’s strolling the cobbles of the gorgeous Albert Dock complex, following the Snowflake Trail through the historic heart of the city, taking a trip to the theatre (did we tell you, Liverpool loves panto!) or seeing festive Liverpool at Santa’s sleigh-level, from the Wheel of Liverpool, we promise this will be a very special season. And, in Liverpool ONE, the fun begins with a huge Christmas party on November 13th – read all about it on page 38. Plan your route into the heart of Christmas by taking a look atvisitliverpool.com/ christmas – and have a magical time! Moving House There won’t be a dry eye in the house as seminal Liverpool club, Cream, says goodbye to its Nation home this Christmas (Boxing Day and New Year’s Eve) - after over two decades at the absolute cutting edge of house’n’techno brilliance, they’re bringing Todd Terry, Paul van Dyk (above) and the man who started it all, James Barton, to the hallowed decks amongst a cast of superstar DJs and longstanding Cream friends. What’s the betting Grace will end the night singing ‘Not Over Yet’? Alas - at least for now - it is. Thanks for the memories, Cream. You were sensational. Cream Grand Finale Wolstenholme Square cream.co.uk And They’re Off! Liverpool’s sporting New Year will storm out of the starting gate with a brand new, world class sporting event at Echo Arena. The Equestrian.com Liverpool International Horse Show will be held on January 1st, 2nd and 3rd and the event will combine top class show jumping with plenty of entertainment. The event is being organised by equestrian promoter Nina Barbour, from the prestigious Bolesworth International, so we’re in safe hands here. Alongside some top class show jumping the event will have its own ‘Grand National’ of Shetland ponies (cue 10,000 people saying ‘ah, how cute’ in unison) and a powered up performance by a troupe of shire horses, thundering across the arena. The Liverpool International Horse Show 1 – 3 Jan 2016 Echo Arena Liverpool echoarena.com 09 FOOD & DRINK Table Talk Raw Power If there’s been a food mantra this year, it’s been ‘eat clean, eat raw and eat fresh’. Seems like Liverpool’s Etsu was only eight years ahead of the game. We spoke to owner, Dave Abe. Being Boiled New to Chinatown, the Bagelry is a bakery dedicated to hand crafted boiled and baked bagels – you’ll have sampled their deliciousness at Baltic Bakehouse or Cow & Co maybe. “We want to provide variety and a high standard, with American varieties alongside traditional Jewish and our own gourmet bagels, made from the best organic flour,” says the Bagelry’s Rhonda Davies. The idea behind the Bagelry is a simple one: “We realised no-one is selling anything like it in the local area, so we thought: well, why not?” That, and Liverpool’s soft water is uncannily similar to New York City’s tap water - bagel central, in other words. Something to chew on. The Bagelry, 42 Nelson Street thebagelryliverpool.co.uk Down Mexico Way Wahaca is the latest in a new array of Liverpool ONE restaurants clamouring for our attention. So, what should we eat? We asked owner, Thomasina Miers... “By the time our Liverpool store opens, our new Winter menu will be live and you have to try the chicken wings with burnt habanero cream, the grilled chicken thigh tacos, the queso fundido with chillies and sobresada…” We’re writing this down, as fast as we can… “Oh, and the salmon tostada and sweet potato taquitos are so popular that we can no longer take it off the menu, and the steak and cheese tacos are a classic that should never be overlooked.” So, everything then? “Pretty much,” she says. Wahaca (opens 20 November) Hanover Street 10 “When our chefs arrived from Japan they were amazed by the quality of fish we were able to source,” he says. “Our only concern was whether people would be able to understand the difference between quality ingredients and lower standard ingredients they’d perhaps experienced before.” Turns out we did. And we absolutely loved it. “We’ve been pleasantly surprised,” he says, “so we’ve become more daring with the menu adding in eel, octopus, surf clams and sea urchin.” Etsu’s also added refreshing Kaguya Japanese craft beers and a couple of Japanese inspired gins. But what does Dave recommend for a Christmas get-together? “Ask all your group to pick one dish each and share everything that comes. For drinks, try our Umeshu which is imported Japanese plum wine. It’s got a very sweet taste and although it’s usually served on the rocks try having it warmed up at Christmas. Finish with sparkling sake.” Etsu 25, The Strand etsu-restaurant.co.uk The French Connection Happy Endings Turning a meal out on its head, a night at Leaf ’s Pudding Club consists of five courses. All of them puddings. It doesn’t get any better than this. The evening celebrates our love of the sweet stuff, with a roll call of all-homemade puds. And, this being Leaf, they’re all washed down and topped off with a perfectly matched cup of tea. Who’s counting the calories anyway, it’s winter. We’re eating for warmth, right? Hello, Jean-Christophe. You took your time! “Ah, yes. But in every restaurant you need a certain amount of theatre,” laughs the French enfant-terrible of his Hilton Doubletree brasserie. “Ultimately, though, I’m into honest food that speaks for itself. Fresh ingredients that do my recipe ideas justice. Dishes that give people the chance to experience my own style of cuisine.” And you can do just that, now that Michelle (a nod to the Beatles, and JeanChristophe’s wife) is open for business. So, what can we expect? “The goal is to create the most talked about and respected brasserie in the North West,” Jean-Christophe says, without hesitation. “I’ve had a few years away from being involved in restaurants to concentrate on my family, and my cookery school, but now I’m back. And it’s going to be amazing.” Jean Christophe Novelli at Michelle Hilton Doubletree, Sir Thomas Street doubletreeliverpool.co.uk 24 November Leaf, Bold Street Five Alive They’re all about choice. What would you create if you could build your perfect burger? That’s the premise at soon-to-arrive Five Guys, the customised burger joint heading to Queen Square. So, what’ll it be? Jalapeno Peppers? Hot Sauce? Bacon? Grilled Mushrooms? Yeah, we thought so – all of the above. Five Guys Queens Square fiveguys.com 11 TABLE TALK New Account Open That glorious old Grade II listed banking hall, once home to uber-stylish Trials and What’s at 62, is to be given a new lease of life. Enter Manchester’s sleek Spinningfields brasserie, Neighbourhood. With its gleaming chrome, leather banquettes and casual take on fine dining, we hear it’s going to be fabulous. Neighbourhood 62 Castle Street neighbourhoodrestaurant.co.uk Pause For Thought When the Christmas shopping gets a little too much, you’ll find us up to our ears in cakes and finger sandwiches, enjoying a reviving Phom tea from a vintage cup. Because that’s the way we roll. Yes, Mathew Street’s Tea Parlour is our sort of civilised bolt hole. And the good people here are thinking of expanding their offer, to include high teas and a private dining room. For now, it remains a blissful world apart - a little oasis of salmon and cucumber, Earl Grey and lemon drizzle. Does it get any better than this? Tea Parlour Mathew Street teaparlour.co.uk We love the new Buyer’s Club, tucked into the corner of Hardman Street and Hope Street – home of the old Picket venue. It’s an assured next move for Bold Street Coffee’s Sam Tawil and the Secret Diners Club’s chef, Daniel Heffy. Expect fine, fine wine by the glass, inventive plates of food (our pig’s cheek hash was sublime) and a convivial atmosphere. This is what Liverpool dining is all about. Cooking, eating and drinking with lashings of soul. Oh, and a brilliant gig venue upstairs. Of course. The Buyer’s Club 24 Hardman Street, Liverpool @buyersclubbar 12 Image: Pete Carr Collective Bargaining Rice and Shine Celebrating a year of stunning Indian street food at Mowgli, her Bold Street cauldron of creative subcontinent cooking, Nisha Katona has distilled her 100 favourite recipes into the gloriously off-kilter cookbook, Pimp My Rice. “The Layered Leaf Lasagne is something I make at least once a week,” she says, flipping through the pages of this punchy, getup-and-cook celebration of the Katona way of doing things. “There’s nothing I love more than a dish that uses up leftovers. This uses up leftover rice, it uses up geriatric, limp cabbage, it even uses up your leftover mince in whatever form you left it to fester in the fridge.This is frugality on speed!” The resulting dish, Nisha says, is spectacular. And there are plenty more where that came from. “Rice, in the West, is seen as such an anodyne, pasty faced, fiendishly awkward bridesmaid dish – a silent understudy to the main event. I wanted to lift the veil on rice and its misunderstood magnificence. I didn’t know of a book that helped me do this. So, I wrote one.” Your Christmas stocking filler? You just found it. Pimp My Rice (published by Nourish Books) NEW from Stadium Tours CENTENARY STAND TOUR AND THE STEVEN GERRARD COLLECTION Hear about the exciting Main Stand expansion, celebrate our wonder years with your tour guide, then visit The Steven Gerrard Collection to see the former captain’s footballing memorabilia. Plus, visit the Boot Room Sports Cafe. Book Now liverpoolfc.com/tours or call 0151 260 6677 Centenary Stand Tour: routes and availability are subject to change depending on the Main Stand expansion work. The Centenary Stand Tour does not include the press room, dressing rooms, This is Anfield sign, tunnel and dug out. Unfortunately due to the building work, we are unable to offer full access of the tour route to wheelchair users. Please contact us in advance of booking to discuss accessibility plans during this time. 13 FESTIVE DINING GUIDE Eating Out From the sleek fine dining of London Carriage Works to the sociable and laid back grills of McCooleys - via the hearty Brazilian steaks of Fazenda – Christmas Dining, Liverpool style, has never looked more tempting… LONDON CARRIAGE WORKS FAZENDA McCOOLEY’S PAN AM Fifty words on why The London Carriage Works is a destination for Christmas? That’s easy. This year, chef Dave Critchley will be overseeing a roll call of wonder that goes a bit like this. Deep breath... Merry Berry Bellini Goosnargh duck, Highland venison Lakeland rabbit, Liverpool Gin and blackberry sauce, Madeira trifle, Blacksticks Blue, Biscotti, Perrier-Jouët Grand Brut Champagne, conviviality, smiling attention, friends and family! We’ve just left some room for £26.50 for two courses. Upmarket Brazilian restaurant Fazenda Bar & Grill is famous for its 15 cuts of beef, chicken, lamb and pork, all beautifully grilled. As a festive treat for diners in its elegant Exchange Flags location this December, Fazenda Bar & Grill’s Christmas menu will see delicious duck served with a stunning red berries glaze added to the already plentiful menu and amazing salad bar. Liverpool’s biggest Irish bar, McCooley’s opened its doors in mid-August in Concert Square. Their freshly prepared threecourse Christmas menu includes traditional Christmas classics with an Irish twist. Dishes include traditional roast turkey with all the trimmings, pan-fried hake in a lemon and parsley sauce and of course Christmas Pudding with a brandy sauce. Prices per person £15 for two-courses and welcome drink, £20 for three-courses and welcome drink. Buffets and bespoke packages are also available. One of the Albert Dock’s most stylish venues, Pan Am continues to offer a sophisticated escape from the everyday. Within its cosy, candlelit dining room and bars you can enjoy a mouthwatering Christmas menu that embraces a touch of the traditional – turkey roast, roast cod loin, parma ham-wrapped pork tenderloin – with Pan Am’s signature cocktails, and sleek soundtrack of tunes-without-thecheese. Come for dinner, stay for the dancing. Pan Am’s that sort of place. 40 Hope Street thelondoncarriageworks.co.uk 14 Fazenda Bar & Grill Horton House, Exchange Flags fazenda.co.uk/liverpool/ Concert Square mccooleys.co.uk Gower Street panambarliverpool.co.uk EVERYMAN The award-winning new Everyman isn’t just a wonderful theatre but its eating and drinking spaces provide a perfect place for sharing ideas, sharing stories and sharing your time with good, honest food. In the downstairs bistro, cozy up by the woodburning stove or find your own corner and relax over lunch or dinner with family and friends. A new winter menu has recently launched including pan-fried scallops, Moroccan Ragout, Massaman Beef Curry along with puddings such as Treacle Tart and Poached Pear. More about the Everyman bistro, booking a table and details of Christmas packages can be found at everymanplayhouse.com/EAT MARAY ALBINA “We’ve curated our menu with the emphasis firmly on sharing,” says the sure-footed team at Bold Street’s Maray. For just £22 per person, their Christmas sharing menu is the most sociable and sizzling selection of small plates this side of the Holy Land. Expect Confit of golden beets with candied walnuts, figs with orange blossom, ham hock and saffron potato, and beetroot and gin cured sea trout. And good times. Always. “We’re really looking forward to our December Master of the House Dinner,” says Albina’s Alex McElhoney. “This year, we’re going for ‘A Royal Christmas’ which will be a selection of courses served to various Royal Households at Christmas. These always go down well with big long tables of people sitting together,” he says. But, whenever you visit this Crosby celebration of traditional British cooking, you’ll be treated to the very best local produce. But it’s not all about the turkey. The shin of beef is spectacularly good. “Mostly, though, Albina’s a place to enjoy a memorable meal together with your loved ones.” That’s always good, yeah? 91 Bold Street maray.co.uk SALT HOUSE BACARO Everyman Bistro 5-9 Hope Street DELIFONSECA You’d expect the Good Food Guide-approved Delifonseca to put on a bit of a spread at Christmas. And you’d be right. In their convivial Dockside venue, you’ll be spoiled for choice. Will it be the shin of beef bourguignon – slow braised in red wine with mushrooms and baby onions? Or will you plump for the pheasant braised with shallots served with creamed cabbage & thyme? No, wait, we’ve just spotted the pan seared sea bass fillets with a crushed new potato & spinach cake. Oh flipping heck. We’re just going to have to come back for seconds, aren’t we? 12 Stanley Street delifonseca.co.uk/events/ christmas-dockside ART SCHOOL RESTAURANT Bringing fine dining to town, Paul Askew’s Art School Restaurant has had a sensational first year – and he’s determined to finish it in style, with an array of indulgent, opulent and typically theatrical Festive Prix Fixe and tasting menus. Fillet of Peterhead hake with Southport smoked pork lardons, Mr Edge’s rare breed ox tongue and cheek served with heritage carrots, fillet of naturalsmoked eel with cockles and mussels and, of course, wineflights to get excited about. It’s the Art School way. Sugnall Street theartschoolrestaurant.co.uk “In Venice, a bacaro is a workingman’s pub where snacks called cicchetti are served in small plates,” says Salt House’s Jonathan Poole of his alwayswelcoming Castle Street venue. “Salt House maintains the authenticity and joyfulness of their simple origins,” he adds. And that’s especially true at Christmas. The £23.95 dinner menu sees a procession of the restaurant’s best-loved plates – Spinach & Egg Pizzette, crispy fried Calamari & Aioli, fillet steak with Scampi, Chicken Milanese with rocket & parmesan. Small in stature, big in flavour. Actually, thinking about it, they’re not particularly small either… 55 Coronation Road, Crosby albina.co.uk 47 Castle Street salthousebacaro.co.uk MR MIYAGI One of the most enjoyable new openings on busy Bold Street, Mr Miyagi’s injects style and substance to that most abused of Asian delicacies - the dim sum. And their Christmas Bento Basket Banquets (try saying that after a few cocktails) ramp up the fun even more, throwing in favourites like tempura, black pig gyoza, nikiri chicken and teriyaki beef yakitori and glazed suckling belly pork. All from a rather decent £18.95 per person. 77 Bold Street mister-miyagi.co.uk Opposite: Albina From top: Fazenda, Mr Miyagi, London Carriage Works, McCooley’s, Pan Am 15 MY LIVERPOOL: VASILY PETRENKO Superconductor Russian-born, Liverpool-adopted, globally-lauded, RLPO’s Principal Conductor Vasily Petrenko has taken to us as much as we’ve taken to him. Which is to say, greatly. We batten down the baton-wielding maestro as he flits from one sell out concert hall to the next... Where do you go for peace, reflection, to hear yourself think? Merseyside has lots of parks, but the nearest one to me is beautiful Birkenhead Park, the world’s first public park. Jogging there nearly every morning is both relaxing and rejuvenating and clears my mind for the day ahead. Can you remember the first place you fell in love with here? Liverpool Philharmonic Hall and the city’s two Cathedrals on Hope Street, and the Mersey, and the Albert Dock. When I arrived in the city in 2006 there was a lot of new development going at the waterfront as the Arena was being built. It was an exciting time. 16 Where’s your favourite table in the city? Restaurants for me tend to be places for meetings while eating something! Since I arrived in Liverpool, the transformation of the city centre is amazing! Hope Street is our (Liverpool Philharmonic’s) home and what has happened here is fantastic. Hope Street and the city now has a huge variety of great restaurants to satisfy everyone! I travel so much though, that really, there is nowhere I would rather be than at home with my wife, Evgenia and our children, in Claughton, sharing a meal and talking together, catching up on our news. If you were tour guide for the day what’s the one place you’d take us to see? it in 2009. Sadly, many of these other beautiful churches are either closed or in need of restoration. Sunset at the mouth of the River Mersey is stunning. The best place I think to see it is at the top of Liverpool Cathedral on Hope Street. What are you looking forward to next? Liverpool is a city that’s filled with music. And I love the fact that Liverpudlians love and appreciate music, so I look forward to rehearsing and performing every one of our concerts in the city. Where do you go to escape the city a while? I enjoy the outdoors, running and hiking. I still want to discover fishing here! To my shame over the years I’ve been in Liverpool, I still haven’t found time to do it. I’m from St.Petersburg in Russia and I spend a lot of time in Oslo where I’m also Chief Conductor of the Oslo Philharmonic. Like here in the UK, both countries have beautiful forests, often with small lakes in the centre. I really enjoy walking in the forest, collecting wild berries and mushrooms. Where does a conductor swap a baton for a beer glass? Or vodka shot? I’m not a big drinker, but when I do – it’s the Philharmonic Pub, of course, where else! Where’s your favourite hidden gem? FOR YOUR DIARY Top: Sunset on the Mersey Middle: St. Mary of the Angels Above: The Philharmonic Pub Left: Liverpool Philharmonic Hall Catch Vasily conducting Mahler’s Symphony No 6, with Schubert’s Violin Concerto, 1213 Nov, and Prokofiev Classical Symphony, Shostakovich Piano Concerto No.1 and No.2, and Khachaturian Gayane Suite No.3, 21-22 Jan. Mira66 / Dave Wood Many churches around Everton and the Docks have beautiful marble and mosaic work, created by Italian craftsmen who settled in the city. Our rehearsal and recording venue in Everton, Liverpool Philharmonic at Friary is the former St. Mary of the Angels and it’s a great example. Changes in the surrounding community meant it had been closed since 2001. Working in partnership with the Archdiocese of Liverpool, who wanted to find a different, but sympathetic use for the building, we spent two years restoring it and reopened 17 18 THE LOWDOWN Warm and Snug Liverpool’s architectural splendour isn’t the soul preserve of the Three Graces and the two Cathedrals. We have other places of worship too. Take a tour of our splendid Victorian pubs, and you’ll be converted. Don’t call it a pub crawl, this is vital research. Images: Alex Petricca 19 Baltic Fleet 33a Wapping The Crown Hotel 43 Lime Street Fly in the Loaf 13 Hardman Street Peter Kavanagh’s 2-6 Egerton Street This ship bow-shaped, panelled boozer is Grade II-listed and since the 1850s has served visitors from land and sea. The pub has its own microbrewery, a wood-burning stove, nautical odds and ends and a top menu. Rumour has it that smugglers’ tunnels exist between the pub and the docks – and a one-time red light district. The Crown’s a real gem. If its Art Nouveau exterior is eyepoppingly impressive, wait until you get inside. A great deal of the interior fixtures are original, from the intricate moulded coffered ceilings to the engraved glass; no wonder it’s a Grade II Listed Building. The panelled bar, deco-esque columns and long, narrow room that make up the interior are imposing in themselves but even better is the exterior. The exterior’s splendid Kirkland Brothers signage refers to the building’s former use as a bakery – with the slogan ‘No flies in the loaf.’ They just don’t make slogans like that anymore do they? Step into Peter Kav’s and you’ll step into a truly unique pub. There’s oak panels, mosaic floors and murals on the walls but also a weird and wonderful collection of additional bits and bobs. Model ships, guitars, books, cycles and old radios are everywhere. If Willy Wonka had a local, it’d look like this. Belvedere Arms 5 Sugnall Street Grab a spot by one of the two original fireplaces when it gets cold outside and warm yourself with the Belvedere’s speciality Gin and Tonic. The etched glass windows of this one-time John Lennon favourite are well worth the trip and the music posters adorning the pub reflect the city’s creative side. 20 Doctor Duncan’s St. John’s Lane The intricate woodwork, gleaming tiled walls, leather booths and beautiful high ceiling at this real ale-centric hostelry make for a gorgeous drinking experience. Just a few steps from Lime Street Station, the pub is an ideal intro to / goodbye to Liverpool’s loveliness. The Lion Tavern 67 Moorfields A Grade II-listed establishment that is quintessentially pubby; original façade and bar, Edwardian tiling and a genuinely cosy feel. The beautiful glass dome lantern room is simply a gem of architecture, painting the interior in multitudes of hue as the sun yawns across the sky, and you work your way through the huge malt whisky selection. THE PHILHARMONIC 36 Hope Street The gents’ toilets in the Phil are the stuff of legend, clad as they are in marble and polished hardwood. Fret not however for the several rooms of the bar and restaurant are wonderfully designed, from the dual snugs to the ornate dining room, where space by the fire is hotly-contested in the winter. The Central Ranelagh Street The DISPENSARY, 87 Renshaw StREET Another superb architectural gem within a Grade 2 listing. Built by the original Cain’s Brewery, (who also built the Philharmonic Dining Rooms) the interior is a riot of etched glass mirrors, beautifully crafted plasterwork ceiling and dome. And the ale’s not bad either. There’s always a karaoke singer in mid flow, too - chances are it’ll be a Patsy Cline number. This former CAMRA Mersyside pub of the year might well be in firmly within the city centre, but it feels like your favourite street corner local. Etched glass, old pub signs on the wall, a real warm welcome and great cask ales. Oh, and of course - medicinal bits and bobs. It’s the best of the Renshaw Street bunch. Roscoe Head 24 Roscoe Street The four rooms are small but that’s part of the charm of the cosy traditional CAMRA-featured drinking den. The tiled floors and hardwood bar add a timeless heft to the atmosphere of a pub named after William Roscoe, 18th Century scouse historian, poet and anti-slavery campaigner. Feature image: Doctor Duncan’s Above (L-R): The Crown Hotel, The Dispensary, Roscoe Head Top right: The Dispensary Right: Fly In The Loaf 21 THE MANIFESTO Homotopia With its eye-popping celebration of gay culture, Homotopia has blazed a trail of hope, activism and acceptance. In doing so, it’s supported the LGBT community and its friends, and gifted the city a festival the like of which we’ve never seen before. We talk to founder, Gary Everett. for 12 years I was a professional actor working in theatre, film and radio. It was a wonderful time. But I knew I had the bug to do more, and desperately wanted to make theatre happen. So starting Homotopia was a natural progression. But make sure your heart leads you to something new. Something exciting. You should always follow your heart. Wherever it leads you. My background is producing and 22 I was keen to do something that didn’t emulate other cities. I knew it was not going to be a Pride type of event. The project really had to be focused on culture and art. I guess my plans were also taking shape at the time the city was bidding to become European Capital of Culture 2008. The pilot festival opened in 2004 around the same time Liverpool had the extraordinary news it had won the bid. Getting people who get it on board makes all the difference. In 2003, the cultural office in the City Council was very open to the idea. We are very much focused on making things happen in Liverpool, and my job is really a cultural producer. The city’s job - which it took to, instantly, with passion - was to support what we were trying to do. Which was, and remains, quite radical. In all the excitement, it’s important not to lose sight of your core beliefs. Homotopia has always believed, at its heart, in the power of campaigning. Many of our commissions and projects have had a strong element of social justice or human rights. The arts benefit from the richness and innovation diversity brings. I believe there is so much untapped talent, ideas and innovation within the gay community. There’s a cultural renaissance happening in queer art and performance. Perhaps the rise in global homophobia and transphobia is a contributory factor. Be proud of who you are. But be proud of where you come from, too. Liverpool has a rich queer cultural heritage. From Holly Johnson to April Ashley, Terence Davies to Paul O’Grady to name but a few. Liverpool’s edge is quite radical and unexpected. It has energy and verve. I think we tap into this. It’s a very diverse and proud city. The LGBTI scene reflects this. We’ve a small gay scene with a lot of character but stands out. It’s refreshingly different. Celebrate queer culture but invite everyone in. It is key to our programming that we bring the city in its widest sense with us. Our landmark Tom of Finland 2008 retrospective had more straight women than anyone! Mainstreaming the programme actually pushes things in surprising and interesting ways. Remember to keep your energy levels topped up. This is no 9 to 5 job. I’m up very early in the mornings and always go for a swim. I have lots of energy. I’m inspired by creativity and by people. I never forget that I’m lucky to work in such a electric environment as the arts. I’m in development stages with three major exhibition projects, which will take place in 2017, and a new programme of work exploring art as activism and the current global situation around human rights for LGBTI communities. Yes, it’s a busy life, but it’s also very rewarding. Art really can make a difference. Art and culture are at the epicentre of Liverpool’s renaissance. It’s a vibrant place to live and work. Everyone around the country still talks in glowing terms about what Liverpool made happen in 2008. The artistic, economic, education and social success of the year’s activities still resonate across the UK. This year’s campaign is ‘ART = LIFE’ and was inspired by the iconic artist and activist Keith Haring. Art has a big part to play in inspiring people. Queering galleries and art spaces can only bring positive cohesion. For too long ‘diversity’ has been packaged and presented as a half empty glass leaving behind or excluding the true experiences of modern day gay life. It’s as important that a 17 year old coming to terms with their sexuality, is exposed to queer culture in all its forms. From Boy George to April Ashley. Our social justice programme has reached over 150,000 younger audiences and has picked up awards especially our anti-hate education initiatives. That makes me especially proud. The city and many audiences have really embraced the festival. This means a lot to the team at Homotopia. Homotopia Until 1 December homotopia.net “art and culture are at the epicentre of liverpool’s renaissance. it’s a vibrant place to live and work... art has a big part to play in inspiring people” 24 THE INSIDER The Heart of Liverpool Why Liverpool’s ancient Parish Church is a special place to visit at Christmastime. Image: Pete Carr Yes, we have two splendid Cathedrals, but Liverpool’s spiritual hub has to be Saint Nicholas’ – Liverpool’s Parish Church – with its distinctive golden square rigger set sail above its steeple overlooking The Strand. It’s the latest in a line of places of worship here that stretches back to 1257. Old St Nic – actually a 4th century Greek Bishop – loved giving gifts. During the Middle Ages, often on the evening before his Saint’s day of 6 December, children were given presents in his honour. In time, the Saint’s name (corrupted to Santa Claus) became synonymous with our modern day Christmas celebrations. All of which means Christmas at Liverpool’s Parish church must be an extra-special time? “Oh yes,” Father Crispin Pailing, Rector of Liverpool, tells us. “We’re busy throughout the year, but never more so than at Christmas. And it starts early for us. In most churches you won’t see a tree or a crib until Christmas Eve, but it’s a genuine pleasure for us to welcome many different groups for carol services throughout December. Last year we had fourteen carol services, but each of them is different and distinct. I most look forward to our own Nine Lessons and Carols, which will be at 6pm on Sunday 20th December. With about 250 people gathered in Church, that’s when Christmas really seems to start for me.” The Church is actually associated with St Nicholas because he’s the Patron Saint of Sailors. The church’s position – once the River Mersey actually lapped at the church wall – meant that it was often the first port of call for the homesick, or those in need of comfort. It’s something Fr Crispin experiences still. “Every day brings scores of new people within our doors, often just to light a candle or have some peace. Christmas is a happy time for most, but for others it can be a lonely time, or remind them of loved ones who are no longer with us. This year we’ll be giving an innovative welcome to far-flung visitors: in collaboration with the Seafarers’ Centre and the Cruise Terminal we’ll be holding a ‘Maritime Carol Service’ at the Cruise Terminal for about 500 people as they prepare to embark on the last cruise ship in Liverpool in 2015.” With the church’s connection to Santa Claus himself, Fr Crispin makes sure St Nicholas is honoured amid all the festive celebrations. “St Nicholas’ Day is on 6th December and every year we try and find a new way to make that connection,” he says. “Last year we followed the tradition of dressing up some of the Sunday School as ‘boy bishops’, though things almost got out of control when we let them loose with bishops’ crooks. This year it falls on a Sunday: we haven’t quite decided what to do yet, but it will be marked in some way. We have a growing ministry amongst children and young people, and so on Christmas Eve we shall be holding a Crib Service at 4pm, to which children from across the City will be welcome. With their parents, please!” Christmas Services Nine Lessons and Carols Sunday 20th December at 6pm Crib Service Christmas Eve at 4pm Midnight Mass Christmas Eve at 11pm Sung Eucharist Christmas Day at 10am St Nicholas Church Chapel Street livpc.co.uk STYLE Traditional Modern Play with classic cuts and cool, 21st century fabrics to create a Christmas look that’s all your own. As you are heading deep into party season, investing in a couple of key pieces will see you right through to New Year with style. But, then again, sometimes the very best parties are those you simply weren’t expecting. That’s when classic cuts and carefully chosen finishing touches – like a gorgeous cape, or sleek dress coat – will see you effortlessly from day to evening. Let’s get the party started, hey? 26 Joe: Shirt: HACKETT LONDON (John Lewis) £60 Bow tie: JOHN LEWIS £25 Coat: REISS £325 Scarf: REISS £70 Trousers: REISS £110 Shoes: DUNE £89 Charlotte: Dress: COAST £169 Shoes: DUNE £89 Earrings: Model’s own Dress: COAST £139 Cape: COAST £79 Clutch: DUNE £55 Shoes: DUNE £89 Josh wears: Top - £39 Trousers £95 Both available from Reiss Lucy wears: Dress, £99 Necklace, £20 Both John Lewis 27 Jumper: REISS £89 Trousers: REISS £110 28 Dress: COAST £109 Shoes: DUNE £79 29 itsliverpool.com/app City highlights: The Georgian Quarter Images: Terry Kearney, PsychoDelia, Somedriftwood, James Stringer Find your way, instantly, into the heart of the city with the free It’s Liverpool App. Take a guided tour from the experts - us! The idea to build a grand housing area in the Canning area of town started in 1800 when city surveyor John Foster Snr., created a blueprint to make a grid plan of housing. This was a time when Liverpool’s nouveau riche could afford more luxurious surroundings. Choosing an area known as Mosslake Fields, to the west of St James’s Mount (from where the Anglican Cathedral now rises), Foster built away from the grime and the warehouses of the city centre. Over the next 100 years a succession of developers built a large number of imposing and elegant town houses, mostly in the Georgian style. The streets radiating off from Hope Street (recent winner of Best Street in the Academy of Urbanism Awards) and Rodney Street are lined with fine terraces, now home to cosy neighbourhood bistros, such as The Quarter (Faulkner Street) and the gastro-pub delights of The Blackburne (24 Catharine Street). Hope Street is bookended with the city’s two cathedrals: the strident 60s silhouette of the (Catholic) Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King, and the world’s second largest Anglican Cathedral - the jawdropping Liverpool Cathedral. Between them lies the stunning new Everyman Theatre (Stirling prize winning, no less), the recently spruced-up Liverpool Philharmonic Hall (175 years old this season), and the Paul McCartney-kickstarted Liverpool Institute of Performing Arts. And tea and cake at women’s social enterprise, Blackburne House (blackburnehouse.co.uk) is always a treat. ‘The Great Space’ is the appropriate new name given to the city’s towering red sandstone Cathedral, which dominates the city skyline for miles around. Sir Giles Gilbert Scott’s masterpiece, the largest in Britain, features the highest and heaviest carillon of bells in the world, and Britain’s mightiest organ. Superlatives aside, it’s a remarkably awe inspiring, within, with an ornately carved Lady Chapel, fabulous refectory (great for lunches), and stunning stained glass. Take a tour of the tower, if you’re not afraid of heights, for an unsurpassed view over the handsomely laid-out streets of Georgian Liverpool below. Christmas at the Cathedral is a really special time. Check out their events at liverpoolcathedral. org.uk Along Rodney Street, at No 62, is the birthplace of William Gladstone. St Andrew’s Church (Rodney Street) and its amazing triangular tomb (said to contain the remains of railway tycoon William McKenzie, who is said to have lost his soul to the devil when he lost a bet. To trick his way out of the wager he is said to have been sealed within the tomb sat on a stool next to a table clutching a hand of cards. He reasoned that if never buried, his soul could never be claimed). Fancy a drink? Try the basement booze of Clove Hitch’s No 23 Club (craft beers and bourbon at 23 Hope Street), or the cocktails and small plates at Kabinett (2a Myrtle Street). Find your way into the soul of our city - download the its liverpool app for free from the Apple store. web: itsliverpool.com/app 31 SPA & LEISURE Sleep first class Suites Hotel Spa & Leisure, Knowsley is the only 4 star hotel in the North West of England where every room is a suite. All our luxurious 98 suites offer a spacious lounge, a business area with state-of-the-art the communications and a large en-suite bedroom. Relax in our gym and heated in-door pool and sample the culinary delights in our fine dining Handley’s Brasserie or the luxury of our Champagne Bollinger Bar, the only one in the north of England. @ SUITES H TEL The Spa @ Suites Hotel Knowlsey, Liverpool is your spa, to enjoy your way. Whether you indulge in our Relaxation Suite, visit our Thermal Suite for a heat and ice journey, or rejuvenate in the double Rasul Chamber, you’ll enjoy the whole luxurious experience. Our therapists, trained to Decléor and Carita world-leading standards, will work their magic with the finest products and over 90 treatments from their exclusive collections. Call the Spa on 0151 549 5400 A fantastic location. We’re only 15 minutes outside of Liverpool City Centre, adjacent to the M57 motorway system and on the doorstep of a host of world famous attractions. .............................................................................................................................. Suites Hotel Ribblers Lane, Knowsley, Prescot, Merseyside L34 9HA. Junction 4 off the M57. www.suiteshotelgroup.com uk.pinterest.com/SuitesSpa/ or call 0151 549 2222 32 www.facebook.com/TheSuitesHotel @SuitesHotel @SuitesHotel TREAT YOURSELF Time to Shine Keep calm and have a facial. If Liverpool had a motto, that one could work. Notice how we didn’t say spray tan? No, these days, we’re all about the seaweed wrap, the ayurvedic ritual and the lymphatic drain. So where can you go to glow this season? 33 SUITES HOTEL In need of a little indulgence? Suites Hotel Knowsley is a spa you can enjoy your way. Whether you indulge in their Relaxation Suite, visit the steamy Thermal Suite for a heat and ice journey to bring you back to your senses, or rejuvenate body and mind in the double Rasul Chamber. You’ll enjoy the whole, blissfully luxurious experience at your own pace. Therapists, trained to Decléor and Carita worldleading standards, will work their magic with the finest products and over 90 treatments. One of them’s got your name on it - so what are you waiting for? Ribblers Lane, Prescot suiteshotelgroup.com BEYOND MEDISPA You’d expect Beauty Bazaar, Harvey Nichols to offer treatments that promise to get us to gorgeous in next to no time. And you’d be right. Their all new Beyond MediSpa takes the art of beauty a little bit seriously, too. With a range of hard-working aesthetic procedures, the spa goes more than merely skin deep to plump, firm, retexturize and even out skin tone. Opt for a six-treatmentsin-one hydrafacial and you’ll positively bounce out of the spa a new woman (or man). Go for a full on pamper, including a gorgeous (but deep – elbows may be used. At least they were on our stubborn, knotted up muscles) ESPA massage and you’ll bounce out, then sleep like a baby. It’s nothing short of transformational. For more information, email beautybazaar.Liverpool@ harveynichols.com or call the store on 0303 123 7014. Manesty’s Lane harveynichols.com/store/ liverpool LUSH Lush does things a little differently. Indulge yourself (or your loved one) to a blissful couple of hours at the city’s Lush Spa and you’ll see. We love their ‘Hard Days Night’ ritual - a 75 minute treatment, inspired by the Beatles. To a soothing soundtrack inspired by the fab four’s love songs, you’ll slip into a comfy pair of PJs and enjoy a soothing massage and facial. Or how about the otherworldly experience of The Planets - Inspired by an evening that Lush co-founder Mark Constantine spent gazing out at a starry night sky. This three hour long immersive treatment takes you on a journey through 34 your past, present and future – en route, a deep, restorative massage, a lifted facial, and a palm reading. Different, yes. Divine, absolutely. Whitechapel lush.co.uk/products/treatments CHILL OUT SPA Chill out by name, chill out by nature. Knowsley Hall’s gorgeous Chill Out Spa bridges that gap between results-driven and blissinducing perfectly. Advanced anti aging facials and skin therapies jostle for your attention alongside energising massages and oooh that’s good hot stone treatments. But, drum-roll please, their ‘Shrinking Violet’ contour wrap system promises to drop a dress size after just one treatment. Now, come on, there’s never a bad time for that... Ormskirk Road, Knowsley chilloutspa.co.uk HILTON DOUBLETREE After seemingly an aeon, Hilton’s second eforea spa in the UK has opened within the new DoubleTree by Hilton Liverpool hotel on Sir Thomas Street. Eforea? What’s that, we hear you mumble. Well, it’s all about the holistic, here. With a clear focus on the overall health and wellbeing of guests’ body and mind, eforea spas take more than a nod of inspiration from those ancient healing techniques – aiming to ensure you “emerge brighter”. They’re not ‘treatments’. Oh no. They’re Journey Enhancements for either feet, head and face, or shoulder neck and scalp, drawing on the teachings of Chinese acupressure, Swedish massage, Egyptian reflexology and the spiritual concepts of Native American healers. Wow, that’s a round the world trip to bring you right back to you, you might say. TITANIC HOTEL SPA Where, once, the basement of this venerable old warehouse was cold, dark and foreboding, now it’s home to surely one of the city’s most beautiful hotel spas complete with hydrotherapy pool, sanarium, sauna and steam room. Treatment rooms offer seaweedbased beauty treatments. Lie back as those ever-so-clever marine algaes get to work on giving you back your glow in time for party season. Or indulge in a top to toe flowing body and scalp massage that replicates the movement of the sea. You don’t get seasick do you? Oh good. Just checking. Regent Road titanichotelliverpool.arosuite. com/spa-leisure Clarins Day Spa Tucked ever so neatly into John Lewis’ second floor, the Clarins Day Spa is a thing of beauty. Here, just yards away from the bustle of Christmas shoppers lies a genuine urban oasis. Clarins, long known for their knack of unlocking the power (and heavenly scents) of nature, offer a full range of treatments with one surefire guarantee: rejuvenationto-go. Whether you plump for a rehydrating treatment, a triactive facial (a state-of-the-art series of facials designed to plump, resurface and reveal a brighter complexion) or a deep, restorative massage promising to leave you detoxified, sculpted and silky smooth, this is the shopping trip you’ve always promised yourself. John Lewis 70 South John Street johnlewis.com/our-services/ beauty-services Sir Thomas Street doubletreeliverpool.co.uk Main feature image: Lush Opposite from top: Beyond Medispa, Lush, Suites Hotel Right from top: Titanic Hotel Spa, Chill Out Spa, Clarins Day Spa, Hilton Doubletree 37 LIVERPOOL ONE ONE Christmas Liverpool ONE is destination Christmas this year, with Ice Festivals, giant trees and a theatrical touch of magic and mystery in the air... 36 There’s something magical happening at Liverpool ONE this Christmas. More magical than ever before, in fact. And it starts with a bang – with the biggest street party the city’s ever seen. Expect snow cannons, string quartets and fire in the sky! No biggie, then... Suitably enough, the party’s centred on the tallest Christmas tree in Britain. Standing a full 30 metres tall, the Paradise Street tree weighs in at a mighty 23 tonnes. “This was definitely our most ambitious project to date,” admits Simon Dews, Managing Director of Trapeze Creative – the crew behind the super structure. “It took a team of six expert tree builders, working flat out for two weeks, to get it ready on time,” he says. “We’ve decorated it with 280 heart lights, 314 light rods and more than 2,000 metres of cabling to supply the power,” Simon reveals. Make no mistake – this is a tree with Christmas emblazoned all over it. And that’s just the start of the celebrations. In a first for the city, Liverpool ONE has joined forces with Liverpool Empire’s Creative Learning Team to conjure up a light show the like of which we’ve never seen before. The show promises to whisk us all away on an enchanted festive journey. An escape route into the heart of Christmas. It’s all part of Liverpool’s One Magical Christmas adventure - a coordinated effort to make the city one huge, open-air winter wonderland. Think choreographed lighting, pyrotechnics panto characters and fog horns. “The show takes the audience on a voyage through the Mersey into a magical adventure, as we wait for Christmas to arrive,” says Liverpool Empire Theatre Creative Learning Manager Natalie Flynn. By the end of the show, we’re betting there won’t be a dry eye along Paradise Street. “This is an incredible opportunity to bring spine tingling performances out of the traditional theatre space and to the people of Liverpool,” Natalie says. “It’ll be a real red carpet event.” Adding to the magic, the Ice Festival will return to Chavasse Park, including an ice rink and the UK’s largest real ice slide. With fairground rides, the return of the (bigger and cooler) real Ice Bar and the cosy Après Lodge serving mulled wine and hot chocolate, Liverpool ONE is pushing the Christmas dial up to 11. Or should that be minus 11? “We’re busy preparing for what may be our most impressive Christmas yet and hope to bring something that everyone, no matter what age can enjoy,” says Liverpool ONE’s Donna Howitt. “At the heart of it, Christmas is about that magical anticipation for the big day, feeling loved and creating heart-warming memories. With the help of the talented people at the Liverpool Empire, we’re hoping to recreate all of that and look forward to the lighting up of the tree on Paradise Street - a spectacle not to be missed. And this is just the start. Continuing throughout the festive period, we want to make sure that every one of our visitors has the best experience ever, from Christmas in shops through to the Ice Festival on Chavasse Park. Liverpool is so famous for its warmth and character and I think this will really come through this Christmas at Liverpool ONE.” See you under the tree! Liverpool ONE Christmas Party From 4pm, 13 November liverpool-one.com onemagicalcity.com 37 Christmas gifts One for You, One for Me How do I love thee? Let me count the gifts... HOME Anglepoise lamp, The White Company, Manesty’s Lane £138 Vintage Owl Stool, BHS, Lord Street, £69 Stroller Desk, Made, Metquarter, £229 Jo Malone Candle, Jo Malone Metquarter, £22 Liberty Cushions, John Lewis, Paradise Street, £95 each 38 FOOD AND DRINK Grow your own snails. Then eat them, Delifonseca, Dockside £35 Hotel Chocolat, Truffles for two advent calendar, Peter’s Lane, £26 Nespresso U Coffee, John Lewis, Paradise Street £129 Baked Cheese Set, Next, Church Street £14 Bartending Glass set, Utility, Paradise Place £16.99 Lunya Hampers (pictured – Tarragona Hamper), College Lane £65 HIM AND HER Bush retro portable cassette player, Argos, St John’s Centre, £14.99 Wemyss Malts, Hive, Nauticalia, Albert Dock, £38 Pink Headphones, Debenhams, South John Street, £25 Hoverboard, Menkind, Lord Street £399 Philips Friends of Hue colour change light, Currys, £69.99 Italian Summer fig, Eau De Toilette, Body Shop £18 Fitbit, Argos, St John’s Centre, £93 My World Mugs, Museum of Liverpool, Pier Head, £8.50 ProJect Elemental Turntable, Richer Sounds, Berry Street £159 Stardust Bracelet, Swarovski, Paradise Street, £99 Frida Kahlo socks, Tate Gallery, Albert Dock, £7.50 39 Christmas gifts KIDS Minions backpack, BHS, Lord Street, £20 Penguin mini buddy speaker, BHS, Lord Street, £10 Street Magic kit, Debenhams, South John Street, £20 Phone Projector, Utility, Bold Street, £20 DAB Radio, Debenhams, outh John Street, £60 Bashful bunny, The White Company, Manesty’s Lane £20 40 With Love from Liverpool Then again, you could opt for a beautifully made gift, created in your favourite city. We’ve plenty of opportunities to shop local, support the crafting community and grab something truly original for your loved one this Christmas... 1. Rex There’s everything from art to fashion, kids to big kids at this vibrant mini mall on the upper floor of the Metquarter. We love PD Boutique’s flirty 50s inspired fashions, and Secret Tour’s Liverpool Tour in a box. Great for a mooch around if you’re in need of inspiration. Metquarter rexshop.co.uk 1 2 2. made-here Liverpool’s longest-standing indiegift retailer, made-here is full to the brim of the quirky and the cool - from Factory Floor’s architectural jewellery to Alison Appleton’s sublime, Japanese-inspired tea services. And, if you’re really smitten by the Great Pottery Throwdown, this will quench your pottery needs as well. Metquarter made-here.co.uk 3 3. Pennington’s This corner store is a real Ropewalks gem - featuring cute soft furnishings, screen prints, one-off driftwood mirrors, and hares on everything from lampshades to cushions (when did hares become the new otters? That’s what we want to know). Great range of pocket money gifts for little shoppers too. 2 Slater Street @penningtonshop 4. ONEArt When a collective of Liverpool’s best loved artists and printers huddle together to take on the High Street, they’re bound to do it with style, right? Liverpool ONE’s ONE Art is the sleek and stylish result. Expect lots of fine art prints, greetings cards, decorations, ceramic tiles and instore demonstrations. And expect to have to find space on your wall when you get home. Peter’s Lane oneartliv.tumblr.com 4 41 Showtime HIGHLIGHTS For full details, and how to buy tickets, head to visitliverpool.com Until 17 January 2016, St George’s Hall WEEPING WINDOW Part of the iconic poppy sculpture which attracted millions of people to the Tower of London in 2014 will cascade down the external façade of St George’s Hall – as part of a UK-wide tour organised by 14-18 Now. Until 28 February 2016, Lady Lever Gallery, New Ferry PUTTING ON THE GLITZ Dazzling 1930s evening gowns take centre stage in the Putting on the Glitz exhibition, revealing how the glitz and glamour of Hollywood was reflected in the fashions of the period. Ongoing-6 December, Museum of Liverpool IT’S GLAM UP NORTH Photographer Rankin curates this exhibition of works from some of the biggest movers in art and design and the blend of photos, art, film, graphics and fashion is as glam as the title suggests. There’s a charity auction on 21 November, proceeds to Claire House Children’s Hospice. Ongoing-3 January, Central Library FRIDA AND ME Kids and families can experience the invention and magic of worldfamous Mexican artist Frida Kahlo in this event conceived by the Georges Pompidou centre in Paris and the Mexican government. Interacting with Frida’s self-portrait in an exhibition-workshop format. 7-21 November, the Bluecoat ALIEN SEX CLUB Above: Frida and Me, Matisse in Focus 42 Striking multimedia project exploring the relationship between culture and HIV, with artists, HIV specialists and scientists working together on three collaborations on three consecutive Saturdays. 13 November, Liverpool City Centre Christmas Lights Switch On The lights throughout Liverpool city centre and Liverpool ONE will be switched on at 6pm on Friday, November 13 - and get ready for the huge Christmas at Liverpool ONE party, centred around the 30 metre tall Christmas Tree, from 4-8pm. 13 November, Unity Theatre SARAH WATERS Join Sarah Waters for a discussion of her most recent - and chilling novel, The Paying Guests which was shortlisted for the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction 2015. Part of the Homotopia season. 20 November-1 May, Tate Liverpool WORKS TO KNOW BY HEART: MATISSE IN FOCUS The Snail, a three-metres square hand-painted paper cut out will never again leave London so this opportunity to see Matisse’s iconic 1953 work for free is spectacular. Also exhibited are works by the master from 1899 onwards. There’s also a chance for kids to cut and tear their own paper works along with family. 21-22 November, World Museum MAKE YOUR OWN SOLAR SYSTEM 28 and 30 November, World Museum NAME THAT PLANET! Part of the Destination Space initiative that celebrates the European Space Agency’s first British astronaut, Tim Peake. Get hands on with experiments, space equipment and live video footage from the International Space Station. Ongoing-29 November, FACT HUMAN FUTURES EXPOSITION Eight International artists present the work generated during their impressive individual residencies scattered around the globe; the inspiration is re-evaluation of how we see what is around us. 28 November, 27 December Camp and Furnace YOUSEF DAYTIME PARTIES Can’t stick the late nights? Try burning your candle earlier, but way brighter at Yousef’s Daytime shindig, starting at 5pm and running through til 1am. It’s late night clubbing, but in a different time zone. The tunes, though, they’re still up all night to get lucky. Assorted DJ all-stars in support. 28-29 November, 5, 12-13, 19-20 December, 9-10, 16-17, 20-31 January, World Museum DESTINATION SPACE – FAMILY SHOW More than a show – an interactive exhibit/performance/ educational/entertaining extravaganza that highlights how those brave and brill astronauts live, work and sleep in space. One for kids of all ages, as they say. 25 November-6 December, Empire Theatre SHREK THE MUSICAL A family-friendly show based on the award-winning DreamWorks movie, the musical version boasts a load of instantly-catchy new songs as well as the classic I’m A Believer. 26 – 29 November, Exhibition Centre Liverpool 28-29 November, 5,6, 12,13 December Speke Hall, Speke Victorian Christmas at Speke Hall Festive fun and family activities around the house. Listen to carols in the Great Hall, try out sugar mice making in the kitchens (and solve the festive trails inside and out. And watch out for the festive donkey rides! 1 and 8 December, FACT FACTLAB HACK NIGHTS: FUSION 360/ OPEN SCAD Free sessions dedicated to designing objects in 3D. Bring your own laptop to these free one-off classes or sign up to an introductory course online. 3-4 December, Liverpool Playhouse SCENE CHANGE Presented by YEP Producers, acts change from scene to scene blending music, theatre, comedy, magic and more. A great way to see the young generation of Liverpool talent. 4 Dec - 9 Jan, Unity Theatre PRINCESS AND THE PEA Continuing Unity’s partnership with inventive children’s theatre company Action Transport Theatre, this year’s panto is a melange of dance, music, song and magic. 4-5 December, Echo Arena MICHAEL McINTYRE If Mac’s new show Happy & Glorious gets anywhere near the success of his last one, Showtime, he’ll be making more people laugh than ever. That tour made over 640,000 people laugh in total – many times over the course of the evening, too. The Ultimate Christmas Fair 7 December, Echo Arena Experience the North West’s definitive luxury shopping event this Christmas in one of Liverpool’s world-class venues. MUMFORD & SONS These huge-selling Londoners have reached out to millions of fans for their intriguing, From top: Destination Space, Shrek the Musical, Mumford & Sons 43 bluegrass-esque modern folk songs and along the way picked up 2013’s Brit Award for Best British Group. 10 December, Liverpool Philharmonic GARETH MALONE The man behind The Choir brings his own choral group, Voices, to town. With he and they leading the audience through a set of popular and classic tunes, you can’t help but join in – which is encouraged. 10 December, The Kazimer DEAF SCHOOL Art rock/new wavers, scousers, punks – call them what you will, but history will state that Deaf School utterly changed how Liverpool thought about alternative music in the Seventies. Since 2011, two new albums have come out to great acclaim. 11 December-21 February, FACT FOLLOW We’re all on the Internet, a lot of the time, but how does the 44 experience have an impact on how we perceive ourselves and the world around us? Follow explores image, identity, social media and life and brings together a number of contemporary artists in this free exhibition. 12 December, Echo Arena Liverpool else – the clue is in the name as people get stuck right in and let themselves off the leash. Two things that we reckon the mighty Garlands is pretty much made for, no? 18 December, The Garage DURAN DURAN FREEZE PRESENTS GILLES PETERSON The newish romantics have announced a UK arena tour ending with the big finale at Echo Arena Liverpool. Expect the big hits, and a slew of rather good new stuff too. Peterson’s eclectic sets range from pure house to World Music influences from his travels. A musical journey, then, on many levels – so don’t forget to bring your dancing boots. 12 December, O2 Academy 21 December, Liverpool Philharmonic ECHO & THE BUNNYMEN CAROLS BY CANDLELIGHT 1980s heroes bring their influential songs and approach back home. Ian McCulloch and the band are one of Liverpool’s most feted talents, and rightly so. 18 December, Garlands ARROGANCE PRESENTS MAD FRIDAY Mad Friday, the final Friday before the big event, is something Who doesn’t like a Chrimbo Carol? Nobody, that’s who. 26 December, Nation CREAM GRAND FINALE – PART THREE The final installment of the grand finale of this iconic night at its spiritual home of Nation will be a bittersweet affair for many but the music is going to be as top notch as ever with such names as K-Klass (Live), Paul Van Dyk, Duke Dumont, Tall Paul, Chicane and none other than club impresario James Barton guesting on the decks. Where Cream heads next will become clear but for now, it’s farewell to the venue where so many DJS made their name and so many people mate lifelong friendships. 27 December, Liverpool Philharmonic THE SOUND OF MUSICALS Classic songs from a host of classic musicals including Anything Goes, Kiss Me Kate, My Fair Lady, Miss Saigon, Sunset Boulevard, Cats, Les Miserables and more. Will your favourite feature? 1-3 January, Echo Arena LIVERPOOL INTERNATIONAL HORSE SHOW Top class show jumping and fabulous entertainment, displays and all things concerned with the magnificent animals. Entertainment and music Clockwise from left: Duran Duran, Echo and the Bunnymen, Gareth Malone Right from top: Abba Mania, Priscilla Queen of the Desert, Mars Rover Robotics provided by the likes of the Bootleg Beatles alongside the noble antics of those breathtaking beasts. 9 January, Empire Theatre ABBA MANIA This show has been touring since 1999 and has sold out venues worldwide with its bulging repertoire of songs by the Swedish pop geniuses. So get in touch with your inner Dancing Queen and remember Money, Money, Money may be nice but The Winner Takes It All. A-haaaaaa! 19-23 January, Empire Theatre LAST NIGHT A DJ SAVED MY LIFE None other than David Hasselhoff is the star of this musical which is having its World Premiere in Liverpool. The story of a DJ Dad and his errant daughter heading to Ibiza plus a soundtrack of Balearic beats will be as awesome as The Hoff himself. 22 January 2016, Echo Arena Liverpool 12 January, Empire Theatre THE CORRS HOZIER The Corrs are back and it’s like they’ve never been away. The four piece band will rattle through their back catalogue of popmeets-Celtic classics. Winner of two Billboard Awards and an Ivor Novello to boot, Hozier truly is a phenomenon. The Irish singer-songwriter is expected to be hitting the summer festivals hard this year so take the opportunity to get on board early. 13 January, Empire Theatre CIRCUS OF HORRORS After having smashed it in the West End and reached the finals of Britain’s Got Talent, this grisly, shandalous show heads to Scouseville with a clutch of bizzaro and shocking circus artistes in tow. Not for the faint hearted! 25-30 January, Empire Theatre PRISCILLA QUEEN OF THE DESERT The tale of three friends on a road trip looking for love and friendship is one of the feelgood movies of the last couple of decades. With a fabulous, outrageous aesthetic, dancefloor favourites and some wildly funny dialogue, this stageshow ain’t no drag. 14-16 January, Unity Theatre 30 January, World Museum MOVE OVER MORIARTY MARS ROVER ROBOTICS Tongue in cheek Sherlockisms as he investigates the notorious Garibaldi Biscuit affair. Terrifyingly hilarious characters include Death Defying Dan and his Whelk Infested Tank of Terror and Molotov the Mind Man of Minsk. The title says it all: an utterly cool way to up your understanding of how those robots on Mars work and the implications of the very latest research including that amazing announcement of possible running water on the red planet. 17 January, Kings Dock 2 February 2016, Echo Arena Liverpool CANCER RESEARCH UK LIVEPOOL RUN A 10km run to encourage people to continue running even through the winter. The route takes in landmarks including Albert Dock and the Three Graces down specially-closed roads; a great chance to see them from a unique perspective, or to go down and cheer on the athletes. STRICTLY COME DANCING It’s time to dust off the glitterballs and polish the judges’ paddles: the Strictly Come Dancing Live Tour is back and promises to be more thrilling than ever before! 45 VINYL REVOLUTION You Spin Me Right Round Liverpool and music - that’s a relationship that’s never been in doubt. But our renewed passion for the black, shiny 12 inch album? That’s a return to an old love we thought we’d extinguished long ago. We pick four of our favourite record shops spearheading the vinyl revolution. JACARANDA Why open a vinyl store? The Jacaranda has a deep-rooted historical connection with Liverpool’s music business, so it was a natural progression for us. Since the venue’s genesis in the 1950s as a happening beatnik coffee bar, it’s been a haunt for the city’s musicians – up-and-coming artists still crowd the stage in our basement performance space, just as The Beatles did 60 years ago! Where do you get your stuff? Because the store is exclusively staffed by DJs, we have a deep network of dealers and prodiggers to work with when sourcing vintage records. We also do a lot of the digging personally. We’ve had rare mambo 45s I’ve pulled out the back rooms of junk shops in Greece, job lots of 60’s 46 garage LPs bought at car boot sales, blaxploitation soundtracks found in country village charity shops... Who are your customers? When we opened up a few months ago, we were curious as to what our customer base would be like, and the surprising thing is that we still can’t work it out. Don’t let the newspapers tell you that the vinyl revival is run exclusively by yuppie hipsters – we have a wide variety of humans in here! Our clientele’s age ranges from 18 to 80, from classic rock devotees to hip hop heads, from Beatle-boosters to serious blues aficionados. What always shifts well? It can be as unpredictable as our customer base. Novelty stuff does quite well, because nowhere else really bothers to carry Instructional Yoga LPs or standup comedy albums. It can be an impulse buy with stuff like that, as some records can be so unique and weird that you have to snap it up. You’ll see a Stevie Wonder record wherever you go, but how many shops have Rudyard Kipling children’s stories, Maori war dances, or the original soundtrack from ‘Cocktail’? What’s your holy grail - albums you want but haven’t found yet? People often have different motivations for wanting a record. Sometimes it’s a record you’ve heard a million times before, a record you can pick up for £3... but then you want the original pressing, which incidentally costs £300. Then other times, it’s a record whose existence is only legendary, like old delta blues 78s that are so rare you’ll probably never live to see a copy unearthed. If anyone has an original 45 of Ruth Brown’s “Daddy, Daddy”, I’d like them to bring it in for me. Is the format’s resurrection here to stay? Yes, I believe so. Though vinyl will never bounce back to dominance that it once enjoyed, I think it will remain the medium-of-choice for dedicated music lovers. Is it, hand on heart, a better format? Or is it about the ritual? Like you say, listening to music on vinyl is tied to a ritualistic physical act – putting the record on the platter, dropping the needle, waiting in anticipation for the music to begin. It’s difficult to say which sounds better. I think, ultimately, you’d struggle to to Madlib, Aphex Twin and Orbital. What’s your holy grail - albums you want but haven’t found yet? Carl: Lego Feet, the original Skam compilation from 1991. Would also be nice to come across a collection of early hardcore/jungle tunes like Tom and Jerry Scooby’s Dreaming! some Nookie and the Jungle Buddah EP. On the jazz front I would weep if confronted with an original Black Jazz or Strata East collection…makes me shiver! notice the difference between a high-quality digital file and a mint platter of vinyl. Any good new stuff, new reissues that you really like? Re-issues provide the appealing opportunity to finally own the LP of a classic album without having to fork out a fortune for an original copy. We carry re-issue albums across the board, from Nas to Miles Davis, from the Frank Zappa to the Kings of Leon. There’s some great reissue compilations out there, too. Soul Jazz Records’ excellent reissues of reggae, rocksteady, and ska from the Studio One back catalogue. Slater Street twitter.com/jacaranda_recs Ant: The obvious answer is a stereo pressing of The Beatles Please Please Me album on the original black & gold label. Personally a box of 60’s UK Mod & Psych singles would be an amazing find (but I’d probably need to buy most of them myself )! Lots of things really, an Ideal For Living 7” by Joy Division would be incredible and nearly happened, or maybe God Save The Queen by The Sex Pistols on A&M. In fact, the more I think about it, the list could be endless! Is the format’s resurrection here to stay? Yes, but a large element of that depends on people buying the equipment to enjoy their records with. Dropping a horrible cheap tinny needle on a beautiful 70s pressing of Curtis Mayfield will not do justice to the music contained. DIG VINYL Is it, hand on heart, better - or is it more about ritual? Why open a vinyl store? The ritual and relationship are very important. Listening to vinyl is a different experience. You take part in it all, and you are not simply passive, you actually have a physical relationship with the music. You can touch it. Of course you also have the artwork, sleeves, and inners that along with the record give you a much fuller, thicker experience of the music and artists intent. Every record and player sounds different but if you invest in a decent system the resultant warm, deep and rich sound is in our opinion unbeatable. Because we felt that Bold Street without a record shop was similar to the Liver building with no birds. Where do you get your stuff? If we told you that we would have to delete you. Who are your customers? Across the board: hipsters, hopheads, students, families, middle aged men, punks, goths, soul girls, kohl girls, old men, young women, musicians, artists. Our customers very much reflect the snapshot of Bold Street on any given afternoon. What always shifts well? The classics: Bowie, Zep, Floyd, Dylan, Beatles, Fleetwood Mac, Queen, the Who, Rolling Stones, The Smiths. We also sell a lot of funk, disco, soul and electronica from artists like Sly Stone, Stevie Wonder and Marvin Gaye through Any good new stuff, new reissues that you really like? We’re really digging Floating Points, the Greg Foat Group and King Midas Sound at present. Reissue wise, we generally go for the originals, but we have enjoyed the Boards of Canada reissues and the Broadcast reissues. 80 Bold Street digliverpool.co.uk “Listening to vinyl is a different experience. you actually have a physical relationship with the music” TWO MORE TO TRY Probe Records The longest-running, and the daddy of them all, Probe’s diet of psychedelic, blues, garage, punk, rock’n’roll and indie has inspired and informed up the city’s musical makers and shakers since 1971: most of scouse music’s extended family tree have worked, shopped or skulked here - from Dead or Alive’s Pete Burns to Half Man Half Biscuit. And it’s still firing on all cylinders. Bluecoat, School Lane probe-records.co.uk Skeleton Records Hop over the water for Birkenhead’s shrine to all things prog, rock, indie and pop. What always sells? “Hawkwind. Has done from day one,” says indefatigable owner, John Weaver. “And Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours. I mean, who hasn’t got Rumours yet? It’s unbelievable.” From back catalogue gems to re-release must-haves, Skeleton rarely disappoints. 11 Oxton Road Birkenhead 47 MY STORY Eithne Brown Eithne Browne never meant to be an actor. Never meant to star in Blood Brothers. Or land a role in Brookside. Never really meant to be one of Liverpool’s most loved stars of stage and screen at all really. But boy are we glad that fate, and talent, had other plans in mind... Image by Jane MacNeil “I was born in Huyton, which was still a rural community in the late 50s. I suppose my first public performance was singing at the opening of Huyton’s new Catholic Church. Of course, even at six, I knew I was going to hell – every Catholic kid did. So I had to put on a good show. I wanted to do my parents proud. My father was a merchant seaman. He’d spend long periods away at sea until we were older; then he’d do the cattle run from Ireland to England. Mum kept the house going. She was amazing. She was a born entertainer, and a gifted musician. But her voice was a thing of beauty. She regularly entertained people at church halls. If they needed someone to sing Ave Maria, they called on her. My grandparents ran the Castle pub on Vauxhall Road, so our weekends were often spent there, where dad would regale us with stories from his travels. He’d bring the world back with him. I loved learning about other people, other cultures from him. That’s probably why, even in my 20s, I’d socialise with my parents - the Casa, the Somali Club - I’d take them everywhere with me! I suppose I’ve got my mum’s face, and her voice - to a degree. But I’ve not got her quality everyone stopped to listen when she sang. It’s the singing that got me where I am, I suppose. I had a son at 17 so, being a single mum, I took a succession of jobs to make ends meet. I was working at the Medici Gallery in Bold Street and a group of friends and I went for a picnic in St James’ Gardens 48 beneath the Cathedral. Drink had been taken, and I struck up a song. I remember my manageress being dumbstruck. “I didn’t know you could sing!” she said, and told me a friend was looking for a singer to help him work out some harmonies for a play he was scoring. That guy was working on a new musical called Blood Brothers. I got a call when I’d moved to another job, selling blinds on London Road. “I’ve heard you can sing,” said the caller. Turned out he was Musical Director for the Playhouse, Peter Filleul. I had a good ear for harmonies. So I could help him to work out various vocal parts. This was just to work out the score, it was never an audition for the play. But somehow Willy Russell heard the tape, and told me to come in. The Director, Chris Bond, had already set his heart on Barbara Dickson, but Willy insisted I was given a part in the chorus for its opening in “it’s a funny life. you wait for the call, then pack your little suitcase and go where the work is” Liverpool and, a few months later, at the Lyric in London. Then, one night, minutes before curtain up, Barbara took ill and I was put into her clothes – which swamped me, I’m 6 inches shorter than her – and practically pushed into the spotlight. I heard the groan when the audience were told Barbara wasn’t performing. And the only thought in my head was, ha, you’ve all paid a tenner to see a venetian blind saleswoman! By the end of the show, I got a standing ovation, and flowers were thrown on stage. I ended up doing 50 performances. I was hooked. I got the role in Stags and Hens on the back of Blood Brothers, but I’ve always done other jobs. I’ve been a telephonist – I love that, being able to talk to people every day, and sometimes put on different accents! I had to audition three times before they gave me the part of Chrissy Rogers in Brookside – for an actor, getting a regular job like that is such a boon. I was living at home, and earning money doing something I loved. They were very happy times. It’s a funny life. You wait for the call, then you pack your little suitcase and go where the work is. We toured with Tartuffe, which was fantastic, but it’s still not glamorous – you’re pulling another suitcase through another London station. All your life in there! I’ve become very good at living out of a case! I never complain. I just think ‘thank God the work’s come in.’ Some years are trickier than others. That’s why people like Steven Fletcher, and places like the Royal Court are so fantastic. When he put ‘Mam I’m ‘Ere’ on over Christmas, he had to take the risk. He had to hire the chairs, pay for the staging. Everything. But because of him, 16 people got work over Christmas that they never would have done otherwise. And the Royal Court – what a wonderful place that is. They don’t get a penny in subsidies.. These days, I’m involved with a lot of off-stage work, and it’s incredible. I work with recovery through drama – projects aimed at younger people who, for whatever reason, feel marginalised, or who are at risk of falling through the cracks of traditional education. I’ve seen young lads blossom, grow in stature. It’s amazing to see, just through a series of tricks and hats and sessions, you give one person the confidence to stand up and say “I can do this.’ How can that not be rewarding? It’s the same when we go into Fazakerley Hospital, or care homes, as the Twin Sets, dressed in our 1940s garb. You can sit beside someone in their hospital bed and they will really open up to you. You hear stories, see the staff relax for a precious few minutes. It allows us to see the patients as human again. Next up for me? I’ve got a Christmas show at Scarborough’s gorgeous Stephen Joseph Theatre – playing the witch in Hansel and Gretel, in a play scored by the amazing band, Stornoway. Acting? Well, 90% of the time, you’re sitting in corner, in the dark, talking to yourself. You just bump along, being picked up and then dropped again. But it gets to you. Put a hat on me now, and I’ll be off... THE WAY I SEE IT Freida McKitrick With her vibrant, expressive and fluid pen and ink scenes, Freida McKitrick captures the dynamic, restless energy of the city. Now she’s working with a group of likeminded artists in a shop that perfectly captures Liverpool’s creative spirit. How did your creative life start? How difficult is it to make a living as an artist these days? I’ve always been interested in creating as a hobby and it remains a hobby, because hobbies are no pressure! That’s why I still go to workshops and courses related to art. I’m always learning. I’m now involved with a fantastic and interesting diverse group of artists working from a studio in the Baltic area of LIverpool. This makes life very interesting. Every day there’s something new going on. You learn a lot from networking with other artists Difficult but not impossible. Many artists have other ways, such as teaching, to earn their bread and butter. I know from other artists in and around the studio not to depend on art to make a living. I was a teacher for many years until I retired and took on a studio with friends, and here I am, enjoying my hobby! How did your distinctive style develop - was it a gradual process? Do you think so? I’m not so sure. I do illustrate a bauble at christmas time, which helps to pay the rent for me having the luxury of a studio! Christmas time in our ONEart shop is going to be very special though. We’re going to have events, previews and launches up to Christmas. I suppose I’m mainly a self taught artist and the techniques I’ve developed over time have been taken on from studying artists and experimenting with different mediums. It’s all about experimenting and developing your style. Drawing with pen and ink became a favourite medium as it gave me the freedom to draw. 50 You’re known for your Christmas scenes - is it a special time of year for you? Do you work outdoors, or work from photographs? I work in the studio mostly, with a coffee and hot toast with real butter, but to start with I work outside and have many sketchbooks on the go. I carry a sketchbook with me most of the time – and camera. each, scrubbed floors, cleaned windows, built counters, painted walls and hung artwork! What are your favourite pieces? I’m mainly shopkeeping on Peter’s Lane, on the first floor of the Interesting Eating Company (to find us come through the cafe up the stairs or in the lift), we’re next to Ted Baker! Three Graces was my very first drawing, then I developed it in many ways, adding rain and snow and the lady with the red umbrella. I then created a drawing of the waterfront and with the changing skyline I can revisit it often. ONE Art is doing tremendously well - that must please you immensely? ONEart has been unimaginably successful, due to the direction, foresight and imagination of Karen Edwards and Katherine Caldwell, and myself of course, the commitment and the belief in ONEart from Liverpool ONE, who are right behind us as we move forward. The 14 artists who have worked hard to create a pop up shop, all contributing £20 What are you working on now? freidamckitrick.co.uk oneartliv.tumblr.com “i still go to workshops and courses related to art. i’m always learning”