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Alice Shortcake

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Posts posted by Alice Shortcake

  1. 22 hours ago, nottsballetlover said:

    Coppelia was lovely yesterday matinee. Samara Downs gorgeous, Mattias Dingman equally so. Joy. Roll on my mini break to Bristol. 

     

    I couldn't agree more about the Saturday matinee - well worth the trip from York!  It didn't occur to me until I was on the way home that the last Coppelia I saw was a 1980s London Festival Ballet production, also at the Hippodrome.

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  2. I saw the show at York's Theatre Royal yesterday afternoon - a very well-attended matinee - and thoroughly enjoyed it.  The tragic hedgehog incident made me wonder, not for the first time, if dancers have ever been injured by Widow Simone's flying feet in the Fille clog dance!  The music seemed to me to be over-amplified, but no-one sitting near me remarked on it so perhaps I'm just overly sensitive to noise.

  3. I saw thus at the cinema but was quite unable to judge it coz the picture was cut off at the top and the bottom! I assume this was a problem at my cinema alone and would welcome advice. It was obviously sumptuous but is it worth a purchase?

     

    I missed the cinema broadcast, but I suspect the reason the DVD isn't on Amazon.uk is that it's only available in a Region 4 version.  The same apparently applies to  the Australian ballet's version of The Nutcracker, which it shares with BRB.

  4. I came across the following snippet in an issue of The Era, a theatrical newspaper, dated 14th January 1899:

     

    "ON Saturday night last in the course of the concluding scene of The Belle of New York at the Cardiff Theatre Royal Mr Lionel E. Lawrence, who was playing Ichabod Bronson, suddenly stopped in the middle of one of his songs and said, “Ladies and gentlemen, I refuse to go on with my song, as there is a man right in front of me who has been reading a newspaper all the evening.  It is most disgusting, and I must ask you to excuse me from singing any more.”  The gentleman continued to peruse his paper, and said he had a perfect right to read a newspaper if he liked, and would not be stopped by anyone.  He continued to do so, and the performance went on without any further incident."

     

    ​It's a comfort to know that audiences were as badly behaved then as they are now!

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