George's Marvellous Medicine - Altrincham Garrick


WHILE I’m not one of those irritating people who witter on about ‘the good old days’, it was really refreshing to see children completely immersed in a form of entertainment that wasn’t screen based.

And big kids like me enjoyed it, too.

I been reviewing theatre for 30 years and this was the first time I’d ever seen - well, I’m not going to spoil the surprise for you.

This production is also a triumph for the director/designer Sean Duvall for has designed a set that smacks of fairytale charm and a talented team of puppeteers who successfully transport the audience to a world in which anything is possible.

Poor George - played by an engaging Andy Withers - has his school holiday ruined when his grouchy old grandma comes to stay at his family’s farm.

She really is a grump, snarling her orders at George and his oh so patient parents, played by Michael Gallagher and Christine Perry.

Withers is an engaging and likeable George and instantly won over the youngsters in the audience as he hatches a plan to put the old battle axe well and truly in her place.

The panto season may be eight months away but this show has that well known staple ingredient of the panto. Audience participation.

But take comfort folks - the jokes are an awful lot better.

Hannah Collman, far, far, far younger than the role she is playing, is really good value as Grandma, perfectly capturing her mannerisms and with a voice that could, quite easily, curdle milk.

The world may be a bad place at the moment so what better than 90 minutes of good, clean fun to whisk us away from these unprecedented times?

Until April 24. Tickets are available from 0161 928 1677 or www.altrinchamgarrick.co.uk. Star rating - 3.5 out of 5.

Photo - Martin Ogden.

Nora A Doll's House - Royal Exchange Theatre


IT’S really depressing when you think about it.

Just how an adaptation of Ibsen’s classic, still has relevance today, a play about the way women are still expected to play a certain role in society and are forced to dilute their dreams and aspirations or abandon them altogether.

Stef Smith’s engaging and thought provoking adaptation makes us question just how much has changed for women in our society by flitting between 1918, when women of a certain age were first allowed to vote, 1968 and 2018.

This piece works quite brilliantly because it reminds us how far we’ve progressed and how far we still have to go before full gender equality is achieved.

While this may sound like heavy going, it’s not. While this play is sure to fuel a debate or two over a post performance drink it certainly isn’t an evening of man bashing even though Thomas, the husband figure played by William Ash, is incurably condescending.

His control over Nora/Christine reduces over time and you’re sure to find yourself rooting for her as she thinks about fleeing her domestic prison.

In this adaptation the role of Nora is shared between three very different actresses. Different in the sense they Yusra Warsama, Jodie McNee and Kirsty Rider bring something very different to the part.

This is very thought provoking, intelligent theatre that remains true to the spirit of a play that’s more than a century old and director Bryony Shanahan and a gifted and close knit cast ensure not a single word of Stef Smith’s dialogue is wasted.

Highly recommended - theatre with a brain and a heart.

Until April 2. Star rating - ****

Tickets are available from www.royalexchange.co.uk.

Photo - Helen Murray

The Lady In The Van - Altrincham Garrick


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AS I left the Garrick on Monday night one question was running through my mind - why doesn’t Celia Bonner do more acting?

She gives a captivating performance as Miss Shepherd, the enigmatic down and out taken in by Alan Bennett and who lived on his driveway for what was supposed to be a temporary basis.

But “temporary” turned into 15 years and an unlikely friendship grew between the genius playwright and an old woman whose outlook on life was, to put it mildly, unique.

It soon emerges that Miss Shepherd has a past, psychologically she’s damaged goods and her unapologetic attitude to personal cleanliness had the audience wincing with disgust when I saw this on opening night.

Celia’s sense of timing is flawless and, under the astute direction of Carole Carr, she’s ably supported by Mike Shaw and Jonathan Black, who share the role of Bennett himself.

Nobody tells a story quite like this national treasure and has turn of phrase is quite brilliant. But you have to be prepared to listen. It’s a case of blink and you’ll miss his priceless witticisms.

Barry Purves’ and Amanda Cooke’s spartan set captures perfectly the suburban London in which this remarkable story unfolds, a tale which can be summed up in the phrase “you couldn’t make this up.”

While Miss Shepherd’s lack of personal hygiene repulsed me at times, I found myself drawn to someone who refused to live by society’s rules.

Alan Bennett was similarly drawn and he got a play out of it.

Until Oct 9. The box office is on 0161 928 1677. Star rating - 3.5 out of 5. Photo by Martin Ogden.