Pat Preater                                                      Calendar of Events
Nigel Price                                                      Brewhouse
Andy Burden                                                      Clandestine Cake Club
Creative Innovation                                              The Real Jane Austen
Centre                                                           Somerset & Bristol
Chelsea Hotel                                                    Clarks Shoes
Somerset Opera                                                   Short Story
Ilminster Arts Centre                                            Poetry Corner
                                                                 My Favourite


 Spring 2013
                                                                               Free
      Shining a light on literature, art, music and performance in Taunton & Somerset
Hot on the heels of our Mr Miles Tea Rooms we are
    delighted to announce or new Café/Restaurant at Riverside
                   Place, St. James St., Taunton.

                                  ‘Miles at the Riverside’

    Home-cooked meals of the highest quality, accompanied by delicious freshly prepared salads.
      We are open 7 days a week for breakfast offering a morning start for everyone. We offer a
    selection of filled wraps and paninis for a lighter bite all day, and of course a wide selection of
                                             cakes and tiffin.
    We use local suppliers and produce and serve the finest tea, coffee and hot chocolate from our
                                    partners, DJ Miles Ltd of Porlock.


                          FUNCTIONS and EVENTS and PARTIES
    If you are looking for a venue to hold an event or celebration we can help. We cater for groups
                  from 6 to 60 and can provide a wide array of menus to suit all events.

              Look out for pre theatre dinner opportunities for events at the Brewhouse.


                                         COFFEE and TEA
     In partnership with DJ Miles we stock a variety of freshly roasted coffee and skilfully blended
                                       teas for you to purchase.
Contents
05 Throwing the Baby Out With the Bathwater
06 Robert Miles Blog
09 No Financial Spreadsheet for Inspiration
10 Somerset Opera
14 The Creative Innovation Centre
16 Pat Preater: A Life in Art
21 The Rural Living Show
22 Heads  Tales: Nigel Price
30 Contains Art: Watchet’s New Art Initiative
32 Let Them Eat Cake
33 The Real Jane Austen
34 The Count of Monte Cristo
36 Chelsea Hotel
38 Somerset  Bristol
39 Made to Last: Clarks Shoes
40 A Fitting Remembrance: John Cole’s Funeral
40 Re-opening of Ilminster Arts Centre
41 Fire River Poets First Poetry Competition
43 Great Expectations Fulfilled: The Brunner Prize
44 Great Expectations: Short Story
47 My Favourite: Anne Brayley	

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       Copy Editor: Jo Ward
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Throwing out the baby with the bathwater?
                             As we go to         I think his answers to some of the criticisms       arts nationally (albeit much less than there
                             print the Brew-     deserve to be more widely known.                    used to be) but we are not not claiming
                             house Theatre         I am much afraid that he an his adminis-          our fair share of it.
                             and Arts Centre     tration is being used as a scapegoat for the          Why is that so little cultural funding is
                             is in administra-   core issue of underfunding. It is also disap-       available to the people of Somerset per
                             tion and its fu-    pointing that there appears no attempt, that        head in comparison with Bristol or Lon-
                             ture is unclear.    I am aware of (though I hope I am proved            don? Do we not deserve properly funded
                             There has been      wrong), in keeping the current programme            theatres as much as anybody else? One
                             an outpouring       in place. A glance at the calendar of events        can only conclude that if we are not get-
                             of support for      in this issue shows what an important part          ting the funding we are not fighting for it
the theatre in a Save The Brewhouse Cam-         the Brewhouse programme was to play in              and making representations for it, which I
paign which is touching and reveals how          our cultural lives over the coming three            am afraid points to lack of commitment at
much it is valued by the community.              months and I have made the decision to              a local level.
   The timing of the closure is particu-         keep the events in place in the listings in the       A properly funded theatre and arts cen-
larly sad as in the last few monthes there       hope that some will still take place, even if       tre not only brings cultural benefits but
seemed to be real buzz about the theatre.        at another venue.                                   makes good business sense. Taunton is
A new initiative brought cinema back to            The talk is of rebirth through volunteers, a      geographically situated in a perfect posi-
town with a judicious mix of recent re-          phoenix arising from the ashes. Volunteers          tion to attract audiences from Somerset,
leases, old time favourites and films not        are an invaluable resource. I know from my          East Devon and beyond. Visitors to the
usually found in the commercial cinema.          own experience. They were the backbone of           Brewhouse not only bring income to the
There was a marvellous Wind in the Wil-          The Taunton Literary Festival and they have
lows production, cleverly making use of          a vital role to play both in terms of admin-
locally produced willows both on the stage       istration and putting on amateur shows, of-
set and in the foyer. A practical plan was       ten to a very high standard. Theatre groups
in place to secure an extension to provide       like the Taunton Thespians do a great job in
the larger auditorium which would bring          introducing theatre into the community and
bigger shows to The Brewhouse in order           are an extremely important part of the local
to make the theatre more profitable and al-      cultural landscape.
lowing the provision of a greater variety          However, we also need professional thea-
and quaility of shows.                           tre from national and regional companies,
  However, one cannot have been unaware          the sort of theatre we can aspire to, and a
of the tightrope that was being walked in        core of professionals both to commission
the last few years as funding was squeezed       shows and run a professional theatre. Please        theatre but the wider community. When
with appeals for donations to the audi-          read the article by Ally Kennen in the fol-         the nettle is grasped and a cultural invest-
ence after each production. The theatre          lowing pages if you have any doubt about            ment is made such as in the case of the
like almost every other business has been        the importance of a professionally run local        Somerset Museum it can bring rewards
affected by a prolonged recession which          theatre to an individuals life.                     and be a great success.
has meant smaller audiences and less rev-          I hope it is understood that we are losing          Let us bring the theatre back to life by
enue, as people think twice about buying a       some very real expertise from the Brew-             all means but when that happens we must
ticket for a show. We have seen household        house and that it is not easily replaced.           not handicap it in a straight jacket of un-
names disappearing from our high streets         In order to run such a theatre we require           derfunding, We must give it sufficient lo-
in the new year as cash flow problems            a proper planned funding regime. Pro-               cal funding and seek to match it a national
very quickly made themselves evident and         grammes have to be put together months in           level through such institutions as the Arts
the Brewhouse clearly was no different in        advance, commissions taken, assumptions             Council through proper representation
this respect.                                    have to be made and an estimate of the po-          and leadership. It should be perceived as
  While the demonstration of support for         tential audience and, therefore, revenue. It        an investment not a liability, a spearhead
the theatre is heartening and there are an       is a risky business at the best of times but        for Taunton to climb up the cultural lad-
impressive number of volunteers coming           especially when there is uncertainty about          der and make it a destination point for the
forward to support the Brewhouse, my             how much, when and where the funding is             arts for the surrounding area and beyond,
worry is that in many quarters the respon-       coming from.                                        with all the attendant cultural and finan-
sibility for the current situation is being       Of course, it is easy to say that in the present   cial benefits that brings.
deflected in the direction of the adminis-       climate any funding for arts centres should
tration under Robert Miles. I am reporting       take second place to hospitals and schools.         Lionel Ward
his last blog here in the following pages as     However, there is funding available for the
Robert Miles Blog                                                                              We therefore employed around 35 part
                                                                                                   time workers, mostly on zero hours
    February 26 2.50pm                                                                             contracts, and 19 full time staff, some
    (Following a meeting at                                                                        of whom ran the restaurant and two of
                                                                                                   whom were the most fantastic appren-
    Deane House the previ-                                                                         tices.
    ous evening)                                                                                      5. If Taunton Deane believe that a
                                                                                                   volunteer led venue, mainly presenting
    While the debate about The Brewhouse                                                           community work, is compatible with
    continues I wish to make clear that I, along                                                   their economic strategy ‘Grow and
    with the other staff, are no longer em-          security, especially when they are just       Green’ which they published two years
    ployed, so I have no reason to enter the fray    back filling other cuts. The decision to      ago, then I must only have the first draft
    other than on a whim to correct any errors       not include The Brewhouse as part of          of the report. I would either love to see
    of fact if it helps the debate. I am currently   ACE National Portfolio Organisations in       the final one or hear an explanation as
    on a whim.                                       2010 was clearly a direct result of Som-      to why it is now not worth the paper
      And in addition, as a parent, I wish to        erset County Council’s decision to very       it’s written on. There are some fantas-
    ensure that the county my children grow          publicly cut its arts funding by 100% a       tic community groups in Taunton, but
    up in has its fair share of cultural activity    few months earlier. This decision was         if TDBC think that the majority of our
    to enrich their lives and make them fully        the beginning of the end.                     old database would want mainly com-
    rounded little creative heroes. Lets face it       3. There have been mumblings from           munity shows, I think they would be
    the more creative they are, the more chance      some creditors of The Brewhouse about         mistaken. I have nothing against the
    they will have in this world whatever they       us trading insolvently. In fact the sud-      model, if it is progressive rather than
    choose to do.                                    den closure of the venue was necessary        the regressive one being proposed
      So lets do some facts: -                       to ensure that the organisation did not       right now. Let’s not turn back the clock
     1. If Taunton Deane Borough Council had         break the law, and did the right thing        to 1977; lets have some ambition to in-
    invested in The Brewhouse at the same            by its creditors, including other theatre     vent something new. A model breaking
    level as South Somerset District Council         companies, artists and ticket holders.        down barriers between ‘professional’
    invested in the Octagon (20 miles away)          Creditors’ being angry is completely          and ‘amateur’ would be really interest-
    over the past five years we would still be       understandable in the current emotive         ing if it was well designed and deliv-
    open. And we would have achieved a sur-          environment. We do realise how painful        ered, but it is unlikely to come out of
    plus of £169K in that time. That doesn’t         this is for everyone and are genuinely        this mess.
    count any match funding that could have          very sorry it had to end this way. How-         As I say, I am no longer employed by
    also been secured by that proper level of        ever the arts industry turning on itself      The Brewhouse (or in fact by anyone)
    investment. TDBC underinvested. They             while the austerity program decimates         and none of what I think really mat-
    are not alone in that position as Somerset       the cultural landscape is counterproduc-      ters. Apparently I have now become a
    County Council and Arts Council England          tive, short sighted and dangerous.            skiver instead of a striver. I hope the
    also underinvested, but TDBC should have          4. There is talk of us employing over 50     game of political football is over, we
    led the process to rectify that position.        workers, which sounds a lot to run a me-      had no legal choice but to take our ball
     2. Arts Council England withdrew regular        dium sized theatre. This number was first     and go home, but there are a lot who
    funding in 2005. It is regular funding that      used by some artists who put up posters       have lost out, creditors, staff, other
    allows an organisation to plan and to make       outside the venue after The Brewhouse         companies whose forthcoming tours
    decisions sustainably. The irony about this      closed. To clarify, we were far more than     may be threatened etc. and myself and
    is the Sustain fund paid The Brewhouse           just a theatre, and employed other staff      the rest of the team are genuinely upset
    nearly half a million pounds in 2009 to          for other work in the visual arts, cater-     by that. I hope a new game can start
    ‘maintain the quality of artistic output and     ing etc. Indeed we ran a restaurant, two      soon, with proper rules, a level playing
    resolve cash flow problems caused by loss        galleries, a studio theatre and hosted arts   field and sustainable investment from
    of box office, trading and sponsorship’.         practitioners who worked peripatetically      all stakeholders in Somerset’s unique
    But one off grants do not give long-term         across Somerset delivering arts projects.     cultural and creative infrastructure.
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                                                                                                                                         Coming Soon to taunton
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‘There is no financial spreadsheet for inspiration’
The Brewhouse Theatre                             you watch, you could take part. Then some-
                                                  how I got to join in a young play writer’s
in Taunton opened in 1977                         workshop. The organisers had come down
when I was nearly two                             from ‘Actual London.’ There was a woman
                                                  who wore all black! Then my secondary
years old. It was the only                        school took us to see a professional touring
theatre for miles around.                         company perform Romeo and Juliet. It was
The ins and outs of the                           unexpectedly funny and terrifying and ex-
                                                  ploded for good those endless excruciating
funding struggle can be                           readings in lessons.
read elsewhere, but what                            And then, when I developed an interest in
                                                  music, I got to perform on the stage, in the
did the place mean to one                         mighty Battle of the Bands. Singing on a
small person, growing up                          professional stage was a big experience for      ‘Ratty’ in The Brewhouse’s in-house
                                                  a person who was used to warbling at school      production of ‘The Wind in The Wil-
on a farm, sixteen miles                          events. (I did end up singing for a living for   lows’ and said ‘I want to be him!’ (an
away, in the middle of no-                        a while -for better or worse). I also got to     excellent progression from the Power
                                                  perform a play I wrote and acted in for my       Ranger role model he previously as-
where?                                            A level Theatre Studies.                         pired to)
                                                    I remember a woman who used to ramble             There are art groups for toddlers, a
The first time I went to The Brewhouse is         around the high street and parks of Taunton      thriving youth theatre, a cinema. The
also one of my first memories. My uncle           all day, it seemed, doing nothing particular.    program is/was packed with every
was acting with a troupe on stage. My un-         She was a well known face and someone I          sort of theatre and music you could
cle had been run over by a bus when he was        would worry about. Was she OK? She got           wish for. And now it has gone. Closed
17 and lost both his legs but was now per-        hold of a camera and eventually The Brew-        down. It has been stopped in its tracks.
forming with other disabled actors.               house hosted an exhibition of her pictures.        I’m not even mentioning the hours of
  Another shady, hazy memory: I was taken         The place was packed.                            pure fun I’ve had at the place, watch-
to the ballet. Imagine that! A scruffy farm          It is impossible to quantify the value of     ing brilliant shows, author talks, music,
girl with a deep interest in cowpats, and         a small country theatre. At the risk of ram-     dancing, local and national performers
only one TV in the house, taken to see such       bling on, or sounding pompous, the theatre       and comedians... I have a friend who
a spectacle. I remember the thump of the          feeds dreams, and creates them. It allows us     has 2 children who have been practis-
dancers’ feet on the stage, totally at odds       to clamber out of our backgrounds and go         ing flat out, in all their spare time for
with their pink fairy-like forms.                 somewhere new, should we wish. Watch-            the gang shows that the scout organi-
  My primary school bussed a class of us          ing brilliant professional touring companies     sation performs in April. I imagine all
there and I saw my first professional play:       was revelatory. And yes, eventually, the         these small people will be very sad.
‘The Selfish Shellfish’ It was dark and           students who learned to work backstage,           The Brewhouse Theatre has touched
scary. A large cloth was used to represent an     to operate the bar, who volunteered to help      my life, and thousands and thousands
oil slick. An actress wore a spiked hat, she      with the lights, the box office, to write and    of others.
was an anemone. I had never seen anything         run small shows. We went on and did more           What a miserable day this is for Taun-
like it and it blew my rural brain. (I went to    things. Things that earned money and paid        ton. It has become a little more grey. A
the cinema just twice as a child, these were      taxes.                                           little more dead.
totally new experiences)                             There is no financial spreadsheet for in-
  The theatre, I understood, was where you        spiration, and generating aspiration, and for    Ally Kennen writes books for chil-
went and were not allowed to wear your            building confidence and skills.                  dren and young adults. Her latest
wellies. You wore your best trousers. But           And now I have moved back to Somer-            book is Midnight Pirates which came
of course it became much, much more than          set and am a firm punter. As well as adult       out in January of this year and Bul-
that.                                             events I regularly take (took) my children to    let Boys which came out in January
  Now eleven, my friend Meena was chosen          the theatre to see glorious children’s shows,    2012. Her first three books were a
to sing during a local production of Mad-         the likes of which are everywhere in the city,   loosely linked series, Beast, Berserk
ame Butterfly, and perform on stage. (She         and hardly anywhere down here in Somer-          and Bedlam. She has also written
later became a ‘proper’ singer) It felt like an   set. My three year old recently pointed at       Sparks for younger children(8+)
awesome opportunity, and it was. The thea-        a picture of a debonair actor who played         readers and Quarry, a one- off teen
tre became a place where, not only could                                                           thriller.
Somerset Opera
     Somerset Opera be-                                                                          Guy Robinson was born the
     gan as an evening class                                                                     year Somerset Opera was
     promoted by Taunton                                                                         founded. Now Secretary of
     Technical College, now                                                                      the society that introduced
     known as Somerset                                                                           him to opera, Guy looks
     College.                                                                                    forward to a busy 2013 pro-
                                                                                                 gramme and an exciting
     It was led by a new arrival to Somer-
     set, Brian Cresswell, recently appoint-                                                     new initiative
     ed music adviser to West Somerset.
     The first evening attracted 12 singers
     who all responded to the proposed                 La Traviatta, 2011, Anando Mukerjee as
                                                                                                 During March, Somerset Opera will be per-
                                                          Alfredo  Virginia King as Violetta
     programme of a concert performance                                                          forming Gilbert  Sullivan’s Iolanthe in ten
     of Tachaikowsky’s little known opera,           March 1976 saw two concert perform-         venues across the county, it is organising the
     “Tcherevichki”. Brian had conducted           ances of Vaughan William’s “Pilgrim’s         Maxwell Masterclass in April, then there’s
     and directed the first known staged           Progress” with orchestra, a work much         the Somerset Song Prize in May, and its fully-
     performances in England in the previ-         loved by Brian who had previously con-        staged summer show - Die Fledermaus - in
     ous May at Bicester School where he           ducted and directed staged performances       July. A full diary, then, for this Taunton based
     was Director of Music.                        in Bicester in 1972 where one perform-        charity.
       After a small concert of Christmas          ance was attended by the composer’s             One of the new elements to the society is its
     music in the December, 1975 saw               widow, Ursula. In May another swing of        Young Singers Programme. Somerset Opera
     a whirlwind of performances. The              emphasis with performances of Tallis’         runs a Bursary programme, helping to support
     Tchaikowsky was presented in concert          massive “Spem in Alium” using other           young singers to get to grips with new roles
     performance in February with 25 per-          choral groups in the area. “Beggar’s Op-      and refine performing skills. Then there’s the
     formers and an orchestra. In July the         era” was staged in May and “Marriage of       Maxwell Masterclass, made possible by the
     group gave two staged performances            Figaro” with orchestra in July.               generous patronage of international opera star
     with orchestra – Purcell “Dido and              The die was cast. Staged and concert        Donald Maxwell. For the past four years Don-
     Aeneas” and the final act of Britten’s        performances of opera, some little known,     ald has spent a whole day guiding young or
     “Midsummer Night’s Dream”. The                with concerts of choral music. The first      inexperienced singers, whilst entertaining an
     new season began with concert per-            18 months had also demonstrated two           audience of avid listeners. This year the Max-
     formances with piano of “Cavalleria           passions of the founder – English music       well Masterclass will take place on 20 April at
     Rusticana” and “Trial by Jury”. De-           and the operas of Gilbert  Sullivan : two    Taunton School, where I went to school.
     cember followed with another double           years later the series of “Come and Sing”       Last year, Donald performed a leading role at
     bill –Menotti’s “Amahl and the Night          performances of the operettas leading on      the Royal Opera, Covent Garden on the night
     Visitors” and the same composer’s             to the creation of Brian’s alter ego, “Pri-   before the masterclass. Within a few hours he
     “Amelia Goes to the Ball”.                    vate Willis” began.                           was on a train heading to Taunton. This goes
                                                                                                 beyond the involvement of your average soci-
                                                                                                 ety patron. Why go to such lengths? ‘Amateur
                                                                                                 grand opera has changed enormously since I
                                                                                                 first got the bug some 40 years ago,’ comments
                                                                                                 Donald. ‘It is now a complex balancing act be-
                                                                                                 tween the varying demands of finances, audi-
                                                                                                 ences and a loyal membership. The increasing
                                                                                                 numbers of talented young professional sing-
                                                                                                 ers adds yet another dimension. I greatly enjoy
                                                                                                 trying to help Somerset Opera by simply try-
                                                                                                 ing to enthuse the young (and the not quite so
                                                                                                 young) members in enjoying grand opera. It is
                                                                                                 fun, and a very important part of our cultural
                                                                                                 life!’
                                                                                                   Also this year, the society is proud to support
                                                                                                 a new venture – the Somerset Song Prize. This
                                                                                                 prestigious, new competition is promoted and
                  Patience, 1981 with Brian Cresswell as Col. Calverley                                                              cont’d p13
10
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                                                                                                                                        11
12
organised by Taunton  Somerset Music,
Drama  Dance Festival as part of their
Centenary celebrations, Somerset Opera
and the Ronald Tickner Educational Trust.
The organisers also express their thanks for
the support, encouragement and expertise
of the Castle Hotel, Taunton, where the fi-
nal will be held on 26 May. The Song Prize
will be open to any voice who is aged 16
– 26 years, and it reinforces the importance
of the role between the singer and pianist.
After the adjudication ceremony for the
Song Prize, there will be a recital of Eng-
lish song from internationally-acclaimed
soprano Elizabeth Watts and world-class
accompanist Iain Burnside. Entry paper-
work will be available from March 2013.                      Midsummer’s Night Dream, Britten,1985 with John Cole as Peter Quince
  The touring show this year will be Iolan-
the: a musical tale of warring fairies (who      jailor, over-the-top wooing and sweet re-       with a heady mix of music and movement
never grow old), members of the House of         venge. Rehearsals are about to begin, and       in the staged shows.
Lords (who have a high regard for brains         whilst the principal performers have been        Success also depends on those with energy
and wished they had some themselves)             cast, all are still welcome to put their name   and vision driving things forward. One such
and a leading man who is not only half a         forward for the chorus. A launch evening        visionary is Brian Cresswell, who founded
fairy but has a mother who looks as young        is planned for 4 April, when Hilary Mar-        the society. Other crucial figures (plucked
as his fiancé. The show is directed by Sue       shall (Somerset Opera’s Chairman and the        from many) include John Cole, who was
Richards and the Musical Director is Chris       Director of the show) will introduce her vi-    maestro and performer for Somerset Opera
Ball.                                            sion for what is colloquially being called      on numerous occasions, and the leadership
  How does the ‘Somerset Opera on tour’          ‘the bat’.                                      and time of Musical Director Chris Ball
work? Firstly, it relies on an ability to read     This will be the fifth time that Somerset     and Chairman Hilary Marshall.
a map – and seek the patience of the audi-       Opera has done Die Fledermaus across its
ence if cast members head to Stogursey in-       38 year history. What has changed since          Guy has fond memories of his first
stead of Stogumber. Second, it relies on an      1974? First, there is the variety of shows       main role with the group, under Brian’s
ability to improvise in different situations.    performed, from Tchaikovsky’s Eugene             musical direction. The show was Don
  ‘We cram ourselves into dressing rooms’        Onegin to a concert version of Wagner’s          Giovanni and Guy was playing Lep-
explains Sue ‘which are usually kitchens or      Meistersingers, from Mozart’s The Mar-           orello. It was quite a risk for the society
billiard rooms, all try and remember to exit     riage of Figaro to Britten’s A Midsummer         to ask Guy to do Leporello, given that
only stage right as some venues don’t have       Night’s Dream (pictured). Also, there have       it was his first major role in opera and
a stage left, fit in as much choreography as     been changes in the venue in which it per-       needed a steady hand from someone
the space on the stage will allow and keep       forms. Some years ago, the Brewhouse             such as Brian. “After the final show”
singing and dancing whatever happens’.           was Somerset Opera’s home. Then, like            remembers Guy “I recall giving Brian
  ‘From a musical perspective’ adds Chris        several other amateur societies, it needed       a tape of Captain Beaky and his Band
“I’ve always enjoyed being faced with            to explore other venues. In recent years we      – a strangely important tape from my
the provision of different instruments at        have found a fantastic venue in the thea-        childhood. It was my little way of say-
our various venues. The beautiful Bech-          tre at King’s’, a genuine theatre, with a bar    ing that this had been an important ex-
stein grand with a 3-year film of dust; the      and a great feel. well suited to our summer      perience for me, and I really cherished
clangy Clavinova which wobbled alarm-            show.                                            that opportunity. Through the Young
ingly at the slightest touch; the piano on a        The success of the society depends on         Singers Programme, I’m hoping we
steeply- raked stage which began to move         its chorus, and the group is lucky to have       can bring new members to the group –
inexorably downstage as I started to play.       strength in its members who are prepared         and offer opportunities for those who’d
Also I remember the time when I arrived          to go the extra mile each year, from sing-       like to sing a bit more”.
late, hastily sat down and started to play       ing heartily in the winter concert to coping
an octave above the required pitch to the
alarm and confusion of the cast, and being                             See Somerset Opera
so confident, or blasé, that it took me two          Iolanthe will be on tour to nine venues from 8 March
pages to realise what was wrong.’
 The summer show will be Die Fledermaus.                Please see Calendar of Events for further details
Using a new translation from Dorset-based                      or visit www.somersetopera.org.uk
Graham Billing, the story mixes cham-
pagne with mistaken identities, a drunken                  or email: secretary@somersetopera.org.uk
                                                                                                                                         13
all else. Once you start a conversation
     The Creative Innova-                                                                          it leads to other things.’
                                                                                                     ‘I have taught workshops for years,’
     tion Centre is a new                                                                          says fellow director Andrew Knutt.
                                                                                                   ‘I now realise that some of the most
     creative space within                                                                         worthwhile results come from just
     Taunton.                                                                                      getting together and talking. Many
                                                                                                   people take part in some form of cre-
      
                                                                                                   ative activity but don’t know how to
                                                                                                   turn it into a business venture. We are
                                                                                                   here to help people both to generate
                                                                                                   creative ideas and apply them from a
     CICCIC styles itself a business support
                                                                                                   business perspective.’
     venture, supporting the creative sector and
                                                                                                     It is not necessarily about creating
     wider community through providing fa-
                                                                                                   a financial outcome from a creative
     cilities for exhibitions, lectures and show
                                                                                                   idea, though that may very well re-
     casing creative practice. It is a Community
                                                                                                   sult.  It’s also about experience and
     Interest Company where profits are passed
                                                                                                   inclusivity which can be rewards in
     back into the community.
                                                                                                   themselves.
        It is creative, then within the broadest     Heads in the clouds: Andrew Knutt (left)
                                                                                                     ‘We want people to be able to walk
     sense, not just serving the artistic com-       and Richard Holt.
                                                                                                   through the door and engage, for there
     munity yet visual art, music, literature and    accompanying article). There are plans        to be greater community ownership
     cultural activities are very much at the        to have a Saturday market where makers        of our culture,’ says Richard.
     heart of its vision.                            and retailers of fine creative works can        ‘Very often,’ Andrew adds,’ what is
       It has already established itself as an ex-   be part of an indoor market. The centre       considered culture is too exclusive or
     hibition centre for the visual arts with the    provides art talks, live music nights, a      not accessible. ‘We want people to
     third such exhibition from local artist Pat     writing retreat, life drawing classes,        take part and experiment.’
     Preater beginning on the 12 March (see          business lectures and talks – the list goes     The building is the old memorial
                                                     on.                                           hall next to the United Reformed
                                                       But the centre is not just about experi-    Church. It is a large airy space though
                                                     encing events and attending courses, it       the acoustics have proved a problem.
                                                     is also a facilitator. Putting design into    However, a solution has been found
                                                     business is at the heart of the concept       using suspended panels made from
                                                     of directors Richard Holt and Andrew          sheep’s wool which absorbs the ech-
                                                     Knutt. Richard has 25 years management        oes, provided by The Wooly Shep-
                                                     experience in business design training        herd, itself a recent creative design
                                                     and Andrew is director of a local design      success. Let us hope that many more
                                                     company, chair of the Somerset Design         such successes follow in its wake and
                                                     Enterprise Network and a member of the        that the centre develops into what it
                                                     board of Design South West.                   promises to be:  an engine for local
                                                        Richard explains: ‘We are here to help,    creative business and cultural devel-
                                                     a base to stimulate and exchange knowl-       opment and an asset to the local com-
                                                     edge. We are about conversation above         munity.

                                                                                    Contact Details
                                                                     Creative Innovation Centre CICMemorial Hall
                                                                       Paul Street Taunton Somerset TA1 3PF
                                                                             Tel. 01823 337477
                                                                 Email: info@creativeinnovationcentre.co.uk
         CICCIC reception area and coffe bar

14
15
A Life in Art
 Pat Preater feels
 that her art has
 been her great ally
 throughout her
 life.

 From her earliest years at primary school
 it was the thing she excelled in and it
 helped her not only with her art but later
 on with other subjects such as biology
 and geography. For her art ‘A’ level she
 was allowed to travel two days a week to
 Stroud Art School to study life drawing
 and composition. She found the experi-
 ence liberating. Not only was she study-
 ing something she really enjoyed, but she
 was working in a freer, less disciplined
 environment.
   After ‘A’ level her mum and dad were
 wary about her continuing her art studies,
 concerned that she would not be able to
 get a decent job with an art qualification.
 Her mum was a nurse and favoured her          Tone near Taunton in 1964. In 1967, now         energy I was getting from my art I was
 either becoming a nurse or a secretary.       with two boys, Jonathan and Jason, they         able to teach.’ Whether she was teaching
 Her father, was, however, she says, ‘won      moved to their present home in Taunton.         or at home, art was always, literally on
 over by my enthusiasm.’ He had also           It was nearly derelict and over the years       the timetable. She would put together a
 wanted to study art himself but had never     they have put a considerable effort into        planner dividing her time between her
 had the opportunity. Once he was on-side      renovating it.                                  work and other duties and her painting
 he became very supportive of her ambi-         Pat took a part time teaching job at La-       for, she says, ‘this reinforced my inten-
 tion and she went on to study an interme-     dymead School in Taunton where she              tion to paint.’
 diate course at Stroud for one year before    remained for six years until the birth of         At Somerset College she taught mainly
 going to art college at Cheltenham where      their third child, Edward in 1974. A fourth     watercolours, though a Friday oil painting
 she took a National Diploma in Design.        child, Ruth, followed and it was not until      class that she was told would not work
   She recalls, ‘I loved my time at art col-   1988 that Pat took up teaching again, this      also proved popular. The students joined
 lege going out to sketch in the town be-      time teaching adult education art courses       the classes to enjoy an interest in painting
 fore returning to the studio to create a      at Somerset College.                            and drawing. Later on, a system of cred-
 composition and drawing local Cotswold          She always kept in touch with her own         its was introduced which enabled entry to
 architecture.’ The discipline of observa-     art both while she was teaching and look-       degree courses. When she finished teach-
 tion was fundamental to the course and        ing after her growing family. ‘I felt it just   ing adult education classes in 2003 (after
 included life drawing, clay work, weav-       wasn’t me if I was not painting,’ she told      fifteen years of teaching), most adult ed-
 ing and etching.                              me. It helped that she taught part time.        ucation classes were cut. She elaborated,
   She then gained a teaching diploma in       Pursuing her art was, in fact, critical to      ‘There was a change from the belief that
 Art at The West of England College in         her teaching method. ‘My work gave me           existed that education was all embracing
 Bristol. She met and married Tom, whose       an impetus to teach other people,’ she          and available to everyone whether in full-
 job took them to Wollaston near Stour-        explained and then reinforced the no-           time education or not.’
 bridge, before a move to Bradford-on-         tion by further adding: ‘Because of the           She has an array of sketchbooks dating



16
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                                           11 March Talk on Rembrandt’s Late Self-Por-
                                           traits by Jeremy Harvey, 7.00pm Conference
                                           Centre, Somerset College, TA1 5AX.
                                           12 March - 5 April Paintings by Pat Preater,
                                           CIC, Paul Street, Taunton.
                                           16 March Drawing Workshop led by Julian
                                           Fraser 7.30 pm The Barn, Obridge House.
                                           8 - 20 April Paintings by Ron Cann, Taunton
                                           Library.
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18
back to her time as an art student when         painting that is often commented on. ‘I am
she was 18. Sometimes she revisits them         not aware of that when I am painting,’ she
and intriguingly believes that on occa-         says,’It is just how it appears to me.’ These
sions she learns from her younger self.         observational sketches are very often pen
As an example she shows me one of her           and watercolour which are then worked up
old pen and ink sketchbooks and com-            into oils. The still life are directly observed
pares it to a more recent one. To my eyes       using oils. However, her still life paintings
they both appear very accomplished.             are never one object in isolation but sev-
However, the style is different, with the       eral grouped together. The space between
                                                them and their relationship to each other is
                                                an important part of the composition.
                                                  Unlike many artists, she does not ever
                                                give up on a painting and consign it to the
                                                rubbish bin if she does not like the way it
                                                is going. She will alter and manipulate it                    Grace Cotinus
                                                and find some way of getting the painting         four years they travelled widely. She
                                                to work even if it means ultimately over-         shows me sketchbooks of Sienna and
                                                painting it when she will often find a way        of Manos in the heart of the Amazon,
                                                of using the painting underneath by, for          beautifully realised and accompanied by
                                                example, letting some of the colour come          elegant handwriting describing the trip.
                                                through.                                          And it was typical of Pat that once she
          Sketchbook of Manos
                                                  We return to her sketchbooks, which ap-         went back on board she was able to teach
                                                pear to be miniature works of art on their        a class on the cruise ship her method in
more recent ones portraying a more intri-
                                                                                                  constructing her skillful compositions
cate but less flowing style. The pen she
                                                                                                  – still using the energy from her own
now mostly uses are of the modern ink
                                                                                                  work to teach others.
ball type, very handy to carry around and
good for intricate sketches but they do
not produce such a free flowing effect. It
is this earlier free flowing style that she
                                                                                                   Pat belongs to the Somerset Society
intends to re-explore.
                                                                                                   of Artists and the Chandos Society
  Her style of art, generally, she believes.
                                                                                                   at Bridgwater. She has found them
reflects her training at art school, based as
                                                                                                   valuable as, she explains, ‘joining a
it was above all else on observation. She
                                                                                                   society gave me an opportunity to
has tried painting in an abstract way but
                                                                                                   show my work and to see the paint-
says she finds it difficult to ‘let go’ and
                                                                 Conversation
                                                                                                   ings outside of my own environment.’
paints ‘what she sees.’ However, at the
                                                                                                   She has shown her work in several
same time, there is a complexity and con-
                                                                                                   local and regional exhibitions such
trivance about some of her work which           own account. After she retired she went            as the South West Academy (Exeter),
give her paintings a particular style. She      on a computing course. During part of the          Bath Academy and the Royal West of
will observe a scene with a sketch and          course they were asked to write about their        England (Bristol), The Brewhouse,
then take that scene and populate it with       hopes for the future. ‘I said I would like to      Bridgwater Arts Centre and The Post
figures usually in conversation or at play.     travel with my husband and sketch. Within          Graduate Centre Bristol. See details
The figures are introduced from memory          eighteen months that was exactly what I            of her new exhibition below.
and sometimes appear in more than one           was doing,’ Pat comments. For three to
painting (such as a yellow dog which
has made repeated appearances) and the

                                                         Pat Preater Art Exhibition
background, though it may have started
off as an observational sketch, may be-
come altered too. The faces of the figures
are often distorted to reflect a particular
                                                                 12 March - 4 April 2013
aspect of their character.                           The Creative Innovation Centre, Memorial Hall,
   She does also produce strictly obser-               Paul St, Taunton TA1 3PF Tel. 01823 337477
vational paintings such as her recent one
of the apple tree which has been such a                Email: info@creativeinnovationcentre.co.uk
part of her and her husband’s life in the                 www.creativeinnovationcentre.co.uk
forty-five years they have spent at their
house. It is full of colour, an aspect of her
                                                                                                                                    19
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20
The Rural Living Show
is hosting a new spring
show at Taunton Race-
course in support of St
Margaret’s Hospice.
As part of the show the following
talks will take place over the two days.
Please check timings with the event
organisers (details at the bottom of the
pages):

Philip White of Hestercombe House and
Gardens:
‘Past and Future developments’
Robin Small of Charlton Orchards
‘Care and pruning of your Orchard’
Adrian Stallard of Lentells Accountants
‘Kitchen Table Businesses -working for
yourself not the tax man!’
Nicky Saunter of the Woolly Shepherd
‘Natural Acoustics - Innovating with
wool’
 Nigel Cox of Bridgwater College
‘Spring preparation for a Blooming Sum-
mer’
 Kate Tuke, Head Gardener of Killerton
‘Killerton Gardens’
John Addison of Bridgwater College
‘Plants for Wildlife’
 Ingrid Hesling, Cinematographer
‘Purple Fields Productions – Rural Living
in Malawi’

Other features of the show include:
Over 100 indoor stands, with many
more outside
Plant and garden marquees
Eco-friendly and sustainability
stands
Ideas for both home and garden
Food hall, with cafe and a tasting
area for local produce
Craft demonstrators
Classic Car day on Sunday                   Please
Childrens entertainment
Fun Run with the NSPCC
                                            use the
Contact details:
                                            voucher
Tel. 01823 32 33 63                         opposite to
Or during the show: 07989 10 97 07
E-mail: info@rurallivingshow.co.uk
                                            gain free
Rural Living Show
Prioryfield House 20 Canon Street
                                            admission
Taunton TA1 1SW                             to the show


                                                          21
Heads and Tales: Nigel Price
     Winners of the Parlia-                           For the Ilminster gig they will be joined      son to leave’, didn’t study at college,
                                                    by Vasilis Xenopoulos on tenor sax. De-          but instead joined The Infantry, ‘I
     mentary Jazz Award                             scribed by The Times as ‘One of the most         was a bit too wild when I was young.
     for Best Jazz Ensemble                         fiery young saxophonists around’, the            It was a highly dubious decision and
                                                    Athens-born musician is a graduate from          one that I regret some days.’ He got
     2010, The Nigel Price                          Boston’s prestigious Berklee College of          into music when aged 11, he and
     Organ Trio play in a                           Music, and is highly regarded on the UK          some school mates decided to form
     modern, mainstream                             jazz scene.                                      a band, ‘We all chose an instrument

     style that focuses on
     well-known standards.
     Bandleader and guitar-
     ist Nigel Price talks of
     their return to Ilminster
     Arts Centre, where they
     will be joined by Vasilis
     Xenopoulos on tenor
     sax.


        ‘I played there in January with Alex
     Garnett, Craig Milverton, Al Swainger
     and Nick Millward’, recalls Nigel,
     ‘We had a brilliant night but I’m really
     looking forward to getting my regular
     guys down there and playing some of
     the tried and tested material we have.’
       The ‘regular guys’ who make up The
     Nigel Price Organ Trio are a talented
     bunch. Firstly there is Pete Whittaker,
     described by Nigel as ‘The UK’s Ham-
     mond organ authority and a seasoned
     professional who just seems to instinc-
     tively know when - and when not - to
     pull the trigger and which sounds are
     totally effective for each musical situ-                                              Nigel Price
     ation.’
      Secondly there is Matt Home, a drum-
     mer who, says Nigel, ‘is a force to be         The musicians between them have per-             right there on the spot and I just opted
     reckoned with.’ His knowledge of jazz          formed with everyone from Ronnie Scott’s         for guitar.’
     drums and jazz drummers throughout             House Band to Ray Gelato, Scott Hamil-             Nowadays Nigel is one of the top
     history is invaluable to the trio. ‘It takes   ton, Jim Mullen, John Etheridge and Toni         UK jazz guitar players. He is a regu-
     maturity to play like him - always for         Kofi.                                            lar performer at Ronnie Scott’s where
     the music, never foregoing good taste            Nigel, who grew up in Epsom, Surrey,           he has racked up over 150 perform-
     in order to impress technically’.              and as he puts it, ‘never really found a rea-    ances, and spent three years in lead-




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                                      23
ing jazz funk band, the James Taylor
 Quartet. Other projects include playing
 with the Sheena Davis Group and the trio
 recording an album with Alex Garnett and
 Snowboy. The album Heads and Tales
 was released by Woodville Records and
 voted ‘5th best in the world, 2011’ by
 Mojo Magazine who described it as ‘bril-
 liant’ and ‘exhilarating’.
   The Nigel Price Organ Trio was formed
 around 2002 when Matt Home moved
 down from Yorkshire and turned up at a
 jam session. ‘I was knocked out by his
 playing - the clarity of his ideas and his
 swing feel was better than anything I’d
 ever heard before’, remembers Nigel, who
 called Pete Whittaker only to discover that
 ‘he had done his back in, lifting the damn
 organ!’ It wasn’t until a year or so later
 that the trio began playing together and,
 says Nigel, ‘It was immediately apparent                                             The Band
 that we had something pretty special.’        ‘My style of writing suits a small group          - the organist’, says Nigel when
   The pairing of organ with guitar proved     like this - punchy arrangements and loads         asked who he would like to work
 to be a winning combination for Nigel         of room for improvisation’.                       with in future. ‘I like his vibe and
 as the group won the Parliamentary Jazz          The trio are currently recording their         I reckon we’d get on pretty well
 Award for Best Jazz Ensemble in 2010.         fourth album. ‘We toured the material at          stylistically’.
 ‘Working in this format you have a huge       the back end of last year so we’re just            With a career spanning ten years,
 sound but communication is easy as there      going to waltz in there and crank it out!’        thousands of gigs, and four al-
 are only three members.’ explains Nigel.      jokes Nigel. ‘I’m always writing and              bums, The Nigel Price Organ Trio
                                               practicing so things never stand still.’          is still very much in demand, and
                                                The trio have also been asked to back the        as Nigel puts it, ‘Life’s never dull
                                               great US baritone sax player Gary Smuly-          and there’s never enough time to
                                               an, when he comes over to the UK in Oc-           get everything done. Speaking of
                                               tober, and in the spring Nigel is set to tour     which – I’ve got to go and find
                                               with UK jazz singer Georgia Mancio.               the time to do some decorating!’
                                                 ‘I’d like to bump into Dr Lonnie Smith




                                                    Hear The Nigel Price Organ Trio with Vasilis Xenopoulos
                                                     Performing on Friday 22nd March at Ilminster Arts Centre,
                                                      The Meeting House, East Street, Ilminster. TA19 70AN.
                                                   8pm. Tickets: £15 (£25.50 including pre-show supper at 7pm).
                                                     Box Office: 01460 54973 www.themeetinghouse.org.uk.


            Vasilis Xenopoulis




24
March 2013 Events
     NB, the events at The Brewhouse are listed but may not take place or be moved to other venues
Date                                    Event Details                                      Venue                           Time
4        Talk        Lowry: Visionary Artist - Neroche DFAS                                Seavington Village Hall         2.30
         Talk        From Furnace to Hearth - Som. Ind. Archaeological Soc.                North Town School               7.30
5        Comedy      The Brig Society - Marcus Brigstock                                   Brewhouse                       8.00
         Drama       Anything Can Happen: Heathfield Year 11 Drama Festival                Tacchi-Morris                   7.30
6        Dance       Russian Cossacks                                                      Brewhouse                       7.45
7        Storytelling Grimm  Grimmer - Martin Maudsley  Saikat Ahamed                    Tacchi-Morris                   7.45
         Opera       The Barber of Seville - Opera Up Close                                Brewhouse                       7.45
8        Music       Steve Gibbons Band                                                    Square  Compass                TBC
         Music       Toby Kearney  Harvey Davies                                          Ilminster Arts Centre           8.00
9        Music       T Rextasy: I Love to Boogie (Tribute band)                            Brewhouse                       7.45
         Music       Spring Concert - Phoenix Singers                                      St John Baptist Ch. Wellington 7.30
         Music       Iolanthe - Somerset Opera                                             Winsford Village Hall           7.30
9        Music       Beethoven, Walton  Brahms - Somerset County Orchestra                Queen’s College                 7.30
         Music       Duets for Jango                                                       Cossington Village Hall         7.30
10       Music       Handel with Harpsicords - Kate Semmens, Collin Booth, Steven Devine   St James Church, Taunton        7.30
         Music       Informal Music  Song Session                                         Halsway Manor                   8.00
         Music       4 Girls, 4 Harps - Christmas Concert                                  Dillington House                8.00
11       Talk        Late Rembrandt  Self-Portraiture                                     Som College, Conference Ctre    7.00
         Music       Haddo                                                                 Wiveliscombe Congr. Church      8.00
12       Theatre     Puppet Theatre: Hanging By a Thread - The Ding Foundation             Tacchi-Morris                   7.45
12-15    Music       Folk: Mid-Week Break - Mary Ireson                                    Halsway Manor                   TBC
12-16    Drama       Snakes in the Grass: Alan Ayckbourn - Taunton Thespians               Tacchi-Morris                   7.30
 13      Music       Northumbrian Voices: Katherine Tickell                                Brewhouse                       7.45

         Music       Iolanthe - Somerset Opera                                             Haslebury Plucknett Bible Ctr   7.30
14       Talk        A Pablo Neruda Night - Graham Fawcett Seven Olympians Tour            Brendon Books 7.00
         Drama       Songs of Innocence  Experience - Heathfield Students                 Tacchi-Morris                   7.00
         Music       Guy Johnston - Cello with Navarra Quartet                             Brewhouse                       7.45
14-16    Drama       Dangerous Corner - The Barnstormers                                   Regal Theatre, Minehead         7.30
15       Music       Iolanthe - Somerset Opera                                             Nether StoweyVillage Hall       7.30
15-16    Drama       Wasted: Paines Plough - Birmingham Rep  Roundhouse                   Brewhouse                       7.45
16       Music       Rob Harbron  Miranda Rutter                                          Halsway Manor                   8.00
         Music       Iolanthe - Somerset Opera                                             Victoria Rooms, Milverton       7.30
         Music       J S Bach: St John Passion - Amici                                     St Mary Magdalene               7.30
         Music       The Novello Years - Chris Davies  Friends                            Trull Memorial Hall             7.00
17       Stories     Art of Puppet Making - Somerset Storyfest                             Halsway Manor                   2.00
         Music       Folk Rock: Jamie Smith’s Mabon                                        David Hall, South Petherton     8.00
18       Music       Piano Recital: Duncan McCririck                                       Taunton Methodist Chapel        7.00
18-19    Dance       Footloose: Surge  Thrive Year 11 students                            Tacchi-Morris                   7.30
19       Talk        Clandestine Cake Club Talk - Emma Richards                            Brendon Books
20       Music       Iolanthe - Somerset Opera                                             Regal Theatre, Minehead         7.30
         Drama       Under Scrutiny - Heathfield Year 11 students                          Tacchi-Morris                   7.00
20-22    Dance       Take Art County Youth Dance Platform                                  Tacchi-Morris                   7.30
20-23    Drama       God of Carnage                                                        Warehouse, Ilminster            TBC
 21      Stories     Beat It Speak It Tell It - Dom, Live Torc, Michael Loader             Tacchi-Morris                   7.45
         Music       Complete Madness (Tribute)                                            Brewhouse                       7.45
                                                                                                                                  25
March 2013 Events
         Events in date order. Contact details for most of the venues are given at the end of event listings. Please note, we do not
         take any responsibility for errors or omissions. Please check with venue for timings and programme details.
         NB, the events at The Brewhouse are listed but may not take place or be moved to other venues
 Date                                      Event Details                                              Venue                            Time
 22         Music          Iolanthe - Somerset Opera                                                Edington Village Hall              7.30
            Music          Ivana Gavric                                                             Milverton Concert Society          8.00
            Music          Jazz: Nigel Price Organ Trio                                             Ilminster Arts Centre              8.00
 23         Storytelling   Making Hi-Story: Somerset Storyfest                                      Museum of Somerset                 2.00
            Dance          Spotlight Dance Academy’s Annual Performance Show                        Regal Theatre, Minehead            7.30
            Music          Marty Wilde  The Wildcats                                               Brewhouse                          7.45
            Drama          The Glory of Friendship - Brewhouse Youth Theatre                        Brewhouse                          2.00
            Music          Iolanthe - Somerset Opera                                                North Curry Village Hall           7.30
            Music          Mendelssohn: Elijah                                                      Wellington Choral Society          7.30
            Music          Taunton Concert Band’s Easter Special                                    Tacchi-Morris                      7.30
            Music          Chris Farlowe  Norman Beaker Band                                       David Hall, Sth Petherton          8.00
 24         Dance          Spotlight Dance Academy’s Annual Performance Show                        Regal Theatre, Minehead            2.30
            Talk           A History of Royal Weddings - Tracy Borman                               Dillington House                   2.30
            Music          Iolanthe - Somerset Opera                                                King’s College                     7.30
 25         Dance          Space Company Dancers                                                    Tacchi-Morris                      7.30
 26         Music          Heathfield Community School Easter Concert                               Tacchi-Morris                      7.00
 27         Drama          The Boy at the Edge of the Room - Forest Forge Theatre                   Tacchi-Morris                      7.30
            Talk           Somerset and Bristol - James Osmond (Talk and Slideshow)                 Brendon Books                      7.00
 28         Comedy         One Rogue Reporter - Richard Peppiatt                                    Brewhouse                          7.45
            Storytelling   Open Mic Thursday                                                        Brewhouse                          8.00
 29         Music          Joey and the Jivers                                                      Lawns Soc Club Taunton             7.30


                                                             April 2013 Events

 2          Film           Harry Potter  Pholosopher’s Stone                                       Brewhouse                          10.30
            Film           Harry Potter  The Chamber of Secrets                                    Brewhouse                          2.00
 5          Music          Dave Martin’s Jabbo Five                                                 Ilminster                          8.00
            Drama          Two Nations - the journeys of everyman                                   Hatch Beauchamp V. Hall            8.00
            Music          Logic: Irish/Country Music Club                                          Lawns Social Club, Taunton         8.30
 6          Music          One day Music Festival: young folk musicians, singers  dancers          Halsway Manor                      noon onwards
            Show           Guinness World Records Officially Amazing Science Live                   Brewhsouse                         2.00/7.00
            Music          Live ‘N’ Up April Brewhouse                                              Brewhouse Studio                   8.00
 7          Music          The Rocky Monster Show - Hocus Pocus  Oasis Regal Theatre               Regal Theatre, Minehead            8.00
 8          Drama          Cube - Essential Theatre Company                                         Tacchi-Morris                      9.00
            Talk           The Great Age of the Poster - Neroche DFAS                               Seavington Village Hall            7.00
 9-13       Show           Taunton Scout  Guide Gang Show                                          Brewhouse                          2.15/7.15
 12         Music          Abba2:Bjorn Belief (Tribute)                                             Regal Theatre, Minehead            7.30
 13         Music          Irish Set Dance with Ceili Time, Maggie Daniel  Lucy Taylor             Halsway Manor                      8.00
 14         Talk           Recent Lessons of History: Gen Sir Michael Rose                          Dillington House                   2.30
            Music          Birds of Chicago                                                         David Hall, S Petherton            8.00
 15-20      Show           Sound of Music - Taunton Amateur Operatic Society                        Brewhouse                          2.00/7.30
 16         Film           Mlle Chambon                                                             Regal Theatre, Minehead            7.30



26
April 2013 Events

                 Events in date order. Contact details for most of the venues are given at the end of event listings. Please note, we do not
                 take any responsibility for errors or omissions. Please check with venue for timings and programme details.

     NB, the events at The Brewhouse are listed but may not take place or be moved to other venues

Date                                        Event Details                                             Venue                         Time
2        Film            Harry Potter  Pholosopher’s Stone                                        Brewhouse                       10.30
         Film            Harry Potter  The Chamber of Secrets                                     Brewhouse                       2.00
5        Music           Dave Martin’s Jabbo Five                                                  Ilminster                       8.00
         Drama           Two Nations - the journeys of everyman                                    Hatch Beauchamp V. Hall         8.00
         Music           Logic: Irish/Country Music Club                                           Lawns Social Club, Taunton      8.30
6        Music           One day Music Festival: young folk musicians, singers  dancers           Halsway Manor
         Show            Guinness World Records Officially Amazing Science Live                    Brewhsouse                      2.00/7.00
         Music           Live ‘N’ Up April Brewhouse                                               Brewhouse Studio                8.00
7        Music           The Rocky Monster Show - Hocus Pocus  Oasis Regal Theatre                Regal Theatre, Minehead         8.00
8        Drama           Cube - Essential Theatre Company                                          Tacchi-Morris                   9.00
         Talk            The Great Age of the Poster - Neroche DFAS                                Seavington Village Hall         7.00
9-13     Show            Taunton Scout  Guide Gang Show                                           Brewhouse                       2.15/7.15
12       Music           Abba2:Bjorn Belief (Tribute)                                              Regal Theatre, Minehead         7.30
13       Music           Irish Set Dance with Ceili Time, Maggie Daniel  Lucy Taylor              Halsway Manor                   8.00
         Music           Birds of Chicago                                                          David Hall, S Petherton         8.00
15-20    Show            Sound of Music - Taunton Amateur Operatic Society                         Brewhouse                       2.00/7.30
16       Film            Mlle Chambon                                                              Regal Theatre, Minehead         7.30
18       Talk            Art Talk: Jenni Dutton  Ingrid Hesling                                   The Barn, Obridge House         7.30
19       Comedy          Jimmy Carr                                                                Wellsprings Leisure Ctre        8.00
         Music           Jazz: Allen barnes  Jim Mullen                                           Ilminster Arts Centre           8.00
         Music           Just An Old Warhouse                                                      David Hall, S Petherton         8.00
20       Music           Britten: Serenade, Simple Symphony. Bach Viol. Sonata-Sinfonietta         St James’ Church, Taunton       7.30
21       Talk            The Soldier Queen: Tessa Dunlop                                           Dillington House                2.30
22       Drama           Play in a Day: Heathfield Year 9 Students                                 Tacchi-Morris                   7.00
23       Drama           Three Hots and a Cot: heathfield year 11 Students                         Tacchi-Morris                   7.00
24-25    Music           Talon: The Best of The Eagles (Tribute)                                   Brewhouse                       7.45
25       Drama           Chelsea Hotel - Earthfall                                                 Tacchi-Morris                   7.30
25-27    Drama           The Rake’s Progress - Waterfront Thearte Company                          Regal Theatre, Minehead         7.30
26       Music           The Aronowitz Ensemble                                                    Castle Hotel, Taunton           6.00
         Dance           There is Hope                                                             Brewhouse                       7.45
         Music           Young Musician’s Concert                                                  St Michael’s Ch, Milverton      8.00
         Music           Ianus Consort: 18th Century Trio                                          Ilminster Arts Cemtre           8.00
         Coomedy         Free Fringe Fridays                                                       Brewhouse Studio                8.00
27       Music           The Aronowitz Ensemble                                                    Castle Hotel, Taunton           11.00/6.00
         Music           Carmina Burana - Taunton Choral Society                                   Queen’s College                 7.30
         Comedy          Brew Ha Ha! Comedy Club                                                   Brewhouse Studio                8.00
28       Music           The Aronowitz Ensemble                                                    Castle Hotel, Taunton           11.00
         Talk            Time Traveller’s Guide to Elizabethan England - Ian Mortimer              Dillington                      2.30
29       Music           Issy  David Emeny with Kate Riaz                                         Wiveliscombe Congr Ch           8.00
30       Drama           The Marriage of Heaven  Hell: Heathfield Year 11 Students                Tacchi-Morris                   7.00
         Talk            Made To Last: Clerks Shoes - Mark Palmer                                  Brendon Books                   7.00

                                                                                                                                           27
May 2013 Events
           Events in date order. Contact details for most of the venues are given at the end of event listings. Please note, we do not
           take any responsibility for errors or omissions. Please check with venue for timings and programme details.

       NB, the events at The Brewhouse are listed but may not take place or be moved to other venues
Date                    Event Details                                                                Venue                         Time

 1         Talk          Art Talk: Laurence Dube-Rushby: A Thousand Sheep                         Brewhouse                        6.00
           Drama         Much Ado About Nothing - Black Chair                                     Regal Theatre, Minehead          7.30
           Dance         May Day Celebrations                                                     Halsway Manor                    Dawn til dusk
 1-3       Ballet        Sleeping Beauty - Vienna Festival Ballet                                 Brewhouse                        5.00/7.00/8.00
 2         Poetry        Fire River Poets Readings                                                Brewhouse Studio                 8.00
 3         Music         Alan Hague Quintet                                                       Ilminster Arts Centre            8.00
 4         Music         Acker Bilk  His Paramount Jazz |Band                                    Brewhouse                        7.45
           Music         Live ‘N’ Up                                                              Brewhsouse Studio                8.00
 5         Talk          The Art of Byzantium - Ian Ainsworth-Smith                               Dillington                       2.30
 7         Film          Where Do We Go Now?                                                      Regal Theatre, Minehead          7.30
 8         Comedy        Position Vacant, Apply Within: Julian Clary                              Brewhouse                        8.00
 9         Talk          The Real jane Austen - Paula Byrne                                       Brendon Books                    7.00
 9-10      Drama         Count of Monte Cristo - Dir. Andy Burden                                 Brewhouse                        7.45
 11        Comedy        Jethro                                                                   Brewhouse                        7.30
           Music         Rock  Roll Co                                                           Regal Theatre, Minehead          7.30
           Music         Ahab  support by LAzibyrd                                               David Hall, S Petherton          8.00
           Music         John Kirkpatrick                                                         Halsway Manor                    8.00
 12        Writing       Writing Retreat                                                          Creative Innovation Centre       10.00-4.00
           Music         The Brodowski String Quartet                                             Dillington House                 2.30
 13        Talk          Gardens of Cornwall  Normandy - Neroche DFAS                            Seavington Hall                  7.15
           Music         Vamm                                                                     Wiveliscombe Congr Ch            8.00
 15        Music         Mugenkyo - Taiko Drummers                                                Brewhouse                        4.45
 16        Drawing       Workshop with Julian fraser                                              The Barn                         7.30
           Comedy        My Stepson Stole My Sonic Screwdriver                                    Brewhouse                        7.45
 17        Music         Rock and Roll: Black Cat                                                 Lawns Social Club, Taunton       7.30
           Comedy        Arthur Smith Exposed                                                     Brewhouse                        8.00
           Music         Gabielle Ducomble Quartet                                                Ilminster Arts Centre            8.00
 18        Show          The Post Show Party Show                                                 Brewhouse                        7.45
           Music         Richard Digance                                                          David Hall, S Petherton          8.00
 19        Dance         Week Long Dance Festival Big Event                                       Regal Theatre, Minehead          7.30
 22        Drama         Charley’s Aunt - Creative Cow                                            Regal Theatre, Minehead          7.30
           Music         Fairport Convention                                                      David Hall, S Petherton          8.00
           Drama         10 Minute Plays - Som College Operating Theatre                          Brewhouse                        8.00
 22-23     Show          How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying                         Bridgwater College               2.00/7.45
 24        Dance         Alice in Wonderland - Ballet Theatre UK                                  Regal Theatre, Minehead          7.30
           Music         Nicholas Mulroy (tenor)  John Reid (piano)                              Ilminster Arts Centre            8.00
 25        Music         Urban Voice in Concert                                                   Regal Theatre, Minehead          7.30
           Music         Singer Songwriter Ange Hardy                                             Wiveliscombe Congr Church        8.00
           Comedy        The Boy With the Tape On His Face - More Tape                            Brewhouse                        8.00
           Comedy        Bre Ha Ha                                                                Brewhouse Studio                 8.00
           Music         Martin Simpson                                                           David Hall, S Petherton          8.00
 28        Music         English Romantics in 20th Century - Mark Bebbington  Friends            Dillington House                 8.00

28
Art Exhibitions

  NB, the events at The Brewhouse are listed but may not take place or be moved to other venues
18 February - 10 March Woods For the Trees Gwyn Ardyth  Sue Bishop Lutyens Gallery Hestercombe
19 February - 8 March Art Exhibition Artists 303 Ilminster Arts Centre
2 March - Saturday 13 April Cultivate 3 - The Trans-Local Network Brewhouse Taunton
2 March - Saturday 20 April Telluric Peter Messa The Brewhouse Taunton
12 March - 9 April 6th Annual Open Exhibition 2013 Ilminster Arts Centre
18 March - 23 March Taunton Library Please see advert for further details
8 - 20 April Art Exhibition Ron Cann  Taunton Library  Please see advert for further details
9 April - 22 April Incomplete Certainties Andy Rollo and Claire Mason Ilminster Arts Centre
23 April - 24 May Annual Exhibition 2013 Somerset Society Of Artists The Brewhouse Taunton
Tuesday 23 April - Friday 24 May Annual Exhibition 2013 Somerset Society Of Artists The Brewhouse Taunton

Contact Details
Barn, Obridge House. Contact: Jeremy Harvey. 01823 276421
Barrington Court Barrington  Ilminster, Somerset TA19 0NQ 01460 242614
Brendon Books Bath Place Taunton TA1 4ER 01823 337742 brendonbooks@gmail.com
The Brewhouse Theatre  Arts Centre Coal Orchard Taunton TA1 1JL 01823 274608 info@
thebrewhouse.net
Bridgwater Arts Centre 11-13 Castle Street  Bridgwater, Somerset TA6 3DD 01278 422 700
The Castle Hotel Castle Green Taunton TA1 1NF 01823 272671
Church St Peter  St Paul Moor Lane North Curry Ta3 6JZ 01823 490255
The David Hall, Roundwell St SOuth Petherton. TA13 5AA 01460 240340 info@thedavidhall.org
Dillington House  Ilminster, Somerset TA19 9DT 01460 258648 dillington@somerset.gov.uk
Enmore Inn Enmore Rd  Durleigh, BRIDGWATER, Bridgwater, Somerset TA5 2AW01278 422
052
Halseway Manor Crowcombe  Taunton, Somerset TA4 4BD 01984 618274
Hestercombe Gardens Hestercombe  Taunton TA2 8LG 01823 413 923
Hobbyhorse Ballroom Esplanade  Minehead, Somerset TA24 5QP 01643 702274
Ilminster Arts Centre East Street ILMINSTER TA19 0AN 01460 55783 
Oake Manor Golf Club,Oake Taunton  TA4 1BA 01823 461992
Parish Church St John Wellington 72 High Street Wellington(01823) 662248
Porlock Village Hall Toll Road (New Rd), Porlock TA24 8QD 01643 862717
Queen’s Conference Centre Trull Road Taunton Ta1 4QS 01823 272559 contact@queenscollege.
org.uk
Regal Theatre 10-16 The Avenue  Minehead TA24 5AY 01643 706430 mail@regaltheatre.co.uk
Richard Huish College 2 Kings Close  Taunton, Somerset TA1 3XP 01823 320800
Silver Street Centre Silver Street  Wiveliscombe, Taunton, Somerset TA4 2PA 01984 623107
St Mary Magdalene Church Church Square Taunton TA1 1SA 01823 272441
St Mary’s Church Bridgwater St Mary Street Bridgwater TA6 3EQ 01278 422437 saintmarybridg-
water@gmail.com
St Mary’s Church Stogumber office.qtb@btinternet.com
St John’s Church Park Street Taunton TA1 4DG secretary@stjohnstaunton.org.uk
Tacchi-Morris Arts Centre School Road Taunton TA2 8PD 01823 41 41 41 info@tacchi-morris.
com
Taunton RFC Hyde Park, Hyde Lane, Bathpool, Taunton, Somerset, TA2 8BU 01823 336363
Temple Methodist Church Upper High Street Taunton TA1 3PY (01823) 275765
Warehouse Theatre  Brewery Lane, Ilminster, TA19 9AD Tel 01460 57049




                                                                                                            29
ing the Links project, Creatives Club
 “That little quaint hig-                                                                       brought people together to network,
 gldy – piggldy town                                                                            inspire each other and share a vision.
                                                                                                Group members formed a not-for-profit
 which is more like                                                                             enterprise, Creatives Club CIC, to work
                                                                                                towards the goal of a dedicated artist-
 a foreign quay than                                                                            run space to support the needs of West
                                                                                                Somerset’s creative industries and give
 any place I know.”                                                                             them a visible presence in the heart of
                                                                                                the community.
 The words of Victorian writer A.C. Os-          home is limiting. The only suitable space         Contains Art has obtained funding
 born Hann sum up the quirky eccentric-          is my living room which is no place to let     from the Western Somerset Local Ac-
 ity of a little harbour town that is the real   rip with the paint”.                           tion for Rural Communities (LARC)
 gem in West Somerset’s crown. Watchet,             The first seeds of this exciting new        scheme and Somerset County Council’s
 an ancient port with boats, Hellikers Tea
 Rooms and Yankee Jack, has inspired
 many artists and writers over the years
 and now with its frayed nonchalance is
 gaining kudos as a thriving arts destina-
 tion. The latest development is a kooky
 project called Contains Art. Just as it
 says on the tin, three shipping contain-
 ers will be situated on the East Quay,
 destined for use as artist’s studios, per-
 formance and exhibition space. The con-
 tainers will occupy a prominent position
 overlooking the harbour and marina and
 with glorious views are sure to inspire
 great work.
    One local artist who is delighted to
 have been offered a seaside studio is An-
 gie Wood, who has been looking for the
 right space since achieving a Fine Art          project were sown when local creatives         Creative Industries Development Fund.
 degree in 2010. As well as providing the        began to meet regularly for a glass of cider   Local businesses have also helped, such
 ideal location to sell her paintings, she       and a chat at Watchet’s Esplanade Club.        as Watchet Glass and Glazing, who
 welcomes the company and stimulation            Facilitated by sisters Naomi and Jessica       have donated some of their services,
 of other artists and says, “Working at          Griffith Prendergrast, as part of the Mak-     Kalina Newman



                                                                                                The public launch is planned for
                                                                                                the May Bank Holiday. Creative
                                                                                                postcards are invited for the open-
                                                                                                ing exhibition, ‘Wish You Were
                                                                                                Here’. So why not send your en-
                                                                                                tries to ‘Contains Art, The Harbour,
                                                                                                Watchet TA23 OAJ’

                                                                                                For more information about Con-
                                                                                                tains Art email info@containsart.
                                                                                                co.uk


                        Angie Wood who will be a studio tenant


30
31
Let Them Eat Cake!
 Secret venues. Inspired                           Cake; plus stunning photography and
                                                   sneak-peek snaps from club events. At
 themes. Fabulous cakes.                           last, the secret is out and everyone is
 Across the UK and beyond,                         invited to join the Club.
 thousands of home bakers                          Happily there is a branch of the Clan-
                                                   destine Cake Club in Taunton, one of
 have been meeting covertly                        150 branches, most of them in the UK.
 in hidden locations with the                      To launch the Clandestine Cake Cook
 same simple mission: bake,                        Book in Taunton, Emma Richards,
                                                   organiser of the The Taunton CCC
 eat and gossip about cake.                        will be giving a short talk, showing
                                                   pictures from previous meetings and
 These are the members of the phenom-              answering questions along with fel-
 enally popular Clandestine Cake Club              low members at Brendon Books in
 - and now, for the first time, they share         Taunton on 19 March.
 their baking secrets with you in the               Emma’s fascination for cakes began
 Clandestine Cake Cook Book. The rules             when she used to vist her nans’s as a
 are quite clear: no cupcakes, no muffins,         young girl and help with the baking.
 no brownies, pies or tarts. It’s all about        She heard about the Clandestine Cake
 cake! With each event organised around            Club from The One Show last April.
 a creative theme, the results are some of         She hoped that one would start in
 the most loved and inventive baked de-            Taunton. When it did not she started
 lights you’ll ever eat. From classic tea-         one with her friend Kirsty. She found
 time treats and chocolatey indulgences            an obliging venue in Cafe Culture and
 to global bakes and spectacular cake ex-          the Taunton branch was begun.
 travaganzas, you’ll find inspiring reci-           The Taunton club now has a healthy
 pes such as: Scrumptious Sticky Toffee            27 members though new members are
 Cake; Smoked Chilli Chocolate Cake;               always welcome with or without bak-
 Blood Orange and Rosemary Loaf;                   ing experience.
 Raspberry Cakewell; Rose, Rhubarb                 One of the central ideas is that the
 Cardamom Cake; Chai-soaked Vanilla                baking should take place at a series of
 Sponge; a giant Lemon Fondant Fancy;              venues, so if there is anyone out there
 and the unmissable five-tier Rainbow              who would like to offer a venue please
                                                   get in touch. Emma can be contacted
                                                   at: emrichas@yahoo.co.uk.



                                                               Meet The Taunton Clandestine Cake Club
                                                                  Talk and Questions followed by cake
                                                                  and an opportunity to buy the book!
                                                                        7.00 pm on 19 March
                                                          at Brendon Books, Bath Place, Taunton TA1 4ER
                                                          01823 337742 email@ brendonbooks@gmail.com
                                                       Tickets, £4 redeemable against the purchase of the book

 The cover of the Clandestine Cake Cook Book,
 available from Brendon Books, details opposite.



32
The Real Jane Austen
                                           work - a silhouette, a vellum notebook, a
                                           topaz cross, a laptop writing box, a roy-
                                           alty cheque, a bathing machine, and many
                                           more.The woman who emerges in this bi-
                                           ography is far tougher, more socially and
                                           politically aware, and altogether more
                                           modern than the conventional picture of
                                           ‘dear Aunt Jane’ would allow. Published
                                           to coincide with the bicentenary of Pride
                                           and Prejudice, this lively and scholarly bi-
Who was the real Jane Austen? Over-        ography brings Austen dazzlingly into the
turning the traditional portrait of the    twenty-first century.
author as conventional and genteel,
Paula Byrne’s landmark biography           Paula was born in Birkenhead in 1967,
reveals the real woman behind the          the third daughter in a large working-
books. In this new biography, best-        class Catholic family. She studied at the                       The Sisters
selling author Paula Byrne, explores       University of Liverpool and now lives             ited. It was published worldwide by
the forces that shaped the interior life   in Oxford with her husband, the Shake-            HarperCollins, with the UK edition
of Britain’s most beloved novelist: her    speare scholar Jonathan Bate, and their           reaching the Sunday Times top ten
father’s religious faith, her mother’s     three children (Tom, Ellie and Harry). She        bestseller list in August 2009. Paula is
aristocratic pedigree, her eldest broth-   is a Fellow of Oxford University’s Harris         also the author of the top ten bestseller
er’s adoption, her other brothers’ na-     Manchester College.                               Perdita: The Life of Mary Robinson
val and military experiences, her rela-      Her previous book, Mad World: Evelyn            (HarperCollins UK, Random House
tives in the East and West Indies, her     Waugh and the Secrets of Brideshead,              USA). Paula’s first book, shortlisted
cousin who lived through the trauma        told the story of Evelyn Waugh’s friend-          for the Theatre Book Prize, was Jane
of the French Revolution, the fami-        ship with the extraordinary aristocratic          Austen and the Theatre, published in
ly’s amateur theatricals, the female       family who inspired Brideshead Revis-             2002 and reissued in paperback by
novelists she admired, her residence                                                         Bloomsbury.
in Bath, her love of the seaside, her
travels around England and her long
struggle to become a published author.
Byrne uses a highly innovative tech-
nique whereby each chapter begins
from an object that conjures up a key
moment or theme in Austen’s life and




                                                                               The Family Profile

                                                                Hear Paula Byrne
                                                    Talk and Questions followed by a book signing
                                                            7.00 pm on Thursday 9 May
                                                  at Brendon Books, Bath Place, Taunton TA1 4ER
                                                 01823 337742 email@ brendonbooks@gmail.com
                                               Tickets £4.00 redeemable against purchase of the book
                                                                                                                              33
The Count of Monte Cristo
 Director Andy Burden’s                       and the company performing the willow
                                              pattern story), and believes that the The
 love of storytelling and                     Count of Monte Cristo lends itself to
 the theatre he believes                      this form of theatrical storytelling.
                                               The Count of Monte Cristo also appeals
 has its roots in his fam-                    to Andy because it raises moral and po-
 ily upbringing in Wales                      litical issues which are relevant to our
                                              time, when corruption within govern-
 It was in part because of an unfortu-        ment and local and national institutions
 nate condition which meant he had            and the morality and behaviour of large
 poor eyesight in one eye and found           commercial companies are bing called
 it difficult to read. As a consequence,      into question. The book is set against
 his Grandad spent a good deal of time        the background of profound political
 reading to him. On Sunday evenings           and social upheaval in France while on
 he would read the bible and on Sat-          a personal level, Edmund Dante, the
 urdays Lambs’ Tales from Shakespeare.        central character, not only has to grap-
 His grandmother would also read to           ple with the fact of the injustice to him-
 him directly from her complete works         self when he is falsely imprisoned, but
 of Shakespeare after she had seen a          the consequences of seeking revenge
 production at the local theatre. Though      which affects the innocent as well as the
 school did its best to put him off Shake-    guilty. There is also the question of the
 speare, a visit from a theatrical group to   morality of money and its relation to an
 his school made up of a cast of just two     individual and their perceived worth.
 people, also made a great impression         Dante is left largely unchallenged when
 on him. They were telling the Willow         he assumes the title of the Count of         cigars they made were called Monte Cristo.
 Pattern story and their only prop was a      Monte Cristo, once it is known that he       They told him it was because that was the
 sheet. Yet he was affected by the power      has money.                                   title of their favourite book.
 and simplicity of the storytelling.            The idea for the setting of the play oc-    Andy saw an opportunity for an interesting
    Though Andy has worked for the            curred after a discussion with a friend      and powerful way of telling the story. The
 commercial theatre on big productions,       who had recently come back from Cuba.        story is retold and re-enacted by three of the
 he feels that the most important role is     He had visited a cigar factory where         workers in a cigar factory who quickly as-
 to communicate a story to the audience       the cigar makers were read to each day       similate their characters in such depth that
 and take them with you and that this         while they worked. He asked why the          we are transported to the reality of world of
 can very often be done best with a small                                                  Dumas’ book.
 energetic cast (just as Shakespeare did        Andy has recently worked on a diverse        Old World. For Stepping Out: Diary of
                                                range of projects including perform-         A Madman and The Inhabitants Of The
                                                ances with The Natural Theatre Com-          Moon Are Noses. Andy has also directed
                                                pany in Slava Poulin’s Snow Show            many shows and projects for Theatre West,
                                                Congress of Fools in Moscow, co-writ-        Innerroom, Big State, and The Theatre
                                                ing and directing the highly acclaimed       Royal Bath.
                                                I Shot Den for Edinburgh, working with
                                                Peepolykus at The Lyric Hammersmith
                                                as associate and then tour director,
                                                directing The National Youth Theatre
                                                in Foot/Mouth at the Soho Theatre and
                                                                                                The Count of Monte Cristo
                                                undertaking a six month contract as                    The Brewhouse,
                                                Artistic Director of The Arc Theatre                       Taunton
                                                Wiltshire Previous directing includes:                 Thursday 9 May
                                                for The Tobacco Factory- Pinocchio,
                                                A Christmas Carol, Alice Through The                     Friday 10 May
                                                Looking Glass and Searchlights Over             Box Office: 01823 283244
                                                Bemmy. For Natural Theatre: A Night          Please check to see if appearing
                                                At The Bijou, Scarlatti In Paradise and
                                                In The Eyes Of Cod. For Strangeface              at an alternative venue
                                                The Last Resort. For Prime Theatre:

              Andy Burden


34
Alexandre Dumas
Alexandre Dumas is one of the most         great English Shakespearian actor) and
widely read of french novelists. His       in 1839, the most successful of his plays,
books have been translated into nearly     Mademoiselle de Belle-Isle.
a hundred languages, and his life was          Other affairs also followed (he was
as colourful as his novels.                rumoured to have more than forty in his
  He was born in 1802, the third child     lifetime and at least three other illegiti-
of Thomas Alexandre Dumas, the il-         mate children). He attached himself to
legitimate son of a marquis and a          Ida Ferrer in 1835 and travelled to Na-
slave girl from San Domingo, Marie         ples with her where he fell in love with
Cesette Dumas. His father, who mar-        Catherine Ungher - and Italy. He mar-
ried Marie-Louise Elisabeth Labouret,      ried Ida Ferrer in 1840 only for them to
died in 1806 in impoverishment,            be separated four years later, the year
though he had previously had a distin-     in which he began to serialise his two
guished career in which he had been a      greatest novels, The Three Musketeers
general under Bonaparte in the Italian     and The Count of Monte Cristo. More
and Egyptian campaigns. His, mother,       books followed including a sequel to
therefore, had little money to spend on    The Three Musketeers. He opened his
educating the young Alexandre. How-        own theatre, The Theatre Historique, in               Photograph 1855 by Nadar
ever, he was a voracious reader and        1847 where he showed several adaptions
his father’s distinguished career and      of his novels. 1848 was a momentous           1853, he returned to Paris and started
aristocratic rank helped him acquire       year, ‘the year of revolutions’, where,       a newspaper, Le Mousquetaire and in
a position with Louise Philippe, the       in France, Louise Philippe was de-            the same year, the novel Ange Pitou.
Duke of Orleans, at which time he be-      posed. Dumas unsuccessfully stood for         In 1858 he founded Le Monte Cristo,
gan to mix with writers and artists. His   parliament and though two books fol-          a literary weekly and then spent some
son, also named Alexandre and who          lowed (The Queen’s Necklace and The           time in Russia where his books were
inherited his writing skills (He wrote     Black Tulip), he went bankrupt in 1850.       popular. In 1860 he met Garibaldi and
The Lady of The Camelias), was born        Though Dumas had a good income from           supported the Italian struggle against
in 1822, the result of an affair with      his books he was extravagant and gener-       Italy and found an Italian-French peri-
seamstress, Catherine le Bay.              ous to his acquaintances who he would         odical entitled L’Independente. In the
  Though we know Alexandre Dumas           often entertain in the large house he         last 10 years of his life he continued to
best for his fiction, he first came to     built outside Paris which he christened       travel throughout Europe still produc-
prominence in the theatre and contin-      The Chateau de Monte Cristo. He was           ing dramas, novels, travel writing and
ued to write plays throughout his life.    forced to sell it when he went bankrupt.      journalism. He had a last love affair
In 1829 he had his first success with        The year following his bankruptcy,          with Adah Menken, a famous Ameri-
Henry III et sa couer at the Come-         Louis Napoleon seized power and the           can actress half his age. He died on 5
die Francais. Other successful plays       Second Empire came into being, Dumas          December 1870 in Dieppe.
followed: Christine in 1830, Antony        joined Victor Hugo in exile in Belgium.
in 1831, Kean in 1836 (based on the        In 1852 he published his memoirs and, in

                                   Auguste Maquet
                                   It is only in recent years that the extent of Maquet’s role in aiding Dumas with his nov-
                                   els has been understood. He became Professor at the Lycee Charlemagne when he was
                                   only eighteen. He trained as an historian though later turned to literature. Maquet’s role
                                   appears to have been to outline the plot and the characters and he was thought to have
                                   contributed to eighteen novels and many plays including the Count of Monte Cristo. His
                                   name did not appear on any of the books though apparently he was well paid. It was a
                                   fruitful relationship for many years until a court action by Maquet against Dumas for
                                   non-payment of monies owed. Dumas wrote that the idea for The Count of Monte Cristo
                                   was based on the story of Pierre Picaud, a French shoemaker who was falsely accused
                                   by three jealous friends of being a spy for England while engaged to be married to a rich
                                   woman. He was imprisoned in The Fenestrelle Fort and was the servant to a rich Italian
                                   cleric who left his money to him when he died. When he left prison he took revenge on
                                   his three false friends, stabbing two of them and poisoning the other.
   Lithograph of 1847 by C Faber
                                                                                                                              35
Every Room Tells a Story: Chelsea Hotel
 As the original Hotel                                                                           any story - to a new generation, and to
                                                                                                 know the cultural history’, says Jim, ‘but
 Chelsea undergoes a                                                                             it is not a documentary we are creating.
 controversial face-lift,                                                                        We will locate our own experiences and
                                                                                                 reference our own performer’s biogra-
 dance theatre company                                                                           phies within the production, using some
                                                                                                 factual and some fictional elements.’
 Earthfall get set to reveal                                                                         Jim founded Earthfall with Jessica
 the poetry and tragicom-                                                                        Cohen in 1989 with the aim of forging
                                                                                                 radical choreography with live music
 ic events from the iconic                                                                       and strong visual imagery. Since then
 New York hotel and its                                                                          Earthfall have performed in many ma-
                                                                                                 jor festivals all over the world, and have
 place in contemporary                                                                           won several awards for their live per-
                                                                                                 formance and film work. These include
 culture.                                                                                        the BAFTA Cymru Award for Best Short
                                                                                                 Film for ‘Too Old to Dream’, and The
                                                                                                 Theatre in Wales Award for Best Dance
 Dylan Thomas spent some of his last                                                             with ‘At Swim Two Boys’, which has
 hours there, and Mark Twain was                                                                 now been made into a film, due for re-
 among the first of many authors to stay.    Jim Ennis  Jessica Cohen, the Artistic Directors
                                                                                                 lease soon.
 In song Leonard Cohen wrote of his af-      ‘I went to hear her read from her book
                                                                                                     Following on from Chelsea Hotel,
 fair with Janis Joplin in ‘Chelsea Hotel    - a beautiful account of a love affair be-
                                                                                                 Earthfall’s next project looks set to take
 #2’, and Bob Dylan described ‘Staying       tween Patti and Robert Mapplethorpe’
                                                                                                 them in a different direction and will be
 up for days in the Chelsea Hotel writing    explains Jim, ‘with him coming to terms
                                                                                                 called ‘Stories from a Crowded Room’.
 Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands’ for his      with his sexuality, and Patti coming to
                                                                                                 It will be a shorter, installation piece that
 wife ‘Sara’. Jack Kerouac, Allen Gins-      terms with her own creativity and artistic
 berg, Arthur C. Clarke, Quentin Crisp,      career.’
 and Sid and Nancy are just some of the        Jim, along with fellow Artistic Direc-
 other legends that have passed through      tor Jessica Cohen has visited the original
 the doors of this infamous New York         Hotel Chelsea in New York. ‘The place
 hotel over the past 100 years.              had an air of shambolic elegance’ recalls
   Using a combination of radical dance,     Jim. ‘It was chaotic with artists donat-
 live music and film, the multi award-       ing drawings and paintings in lieu of
 winning Earthfall peel back-layers of       rent. The building has charisma and has
 history to reveal the stories-some true,    always been a place of culture, created
 some false-buried within its walls.         organically from the ground up, but now
   ‘We had done a lot of research into the   it seems like it’s becoming quite corpo-
 New York art scene of the 50s and 60s       rate.’
 for The Factory’, explains Artistic Di-       The Hotel, which first opened in 1884,
 rector Jim Ennis, referring to a previous   is currently undergoing refurbishment,
 Earthfall production inspired by Andy       and as a result many of the historic fea-
 Warhol’s famous creative hub. ‘Out of       tures including artists work have been
 that, stories kept emerging of the events   removed. This has proved controversial,
                                                                                                 Jim describes as “a piece of architecture,
 and people at the Chelsea Hotel. Like       with some residents alleging these moves
                                                                                                 a site-responsive piece of work where
 Warhol’s Factory, the Chelsea Hotel be-     are an attempt by the developers to force
                                                                                                 the performers and the audience will be
 came a place where artists found refuge,    out existing tenants, some of whom have
                                                                                                 immersed.”
 and created an almost pseudo-family to      resided there since the 1960s.
                                                                                                 By Sara Loveridge
 protect themselves.’                          ‘I think it is important to tell stories -
    One of the major influences on the
 choreography and storytelling of Chel-                             See Earthfall perform Chelsea Hotel
 sea Hotel has been Patti Smith’s ac-         Thur 25th April at Tacchi-Morris Arts Centre, School Road, Taunton. TA2 8PD.
 count of the time she spent at the hotel     7.30pm. Tickets: £9, £7 Concessions, £5 Students. Recommended for those aged14+.
 in the 60s, as documented in her book        Box Office: 01823 414141. Website: www.tacchi-morris.com.
 ‘Just Kids’.


36
Let us forget with generosity those who cannot love us
Graham Fawcett is
coming to Brendon
Books in Taunton to
                                               Neruda
talk about the poetry gi-
ant, Pablo Neruda, one
                                                 the
of the seven Olympians                        Olympian
of his lecture tour.
 Graham explains the concept:
 ‘Over the twenty-seven centuries since
the first Olympic Games, athletes have     School in London since 1997, devis-          Graham Fawcett on Neruda:
been winning the hearts of their coun-     ing and teaching new courses on poetry         Such is the power of cinema that the
tries and often the world with feats of    past and present from around the world.      clearest picture many of us have of Pa-
physical and mental giftedness as near     He has written and presented radio pro-      blo Neruda’s life and work is, thanks to
to miraculous as anyone can imagine.       grammes about literature and music on        the 1994 film Il Postino: The Postman,
Go to Olympus and join the Olympic         BBC Radio 3 for many years. His verse        that he was on Capri in 1952 living for
crowds in ancient times, however, and      translation of Dante’s early love poems,     the first time with Mathilde Urrutia,
you would also have seen poets on          La Vita Nuova, was a BBC Radio Dra-          the woman who would share the last 28
hand to write works in praise of the new   ma commission broadcast on Radio 3           years of hisife, and that he understood
champions.                                 as A Voyage of Sighs directed by John        about love.
  Seven Olympians reverses the process     Theocharis.                                     Whether in enforced exile, as on
by staging lectures in praise of Ovid,        Graham studied Classics at Christ’s       Capri and visiting many of the world’s
Geoffrey Chaucer, Lord Byron, Alexan-      Hospital, where his love of poetry be-       capitals, or as a diplomat in Burma,
                                           gan while translating the great English      Ceylon, the Dutch East Indies, Spain
                                           poets into Greek and Latin. He read          during the Civil War (his in memoriam
                                           Archaeology  Anthropology and Eng-          poems for Lorca, a friend, stun eye and
                                           lish at Cambridge, and has worked for        ear), France and Mexico, Neruda trav-
                                           Southern Television, Southern Arts, the      elled effortlessly; as a result, his poetry
                                           British Institute of Florence, the Arvon     carries the authentic charge of his en-
                                           Foundation and Art History Abroad. He        counter with dramas of land and sea
                                           taught translation at Goldsmiths College     and the unfolding of history.
                                           for fifteen years from 1991, and now         The love poetry offers the gloriously
                                           lectures on both poetry and translation at   double intimacy of an open heart to the
                                           universities in the UK, Italy and Spain.     beloved and friendship’s confessional
                                            He has been a mentor for Exiled Writers     to the reader, while his political nerve,
                                           Ink, and is a trustee of Outside In World,   exquisitely incisive and moderate, in-
                                           the children’s world literature charity,     spires fellow feeling beyond borders.
                                           and President of the T S Eliot Society       Nobel Laureate in 1971, Neruda has
                                           (UK) - www.eliotsociety.org.uk. He has       been hailed by Gabriel Garcia Mar-
der Pushkin, Charles Baudelaire, Emily     lived in Italy and French Catalonia and      quez as the greatest poet of the twenti-
Dickinson and Pablo Neruda, seven          now lives in London.                         eth century in any language.
poets who became and have remained
national and international heroes for
their uniqueness of voice, intensity of                Pablo Neruda Night at Brendon Books
wonder at the world, formidable output,                        Thursday 14 March 7.00pm
and sheer prowess on the page.’                       Tickets: £10 from Brendon Books, Bath Place,
  He has been a tutor for The Poetry
                                                             Taunton TA1 4ER 01823 337742
                                                            email: brendonbooks@gmail.com



                                                                                                                              37
Somerset  Bristol
 When James Osmond                               away. Britain is a land that bears the
                                                 scars of thousands of years of human
 returned to the UK and                          habitation. Although this means that it
 to Bristol after a year                         no longer has any significant areas of
                                                 true wilderness, it also means that the
 photographing the dra-                          landscape has had long enough to set-
                                                 tle into its co-existence with the human
 matic landscapes of                             population.
 Australia and New Zea-                             Winding country lanes, patchwork
                                                 fields and ancient church towers, are
 land he was concerned                           just some examples of the time-sof-
 that the West Country                           tened scars inflicted on the land, that
                                                 have now become central to its aes-
 landscape would ap-                             thetic appeal. Human history is writ-
                                                 ten deeply into the landscape of Britain
 pear tame by compari-                           and nowhere is this more noticeable
 son. However, he need                           than in Somerset.’
                                                                                               ing web design, film making, business
                                                   James’s route to photography was an
 not have worried.                               indirect one. As a ‘clueless 17 year old’     planning and digital photography tech-
                                                 he was not sure what he wanted to do          niques. I was in my element and didn’t
                                                 but was clear that he wanted to work          want to stop so once I graduated from
                                                 outside and was not interested in be-         this course, I immediately plunged into
                                                 coming rich.                                  the unpredictable world of freelance na-
 ‘In hindsight, I can see that the problem was     ‘I thought a degree in Zoology might        ture photography.’
 one of novelty. When you have grown up          suit me, so I went to Nottingham Uni-           The result of his endeavours is a new
 and lived all your life in the same country,    versity to do just that. It’s a fascinating   photographic book which covers the
 you are naturally accustomed to your sur-       subject and I loved the fieldwork, but        historic county of Somerset (the mod-
 rounding landscape and inclined to take for     there was one module that stood out for       ern counties of Somerset, North Somer-
 granted the qualities that make it special.     me. That was the module on Biological         set and Bath and North East Somerset)
   Spending a year away in such a different      Photography.                                  which boasts three areas of outstanding
 environment as Australia and New Zea-             In 2001, a year after graduating from       natural beauty, one unesco World Herit-
 land allowed me to return to Britain with       my Zoology degree, I was heading              age Site and a National Park. He also
 fresh eyes and as I set about surveying the     back to Nottingham University to take         covers the city of Bristol which borders
 green spaces surrounding Bristol, I was         my place on the newly launched MSc            the historic county.The author takes us
 aware of a subtle yet profound quality of       course in Biological Imaging. This            on a journey through the seasons of
 the landscape that I had missed while I was     was a very intensive year during which        Somerset and Bristol in a collection of
                                                 I learned all sorts of things includ-         stunning photographs.

                                                                                                     James Osmond will be
                                                                                                       showing slides and
                                                                                                     talking about his book
                                                                                                        at Brendon Books
                                                                                                       Bath Place Taunton
                                                                                                             TA1 4ER
                                                                                                     Wedensday 27 March
                                                                                                             at 7.00pm
                                                                                                          01823 337742
                                                                                                           Tickets £4.00



38
Made to Last
                                                                                         Eventually, shareholders voted to reject
This is the story behind                                                                 the bid. The company was reorganised
                                                                                         with all its lines made outside the coun-
an iconic British brand                                                                  try. This meant the closures of all UK
that is approaching its                                                                  factories and the laying off of hundreds
                                                                                         of Clarks employees. But the result has
double century. Clarks’                                                                  been a transformation in the company’s
reach extends to all cor-                                                                fortunes. In 2010 its profits were over
                                                                                         GBP 100 million and its retro desert
ners of the globe and                                                                    boots and other styles have become the
                                                                                         height of fashion, especially in China
yet it remains a family-                                                                 and America.
owned business firmly                                                                    Mark Palmer has been a journalist all
rooted in its Quaker ori-                                                                his working life as a news editor on the
                                                                                         Daily Telegraph, Executive Editor of
gins.                                                                                    the Daily Express and, latterly, as Trav-
                                                                                         el editor of the Daily Mail. His inter-
                                                                                         est in Clarks emanated in part from the
This is unlike other well known Quaker                                                   fact that he is a direct descendant of the
firms like Cadburys, now part of US gi-                                                  Quaker George Palmer, who began the
ant Kraft.                                                                               biscuit firm that was to become Huntley
  Founded in 1825 by two brothers, Cyrus     ies and recreation halls were built - and   and Palmers in 1841. William Palmer
and James Clark, the company began as a      trade unions banned. As the sun set on      was an executor of founder Cyrus
rug-making operation in the then tiny vil-   the British Empire, Clarks opened up new    Clark’s will and, in fact, the Palmers
lage of Street, Somerset. One day, James     frontiers across the world. Clarks brand    were one of several Somerset families
Clark began making slippers from off-        logo became one of the most famous          which bailed Clarks out in 1863 when
cuts of rugs and found that people wanted    in the world. Every parent in the 1950s     the company came perilously close to
to buy them. Slippers became shoes and       swore by Clarks shoes for their children    bankruptcy. Part of the fascination for
boots - and a business was born.             as well as buying them for themselves.      Mark, in addition to exploring his own
   Over the years it has had its ups and     But increased competition from within       Quaker roots, is how the company has
downs but it has always strived to remain    the UK and overseas saw concerns for        retained its old fashioned ethos of qual-
true to its Quaker values in its commit-     the future heightened during the 1980s. A   ity and service and yet been an inno-
ment to the well-being of its workforce      hostile bid for the company in the early    vator and remained at the forefront of
and the local community. Schools, librar-    1990s saw the board and the family split.   technological change.


                                                                                                Mark Palmer
                                                                                             will be talking about
                                                                                             and signing copies of
                                                                                                 Made to Last
                                                                                              at Brendon Books
                                                                                              Bath Place Taunton
                                                                                                   TA1 4ER
                                                                                                 on April 30th
                                                                                                   at 7.00pm
                                                                                                01823 337742
                                                                                                 Tickets £4.00


                                                                                                                              39
A fitting Remembrance
     Linda Cole, widow of John                  highlighting all the aspects of John’s
     Cole, shares her experience                life, his achievements, his passions, his
     of the funeral tribute                     aspirations and work for his commu-
                                                nity, were delivered by Hilary Marshall
     At 2 p.m. on Friday, 1st February, the     and Chris Davies. Hilary read a telling
     Church of St. Mary Magdalene Taun-         passage from the last chapter of John’s
     ton was full to the brim with close to     novel, “ Resolution”. As his death was
     six hundred colleagues, musicians          the result of a dramatic onset of Motor
     and music lovers, previous patients,       Neurone Disease, these words served as
     friends and family members who had         hope and balm for the soul. The clergy,
     assembled to celebrate the life of John    the Reverend Rod Corke and the Rever-
     Hugh Cole. The introit for the entry       end Terry Stokes gave other insights in-    a smile “John is already making plans
     of the coffin was “If ye love me” by       cluding the seventeen years when John       for auditions from among the heav-
     Thomas Tallis. John’s choir, Amici,        and Terry together looked after Wel-        enly choirs”. There could be no more
     now under the direction of Andrew          lington “body and soul”! At the end of      fitting place for the reception than
     Trewhella, sang with commitment            the day, the man who made music had         the buzz of the Music School and the
     and love. Rarely has been heard            music made for him. The recessional         quiet reflective peace of the Chapel
     such beautiful singing. Three spe-         Hallelujah chorus, John’s choice, was       at Taunton School, where John devel-
     cially selected traditional hymns were     rousingly sung by congregation/audi-        oped his love of music and went on
     enhanced by descants written and           ence and choir, joined by the exciting      from there to study medicine.
     provided by Andrew and the organ-          sound of two trumpeters from Orchestra
     ist, John Young. Stunning eulogies,        West. As one mourner commented with         Linda Cole




     There was a grand re-
     opening at Ilminster
     Arts Centre on Mon-
     day 14 January
                                                         Three of the Exhibiting Artists
      Handmade pennants depicting local
      scenes by South Somerset Embroi-
      derers’ Guild were unveiled.
      In the Gallery, a brand new exhibition
      was launched by Ian Wait of Bran-
      ston (sponsors of the Annual Open)
     Thanks to support from NatWest
     Community Force, the Gooch Char-
     itableTrust, South Somerset District
     Council, and customer donations,                                       Leo Davey is from a          Jane Bradley is the only
     Ilminster Arts Centre has been able       Andrew Sutcliffe,                                         printmaker exhibited.
                                               Retired art teacher. He      family of artists who
     to carry out much-needed refur-                                        have all gone in slightly    Has returned to art after
     bishment works over the Christmas         always maintained his                                     an 18 year gap. Thinks
                                               painting style while         different directions.
     break. This included upgrading the                                     He studied art illustra-     her work is a lot freer
     Café Kitchen, installing new light-       teaching. He finds that                                   and more abstract than it
                                               now in retirement he         tion and now owns his
     ing in the Gallery and painting the                                    own studio and shop          used to be and finds that
     Arts Centre internally. Thanks were       can attempt a looser                                      screenprinting methods
                                               painting style.              in Minehead. He also
     expressed to all volunteers who                                        produces stylised land-      have changed a lot for
     have assisted with this.                                               scapes.                      the better,


40
The First Fire River Poets
                                Poetry Competition

                                                                                           place and the poem is infused with a
The Fire River Poets                                                                       sense of fun coupled with a warm hu-
first poetry competi-                                                                      manity that gradually won me over.
                                                                                             Third Prize goes to Graham Burchell
tion took place dur-                                                                       for From a Table of Winds. The imagery
ing the second half                                                                        in this poem is often quite surreal and
                                                                                           quirky (‘A cloud approaches. It’s the
of 2012 with the re-                                                                       size of a housing estate’). In this, the
sults announced at local to Somerset but perhaps in the fu-                                style is similar to Mark’s. To mention
                                                                                           the ostensible subject – a gust of wind
the beginning of 2013. ture also in the wider context of the South                         blowing stuff about – gives little idea of
Chairman of the Fire West of England.                                                      the worth and originality of this poem.
                                                                                             I didn’t deliberately set out to produce
River Poets, John The Competition report                                                   a final shortlist of ten poems. It just so
Stuart describes the An Judge Anthony Watts follows: from
                       the
                           amended version of the report                                   happened that after I had found reasons
                                                                                           for rejecting as many as possible I was
background to the                                                                          left with ten that refused to be ignored.
                       The hardest part of judging a competi-
competition.           tion is deciding which of your shortlist
                                                                                           Here then, in no particular order, are
                                                                                           the seven remaining poems, to each of
                                             of really good poems is the best. All of      which I have awarded a special com-
Congratulations must go to the mem-          them were selected because of some spe-       mendation.
bers who drew up the rules, organised        cial quality that marked them out from
publicity, took receipt of entries and       the rest. After living with the shortlist     Highly commended (in alphabetical or-
fees for the very smooth and efficient       for several days, during which I changed      der):
job that was done under the supervi-         the order several times, I finally decided    Anne Kealy for the poem Wordless
sion of Chrissy Banks.                       to award first prize to Mark Totterdell’s     Dream, Jonathan Pinnock for the poem
  The winner received £100, £75 and          strikingly descriptive poem Wasp. This        Bloody Italians, Mark Totterdell for the
£50 respectively for first, second and       is the kind of poem where you know the        poems Pet Shop, Pied Wagtails and The
third place. A number of poems were          poet has held the subject in the focus of     Kelt., Peter Wyton for the poems Robots
also commended.                              his imagination until exactly the right       on Robots and The Comma in Water-
 The entries were, as is now common-         words appeared on the page (‘its mini-        stones.
place, judged ‘blind’ in that the adju-      monster face / with forelegs poised like
dicator, Anthony Watts, was unaware          paws’). Through brilliant use of imagery,     I’ve been on both sides of this competi-
of who wrote the poems he received           it shows you the familiar in an unfamiliar    tion malarkey, so I’m aware that the one
in the post.                                 way. After reading this, I will never look    thing you’re dying to know, apart from
  These poems will now be published          at a wasp in quite the same way again.        whether you’ve won, is how many en-
on our website (www.fireriverpoets.             Sister Hildegard by Annie Fisher (sec-     tries there were. If you don’t know that,
org.uk) and the poets are all to be invit-   ond prize) appealed to me for quite differ-   the results don’t mean very much. Yet
ed to a special reading of these poems       ent reasons. This one was a slow burner.      surprisingly few competitions bother to
and others of their choice at a reading      It started off well down the shortlist and    tell you. Not so this one. The final total
on Thursday 2 May 2013 (venue to be          slowly climbed to second place as I came      of valid entries received was 245 poems.
announced).                                  to like it more with each successive read-    If you reached the shortlist - well done.
  Fire River Poets intend that the in-       ing. In contrast to Mark’s bold metaphors,    If you are a prizewinner – very well
come gained through the competition          Annie’s language is straightforward, con-     done. If neither - better luck next time.
will be used to develop and expand           versational and unassuming, but it reads
their poetry-based activities, mainly        beautifully. There’s not a word out of




                                                                                                                             41
FIRST PRIZE                                               So there we were, singing softly:
                                                               “Hark! I hear the foe advancing,
                                                               Hildegard’s great sandals prancing.
     Wasp                                                      Sh-sh-sh......she’s coming!”
     In high-vis tabard, it’s the hazchem symbol
                                                               Dear, shy Hildegard, we meant you no harm.
     for itself; all chevron segments,
                                                               Anyway, we knew
     points and angles, dangling undercarriage.
                                                               Your guardian angel could see in the dark.
     It’s jasper
                                                               And, to be sure, there was never a slip,
     the picnic villain, seeking to steal the sweetness
                                                               Not a curse, not a cry.
     from the glass. Those hazy wings,
                                                               Just the creak of your careful feet,
     sugar-fuelled, keep it buzzing through
                                                               And a reassuring mustiness,
     the stump of summer.
                                                               As you wafted by.
     It seems so other – meshed eyes, the oddity
                                                               Annie Fisher
     of exoskeleton – as if it had scouted out
     from some domed, humming, matt-grey
     mothership,
                                                               THIRD PRIZE
     but when it wipes its mini-monster face
     with forelegs poised like paws, can you not sense         From a Table of Winds
     the subtlest of tugs on those tight-wound strands
     that bind us into kin?                                    A seafront diner dedicated to Geronimo
                                                               has dream-catchers, fluffy tomahawks
     Mark Totterdell                                           and prints of him looking disgruntled.
                                                               Every object is beaded and feathered.

                                                               Being feather phobic I choose to sit outside.
                                                               The air is still.
     SECOND PRIZE                                              There’s the arc of a polystyrene cup
                                                               lifted from table to lips. Silence
     Sister Hildegard
                                                               interrupted by a slurp, a gull’s scream
     Sister Hildegard disturbed the air lightly                and harder breaths as I free a sandwich
     With the musty odour of nunliness,                        from its wrapping. A fly and a wash of breeze
     Slept under shivering blankets,                           feather my face. My napkin shudders.
     In the room abutting the boarders’ dormitory.
                                                               A cloud approaches.
     Each night at ten, after chapel prayers,                  It’s the size of a housing estate.
     Her large feet, in a pair of men’s sandals,               Behind it a cherub flies, cheeks inflated
     Creaked along the corridors and up the spiral stairs,     like the child on the next table.
     Past our whispering, giggling beds
     To her tiny, white-walled cell.                           Light dims. There’s a chill.
                                                               Tables become rinks:
     One night we set booby traps:                             my cup, three-quarters empty, skates, spins,
     Soap on the door knobs,                                   sprays tea into the cherub’s blown breath.
     A sticky-out-drawer,
     Slippers, hairbrush, flannels on the floor...             Paper, plastic spoon and wrappings
                                                               are hovercrafts. My napkin becomes
     O blest, irretrievable, innocent days                     an airborne ghost of the gull I saw yesterday,
     Of Bunty comics and ballet shoes,                         tripping over rocks with its broken wing.
     And interlock knickers with pockets in regulation grey,
     My perfectly pointless first bra: thirty double A...      Graham Burchell


42
‘Great Expectations’ fulfilled
                                                       huish | EVENTS
             The 2012 Brunner Prize
             Creative Writing Competi-
             tion, organised by Richard
NTS
             Huish College of Taunton,
             was judged and awarded
             in Novermber 2012. Sue
             Morkane, English teacher
             at Huish and critical to the
             organisation and devle-
                                                      ‘Great Expectations’ was one of the
                                                                Bleak House
                                                      seven titles based on Charles Dickens’
                                                       The Cricket on the Hearth
                                                      work (and in honour of his bi-cente-
                                                                                                                    2012
                                                                                               ond year in a row for his original and im-
                                                                                               pressively crafted take on ‘Hard Times.’
                                                                                                 The judges (the Richard Huish College
ak House opment of the competi-
                                  2012
             tion, describes the award
et on the Hearth
                                                      nary Great Expectationsstimulus
                                                            this year) that was the
                                                      for the annual Brunner Creative Writ-
                                                                 Hard Times
                                                                                               English Department and creative writing
                                                                                               tutor and writer Julie Boyer) commended
Expectations evening.                                 ing competition. This is the fifteenth   the very high quality of the writing.
 d Times                                              year The Ghost’s Bargain been
                                                            that partner schools have             The Taunton Academy’s Emily Beau-
ost’s Bargain                                         involved and Curiosity Shop
                                                         The Old there was an impressive       champ was a fitting winner of the Brun-
Curiosity Shop                                        standard of workTwo Cities
                                                           A Tale of from seven schools:       ner Competition’s sister award, The Lucas
of Two Cities                                         Bishop Fox’s, The Castle, Courtfields,   Cup for Artistic Writing. She too chose a
                                                      Heathfield, Kingsmead, the Taun-         passage from ‘Great Expectations’ to il-
                                                      ton Academy and, for the first time,     lustrate and created an evocative compo-
                                                      the wider Somerset area: Norton Hill     sition with delicate penmanship.
                                                      School, Midsomer Norton.                 Winners collected their awards at a Pres-
                                                        The Brunner Cup went to Richard        entation evening held on 20th November
                                                      Huish College student Zoe Backhouse,     in the college’s Main Hall. An apprecia-
                                                      whose ‘Great Expectations’ was one       tive audience listened to members of the
                                                      of the best entries yet: a very modern   English department reading extracts of
                                                      piece of work that explored the think-   the winning entries. An extremely pleas-
                                                      ing of a young musician as she played.   ant evening was concluded with wine and
r entries:
 October                                              The partner school’s award went to       refreshments.
                                                        Deadline for entries:
                                                      Sam Dunnett (The Castle) for the sec-
                                                        Friday 26th October

             Zoe Backhouse, the winner of the       though she quickly adds that she
             Brunner Prize is a student in the      does not have issues with control-
             lower sixth of Richard College         ling parents herself.
             studying English literature, classi-      Her main influence lies in the
             cal civilisation, English language,    American writer Lorrie Moore’s
             French and drama and hopes to          short stories. ‘Her collection called
             carry on with English at Univer-       ‘Self Help’ really inspired the voice
             sity.                                  of the short story, she says. ‘It is
               The inspiration for her short sto-   definitely Lorrie Moore’s style
             ry is her background in music. Un-     which formed the ‘how to’, impera-
             til this year, when she had to focus   tive persona of Great Expectations.
             on her academic studies, she had       She is a fantastic writer.’
             been part of a choir and played
             music in a band. She has, she says,    The complete short story is repro-
             ‘grown up knowing children with        duced on the following pages.
             pushy parents who themselves did
             not make it in the music industry,                                                 Left, Emily Beauchamp, winner of the Lucas
                                                                                                Cup and right, Zoe Backhouse, winner of The
                                                                                                Brunner Cup




                                                                                                                                         43
Short Story
                                              keys down and slaps her ankle against the
 Great Expectations                           skirting board. Sit directly above her in
                                                                                              Laugh as thick globules roll over his taut
                                                                                              skin, reaching out, grasping his ears, his
                                              your room. Listen. Floss your bow with          hair. Hoot as spit penetrates his mouth
 By Zoë Backhouse                             rosin. The G is flat. Tune it. Hum the Bee      and floods his windpipe. Shriek when
                                              Gees whilst flicking to the third movement.     he chokes, when he splutters, when he
 Fancy you can smell your eyeballs burn-      Hear her footsteps outside your room.           gasps. Howl when, like a nostalgic
 ing because you’ve looked at the sun too       ‘Claire.’                                     fountain, saliva punches through his
 long. Flick your lids openshut. Watch           Take in her damp hair, her dishevelled       pale, pressed suit, and explodes with
 the sun’s shape morph into squares and       clothes. Notice a rip in her trousers. Feel     slow, satisfied pops.
 rectangles, and ooze into the edges of       slightly grossed out by the eye of flesh.         ‘What are you looking at Claire?’
 your vision. Feel a flat pain stirring in    It is pale and rippled. Resolve to remain         Mutter a response.
 the side of your head. Light floods your     thin.                                              Fade back into mindless memories.
 view. Scrunch up your face in revul-           ‘How was your day, Mother?’                   Tap the lino with your patent leather
 sion.                                          ‘I was knocked off my bike, Claire.’          shoe. Notice a spattering of mud on
   ‘Steve. Claire’s doing it again.’ Feel       Feel surprised at her bluntness. Nod, un-     the left shoe (ironically it mirrors the
 your father’s shadow on you. He is cran-     derstanding. Worry she needs help, or a         recent outbreak of spots on your nose).
 ing his neck over the pushchair. Know        hug. Look around; find inspiration from         Wonder why the previous interview is
 his pupils are sombre and wide.’             your conservative whitewashed room.             taking so long. See a man hurry past,
   ‘Claire. Stop it.’ He says slowly and        Ask: ‘Are you okay?’                          lugging a tuba. Notice a loose stitch in
 carefully, like a hammer testing a nail.        Watch her straighten. Notice her nod.        his jumper.
 *                                            You’ve done the job. Relax.                       Reflect on the day she died.
 Study Mrs Walters carefully. Trace her         Tottering downstairs, she will sort herself      Wonder whether the bike crash jolted
 face’s contours onto your thigh and fill     out and research diabetes’ influence on         her fattening tumour. Wonder whether
 them with paint. Feel wheezy at the          the younger generation. After this, know        she knew all along. Hate her for not tell-
 sweep of her hand up her cello’s neck.       she will file everything away in her ring       ing you. Hate your father for his hard
 Drum your fingers. Itch to play.             binder and use paper polos for reinforce-       and square tears. Think of his marble
  ‘Someone, somewhere, is always play-        ments. You will share her satisfaction in       skin. Think of the surface of your cello.
 ing Elgar.’                                  this but she will not see you, at the door-      Feel a roll of nerves again. Inhale. Kick
 Slump at your father’s voice. Hate Mrs       way, as she moves away from her desk and        your legs against the chair. Try to forget
 Walter’s sheepish smile and plan multi-      makes towards the kitchen. She will then        them wheeling her in to the ambulance,
 ple ways of destroying her. Decide to        cook pasta, or quinoa. You will eat duti-       her head lolling stupidly to the side, you:
 cut up her cello strings and then twist      fully. She will clear, murmur goodnight,        void of words or thoughts, your hands
 them round her neck until her eyeballs       and bumble upstairs at 8:30. Your father        trembling, fumbling for an already gla-
 fall out.                                    will roll his eyes.                             cial hand. Clench your jaw. Taste your
    Steve. She doesn’t like her, Steve.         She is pathetic.                              tongue in your mouth. Rush through the
 She’s not leading a normal life.               Think this as you watch her, slumped          piece in your head. Stumble at dimin-
  Julie is the best around. She’ll take her   against your doorframe. Think it all in the     ished sevenths in the second movement.
 places we could never dream of.              gasp of time it takes her to straighten up.     Tense your neck. Jump: she is ready for
    Try the dotted rhythm Mrs Walters         Work your brain in flashes. Turn back to        you now.
 is suggesting. Think of mother’s new         the music and click your neck to the right
 polka dot bag and its dead cow smell.        like the men do in movies before they           *
 Close your eyes a bit while you’re play-     fight. Imagine the sound of bones. Taste        Feel the beams of their eyes in the dark-
 ing. Lean into your cello’s body. Forget     your new candy lip balm that you stole          ness. Watch the dust particles, dancing
 Mrs Walters’ smudged lipstick, your fa-      from that disabled girl. Lift the bow. In-      to the whirrs of the cameras. Reckon
 ther’s hand on her chair. Lean on the C      hale; ready.                                    you can hear their swooping sniggers
 sharp and dance with the scale. Imagine      *                                               amongst the shushed and hushed crack-
 popping each of the notes like perfect        As you sit, waiting to be called for the au-   ling of a million salted crisps.
 bubbles, blue and silver on your pointed     dition, remember this. Remember it now            Swing your bow round to the spines
 tongue. Wonder if you can go to Bella        as you eye your father eyeing you.              of four strings. Bounce each one. Test
 Hoffman’s for tea.                              Picture yourself projecting a line of sa-    their metal tautness. Position your skirt
 *                                            liva at his blank face. Watch it slip down      around you. Shift its waves of silk, their
 Your mother slams the door as she comes      the bridge of his nose, seep into his tear      vastness trapping you with a grand ges-
 home from the office. She throws her         ducts, dribble down to his flat mouth.          ture of condescension. Blush. Wonder




44
Massive spring sale
20% off new books from stock until the end of March*
    Named as one of the top 50 of all bookshops in the UK
      by the Independent Newspaper in February 2012

                            BOOKS: New  Old
                   Ordnance Survey Map Stockists
                             01823 337742
                       brendonbooks@gmail.com
                     www.brendonbooksonline.co.uk
                *Excludes local books and books by local authors
                                                                   45
if anyone realises you’re wearing the bra         burning horsehair. Lick the cracks off         ment. It nods. Its eyes are wide. Its
 your father binned when he saw you’d              your lips and taste an echo of candy-          innocence stifles you.
 bought it instead of the mute.                    pink lipstick. Grip the cello’s neck, so         Sway under the imbalance of your
   Cock your head to each sound. Smile.            familiar in your sweaty clench.                slumped shoulders; great expectations
 Smirk. Know you’re good. Know you’re                Picture its launch, an arc of wood and       waltz with smoke and begin to strangle
 better than most, better than those other         light and dust. Imagine the stream of air      you. Through the light and dust and
 competitors sitting backstage, surrounded         fizzing through the strings. They will         smoke it pleads.
 by fraught, frail mothers and fathers and         sing for one last time. Your tears will         I am not him.
 teachers. They live vicariously. Know this        be whipped into the whirlwind and will          I was never him.
 is worth more than another’s pretty face,         splash the fire. It too will fizz and splut-     The fire, disappointed now, licks the
 more than a witty mind. Know you’re               ter with this new body of food. Smug           air with quietening flames. Hug the
 good enough to win.                               boas of smoke will announce victory            cello’s slender shoulders. Like the
   Know your father will be proud, his hours       and it will all be over.                       eternal lover, curl round its hips. Rock
 of calculations, of silent decisions, of blank,     It will all be over.                         with its weight. Slow.
 blanketing pressure finally paying off.              Finger the strings, lost in rebellion’s      Someone, somewhere, plays Elgar.
   Think you have a void inside your struc-        image. It nudges your thigh. Glance             But today, darling, it will not be you.
 ture, gnawed at by missing birthdays, ab-         down at the bowed head of your instru-
 sent embraces. Drip in your stale pre-re-
 hearsed passion. Feel melodramatic. Nod
 at Mark. Watch his arms rise, sense the
 orchestra stand to attention.
   Begin.
 *

 Drop the bottle on the garden patio. Watch
 the sun set. Snort. Return to the heap.
   Stand, framed by the orange glow. Fix
 hands on hips, chubby now from years of
 stagnant rehearsals and late night post-con-
 cert snacks. Trace a cello on the inside of
 your curled hand. Find yourself scratching
 the sharp lines of your father’s profile.
   Cackle. Swig. Feel the alcohol’s burn in
 your throat and lungs.
   Think: it’s good I’m not a singer.
  Yell: IT’S GOOD I’M NOT A CELLIST.
   Shriek at the only gift he ever gave you:
 the black, plain funeral dress. Shout every
 cubicle-door word you know (you’d learn
 them as hot, hurried urine streamed obedi-
 ently into the bowl before each perform-
 ance).
   Scream your mother’s name- tell her you
 hate her. Tell her you’re glad she’s dead.
 Tell her she killed your father and he killed
 you. Wail that your hair’s greasy, that
 you’ve bitten off your nails, that the whole
 world weighs a million lost piggy-back
 rides you never had, that you’re gay, that
 you’re straight, that you’re a man, that you
 hate all men, that you’re scared of the dark.
 Screech. Howl. Hoot.
   Breathe the fire’s smell of radiators and




46
My Favourite...
We asked Ann Brayley to tell us about her favourite literature, art
music and drama. Anne runs the book club at Brendon Books. She
has had s short story read on radio 4 and is working on a collection
of stories. Anne works as Marketing Manager at Chilton Cantello
School
Having run several book clubs over the       truly audacious and laughably pompous
years, you’d think it would be easy to       lives of the last of the aristocracy and their
pick my favourite authors and books.         circle.
Not so. It is with great difficulty that I     Proust seemed to me to view everything
pick just two authors knowing full well      through a lens of reminiscence and im-
that I leave behind bus loads of won-        pending loss. Being a hopelessly senti-
derful authors waiting for clearance to      mental person, I found myself reading all
jolt forward a foot or two. That will be     three of volumes of his work: Remem-
for another occasion. In the meantime,       brance of Things Past, as though I was
the two authors I have chosen as my fa-      feeding on every word and characterisa-
vourites are Marguerite Duras and Mar-       tion while using a big fat spoon to capture               Lucien Freud Photo: Procsilas
cel Proust.                                  all the delicious juices .                       has pushed the boundaries in our life-
 Duras because she wrote like a painter       I have been to performances ranging from        time and created a stepping stone into
paints. She applied strokes of words         opera to contemporary dance to something         the future like da Vinci, van Gogh and
                                             wildly avant garde involving drums and           Picasso did. I think that artist is Lucien
                                             singing in a disused warehouse in Vancou-        Freud. How is that after centuries of
                                             ver I seem to remember a long time ago,          painting by generations of artists, Freud
                                             but the one that stands tallest amongst this     could come along and find yet another
                                             small crowd of contenders is Waiting for         way to apply paint to the canvas? How
                                             Godot. I refer to the specific performance       did he do that? I hold him up as my fa-
                                             with Ian McKellan, Patrick Stewart and           vourite artist because his work is acces-
                                             Simon Callow at the Bath Theatre Royal           sible, yet shocking and ground breaking
                                             a few years ago. Thanks to two friends           at the same time.
                                             who bought tickets for me to join them as           Finally, my favourite music is tradi-
                                             part of my ‘not insignificant birthday’ I        tional Croatian music. I hear in it a
             Marguerite Duras
                                             saw this play, I think a third time, but with    combination of gypsy, Klezmer, Hun-
to the page and the end result is like a                                                      garian and even a bit of sub-continental
painting that you want to look at again                                                       Indian. I grew up with this music being
and again. She used fleeting imagery                                                          played on stacked 45’s during parties at
and sharp observation interchangeably                                                         home and it immediately brings to me
like that of a rare artist who can use                                                        the sound of laughter and of tears from
both water colour and oil to full effect.                                                     missing the home country by my par-
Duras let romanticism, bad love, pain,                                                        ents and their fellow immigrant friends.
sentimentalism, ambiguity, even stu-                                                          It is bitter sweet music for me.
por and spareness of thought all flow
through her writing. She got it all down
                                                 2010 production, The Doon School, India
on the page and I love that. The first                    Photo: Merlay Samuel
book I read was The Lover and I highly
recommend the same starting point for        these actors it was lifted to pure artistry.
anyone else.                                 Simon Callow made the role of Pozzo
  My second most favourite and entirely      entirely his own which was an added and
different author, Proust, socialised with    unexpected surprise. The whole thing was
the upper classes in the fading twilight     superb.
of the 19th century. He wrote about the        I think there is really only one artist that               Croatian Gypsy Music.



                                                                                                                                       47
48

Spring13webversion

  • 1.
    Pat Preater Calendar of Events Nigel Price Brewhouse Andy Burden Clandestine Cake Club Creative Innovation The Real Jane Austen Centre Somerset & Bristol Chelsea Hotel Clarks Shoes Somerset Opera Short Story Ilminster Arts Centre Poetry Corner My Favourite Spring 2013 Free Shining a light on literature, art, music and performance in Taunton & Somerset
  • 2.
    Hot on theheels of our Mr Miles Tea Rooms we are delighted to announce or new Café/Restaurant at Riverside Place, St. James St., Taunton. ‘Miles at the Riverside’ Home-cooked meals of the highest quality, accompanied by delicious freshly prepared salads. We are open 7 days a week for breakfast offering a morning start for everyone. We offer a selection of filled wraps and paninis for a lighter bite all day, and of course a wide selection of cakes and tiffin. We use local suppliers and produce and serve the finest tea, coffee and hot chocolate from our partners, DJ Miles Ltd of Porlock. FUNCTIONS and EVENTS and PARTIES If you are looking for a venue to hold an event or celebration we can help. We cater for groups from 6 to 60 and can provide a wide array of menus to suit all events. Look out for pre theatre dinner opportunities for events at the Brewhouse. COFFEE and TEA In partnership with DJ Miles we stock a variety of freshly roasted coffee and skilfully blended teas for you to purchase.
  • 3.
    Contents 05 Throwing theBaby Out With the Bathwater 06 Robert Miles Blog 09 No Financial Spreadsheet for Inspiration 10 Somerset Opera 14 The Creative Innovation Centre 16 Pat Preater: A Life in Art 21 The Rural Living Show 22 Heads Tales: Nigel Price 30 Contains Art: Watchet’s New Art Initiative 32 Let Them Eat Cake 33 The Real Jane Austen 34 The Count of Monte Cristo 36 Chelsea Hotel 38 Somerset Bristol 39 Made to Last: Clarks Shoes 40 A Fitting Remembrance: John Cole’s Funeral 40 Re-opening of Ilminster Arts Centre 41 Fire River Poets First Poetry Competition 43 Great Expectations Fulfilled: The Brunner Prize 44 Great Expectations: Short Story 47 My Favourite: Anne Brayley Editorial Advertising Lionel Ward Copy Editor: Jo Ward The views expressed in LAMP Events Compiler: Julie Munckton are not necessarily those of the All enquiries: editorial team. Copyright, unless lampmagazine1@gmail.com otherwise stated, is that of the 01823 337742 magazine or the individual au- thors. We do not accept liability c/o Brendon Books, for the content or accuracy of the Bath Place, Taunton magazine including that of the TA1 4ER advertisers.
  • 4.
    Feeling unwell? Aches or pains? Relationship problems? Feeling stressed or anxious? We can help. We offer a wide range of natural therapies and treatments to get you back on track. If you’re not sure which treatment would be best for you, call us and we’ll give you a free health chat. Spring into action with our special offers Contact us: £15 off your first £10 off your Free Massage Free Back Free 30 minute Marlborough House treatment with our first treatment with 30 min taster for Check for first health chat and free 1 Middle Street new Oesteopath our Osteopath your first time clients with relaxation CD for Taunton TA1 1SH and accupuncturist Kate Smith or our Lomi-Lomi and our registered new hypnotherapy 01823 272227 John Parry Chiropractor deep tissue massage Osteopaths and NLP clients contact@mh-tc.com Steve Rule Chiropracters www.mh-tc.com Osteopathy Homeopathy Thai Massage Psychotherapy Reiki McTimoney Chiropractic Allergy Testing Treatment Hot Stone Massage Counselling Pilates (1-to-1) Craniosacral Therapy Acupuncture Shiatsu Massage EFT Orthotics Cranial Osteopathy Sports Injury Massage Alexander Technique Neuro-Linguistic Programming Baby Massage Classes Hypnotherapy Aromatherapy Meditation Thought Field Therapy Children’s Clinic Coaching/NLP Lomi-Lomi Massage Reflexology Psych-K Parenting Skills
  • 5.
    Throwing out thebaby with the bathwater? As we go to I think his answers to some of the criticisms arts nationally (albeit much less than there print the Brew- deserve to be more widely known. used to be) but we are not not claiming house Theatre I am much afraid that he an his adminis- our fair share of it. and Arts Centre tration is being used as a scapegoat for the Why is that so little cultural funding is is in administra- core issue of underfunding. It is also disap- available to the people of Somerset per tion and its fu- pointing that there appears no attempt, that head in comparison with Bristol or Lon- ture is unclear. I am aware of (though I hope I am proved don? Do we not deserve properly funded There has been wrong), in keeping the current programme theatres as much as anybody else? One an outpouring in place. A glance at the calendar of events can only conclude that if we are not get- of support for in this issue shows what an important part ting the funding we are not fighting for it the theatre in a Save The Brewhouse Cam- the Brewhouse programme was to play in and making representations for it, which I paign which is touching and reveals how our cultural lives over the coming three am afraid points to lack of commitment at much it is valued by the community. months and I have made the decision to a local level. The timing of the closure is particu- keep the events in place in the listings in the A properly funded theatre and arts cen- larly sad as in the last few monthes there hope that some will still take place, even if tre not only brings cultural benefits but seemed to be real buzz about the theatre. at another venue. makes good business sense. Taunton is A new initiative brought cinema back to The talk is of rebirth through volunteers, a geographically situated in a perfect posi- town with a judicious mix of recent re- phoenix arising from the ashes. Volunteers tion to attract audiences from Somerset, leases, old time favourites and films not are an invaluable resource. I know from my East Devon and beyond. Visitors to the usually found in the commercial cinema. own experience. They were the backbone of Brewhouse not only bring income to the There was a marvellous Wind in the Wil- The Taunton Literary Festival and they have lows production, cleverly making use of a vital role to play both in terms of admin- locally produced willows both on the stage istration and putting on amateur shows, of- set and in the foyer. A practical plan was ten to a very high standard. Theatre groups in place to secure an extension to provide like the Taunton Thespians do a great job in the larger auditorium which would bring introducing theatre into the community and bigger shows to The Brewhouse in order are an extremely important part of the local to make the theatre more profitable and al- cultural landscape. lowing the provision of a greater variety However, we also need professional thea- and quaility of shows. tre from national and regional companies, However, one cannot have been unaware the sort of theatre we can aspire to, and a of the tightrope that was being walked in core of professionals both to commission the last few years as funding was squeezed shows and run a professional theatre. Please theatre but the wider community. When with appeals for donations to the audi- read the article by Ally Kennen in the fol- the nettle is grasped and a cultural invest- ence after each production. The theatre lowing pages if you have any doubt about ment is made such as in the case of the like almost every other business has been the importance of a professionally run local Somerset Museum it can bring rewards affected by a prolonged recession which theatre to an individuals life. and be a great success. has meant smaller audiences and less rev- I hope it is understood that we are losing Let us bring the theatre back to life by enue, as people think twice about buying a some very real expertise from the Brew- all means but when that happens we must ticket for a show. We have seen household house and that it is not easily replaced. not handicap it in a straight jacket of un- names disappearing from our high streets In order to run such a theatre we require derfunding, We must give it sufficient lo- in the new year as cash flow problems a proper planned funding regime. Pro- cal funding and seek to match it a national very quickly made themselves evident and grammes have to be put together months in level through such institutions as the Arts the Brewhouse clearly was no different in advance, commissions taken, assumptions Council through proper representation this respect. have to be made and an estimate of the po- and leadership. It should be perceived as While the demonstration of support for tential audience and, therefore, revenue. It an investment not a liability, a spearhead the theatre is heartening and there are an is a risky business at the best of times but for Taunton to climb up the cultural lad- impressive number of volunteers coming especially when there is uncertainty about der and make it a destination point for the forward to support the Brewhouse, my how much, when and where the funding is arts for the surrounding area and beyond, worry is that in many quarters the respon- coming from. with all the attendant cultural and finan- sibility for the current situation is being Of course, it is easy to say that in the present cial benefits that brings. deflected in the direction of the adminis- climate any funding for arts centres should tration under Robert Miles. I am reporting take second place to hospitals and schools. Lionel Ward his last blog here in the following pages as However, there is funding available for the
  • 6.
    Robert Miles Blog We therefore employed around 35 part time workers, mostly on zero hours February 26 2.50pm contracts, and 19 full time staff, some (Following a meeting at of whom ran the restaurant and two of whom were the most fantastic appren- Deane House the previ- tices. ous evening) 5. If Taunton Deane believe that a volunteer led venue, mainly presenting While the debate about The Brewhouse community work, is compatible with continues I wish to make clear that I, along their economic strategy ‘Grow and with the other staff, are no longer em- security, especially when they are just Green’ which they published two years ployed, so I have no reason to enter the fray back filling other cuts. The decision to ago, then I must only have the first draft other than on a whim to correct any errors not include The Brewhouse as part of of the report. I would either love to see of fact if it helps the debate. I am currently ACE National Portfolio Organisations in the final one or hear an explanation as on a whim. 2010 was clearly a direct result of Som- to why it is now not worth the paper And in addition, as a parent, I wish to erset County Council’s decision to very it’s written on. There are some fantas- ensure that the county my children grow publicly cut its arts funding by 100% a tic community groups in Taunton, but up in has its fair share of cultural activity few months earlier. This decision was if TDBC think that the majority of our to enrich their lives and make them fully the beginning of the end. old database would want mainly com- rounded little creative heroes. Lets face it 3. There have been mumblings from munity shows, I think they would be the more creative they are, the more chance some creditors of The Brewhouse about mistaken. I have nothing against the they will have in this world whatever they us trading insolvently. In fact the sud- model, if it is progressive rather than choose to do. den closure of the venue was necessary the regressive one being proposed So lets do some facts: - to ensure that the organisation did not right now. Let’s not turn back the clock 1. If Taunton Deane Borough Council had break the law, and did the right thing to 1977; lets have some ambition to in- invested in The Brewhouse at the same by its creditors, including other theatre vent something new. A model breaking level as South Somerset District Council companies, artists and ticket holders. down barriers between ‘professional’ invested in the Octagon (20 miles away) Creditors’ being angry is completely and ‘amateur’ would be really interest- over the past five years we would still be understandable in the current emotive ing if it was well designed and deliv- open. And we would have achieved a sur- environment. We do realise how painful ered, but it is unlikely to come out of plus of £169K in that time. That doesn’t this is for everyone and are genuinely this mess. count any match funding that could have very sorry it had to end this way. How- As I say, I am no longer employed by also been secured by that proper level of ever the arts industry turning on itself The Brewhouse (or in fact by anyone) investment. TDBC underinvested. They while the austerity program decimates and none of what I think really mat- are not alone in that position as Somerset the cultural landscape is counterproduc- ters. Apparently I have now become a County Council and Arts Council England tive, short sighted and dangerous. skiver instead of a striver. I hope the also underinvested, but TDBC should have 4. There is talk of us employing over 50 game of political football is over, we led the process to rectify that position. workers, which sounds a lot to run a me- had no legal choice but to take our ball 2. Arts Council England withdrew regular dium sized theatre. This number was first and go home, but there are a lot who funding in 2005. It is regular funding that used by some artists who put up posters have lost out, creditors, staff, other allows an organisation to plan and to make outside the venue after The Brewhouse companies whose forthcoming tours decisions sustainably. The irony about this closed. To clarify, we were far more than may be threatened etc. and myself and is the Sustain fund paid The Brewhouse just a theatre, and employed other staff the rest of the team are genuinely upset nearly half a million pounds in 2009 to for other work in the visual arts, cater- by that. I hope a new game can start ‘maintain the quality of artistic output and ing etc. Indeed we ran a restaurant, two soon, with proper rules, a level playing resolve cash flow problems caused by loss galleries, a studio theatre and hosted arts field and sustainable investment from of box office, trading and sponsorship’. practitioners who worked peripatetically all stakeholders in Somerset’s unique But one off grants do not give long-term across Somerset delivering arts projects. cultural and creative infrastructure.
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  • 9.
    ‘There is nofinancial spreadsheet for inspiration’ The Brewhouse Theatre you watch, you could take part. Then some- how I got to join in a young play writer’s in Taunton opened in 1977 workshop. The organisers had come down when I was nearly two from ‘Actual London.’ There was a woman who wore all black! Then my secondary years old. It was the only school took us to see a professional touring theatre for miles around. company perform Romeo and Juliet. It was The ins and outs of the unexpectedly funny and terrifying and ex- ploded for good those endless excruciating funding struggle can be readings in lessons. read elsewhere, but what And then, when I developed an interest in music, I got to perform on the stage, in the did the place mean to one mighty Battle of the Bands. Singing on a small person, growing up professional stage was a big experience for ‘Ratty’ in The Brewhouse’s in-house a person who was used to warbling at school production of ‘The Wind in The Wil- on a farm, sixteen miles events. (I did end up singing for a living for lows’ and said ‘I want to be him!’ (an away, in the middle of no- a while -for better or worse). I also got to excellent progression from the Power perform a play I wrote and acted in for my Ranger role model he previously as- where? A level Theatre Studies. pired to) I remember a woman who used to ramble There are art groups for toddlers, a The first time I went to The Brewhouse is around the high street and parks of Taunton thriving youth theatre, a cinema. The also one of my first memories. My uncle all day, it seemed, doing nothing particular. program is/was packed with every was acting with a troupe on stage. My un- She was a well known face and someone I sort of theatre and music you could cle had been run over by a bus when he was would worry about. Was she OK? She got wish for. And now it has gone. Closed 17 and lost both his legs but was now per- hold of a camera and eventually The Brew- down. It has been stopped in its tracks. forming with other disabled actors. house hosted an exhibition of her pictures. I’m not even mentioning the hours of Another shady, hazy memory: I was taken The place was packed. pure fun I’ve had at the place, watch- to the ballet. Imagine that! A scruffy farm It is impossible to quantify the value of ing brilliant shows, author talks, music, girl with a deep interest in cowpats, and a small country theatre. At the risk of ram- dancing, local and national performers only one TV in the house, taken to see such bling on, or sounding pompous, the theatre and comedians... I have a friend who a spectacle. I remember the thump of the feeds dreams, and creates them. It allows us has 2 children who have been practis- dancers’ feet on the stage, totally at odds to clamber out of our backgrounds and go ing flat out, in all their spare time for with their pink fairy-like forms. somewhere new, should we wish. Watch- the gang shows that the scout organi- My primary school bussed a class of us ing brilliant professional touring companies sation performs in April. I imagine all there and I saw my first professional play: was revelatory. And yes, eventually, the these small people will be very sad. ‘The Selfish Shellfish’ It was dark and students who learned to work backstage, The Brewhouse Theatre has touched scary. A large cloth was used to represent an to operate the bar, who volunteered to help my life, and thousands and thousands oil slick. An actress wore a spiked hat, she with the lights, the box office, to write and of others. was an anemone. I had never seen anything run small shows. We went on and did more What a miserable day this is for Taun- like it and it blew my rural brain. (I went to things. Things that earned money and paid ton. It has become a little more grey. A the cinema just twice as a child, these were taxes. little more dead. totally new experiences) There is no financial spreadsheet for in- The theatre, I understood, was where you spiration, and generating aspiration, and for Ally Kennen writes books for chil- went and were not allowed to wear your building confidence and skills. dren and young adults. Her latest wellies. You wore your best trousers. But And now I have moved back to Somer- book is Midnight Pirates which came of course it became much, much more than set and am a firm punter. As well as adult out in January of this year and Bul- that. events I regularly take (took) my children to let Boys which came out in January Now eleven, my friend Meena was chosen the theatre to see glorious children’s shows, 2012. Her first three books were a to sing during a local production of Mad- the likes of which are everywhere in the city, loosely linked series, Beast, Berserk ame Butterfly, and perform on stage. (She and hardly anywhere down here in Somer- and Bedlam. She has also written later became a ‘proper’ singer) It felt like an set. My three year old recently pointed at Sparks for younger children(8+) awesome opportunity, and it was. The thea- a picture of a debonair actor who played readers and Quarry, a one- off teen tre became a place where, not only could thriller.
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    Somerset Opera Somerset Opera be- Guy Robinson was born the gan as an evening class year Somerset Opera was promoted by Taunton founded. Now Secretary of Technical College, now the society that introduced known as Somerset him to opera, Guy looks College. forward to a busy 2013 pro- gramme and an exciting It was led by a new arrival to Somer- set, Brian Cresswell, recently appoint- new initiative ed music adviser to West Somerset. The first evening attracted 12 singers who all responded to the proposed La Traviatta, 2011, Anando Mukerjee as During March, Somerset Opera will be per- Alfredo Virginia King as Violetta programme of a concert performance forming Gilbert Sullivan’s Iolanthe in ten of Tachaikowsky’s little known opera, March 1976 saw two concert perform- venues across the county, it is organising the “Tcherevichki”. Brian had conducted ances of Vaughan William’s “Pilgrim’s Maxwell Masterclass in April, then there’s and directed the first known staged Progress” with orchestra, a work much the Somerset Song Prize in May, and its fully- performances in England in the previ- loved by Brian who had previously con- staged summer show - Die Fledermaus - in ous May at Bicester School where he ducted and directed staged performances July. A full diary, then, for this Taunton based was Director of Music. in Bicester in 1972 where one perform- charity. After a small concert of Christmas ance was attended by the composer’s One of the new elements to the society is its music in the December, 1975 saw widow, Ursula. In May another swing of Young Singers Programme. Somerset Opera a whirlwind of performances. The emphasis with performances of Tallis’ runs a Bursary programme, helping to support Tchaikowsky was presented in concert massive “Spem in Alium” using other young singers to get to grips with new roles performance in February with 25 per- choral groups in the area. “Beggar’s Op- and refine performing skills. Then there’s the formers and an orchestra. In July the era” was staged in May and “Marriage of Maxwell Masterclass, made possible by the group gave two staged performances Figaro” with orchestra in July. generous patronage of international opera star with orchestra – Purcell “Dido and The die was cast. Staged and concert Donald Maxwell. For the past four years Don- Aeneas” and the final act of Britten’s performances of opera, some little known, ald has spent a whole day guiding young or “Midsummer Night’s Dream”. The with concerts of choral music. The first inexperienced singers, whilst entertaining an new season began with concert per- 18 months had also demonstrated two audience of avid listeners. This year the Max- formances with piano of “Cavalleria passions of the founder – English music well Masterclass will take place on 20 April at Rusticana” and “Trial by Jury”. De- and the operas of Gilbert Sullivan : two Taunton School, where I went to school. cember followed with another double years later the series of “Come and Sing” Last year, Donald performed a leading role at bill –Menotti’s “Amahl and the Night performances of the operettas leading on the Royal Opera, Covent Garden on the night Visitors” and the same composer’s to the creation of Brian’s alter ego, “Pri- before the masterclass. Within a few hours he “Amelia Goes to the Ball”. vate Willis” began. was on a train heading to Taunton. This goes beyond the involvement of your average soci- ety patron. Why go to such lengths? ‘Amateur grand opera has changed enormously since I first got the bug some 40 years ago,’ comments Donald. ‘It is now a complex balancing act be- tween the varying demands of finances, audi- ences and a loyal membership. The increasing numbers of talented young professional sing- ers adds yet another dimension. I greatly enjoy trying to help Somerset Opera by simply try- ing to enthuse the young (and the not quite so young) members in enjoying grand opera. It is fun, and a very important part of our cultural life!’ Also this year, the society is proud to support a new venture – the Somerset Song Prize. This prestigious, new competition is promoted and Patience, 1981 with Brian Cresswell as Col. Calverley cont’d p13 10
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    organised by Taunton Somerset Music, Drama Dance Festival as part of their Centenary celebrations, Somerset Opera and the Ronald Tickner Educational Trust. The organisers also express their thanks for the support, encouragement and expertise of the Castle Hotel, Taunton, where the fi- nal will be held on 26 May. The Song Prize will be open to any voice who is aged 16 – 26 years, and it reinforces the importance of the role between the singer and pianist. After the adjudication ceremony for the Song Prize, there will be a recital of Eng- lish song from internationally-acclaimed soprano Elizabeth Watts and world-class accompanist Iain Burnside. Entry paper- work will be available from March 2013. Midsummer’s Night Dream, Britten,1985 with John Cole as Peter Quince The touring show this year will be Iolan- the: a musical tale of warring fairies (who jailor, over-the-top wooing and sweet re- with a heady mix of music and movement never grow old), members of the House of venge. Rehearsals are about to begin, and in the staged shows. Lords (who have a high regard for brains whilst the principal performers have been Success also depends on those with energy and wished they had some themselves) cast, all are still welcome to put their name and vision driving things forward. One such and a leading man who is not only half a forward for the chorus. A launch evening visionary is Brian Cresswell, who founded fairy but has a mother who looks as young is planned for 4 April, when Hilary Mar- the society. Other crucial figures (plucked as his fiancé. The show is directed by Sue shall (Somerset Opera’s Chairman and the from many) include John Cole, who was Richards and the Musical Director is Chris Director of the show) will introduce her vi- maestro and performer for Somerset Opera Ball. sion for what is colloquially being called on numerous occasions, and the leadership How does the ‘Somerset Opera on tour’ ‘the bat’. and time of Musical Director Chris Ball work? Firstly, it relies on an ability to read This will be the fifth time that Somerset and Chairman Hilary Marshall. a map – and seek the patience of the audi- Opera has done Die Fledermaus across its ence if cast members head to Stogursey in- 38 year history. What has changed since Guy has fond memories of his first stead of Stogumber. Second, it relies on an 1974? First, there is the variety of shows main role with the group, under Brian’s ability to improvise in different situations. performed, from Tchaikovsky’s Eugene musical direction. The show was Don ‘We cram ourselves into dressing rooms’ Onegin to a concert version of Wagner’s Giovanni and Guy was playing Lep- explains Sue ‘which are usually kitchens or Meistersingers, from Mozart’s The Mar- orello. It was quite a risk for the society billiard rooms, all try and remember to exit riage of Figaro to Britten’s A Midsummer to ask Guy to do Leporello, given that only stage right as some venues don’t have Night’s Dream (pictured). Also, there have it was his first major role in opera and a stage left, fit in as much choreography as been changes in the venue in which it per- needed a steady hand from someone the space on the stage will allow and keep forms. Some years ago, the Brewhouse such as Brian. “After the final show” singing and dancing whatever happens’. was Somerset Opera’s home. Then, like remembers Guy “I recall giving Brian ‘From a musical perspective’ adds Chris several other amateur societies, it needed a tape of Captain Beaky and his Band “I’ve always enjoyed being faced with to explore other venues. In recent years we – a strangely important tape from my the provision of different instruments at have found a fantastic venue in the thea- childhood. It was my little way of say- our various venues. The beautiful Bech- tre at King’s’, a genuine theatre, with a bar ing that this had been an important ex- stein grand with a 3-year film of dust; the and a great feel. well suited to our summer perience for me, and I really cherished clangy Clavinova which wobbled alarm- show. that opportunity. Through the Young ingly at the slightest touch; the piano on a The success of the society depends on Singers Programme, I’m hoping we steeply- raked stage which began to move its chorus, and the group is lucky to have can bring new members to the group – inexorably downstage as I started to play. strength in its members who are prepared and offer opportunities for those who’d Also I remember the time when I arrived to go the extra mile each year, from sing- like to sing a bit more”. late, hastily sat down and started to play ing heartily in the winter concert to coping an octave above the required pitch to the alarm and confusion of the cast, and being See Somerset Opera so confident, or blasé, that it took me two Iolanthe will be on tour to nine venues from 8 March pages to realise what was wrong.’ The summer show will be Die Fledermaus. Please see Calendar of Events for further details Using a new translation from Dorset-based or visit www.somersetopera.org.uk Graham Billing, the story mixes cham- pagne with mistaken identities, a drunken or email: secretary@somersetopera.org.uk 13
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    all else. Onceyou start a conversation The Creative Innova- it leads to other things.’   ‘I have taught workshops for years,’ tion Centre is a new says fellow director Andrew Knutt. ‘I now realise that some of the most creative space within worthwhile results come from just Taunton. getting together and talking. Many people take part in some form of cre-   ative activity but don’t know how to turn it into a business venture. We are here to help people both to generate creative ideas and apply them from a CICCIC styles itself a business support business perspective.’ venture, supporting the creative sector and   It is not necessarily about creating wider community through providing fa- a financial outcome from a creative cilities for exhibitions, lectures and show idea, though that may very well re- casing creative practice. It is a Community sult.  It’s also about experience and Interest Company where profits are passed inclusivity which can be rewards in back into the community. themselves. It is creative, then within the broadest Heads in the clouds: Andrew Knutt (left)   ‘We want people to be able to walk sense, not just serving the artistic com- and Richard Holt. through the door and engage, for there munity yet visual art, music, literature and accompanying article). There are plans to be greater community ownership cultural activities are very much at the to have a Saturday market where makers of our culture,’ says Richard. heart of its vision. and retailers of fine creative works can   ‘Very often,’ Andrew adds,’ what is   It has already established itself as an ex- be part of an indoor market. The centre considered culture is too exclusive or hibition centre for the visual arts with the provides art talks, live music nights, a not accessible. ‘We want people to third such exhibition from local artist Pat writing retreat, life drawing classes, take part and experiment.’ Preater beginning on the 12 March (see business lectures and talks – the list goes   The building is the old memorial on. hall next to the United Reformed   But the centre is not just about experi- Church. It is a large airy space though encing events and attending courses, it the acoustics have proved a problem. is also a facilitator. Putting design into However, a solution has been found business is at the heart of the concept using suspended panels made from of directors Richard Holt and Andrew sheep’s wool which absorbs the ech- Knutt. Richard has 25 years management oes, provided by The Wooly Shep- experience in business design training herd, itself a recent creative design and Andrew is director of a local design success. Let us hope that many more company, chair of the Somerset Design such successes follow in its wake and Enterprise Network and a member of the that the centre develops into what it board of Design South West. promises to be:  an engine for local    Richard explains: ‘We are here to help, creative business and cultural devel- a base to stimulate and exchange knowl- opment and an asset to the local com- edge. We are about conversation above munity. Contact Details Creative Innovation Centre CICMemorial Hall Paul Street Taunton Somerset TA1 3PF Tel. 01823 337477 Email: info@creativeinnovationcentre.co.uk CICCIC reception area and coffe bar 14
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    A Life inArt Pat Preater feels that her art has been her great ally throughout her life. From her earliest years at primary school it was the thing she excelled in and it helped her not only with her art but later on with other subjects such as biology and geography. For her art ‘A’ level she was allowed to travel two days a week to Stroud Art School to study life drawing and composition. She found the experi- ence liberating. Not only was she study- ing something she really enjoyed, but she was working in a freer, less disciplined environment. After ‘A’ level her mum and dad were wary about her continuing her art studies, concerned that she would not be able to get a decent job with an art qualification. Her mum was a nurse and favoured her Tone near Taunton in 1964. In 1967, now energy I was getting from my art I was either becoming a nurse or a secretary. with two boys, Jonathan and Jason, they able to teach.’ Whether she was teaching Her father, was, however, she says, ‘won moved to their present home in Taunton. or at home, art was always, literally on over by my enthusiasm.’ He had also It was nearly derelict and over the years the timetable. She would put together a wanted to study art himself but had never they have put a considerable effort into planner dividing her time between her had the opportunity. Once he was on-side renovating it. work and other duties and her painting he became very supportive of her ambi- Pat took a part time teaching job at La- for, she says, ‘this reinforced my inten- tion and she went on to study an interme- dymead School in Taunton where she tion to paint.’ diate course at Stroud for one year before remained for six years until the birth of At Somerset College she taught mainly going to art college at Cheltenham where their third child, Edward in 1974. A fourth watercolours, though a Friday oil painting she took a National Diploma in Design. child, Ruth, followed and it was not until class that she was told would not work She recalls, ‘I loved my time at art col- 1988 that Pat took up teaching again, this also proved popular. The students joined lege going out to sketch in the town be- time teaching adult education art courses the classes to enjoy an interest in painting fore returning to the studio to create a at Somerset College. and drawing. Later on, a system of cred- composition and drawing local Cotswold She always kept in touch with her own its was introduced which enabled entry to architecture.’ The discipline of observa- art both while she was teaching and look- degree courses. When she finished teach- tion was fundamental to the course and ing after her growing family. ‘I felt it just ing adult education classes in 2003 (after included life drawing, clay work, weav- wasn’t me if I was not painting,’ she told fifteen years of teaching), most adult ed- ing and etching. me. It helped that she taught part time. ucation classes were cut. She elaborated, She then gained a teaching diploma in Pursuing her art was, in fact, critical to ‘There was a change from the belief that Art at The West of England College in her teaching method. ‘My work gave me existed that education was all embracing Bristol. She met and married Tom, whose an impetus to teach other people,’ she and available to everyone whether in full- job took them to Wollaston near Stour- explained and then reinforced the no- time education or not.’ bridge, before a move to Bradford-on- tion by further adding: ‘Because of the She has an array of sketchbooks dating 16
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    cluttering fever tendsto strike. Take a look at these smart storage solutions. ABOVE: Antique Brown Wicker Stair Basket, £20, All Tidied Up. LEFT: John Lewis Abbeywood, two door, three drawer coloured chest, £599 SAGT offers artists and art lovers alike an oppor- tunity to support the arts in Somerset while pursu- ing our long term goal of acquiring a high quality Permanent Somerset Art Gallery Collection. If you are inspired by, appreciate and value the arts, SAGT is for you – a community of like-minded art enthusiasts helping Taunton to be a true Cultural Centre! Our programme includes exhibitions, talks, workshops, cultural outings events. For membership information check out our website or contact Jeremy Harvey (Chairman) on 01823 276421 11 March Talk on Rembrandt’s Late Self-Por- traits by Jeremy Harvey, 7.00pm Conference Centre, Somerset College, TA1 5AX. 12 March - 5 April Paintings by Pat Preater, CIC, Paul Street, Taunton. 16 March Drawing Workshop led by Julian Fraser 7.30 pm The Barn, Obridge House. 8 - 20 April Paintings by Ron Cann, Taunton Library. ALBURY HOUSE GROUP PRACTICE 10 Limited Edition 18 April Talk by Jenni Dutton Ingrid Hesling 7.30 pm The Barn, Obridge House, Obridge Road, TA2 7QA. Osteopathy To Book talks: 01823 276421 (admission: £5.00) Sara Kennard Associates 01823 332871 Physiotherapy Taunton Art Group Established Maria Andrew Exhibition 25 years 01823 332070 18-23 March 2013 At Taunton Library Chiropody (during normal library hours) Marian Barnacle Associates 01823 322516 Painting,drawings, printmaking and 3 dimensional works by amateur and professional artists original work and cards for sale * Free Parking * Ground Floor Treatment Rooms Contact us: 0788 0793 066 or 07817 807 259 * Wheelchair Access 17
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    A TALE FOR OUR TIMES – ON EXMOOR A compelling story of family and ecological conflict on Exmoor, set against the cur- rent financial cri- sis and interwoven with sexual rivalry and obsession. And at another level, a reflection on our planet as a tiny, living, teeming sward - finite and vulnerable - and floating alone in the dead sea of the universe. PAN’S PRINCIPLE by SIMON PATRICK A ‘MUST-READ’ NOW ON KINDLE – ONLY £0.99P ginger fig gifts and gallery 1b Bath Place, Taunton TA1 4ER 01823 ginger fig gallery promotes artists and designers exclusively from the South West, exhibiting new talent alongside established artists 18
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    back to hertime as an art student when painting that is often commented on. ‘I am she was 18. Sometimes she revisits them not aware of that when I am painting,’ she and intriguingly believes that on occa- says,’It is just how it appears to me.’ These sions she learns from her younger self. observational sketches are very often pen As an example she shows me one of her and watercolour which are then worked up old pen and ink sketchbooks and com- into oils. The still life are directly observed pares it to a more recent one. To my eyes using oils. However, her still life paintings they both appear very accomplished. are never one object in isolation but sev- However, the style is different, with the eral grouped together. The space between them and their relationship to each other is an important part of the composition. Unlike many artists, she does not ever give up on a painting and consign it to the rubbish bin if she does not like the way it is going. She will alter and manipulate it Grace Cotinus and find some way of getting the painting four years they travelled widely. She to work even if it means ultimately over- shows me sketchbooks of Sienna and painting it when she will often find a way of Manos in the heart of the Amazon, of using the painting underneath by, for beautifully realised and accompanied by example, letting some of the colour come elegant handwriting describing the trip. through. And it was typical of Pat that once she Sketchbook of Manos We return to her sketchbooks, which ap- went back on board she was able to teach pear to be miniature works of art on their a class on the cruise ship her method in more recent ones portraying a more intri- constructing her skillful compositions cate but less flowing style. The pen she – still using the energy from her own now mostly uses are of the modern ink work to teach others. ball type, very handy to carry around and good for intricate sketches but they do not produce such a free flowing effect. It is this earlier free flowing style that she Pat belongs to the Somerset Society intends to re-explore. of Artists and the Chandos Society Her style of art, generally, she believes. at Bridgwater. She has found them reflects her training at art school, based as valuable as, she explains, ‘joining a it was above all else on observation. She society gave me an opportunity to has tried painting in an abstract way but show my work and to see the paint- says she finds it difficult to ‘let go’ and Conversation ings outside of my own environment.’ paints ‘what she sees.’ However, at the She has shown her work in several same time, there is a complexity and con- local and regional exhibitions such trivance about some of her work which own account. After she retired she went as the South West Academy (Exeter), give her paintings a particular style. She on a computing course. During part of the Bath Academy and the Royal West of will observe a scene with a sketch and course they were asked to write about their England (Bristol), The Brewhouse, then take that scene and populate it with hopes for the future. ‘I said I would like to Bridgwater Arts Centre and The Post figures usually in conversation or at play. travel with my husband and sketch. Within Graduate Centre Bristol. See details The figures are introduced from memory eighteen months that was exactly what I of her new exhibition below. and sometimes appear in more than one was doing,’ Pat comments. For three to painting (such as a yellow dog which has made repeated appearances) and the Pat Preater Art Exhibition background, though it may have started off as an observational sketch, may be- come altered too. The faces of the figures are often distorted to reflect a particular 12 March - 4 April 2013 aspect of their character. The Creative Innovation Centre, Memorial Hall, She does also produce strictly obser- Paul St, Taunton TA1 3PF Tel. 01823 337477 vational paintings such as her recent one of the apple tree which has been such a Email: info@creativeinnovationcentre.co.uk part of her and her husband’s life in the www.creativeinnovationcentre.co.uk forty-five years they have spent at their house. It is full of colour, an aspect of her 19
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    Your local artsmagazinetel. 01823 337742 email:lampmagazine1@gmail.com OPEN DAY www.lampmagzine.co.uk Advertise in The Lamp B E PA RT O F T H E D I S C O V E R Y Saturday 4th May —10 am arrival Please contact us to reserve your place Co-educational day boarding: ages 13 –18 telephone: 01823 328204 admissions@kings-taunton.co.uk www.kings-taunton.co.uk 20
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    The Rural LivingShow is hosting a new spring show at Taunton Race- course in support of St Margaret’s Hospice. As part of the show the following talks will take place over the two days. Please check timings with the event organisers (details at the bottom of the pages): Philip White of Hestercombe House and Gardens: ‘Past and Future developments’ Robin Small of Charlton Orchards ‘Care and pruning of your Orchard’ Adrian Stallard of Lentells Accountants ‘Kitchen Table Businesses -working for yourself not the tax man!’ Nicky Saunter of the Woolly Shepherd ‘Natural Acoustics - Innovating with wool’ Nigel Cox of Bridgwater College ‘Spring preparation for a Blooming Sum- mer’ Kate Tuke, Head Gardener of Killerton ‘Killerton Gardens’ John Addison of Bridgwater College ‘Plants for Wildlife’ Ingrid Hesling, Cinematographer ‘Purple Fields Productions – Rural Living in Malawi’ Other features of the show include: Over 100 indoor stands, with many more outside Plant and garden marquees Eco-friendly and sustainability stands Ideas for both home and garden Food hall, with cafe and a tasting area for local produce Craft demonstrators Classic Car day on Sunday Please Childrens entertainment Fun Run with the NSPCC use the Contact details: voucher Tel. 01823 32 33 63 opposite to Or during the show: 07989 10 97 07 E-mail: info@rurallivingshow.co.uk gain free Rural Living Show Prioryfield House 20 Canon Street admission Taunton TA1 1SW to the show 21
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    Heads and Tales:Nigel Price Winners of the Parlia- For the Ilminster gig they will be joined son to leave’, didn’t study at college, by Vasilis Xenopoulos on tenor sax. De- but instead joined The Infantry, ‘I mentary Jazz Award scribed by The Times as ‘One of the most was a bit too wild when I was young. for Best Jazz Ensemble fiery young saxophonists around’, the It was a highly dubious decision and Athens-born musician is a graduate from one that I regret some days.’ He got 2010, The Nigel Price Boston’s prestigious Berklee College of into music when aged 11, he and Organ Trio play in a Music, and is highly regarded on the UK some school mates decided to form modern, mainstream jazz scene. a band, ‘We all chose an instrument style that focuses on well-known standards. Bandleader and guitar- ist Nigel Price talks of their return to Ilminster Arts Centre, where they will be joined by Vasilis Xenopoulos on tenor sax. ‘I played there in January with Alex Garnett, Craig Milverton, Al Swainger and Nick Millward’, recalls Nigel, ‘We had a brilliant night but I’m really looking forward to getting my regular guys down there and playing some of the tried and tested material we have.’ The ‘regular guys’ who make up The Nigel Price Organ Trio are a talented bunch. Firstly there is Pete Whittaker, described by Nigel as ‘The UK’s Ham- mond organ authority and a seasoned professional who just seems to instinc- tively know when - and when not - to pull the trigger and which sounds are totally effective for each musical situ- Nigel Price ation.’ Secondly there is Matt Home, a drum- mer who, says Nigel, ‘is a force to be The musicians between them have per- right there on the spot and I just opted reckoned with.’ His knowledge of jazz formed with everyone from Ronnie Scott’s for guitar.’ drums and jazz drummers throughout House Band to Ray Gelato, Scott Hamil- Nowadays Nigel is one of the top history is invaluable to the trio. ‘It takes ton, Jim Mullen, John Etheridge and Toni UK jazz guitar players. He is a regu- maturity to play like him - always for Kofi. lar performer at Ronnie Scott’s where the music, never foregoing good taste Nigel, who grew up in Epsom, Surrey, he has racked up over 150 perform- in order to impress technically’. and as he puts it, ‘never really found a rea- ances, and spent three years in lead- 22
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    Mel Reeves Guitar Tuition GCSEComposition Lessons Music Technology Tuition Music for Dressage Songwriter’s recording service ‘A teacher of fantastic experience’ Guitar Techniques Magazine Tel. 01398 371252 mel.reeves@btinternet.com 23
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    ing jazz funkband, the James Taylor Quartet. Other projects include playing with the Sheena Davis Group and the trio recording an album with Alex Garnett and Snowboy. The album Heads and Tales was released by Woodville Records and voted ‘5th best in the world, 2011’ by Mojo Magazine who described it as ‘bril- liant’ and ‘exhilarating’. The Nigel Price Organ Trio was formed around 2002 when Matt Home moved down from Yorkshire and turned up at a jam session. ‘I was knocked out by his playing - the clarity of his ideas and his swing feel was better than anything I’d ever heard before’, remembers Nigel, who called Pete Whittaker only to discover that ‘he had done his back in, lifting the damn organ!’ It wasn’t until a year or so later that the trio began playing together and, says Nigel, ‘It was immediately apparent The Band that we had something pretty special.’ ‘My style of writing suits a small group - the organist’, says Nigel when The pairing of organ with guitar proved like this - punchy arrangements and loads asked who he would like to work to be a winning combination for Nigel of room for improvisation’. with in future. ‘I like his vibe and as the group won the Parliamentary Jazz The trio are currently recording their I reckon we’d get on pretty well Award for Best Jazz Ensemble in 2010. fourth album. ‘We toured the material at stylistically’. ‘Working in this format you have a huge the back end of last year so we’re just With a career spanning ten years, sound but communication is easy as there going to waltz in there and crank it out!’ thousands of gigs, and four al- are only three members.’ explains Nigel. jokes Nigel. ‘I’m always writing and bums, The Nigel Price Organ Trio practicing so things never stand still.’ is still very much in demand, and The trio have also been asked to back the as Nigel puts it, ‘Life’s never dull great US baritone sax player Gary Smuly- and there’s never enough time to an, when he comes over to the UK in Oc- get everything done. Speaking of tober, and in the spring Nigel is set to tour which – I’ve got to go and find with UK jazz singer Georgia Mancio. the time to do some decorating!’ ‘I’d like to bump into Dr Lonnie Smith Hear The Nigel Price Organ Trio with Vasilis Xenopoulos Performing on Friday 22nd March at Ilminster Arts Centre, The Meeting House, East Street, Ilminster. TA19 70AN. 8pm. Tickets: £15 (£25.50 including pre-show supper at 7pm). Box Office: 01460 54973 www.themeetinghouse.org.uk. Vasilis Xenopoulis 24
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    March 2013 Events NB, the events at The Brewhouse are listed but may not take place or be moved to other venues Date Event Details Venue Time 4 Talk Lowry: Visionary Artist - Neroche DFAS Seavington Village Hall 2.30 Talk From Furnace to Hearth - Som. Ind. Archaeological Soc. North Town School 7.30 5 Comedy The Brig Society - Marcus Brigstock Brewhouse 8.00 Drama Anything Can Happen: Heathfield Year 11 Drama Festival Tacchi-Morris 7.30 6 Dance Russian Cossacks Brewhouse 7.45 7 Storytelling Grimm Grimmer - Martin Maudsley Saikat Ahamed Tacchi-Morris 7.45 Opera The Barber of Seville - Opera Up Close Brewhouse 7.45 8 Music Steve Gibbons Band Square Compass TBC Music Toby Kearney Harvey Davies Ilminster Arts Centre 8.00 9 Music T Rextasy: I Love to Boogie (Tribute band) Brewhouse 7.45 Music Spring Concert - Phoenix Singers St John Baptist Ch. Wellington 7.30 Music Iolanthe - Somerset Opera Winsford Village Hall 7.30 9 Music Beethoven, Walton Brahms - Somerset County Orchestra Queen’s College 7.30 Music Duets for Jango Cossington Village Hall 7.30 10 Music Handel with Harpsicords - Kate Semmens, Collin Booth, Steven Devine St James Church, Taunton 7.30 Music Informal Music Song Session Halsway Manor 8.00 Music 4 Girls, 4 Harps - Christmas Concert Dillington House 8.00 11 Talk Late Rembrandt Self-Portraiture Som College, Conference Ctre 7.00 Music Haddo Wiveliscombe Congr. Church 8.00 12 Theatre Puppet Theatre: Hanging By a Thread - The Ding Foundation Tacchi-Morris 7.45 12-15 Music Folk: Mid-Week Break - Mary Ireson Halsway Manor TBC 12-16 Drama Snakes in the Grass: Alan Ayckbourn - Taunton Thespians Tacchi-Morris 7.30 13 Music Northumbrian Voices: Katherine Tickell Brewhouse 7.45 Music Iolanthe - Somerset Opera Haslebury Plucknett Bible Ctr 7.30 14 Talk A Pablo Neruda Night - Graham Fawcett Seven Olympians Tour Brendon Books 7.00 Drama Songs of Innocence Experience - Heathfield Students Tacchi-Morris 7.00 Music Guy Johnston - Cello with Navarra Quartet Brewhouse 7.45 14-16 Drama Dangerous Corner - The Barnstormers Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 15 Music Iolanthe - Somerset Opera Nether StoweyVillage Hall 7.30 15-16 Drama Wasted: Paines Plough - Birmingham Rep Roundhouse Brewhouse 7.45 16 Music Rob Harbron Miranda Rutter Halsway Manor 8.00 Music Iolanthe - Somerset Opera Victoria Rooms, Milverton 7.30 Music J S Bach: St John Passion - Amici St Mary Magdalene 7.30 Music The Novello Years - Chris Davies Friends Trull Memorial Hall 7.00 17 Stories Art of Puppet Making - Somerset Storyfest Halsway Manor 2.00 Music Folk Rock: Jamie Smith’s Mabon David Hall, South Petherton 8.00 18 Music Piano Recital: Duncan McCririck Taunton Methodist Chapel 7.00 18-19 Dance Footloose: Surge Thrive Year 11 students Tacchi-Morris 7.30 19 Talk Clandestine Cake Club Talk - Emma Richards Brendon Books 20 Music Iolanthe - Somerset Opera Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 Drama Under Scrutiny - Heathfield Year 11 students Tacchi-Morris 7.00 20-22 Dance Take Art County Youth Dance Platform Tacchi-Morris 7.30 20-23 Drama God of Carnage Warehouse, Ilminster TBC 21 Stories Beat It Speak It Tell It - Dom, Live Torc, Michael Loader Tacchi-Morris 7.45 Music Complete Madness (Tribute) Brewhouse 7.45 25
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    March 2013 Events Events in date order. Contact details for most of the venues are given at the end of event listings. Please note, we do not take any responsibility for errors or omissions. Please check with venue for timings and programme details. NB, the events at The Brewhouse are listed but may not take place or be moved to other venues Date Event Details Venue Time 22 Music Iolanthe - Somerset Opera Edington Village Hall 7.30 Music Ivana Gavric Milverton Concert Society 8.00 Music Jazz: Nigel Price Organ Trio Ilminster Arts Centre 8.00 23 Storytelling Making Hi-Story: Somerset Storyfest Museum of Somerset 2.00 Dance Spotlight Dance Academy’s Annual Performance Show Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 Music Marty Wilde The Wildcats Brewhouse 7.45 Drama The Glory of Friendship - Brewhouse Youth Theatre Brewhouse 2.00 Music Iolanthe - Somerset Opera North Curry Village Hall 7.30 Music Mendelssohn: Elijah Wellington Choral Society 7.30 Music Taunton Concert Band’s Easter Special Tacchi-Morris 7.30 Music Chris Farlowe Norman Beaker Band David Hall, Sth Petherton 8.00 24 Dance Spotlight Dance Academy’s Annual Performance Show Regal Theatre, Minehead 2.30 Talk A History of Royal Weddings - Tracy Borman Dillington House 2.30 Music Iolanthe - Somerset Opera King’s College 7.30 25 Dance Space Company Dancers Tacchi-Morris 7.30 26 Music Heathfield Community School Easter Concert Tacchi-Morris 7.00 27 Drama The Boy at the Edge of the Room - Forest Forge Theatre Tacchi-Morris 7.30 Talk Somerset and Bristol - James Osmond (Talk and Slideshow) Brendon Books 7.00 28 Comedy One Rogue Reporter - Richard Peppiatt Brewhouse 7.45 Storytelling Open Mic Thursday Brewhouse 8.00 29 Music Joey and the Jivers Lawns Soc Club Taunton 7.30 April 2013 Events 2 Film Harry Potter Pholosopher’s Stone Brewhouse 10.30 Film Harry Potter The Chamber of Secrets Brewhouse 2.00 5 Music Dave Martin’s Jabbo Five Ilminster 8.00 Drama Two Nations - the journeys of everyman Hatch Beauchamp V. Hall 8.00 Music Logic: Irish/Country Music Club Lawns Social Club, Taunton 8.30 6 Music One day Music Festival: young folk musicians, singers dancers Halsway Manor noon onwards Show Guinness World Records Officially Amazing Science Live Brewhsouse 2.00/7.00 Music Live ‘N’ Up April Brewhouse Brewhouse Studio 8.00 7 Music The Rocky Monster Show - Hocus Pocus Oasis Regal Theatre Regal Theatre, Minehead 8.00 8 Drama Cube - Essential Theatre Company Tacchi-Morris 9.00 Talk The Great Age of the Poster - Neroche DFAS Seavington Village Hall 7.00 9-13 Show Taunton Scout Guide Gang Show Brewhouse 2.15/7.15 12 Music Abba2:Bjorn Belief (Tribute) Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 13 Music Irish Set Dance with Ceili Time, Maggie Daniel Lucy Taylor Halsway Manor 8.00 14 Talk Recent Lessons of History: Gen Sir Michael Rose Dillington House 2.30 Music Birds of Chicago David Hall, S Petherton 8.00 15-20 Show Sound of Music - Taunton Amateur Operatic Society Brewhouse 2.00/7.30 16 Film Mlle Chambon Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 26
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    April 2013 Events Events in date order. Contact details for most of the venues are given at the end of event listings. Please note, we do not take any responsibility for errors or omissions. Please check with venue for timings and programme details. NB, the events at The Brewhouse are listed but may not take place or be moved to other venues Date Event Details Venue Time 2 Film Harry Potter Pholosopher’s Stone Brewhouse 10.30 Film Harry Potter The Chamber of Secrets Brewhouse 2.00 5 Music Dave Martin’s Jabbo Five Ilminster 8.00 Drama Two Nations - the journeys of everyman Hatch Beauchamp V. Hall 8.00 Music Logic: Irish/Country Music Club Lawns Social Club, Taunton 8.30 6 Music One day Music Festival: young folk musicians, singers dancers Halsway Manor Show Guinness World Records Officially Amazing Science Live Brewhsouse 2.00/7.00 Music Live ‘N’ Up April Brewhouse Brewhouse Studio 8.00 7 Music The Rocky Monster Show - Hocus Pocus Oasis Regal Theatre Regal Theatre, Minehead 8.00 8 Drama Cube - Essential Theatre Company Tacchi-Morris 9.00 Talk The Great Age of the Poster - Neroche DFAS Seavington Village Hall 7.00 9-13 Show Taunton Scout Guide Gang Show Brewhouse 2.15/7.15 12 Music Abba2:Bjorn Belief (Tribute) Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 13 Music Irish Set Dance with Ceili Time, Maggie Daniel Lucy Taylor Halsway Manor 8.00 Music Birds of Chicago David Hall, S Petherton 8.00 15-20 Show Sound of Music - Taunton Amateur Operatic Society Brewhouse 2.00/7.30 16 Film Mlle Chambon Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 18 Talk Art Talk: Jenni Dutton Ingrid Hesling The Barn, Obridge House 7.30 19 Comedy Jimmy Carr Wellsprings Leisure Ctre 8.00 Music Jazz: Allen barnes Jim Mullen Ilminster Arts Centre 8.00 Music Just An Old Warhouse David Hall, S Petherton 8.00 20 Music Britten: Serenade, Simple Symphony. Bach Viol. Sonata-Sinfonietta St James’ Church, Taunton 7.30 21 Talk The Soldier Queen: Tessa Dunlop Dillington House 2.30 22 Drama Play in a Day: Heathfield Year 9 Students Tacchi-Morris 7.00 23 Drama Three Hots and a Cot: heathfield year 11 Students Tacchi-Morris 7.00 24-25 Music Talon: The Best of The Eagles (Tribute) Brewhouse 7.45 25 Drama Chelsea Hotel - Earthfall Tacchi-Morris 7.30 25-27 Drama The Rake’s Progress - Waterfront Thearte Company Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 26 Music The Aronowitz Ensemble Castle Hotel, Taunton 6.00 Dance There is Hope Brewhouse 7.45 Music Young Musician’s Concert St Michael’s Ch, Milverton 8.00 Music Ianus Consort: 18th Century Trio Ilminster Arts Cemtre 8.00 Coomedy Free Fringe Fridays Brewhouse Studio 8.00 27 Music The Aronowitz Ensemble Castle Hotel, Taunton 11.00/6.00 Music Carmina Burana - Taunton Choral Society Queen’s College 7.30 Comedy Brew Ha Ha! Comedy Club Brewhouse Studio 8.00 28 Music The Aronowitz Ensemble Castle Hotel, Taunton 11.00 Talk Time Traveller’s Guide to Elizabethan England - Ian Mortimer Dillington 2.30 29 Music Issy David Emeny with Kate Riaz Wiveliscombe Congr Ch 8.00 30 Drama The Marriage of Heaven Hell: Heathfield Year 11 Students Tacchi-Morris 7.00 Talk Made To Last: Clerks Shoes - Mark Palmer Brendon Books 7.00 27
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    May 2013 Events Events in date order. Contact details for most of the venues are given at the end of event listings. Please note, we do not take any responsibility for errors or omissions. Please check with venue for timings and programme details. NB, the events at The Brewhouse are listed but may not take place or be moved to other venues Date Event Details Venue Time 1 Talk Art Talk: Laurence Dube-Rushby: A Thousand Sheep Brewhouse 6.00 Drama Much Ado About Nothing - Black Chair Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 Dance May Day Celebrations Halsway Manor Dawn til dusk 1-3 Ballet Sleeping Beauty - Vienna Festival Ballet Brewhouse 5.00/7.00/8.00 2 Poetry Fire River Poets Readings Brewhouse Studio 8.00 3 Music Alan Hague Quintet Ilminster Arts Centre 8.00 4 Music Acker Bilk His Paramount Jazz |Band Brewhouse 7.45 Music Live ‘N’ Up Brewhsouse Studio 8.00 5 Talk The Art of Byzantium - Ian Ainsworth-Smith Dillington 2.30 7 Film Where Do We Go Now? Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 8 Comedy Position Vacant, Apply Within: Julian Clary Brewhouse 8.00 9 Talk The Real jane Austen - Paula Byrne Brendon Books 7.00 9-10 Drama Count of Monte Cristo - Dir. Andy Burden Brewhouse 7.45 11 Comedy Jethro Brewhouse 7.30 Music Rock Roll Co Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 Music Ahab support by LAzibyrd David Hall, S Petherton 8.00 Music John Kirkpatrick Halsway Manor 8.00 12 Writing Writing Retreat Creative Innovation Centre 10.00-4.00 Music The Brodowski String Quartet Dillington House 2.30 13 Talk Gardens of Cornwall Normandy - Neroche DFAS Seavington Hall 7.15 Music Vamm Wiveliscombe Congr Ch 8.00 15 Music Mugenkyo - Taiko Drummers Brewhouse 4.45 16 Drawing Workshop with Julian fraser The Barn 7.30 Comedy My Stepson Stole My Sonic Screwdriver Brewhouse 7.45 17 Music Rock and Roll: Black Cat Lawns Social Club, Taunton 7.30 Comedy Arthur Smith Exposed Brewhouse 8.00 Music Gabielle Ducomble Quartet Ilminster Arts Centre 8.00 18 Show The Post Show Party Show Brewhouse 7.45 Music Richard Digance David Hall, S Petherton 8.00 19 Dance Week Long Dance Festival Big Event Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 22 Drama Charley’s Aunt - Creative Cow Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 Music Fairport Convention David Hall, S Petherton 8.00 Drama 10 Minute Plays - Som College Operating Theatre Brewhouse 8.00 22-23 Show How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying Bridgwater College 2.00/7.45 24 Dance Alice in Wonderland - Ballet Theatre UK Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 Music Nicholas Mulroy (tenor) John Reid (piano) Ilminster Arts Centre 8.00 25 Music Urban Voice in Concert Regal Theatre, Minehead 7.30 Music Singer Songwriter Ange Hardy Wiveliscombe Congr Church 8.00 Comedy The Boy With the Tape On His Face - More Tape Brewhouse 8.00 Comedy Bre Ha Ha Brewhouse Studio 8.00 Music Martin Simpson David Hall, S Petherton 8.00 28 Music English Romantics in 20th Century - Mark Bebbington Friends Dillington House 8.00 28
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    Art Exhibitions NB, the events at The Brewhouse are listed but may not take place or be moved to other venues 18 February - 10 March Woods For the Trees Gwyn Ardyth Sue Bishop Lutyens Gallery Hestercombe 19 February - 8 March Art Exhibition Artists 303 Ilminster Arts Centre 2 March - Saturday 13 April Cultivate 3 - The Trans-Local Network Brewhouse Taunton 2 March - Saturday 20 April Telluric Peter Messa The Brewhouse Taunton 12 March - 9 April 6th Annual Open Exhibition 2013 Ilminster Arts Centre 18 March - 23 March Taunton Library Please see advert for further details 8 - 20 April Art Exhibition Ron Cann  Taunton Library  Please see advert for further details 9 April - 22 April Incomplete Certainties Andy Rollo and Claire Mason Ilminster Arts Centre 23 April - 24 May Annual Exhibition 2013 Somerset Society Of Artists The Brewhouse Taunton Tuesday 23 April - Friday 24 May Annual Exhibition 2013 Somerset Society Of Artists The Brewhouse Taunton Contact Details Barn, Obridge House. Contact: Jeremy Harvey. 01823 276421 Barrington Court Barrington  Ilminster, Somerset TA19 0NQ 01460 242614 Brendon Books Bath Place Taunton TA1 4ER 01823 337742 brendonbooks@gmail.com The Brewhouse Theatre Arts Centre Coal Orchard Taunton TA1 1JL 01823 274608 info@ thebrewhouse.net Bridgwater Arts Centre 11-13 Castle Street  Bridgwater, Somerset TA6 3DD 01278 422 700 The Castle Hotel Castle Green Taunton TA1 1NF 01823 272671 Church St Peter St Paul Moor Lane North Curry Ta3 6JZ 01823 490255 The David Hall, Roundwell St SOuth Petherton. TA13 5AA 01460 240340 info@thedavidhall.org Dillington House  Ilminster, Somerset TA19 9DT 01460 258648 dillington@somerset.gov.uk Enmore Inn Enmore Rd  Durleigh, BRIDGWATER, Bridgwater, Somerset TA5 2AW01278 422 052 Halseway Manor Crowcombe  Taunton, Somerset TA4 4BD 01984 618274 Hestercombe Gardens Hestercombe  Taunton TA2 8LG 01823 413 923 Hobbyhorse Ballroom Esplanade  Minehead, Somerset TA24 5QP 01643 702274 Ilminster Arts Centre East Street ILMINSTER TA19 0AN 01460 55783  Oake Manor Golf Club,Oake Taunton  TA4 1BA 01823 461992 Parish Church St John Wellington 72 High Street Wellington(01823) 662248 Porlock Village Hall Toll Road (New Rd), Porlock TA24 8QD 01643 862717 Queen’s Conference Centre Trull Road Taunton Ta1 4QS 01823 272559 contact@queenscollege. org.uk Regal Theatre 10-16 The Avenue  Minehead TA24 5AY 01643 706430 mail@regaltheatre.co.uk Richard Huish College 2 Kings Close  Taunton, Somerset TA1 3XP 01823 320800 Silver Street Centre Silver Street  Wiveliscombe, Taunton, Somerset TA4 2PA 01984 623107 St Mary Magdalene Church Church Square Taunton TA1 1SA 01823 272441 St Mary’s Church Bridgwater St Mary Street Bridgwater TA6 3EQ 01278 422437 saintmarybridg- water@gmail.com St Mary’s Church Stogumber office.qtb@btinternet.com St John’s Church Park Street Taunton TA1 4DG secretary@stjohnstaunton.org.uk Tacchi-Morris Arts Centre School Road Taunton TA2 8PD 01823 41 41 41 info@tacchi-morris. com Taunton RFC Hyde Park, Hyde Lane, Bathpool, Taunton, Somerset, TA2 8BU 01823 336363 Temple Methodist Church Upper High Street Taunton TA1 3PY (01823) 275765 Warehouse Theatre  Brewery Lane, Ilminster, TA19 9AD Tel 01460 57049 29
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    ing the Linksproject, Creatives Club “That little quaint hig- brought people together to network, gldy – piggldy town inspire each other and share a vision. Group members formed a not-for-profit which is more like enterprise, Creatives Club CIC, to work towards the goal of a dedicated artist- a foreign quay than run space to support the needs of West Somerset’s creative industries and give any place I know.” them a visible presence in the heart of the community. The words of Victorian writer A.C. Os- home is limiting. The only suitable space Contains Art has obtained funding born Hann sum up the quirky eccentric- is my living room which is no place to let from the Western Somerset Local Ac- ity of a little harbour town that is the real rip with the paint”. tion for Rural Communities (LARC) gem in West Somerset’s crown. Watchet, The first seeds of this exciting new scheme and Somerset County Council’s an ancient port with boats, Hellikers Tea Rooms and Yankee Jack, has inspired many artists and writers over the years and now with its frayed nonchalance is gaining kudos as a thriving arts destina- tion. The latest development is a kooky project called Contains Art. Just as it says on the tin, three shipping contain- ers will be situated on the East Quay, destined for use as artist’s studios, per- formance and exhibition space. The con- tainers will occupy a prominent position overlooking the harbour and marina and with glorious views are sure to inspire great work. One local artist who is delighted to have been offered a seaside studio is An- gie Wood, who has been looking for the right space since achieving a Fine Art project were sown when local creatives Creative Industries Development Fund. degree in 2010. As well as providing the began to meet regularly for a glass of cider Local businesses have also helped, such ideal location to sell her paintings, she and a chat at Watchet’s Esplanade Club. as Watchet Glass and Glazing, who welcomes the company and stimulation Facilitated by sisters Naomi and Jessica have donated some of their services, of other artists and says, “Working at Griffith Prendergrast, as part of the Mak- Kalina Newman The public launch is planned for the May Bank Holiday. Creative postcards are invited for the open- ing exhibition, ‘Wish You Were Here’. So why not send your en- tries to ‘Contains Art, The Harbour, Watchet TA23 OAJ’ For more information about Con- tains Art email info@containsart. co.uk Angie Wood who will be a studio tenant 30
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    Let Them EatCake! Secret venues. Inspired Cake; plus stunning photography and sneak-peek snaps from club events. At themes. Fabulous cakes. last, the secret is out and everyone is Across the UK and beyond, invited to join the Club. thousands of home bakers Happily there is a branch of the Clan- destine Cake Club in Taunton, one of have been meeting covertly 150 branches, most of them in the UK. in hidden locations with the To launch the Clandestine Cake Cook same simple mission: bake, Book in Taunton, Emma Richards, organiser of the The Taunton CCC eat and gossip about cake. will be giving a short talk, showing pictures from previous meetings and These are the members of the phenom- answering questions along with fel- enally popular Clandestine Cake Club low members at Brendon Books in - and now, for the first time, they share Taunton on 19 March. their baking secrets with you in the Emma’s fascination for cakes began Clandestine Cake Cook Book. The rules when she used to vist her nans’s as a are quite clear: no cupcakes, no muffins, young girl and help with the baking. no brownies, pies or tarts. It’s all about She heard about the Clandestine Cake cake! With each event organised around Club from The One Show last April. a creative theme, the results are some of She hoped that one would start in the most loved and inventive baked de- Taunton. When it did not she started lights you’ll ever eat. From classic tea- one with her friend Kirsty. She found time treats and chocolatey indulgences an obliging venue in Cafe Culture and to global bakes and spectacular cake ex- the Taunton branch was begun. travaganzas, you’ll find inspiring reci- The Taunton club now has a healthy pes such as: Scrumptious Sticky Toffee 27 members though new members are Cake; Smoked Chilli Chocolate Cake; always welcome with or without bak- Blood Orange and Rosemary Loaf; ing experience. Raspberry Cakewell; Rose, Rhubarb One of the central ideas is that the Cardamom Cake; Chai-soaked Vanilla baking should take place at a series of Sponge; a giant Lemon Fondant Fancy; venues, so if there is anyone out there and the unmissable five-tier Rainbow who would like to offer a venue please get in touch. Emma can be contacted at: emrichas@yahoo.co.uk. Meet The Taunton Clandestine Cake Club Talk and Questions followed by cake and an opportunity to buy the book! 7.00 pm on 19 March at Brendon Books, Bath Place, Taunton TA1 4ER 01823 337742 email@ brendonbooks@gmail.com Tickets, £4 redeemable against the purchase of the book The cover of the Clandestine Cake Cook Book, available from Brendon Books, details opposite. 32
  • 33.
    The Real JaneAusten work - a silhouette, a vellum notebook, a topaz cross, a laptop writing box, a roy- alty cheque, a bathing machine, and many more.The woman who emerges in this bi- ography is far tougher, more socially and politically aware, and altogether more modern than the conventional picture of ‘dear Aunt Jane’ would allow. Published to coincide with the bicentenary of Pride and Prejudice, this lively and scholarly bi- Who was the real Jane Austen? Over- ography brings Austen dazzlingly into the turning the traditional portrait of the twenty-first century. author as conventional and genteel, Paula Byrne’s landmark biography Paula was born in Birkenhead in 1967, reveals the real woman behind the the third daughter in a large working- books. In this new biography, best- class Catholic family. She studied at the The Sisters selling author Paula Byrne, explores University of Liverpool and now lives ited. It was published worldwide by the forces that shaped the interior life in Oxford with her husband, the Shake- HarperCollins, with the UK edition of Britain’s most beloved novelist: her speare scholar Jonathan Bate, and their reaching the Sunday Times top ten father’s religious faith, her mother’s three children (Tom, Ellie and Harry). She bestseller list in August 2009. Paula is aristocratic pedigree, her eldest broth- is a Fellow of Oxford University’s Harris also the author of the top ten bestseller er’s adoption, her other brothers’ na- Manchester College. Perdita: The Life of Mary Robinson val and military experiences, her rela- Her previous book, Mad World: Evelyn (HarperCollins UK, Random House tives in the East and West Indies, her Waugh and the Secrets of Brideshead, USA). Paula’s first book, shortlisted cousin who lived through the trauma told the story of Evelyn Waugh’s friend- for the Theatre Book Prize, was Jane of the French Revolution, the fami- ship with the extraordinary aristocratic Austen and the Theatre, published in ly’s amateur theatricals, the female family who inspired Brideshead Revis- 2002 and reissued in paperback by novelists she admired, her residence Bloomsbury. in Bath, her love of the seaside, her travels around England and her long struggle to become a published author. Byrne uses a highly innovative tech- nique whereby each chapter begins from an object that conjures up a key moment or theme in Austen’s life and The Family Profile Hear Paula Byrne Talk and Questions followed by a book signing 7.00 pm on Thursday 9 May at Brendon Books, Bath Place, Taunton TA1 4ER 01823 337742 email@ brendonbooks@gmail.com Tickets £4.00 redeemable against purchase of the book 33
  • 34.
    The Count ofMonte Cristo Director Andy Burden’s and the company performing the willow pattern story), and believes that the The love of storytelling and Count of Monte Cristo lends itself to the theatre he believes this form of theatrical storytelling. The Count of Monte Cristo also appeals has its roots in his fam- to Andy because it raises moral and po- ily upbringing in Wales litical issues which are relevant to our time, when corruption within govern- It was in part because of an unfortu- ment and local and national institutions nate condition which meant he had and the morality and behaviour of large poor eyesight in one eye and found commercial companies are bing called it difficult to read. As a consequence, into question. The book is set against his Grandad spent a good deal of time the background of profound political reading to him. On Sunday evenings and social upheaval in France while on he would read the bible and on Sat- a personal level, Edmund Dante, the urdays Lambs’ Tales from Shakespeare. central character, not only has to grap- His grandmother would also read to ple with the fact of the injustice to him- him directly from her complete works self when he is falsely imprisoned, but of Shakespeare after she had seen a the consequences of seeking revenge production at the local theatre. Though which affects the innocent as well as the school did its best to put him off Shake- guilty. There is also the question of the speare, a visit from a theatrical group to morality of money and its relation to an his school made up of a cast of just two individual and their perceived worth. people, also made a great impression Dante is left largely unchallenged when on him. They were telling the Willow he assumes the title of the Count of cigars they made were called Monte Cristo. Pattern story and their only prop was a Monte Cristo, once it is known that he They told him it was because that was the sheet. Yet he was affected by the power has money. title of their favourite book. and simplicity of the storytelling. The idea for the setting of the play oc- Andy saw an opportunity for an interesting Though Andy has worked for the curred after a discussion with a friend and powerful way of telling the story. The commercial theatre on big productions, who had recently come back from Cuba. story is retold and re-enacted by three of the he feels that the most important role is He had visited a cigar factory where workers in a cigar factory who quickly as- to communicate a story to the audience the cigar makers were read to each day similate their characters in such depth that and take them with you and that this while they worked. He asked why the we are transported to the reality of world of can very often be done best with a small Dumas’ book. energetic cast (just as Shakespeare did Andy has recently worked on a diverse Old World. For Stepping Out: Diary of range of projects including perform- A Madman and The Inhabitants Of The ances with The Natural Theatre Com- Moon Are Noses. Andy has also directed pany in Slava Poulin’s Snow Show many shows and projects for Theatre West, Congress of Fools in Moscow, co-writ- Innerroom, Big State, and The Theatre ing and directing the highly acclaimed Royal Bath. I Shot Den for Edinburgh, working with Peepolykus at The Lyric Hammersmith as associate and then tour director, directing The National Youth Theatre in Foot/Mouth at the Soho Theatre and The Count of Monte Cristo undertaking a six month contract as The Brewhouse, Artistic Director of The Arc Theatre Taunton Wiltshire Previous directing includes: Thursday 9 May for The Tobacco Factory- Pinocchio, A Christmas Carol, Alice Through The Friday 10 May Looking Glass and Searchlights Over Box Office: 01823 283244 Bemmy. For Natural Theatre: A Night Please check to see if appearing At The Bijou, Scarlatti In Paradise and In The Eyes Of Cod. For Strangeface at an alternative venue The Last Resort. For Prime Theatre: Andy Burden 34
  • 35.
    Alexandre Dumas Alexandre Dumasis one of the most great English Shakespearian actor) and widely read of french novelists. His in 1839, the most successful of his plays, books have been translated into nearly Mademoiselle de Belle-Isle. a hundred languages, and his life was Other affairs also followed (he was as colourful as his novels. rumoured to have more than forty in his He was born in 1802, the third child lifetime and at least three other illegiti- of Thomas Alexandre Dumas, the il- mate children). He attached himself to legitimate son of a marquis and a Ida Ferrer in 1835 and travelled to Na- slave girl from San Domingo, Marie ples with her where he fell in love with Cesette Dumas. His father, who mar- Catherine Ungher - and Italy. He mar- ried Marie-Louise Elisabeth Labouret, ried Ida Ferrer in 1840 only for them to died in 1806 in impoverishment, be separated four years later, the year though he had previously had a distin- in which he began to serialise his two guished career in which he had been a greatest novels, The Three Musketeers general under Bonaparte in the Italian and The Count of Monte Cristo. More and Egyptian campaigns. His, mother, books followed including a sequel to therefore, had little money to spend on The Three Musketeers. He opened his educating the young Alexandre. How- own theatre, The Theatre Historique, in Photograph 1855 by Nadar ever, he was a voracious reader and 1847 where he showed several adaptions his father’s distinguished career and of his novels. 1848 was a momentous 1853, he returned to Paris and started aristocratic rank helped him acquire year, ‘the year of revolutions’, where, a newspaper, Le Mousquetaire and in a position with Louise Philippe, the in France, Louise Philippe was de- the same year, the novel Ange Pitou. Duke of Orleans, at which time he be- posed. Dumas unsuccessfully stood for In 1858 he founded Le Monte Cristo, gan to mix with writers and artists. His parliament and though two books fol- a literary weekly and then spent some son, also named Alexandre and who lowed (The Queen’s Necklace and The time in Russia where his books were inherited his writing skills (He wrote Black Tulip), he went bankrupt in 1850. popular. In 1860 he met Garibaldi and The Lady of The Camelias), was born Though Dumas had a good income from supported the Italian struggle against in 1822, the result of an affair with his books he was extravagant and gener- Italy and found an Italian-French peri- seamstress, Catherine le Bay. ous to his acquaintances who he would odical entitled L’Independente. In the Though we know Alexandre Dumas often entertain in the large house he last 10 years of his life he continued to best for his fiction, he first came to built outside Paris which he christened travel throughout Europe still produc- prominence in the theatre and contin- The Chateau de Monte Cristo. He was ing dramas, novels, travel writing and ued to write plays throughout his life. forced to sell it when he went bankrupt. journalism. He had a last love affair In 1829 he had his first success with The year following his bankruptcy, with Adah Menken, a famous Ameri- Henry III et sa couer at the Come- Louis Napoleon seized power and the can actress half his age. He died on 5 die Francais. Other successful plays Second Empire came into being, Dumas December 1870 in Dieppe. followed: Christine in 1830, Antony joined Victor Hugo in exile in Belgium. in 1831, Kean in 1836 (based on the In 1852 he published his memoirs and, in Auguste Maquet It is only in recent years that the extent of Maquet’s role in aiding Dumas with his nov- els has been understood. He became Professor at the Lycee Charlemagne when he was only eighteen. He trained as an historian though later turned to literature. Maquet’s role appears to have been to outline the plot and the characters and he was thought to have contributed to eighteen novels and many plays including the Count of Monte Cristo. His name did not appear on any of the books though apparently he was well paid. It was a fruitful relationship for many years until a court action by Maquet against Dumas for non-payment of monies owed. Dumas wrote that the idea for The Count of Monte Cristo was based on the story of Pierre Picaud, a French shoemaker who was falsely accused by three jealous friends of being a spy for England while engaged to be married to a rich woman. He was imprisoned in The Fenestrelle Fort and was the servant to a rich Italian cleric who left his money to him when he died. When he left prison he took revenge on his three false friends, stabbing two of them and poisoning the other. Lithograph of 1847 by C Faber 35
  • 36.
    Every Room Tellsa Story: Chelsea Hotel As the original Hotel any story - to a new generation, and to know the cultural history’, says Jim, ‘but Chelsea undergoes a it is not a documentary we are creating. controversial face-lift, We will locate our own experiences and reference our own performer’s biogra- dance theatre company phies within the production, using some factual and some fictional elements.’ Earthfall get set to reveal Jim founded Earthfall with Jessica the poetry and tragicom- Cohen in 1989 with the aim of forging radical choreography with live music ic events from the iconic and strong visual imagery. Since then New York hotel and its Earthfall have performed in many ma- jor festivals all over the world, and have place in contemporary won several awards for their live per- formance and film work. These include culture. the BAFTA Cymru Award for Best Short Film for ‘Too Old to Dream’, and The Theatre in Wales Award for Best Dance Dylan Thomas spent some of his last with ‘At Swim Two Boys’, which has hours there, and Mark Twain was now been made into a film, due for re- among the first of many authors to stay. Jim Ennis Jessica Cohen, the Artistic Directors lease soon. In song Leonard Cohen wrote of his af- ‘I went to hear her read from her book Following on from Chelsea Hotel, fair with Janis Joplin in ‘Chelsea Hotel - a beautiful account of a love affair be- Earthfall’s next project looks set to take #2’, and Bob Dylan described ‘Staying tween Patti and Robert Mapplethorpe’ them in a different direction and will be up for days in the Chelsea Hotel writing explains Jim, ‘with him coming to terms called ‘Stories from a Crowded Room’. Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands’ for his with his sexuality, and Patti coming to It will be a shorter, installation piece that wife ‘Sara’. Jack Kerouac, Allen Gins- terms with her own creativity and artistic berg, Arthur C. Clarke, Quentin Crisp, career.’ and Sid and Nancy are just some of the Jim, along with fellow Artistic Direc- other legends that have passed through tor Jessica Cohen has visited the original the doors of this infamous New York Hotel Chelsea in New York. ‘The place hotel over the past 100 years. had an air of shambolic elegance’ recalls Using a combination of radical dance, Jim. ‘It was chaotic with artists donat- live music and film, the multi award- ing drawings and paintings in lieu of winning Earthfall peel back-layers of rent. The building has charisma and has history to reveal the stories-some true, always been a place of culture, created some false-buried within its walls. organically from the ground up, but now ‘We had done a lot of research into the it seems like it’s becoming quite corpo- New York art scene of the 50s and 60s rate.’ for The Factory’, explains Artistic Di- The Hotel, which first opened in 1884, rector Jim Ennis, referring to a previous is currently undergoing refurbishment, Earthfall production inspired by Andy and as a result many of the historic fea- Warhol’s famous creative hub. ‘Out of tures including artists work have been that, stories kept emerging of the events removed. This has proved controversial, Jim describes as “a piece of architecture, and people at the Chelsea Hotel. Like with some residents alleging these moves a site-responsive piece of work where Warhol’s Factory, the Chelsea Hotel be- are an attempt by the developers to force the performers and the audience will be came a place where artists found refuge, out existing tenants, some of whom have immersed.” and created an almost pseudo-family to resided there since the 1960s. By Sara Loveridge protect themselves.’ ‘I think it is important to tell stories - One of the major influences on the choreography and storytelling of Chel- See Earthfall perform Chelsea Hotel sea Hotel has been Patti Smith’s ac- Thur 25th April at Tacchi-Morris Arts Centre, School Road, Taunton. TA2 8PD. count of the time she spent at the hotel 7.30pm. Tickets: £9, £7 Concessions, £5 Students. Recommended for those aged14+. in the 60s, as documented in her book Box Office: 01823 414141. Website: www.tacchi-morris.com. ‘Just Kids’. 36
  • 37.
    Let us forgetwith generosity those who cannot love us Graham Fawcett is coming to Brendon Books in Taunton to Neruda talk about the poetry gi- ant, Pablo Neruda, one the of the seven Olympians Olympian of his lecture tour. Graham explains the concept: ‘Over the twenty-seven centuries since the first Olympic Games, athletes have School in London since 1997, devis- Graham Fawcett on Neruda: been winning the hearts of their coun- ing and teaching new courses on poetry Such is the power of cinema that the tries and often the world with feats of past and present from around the world. clearest picture many of us have of Pa- physical and mental giftedness as near He has written and presented radio pro- blo Neruda’s life and work is, thanks to to miraculous as anyone can imagine. grammes about literature and music on the 1994 film Il Postino: The Postman, Go to Olympus and join the Olympic BBC Radio 3 for many years. His verse that he was on Capri in 1952 living for crowds in ancient times, however, and translation of Dante’s early love poems, the first time with Mathilde Urrutia, you would also have seen poets on La Vita Nuova, was a BBC Radio Dra- the woman who would share the last 28 hand to write works in praise of the new ma commission broadcast on Radio 3 years of hisife, and that he understood champions. as A Voyage of Sighs directed by John about love. Seven Olympians reverses the process Theocharis. Whether in enforced exile, as on by staging lectures in praise of Ovid, Graham studied Classics at Christ’s Capri and visiting many of the world’s Geoffrey Chaucer, Lord Byron, Alexan- Hospital, where his love of poetry be- capitals, or as a diplomat in Burma, gan while translating the great English Ceylon, the Dutch East Indies, Spain poets into Greek and Latin. He read during the Civil War (his in memoriam Archaeology Anthropology and Eng- poems for Lorca, a friend, stun eye and lish at Cambridge, and has worked for ear), France and Mexico, Neruda trav- Southern Television, Southern Arts, the elled effortlessly; as a result, his poetry British Institute of Florence, the Arvon carries the authentic charge of his en- Foundation and Art History Abroad. He counter with dramas of land and sea taught translation at Goldsmiths College and the unfolding of history. for fifteen years from 1991, and now The love poetry offers the gloriously lectures on both poetry and translation at double intimacy of an open heart to the universities in the UK, Italy and Spain. beloved and friendship’s confessional He has been a mentor for Exiled Writers to the reader, while his political nerve, Ink, and is a trustee of Outside In World, exquisitely incisive and moderate, in- the children’s world literature charity, spires fellow feeling beyond borders. and President of the T S Eliot Society Nobel Laureate in 1971, Neruda has (UK) - www.eliotsociety.org.uk. He has been hailed by Gabriel Garcia Mar- der Pushkin, Charles Baudelaire, Emily lived in Italy and French Catalonia and quez as the greatest poet of the twenti- Dickinson and Pablo Neruda, seven now lives in London. eth century in any language. poets who became and have remained national and international heroes for their uniqueness of voice, intensity of Pablo Neruda Night at Brendon Books wonder at the world, formidable output, Thursday 14 March 7.00pm and sheer prowess on the page.’ Tickets: £10 from Brendon Books, Bath Place, He has been a tutor for The Poetry Taunton TA1 4ER 01823 337742 email: brendonbooks@gmail.com 37
  • 38.
    Somerset Bristol When James Osmond away. Britain is a land that bears the scars of thousands of years of human returned to the UK and habitation. Although this means that it to Bristol after a year no longer has any significant areas of true wilderness, it also means that the photographing the dra- landscape has had long enough to set- tle into its co-existence with the human matic landscapes of population. Australia and New Zea- Winding country lanes, patchwork fields and ancient church towers, are land he was concerned just some examples of the time-sof- that the West Country tened scars inflicted on the land, that have now become central to its aes- landscape would ap- thetic appeal. Human history is writ- ten deeply into the landscape of Britain pear tame by compari- and nowhere is this more noticeable son. However, he need than in Somerset.’ ing web design, film making, business James’s route to photography was an not have worried. indirect one. As a ‘clueless 17 year old’ planning and digital photography tech- he was not sure what he wanted to do niques. I was in my element and didn’t but was clear that he wanted to work want to stop so once I graduated from outside and was not interested in be- this course, I immediately plunged into coming rich. the unpredictable world of freelance na- ‘In hindsight, I can see that the problem was ‘I thought a degree in Zoology might ture photography.’ one of novelty. When you have grown up suit me, so I went to Nottingham Uni- The result of his endeavours is a new and lived all your life in the same country, versity to do just that. It’s a fascinating photographic book which covers the you are naturally accustomed to your sur- subject and I loved the fieldwork, but historic county of Somerset (the mod- rounding landscape and inclined to take for there was one module that stood out for ern counties of Somerset, North Somer- granted the qualities that make it special. me. That was the module on Biological set and Bath and North East Somerset) Spending a year away in such a different Photography. which boasts three areas of outstanding environment as Australia and New Zea- In 2001, a year after graduating from natural beauty, one unesco World Herit- land allowed me to return to Britain with my Zoology degree, I was heading age Site and a National Park. He also fresh eyes and as I set about surveying the back to Nottingham University to take covers the city of Bristol which borders green spaces surrounding Bristol, I was my place on the newly launched MSc the historic county.The author takes us aware of a subtle yet profound quality of course in Biological Imaging. This on a journey through the seasons of the landscape that I had missed while I was was a very intensive year during which Somerset and Bristol in a collection of I learned all sorts of things includ- stunning photographs. James Osmond will be showing slides and talking about his book at Brendon Books Bath Place Taunton TA1 4ER Wedensday 27 March at 7.00pm 01823 337742 Tickets £4.00 38
  • 39.
    Made to Last Eventually, shareholders voted to reject This is the story behind the bid. The company was reorganised with all its lines made outside the coun- an iconic British brand try. This meant the closures of all UK that is approaching its factories and the laying off of hundreds of Clarks employees. But the result has double century. Clarks’ been a transformation in the company’s reach extends to all cor- fortunes. In 2010 its profits were over GBP 100 million and its retro desert ners of the globe and boots and other styles have become the height of fashion, especially in China yet it remains a family- and America. owned business firmly Mark Palmer has been a journalist all rooted in its Quaker ori- his working life as a news editor on the Daily Telegraph, Executive Editor of gins. the Daily Express and, latterly, as Trav- el editor of the Daily Mail. His inter- est in Clarks emanated in part from the This is unlike other well known Quaker fact that he is a direct descendant of the firms like Cadburys, now part of US gi- Quaker George Palmer, who began the ant Kraft. biscuit firm that was to become Huntley Founded in 1825 by two brothers, Cyrus ies and recreation halls were built - and and Palmers in 1841. William Palmer and James Clark, the company began as a trade unions banned. As the sun set on was an executor of founder Cyrus rug-making operation in the then tiny vil- the British Empire, Clarks opened up new Clark’s will and, in fact, the Palmers lage of Street, Somerset. One day, James frontiers across the world. Clarks brand were one of several Somerset families Clark began making slippers from off- logo became one of the most famous which bailed Clarks out in 1863 when cuts of rugs and found that people wanted in the world. Every parent in the 1950s the company came perilously close to to buy them. Slippers became shoes and swore by Clarks shoes for their children bankruptcy. Part of the fascination for boots - and a business was born. as well as buying them for themselves. Mark, in addition to exploring his own Over the years it has had its ups and But increased competition from within Quaker roots, is how the company has downs but it has always strived to remain the UK and overseas saw concerns for retained its old fashioned ethos of qual- true to its Quaker values in its commit- the future heightened during the 1980s. A ity and service and yet been an inno- ment to the well-being of its workforce hostile bid for the company in the early vator and remained at the forefront of and the local community. Schools, librar- 1990s saw the board and the family split. technological change. Mark Palmer will be talking about and signing copies of Made to Last at Brendon Books Bath Place Taunton TA1 4ER on April 30th at 7.00pm 01823 337742 Tickets £4.00 39
  • 40.
    A fitting Remembrance Linda Cole, widow of John highlighting all the aspects of John’s Cole, shares her experience life, his achievements, his passions, his of the funeral tribute aspirations and work for his commu- nity, were delivered by Hilary Marshall At 2 p.m. on Friday, 1st February, the and Chris Davies. Hilary read a telling Church of St. Mary Magdalene Taun- passage from the last chapter of John’s ton was full to the brim with close to novel, “ Resolution”. As his death was six hundred colleagues, musicians the result of a dramatic onset of Motor and music lovers, previous patients, Neurone Disease, these words served as friends and family members who had hope and balm for the soul. The clergy, assembled to celebrate the life of John the Reverend Rod Corke and the Rever- Hugh Cole. The introit for the entry end Terry Stokes gave other insights in- a smile “John is already making plans of the coffin was “If ye love me” by cluding the seventeen years when John for auditions from among the heav- Thomas Tallis. John’s choir, Amici, and Terry together looked after Wel- enly choirs”. There could be no more now under the direction of Andrew lington “body and soul”! At the end of fitting place for the reception than Trewhella, sang with commitment the day, the man who made music had the buzz of the Music School and the and love. Rarely has been heard music made for him. The recessional quiet reflective peace of the Chapel such beautiful singing. Three spe- Hallelujah chorus, John’s choice, was at Taunton School, where John devel- cially selected traditional hymns were rousingly sung by congregation/audi- oped his love of music and went on enhanced by descants written and ence and choir, joined by the exciting from there to study medicine. provided by Andrew and the organ- sound of two trumpeters from Orchestra ist, John Young. Stunning eulogies, West. As one mourner commented with Linda Cole There was a grand re- opening at Ilminster Arts Centre on Mon- day 14 January Three of the Exhibiting Artists Handmade pennants depicting local scenes by South Somerset Embroi- derers’ Guild were unveiled. In the Gallery, a brand new exhibition was launched by Ian Wait of Bran- ston (sponsors of the Annual Open) Thanks to support from NatWest Community Force, the Gooch Char- itableTrust, South Somerset District Council, and customer donations, Leo Davey is from a Jane Bradley is the only Ilminster Arts Centre has been able Andrew Sutcliffe, printmaker exhibited. Retired art teacher. He family of artists who to carry out much-needed refur- have all gone in slightly Has returned to art after bishment works over the Christmas always maintained his an 18 year gap. Thinks painting style while different directions. break. This included upgrading the He studied art illustra- her work is a lot freer Café Kitchen, installing new light- teaching. He finds that and more abstract than it now in retirement he tion and now owns his ing in the Gallery and painting the own studio and shop used to be and finds that Arts Centre internally. Thanks were can attempt a looser screenprinting methods painting style. in Minehead. He also expressed to all volunteers who produces stylised land- have changed a lot for have assisted with this. scapes. the better, 40
  • 41.
    The First FireRiver Poets Poetry Competition place and the poem is infused with a The Fire River Poets sense of fun coupled with a warm hu- first poetry competi- manity that gradually won me over. Third Prize goes to Graham Burchell tion took place dur- for From a Table of Winds. The imagery ing the second half in this poem is often quite surreal and quirky (‘A cloud approaches. It’s the of 2012 with the re- size of a housing estate’). In this, the sults announced at local to Somerset but perhaps in the fu- style is similar to Mark’s. To mention the ostensible subject – a gust of wind the beginning of 2013. ture also in the wider context of the South blowing stuff about – gives little idea of Chairman of the Fire West of England. the worth and originality of this poem. I didn’t deliberately set out to produce River Poets, John The Competition report a final shortlist of ten poems. It just so Stuart describes the An Judge Anthony Watts follows: from the amended version of the report happened that after I had found reasons for rejecting as many as possible I was background to the left with ten that refused to be ignored. The hardest part of judging a competi- competition. tion is deciding which of your shortlist Here then, in no particular order, are the seven remaining poems, to each of of really good poems is the best. All of which I have awarded a special com- Congratulations must go to the mem- them were selected because of some spe- mendation. bers who drew up the rules, organised cial quality that marked them out from publicity, took receipt of entries and the rest. After living with the shortlist Highly commended (in alphabetical or- fees for the very smooth and efficient for several days, during which I changed der): job that was done under the supervi- the order several times, I finally decided Anne Kealy for the poem Wordless sion of Chrissy Banks. to award first prize to Mark Totterdell’s Dream, Jonathan Pinnock for the poem The winner received £100, £75 and strikingly descriptive poem Wasp. This Bloody Italians, Mark Totterdell for the £50 respectively for first, second and is the kind of poem where you know the poems Pet Shop, Pied Wagtails and The third place. A number of poems were poet has held the subject in the focus of Kelt., Peter Wyton for the poems Robots also commended. his imagination until exactly the right on Robots and The Comma in Water- The entries were, as is now common- words appeared on the page (‘its mini- stones. place, judged ‘blind’ in that the adju- monster face / with forelegs poised like dicator, Anthony Watts, was unaware paws’). Through brilliant use of imagery, I’ve been on both sides of this competi- of who wrote the poems he received it shows you the familiar in an unfamiliar tion malarkey, so I’m aware that the one in the post. way. After reading this, I will never look thing you’re dying to know, apart from These poems will now be published at a wasp in quite the same way again. whether you’ve won, is how many en- on our website (www.fireriverpoets. Sister Hildegard by Annie Fisher (sec- tries there were. If you don’t know that, org.uk) and the poets are all to be invit- ond prize) appealed to me for quite differ- the results don’t mean very much. Yet ed to a special reading of these poems ent reasons. This one was a slow burner. surprisingly few competitions bother to and others of their choice at a reading It started off well down the shortlist and tell you. Not so this one. The final total on Thursday 2 May 2013 (venue to be slowly climbed to second place as I came of valid entries received was 245 poems. announced). to like it more with each successive read- If you reached the shortlist - well done. Fire River Poets intend that the in- ing. In contrast to Mark’s bold metaphors, If you are a prizewinner – very well come gained through the competition Annie’s language is straightforward, con- done. If neither - better luck next time. will be used to develop and expand versational and unassuming, but it reads their poetry-based activities, mainly beautifully. There’s not a word out of 41
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    FIRST PRIZE So there we were, singing softly: “Hark! I hear the foe advancing, Hildegard’s great sandals prancing. Wasp Sh-sh-sh......she’s coming!” In high-vis tabard, it’s the hazchem symbol Dear, shy Hildegard, we meant you no harm. for itself; all chevron segments, Anyway, we knew points and angles, dangling undercarriage. Your guardian angel could see in the dark. It’s jasper And, to be sure, there was never a slip, the picnic villain, seeking to steal the sweetness Not a curse, not a cry. from the glass. Those hazy wings, Just the creak of your careful feet, sugar-fuelled, keep it buzzing through And a reassuring mustiness, the stump of summer. As you wafted by. It seems so other – meshed eyes, the oddity Annie Fisher of exoskeleton – as if it had scouted out from some domed, humming, matt-grey mothership, THIRD PRIZE but when it wipes its mini-monster face with forelegs poised like paws, can you not sense From a Table of Winds the subtlest of tugs on those tight-wound strands that bind us into kin? A seafront diner dedicated to Geronimo has dream-catchers, fluffy tomahawks Mark Totterdell and prints of him looking disgruntled. Every object is beaded and feathered. Being feather phobic I choose to sit outside. The air is still. SECOND PRIZE There’s the arc of a polystyrene cup lifted from table to lips. Silence Sister Hildegard interrupted by a slurp, a gull’s scream Sister Hildegard disturbed the air lightly and harder breaths as I free a sandwich With the musty odour of nunliness, from its wrapping. A fly and a wash of breeze Slept under shivering blankets, feather my face. My napkin shudders. In the room abutting the boarders’ dormitory. A cloud approaches. Each night at ten, after chapel prayers, It’s the size of a housing estate. Her large feet, in a pair of men’s sandals, Behind it a cherub flies, cheeks inflated Creaked along the corridors and up the spiral stairs, like the child on the next table. Past our whispering, giggling beds To her tiny, white-walled cell. Light dims. There’s a chill. Tables become rinks: One night we set booby traps: my cup, three-quarters empty, skates, spins, Soap on the door knobs, sprays tea into the cherub’s blown breath. A sticky-out-drawer, Slippers, hairbrush, flannels on the floor... Paper, plastic spoon and wrappings are hovercrafts. My napkin becomes O blest, irretrievable, innocent days an airborne ghost of the gull I saw yesterday, Of Bunty comics and ballet shoes, tripping over rocks with its broken wing. And interlock knickers with pockets in regulation grey, My perfectly pointless first bra: thirty double A... Graham Burchell 42
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    ‘Great Expectations’ fulfilled huish | EVENTS The 2012 Brunner Prize Creative Writing Competi- tion, organised by Richard NTS Huish College of Taunton, was judged and awarded in Novermber 2012. Sue Morkane, English teacher at Huish and critical to the organisation and devle- ‘Great Expectations’ was one of the Bleak House seven titles based on Charles Dickens’ The Cricket on the Hearth work (and in honour of his bi-cente- 2012 ond year in a row for his original and im- pressively crafted take on ‘Hard Times.’ The judges (the Richard Huish College ak House opment of the competi- 2012 tion, describes the award et on the Hearth nary Great Expectationsstimulus this year) that was the for the annual Brunner Creative Writ- Hard Times English Department and creative writing tutor and writer Julie Boyer) commended Expectations evening. ing competition. This is the fifteenth the very high quality of the writing. d Times year The Ghost’s Bargain been that partner schools have The Taunton Academy’s Emily Beau- ost’s Bargain involved and Curiosity Shop The Old there was an impressive champ was a fitting winner of the Brun- Curiosity Shop standard of workTwo Cities A Tale of from seven schools: ner Competition’s sister award, The Lucas of Two Cities Bishop Fox’s, The Castle, Courtfields, Cup for Artistic Writing. She too chose a Heathfield, Kingsmead, the Taun- passage from ‘Great Expectations’ to il- ton Academy and, for the first time, lustrate and created an evocative compo- the wider Somerset area: Norton Hill sition with delicate penmanship. School, Midsomer Norton. Winners collected their awards at a Pres- The Brunner Cup went to Richard entation evening held on 20th November Huish College student Zoe Backhouse, in the college’s Main Hall. An apprecia- whose ‘Great Expectations’ was one tive audience listened to members of the of the best entries yet: a very modern English department reading extracts of piece of work that explored the think- the winning entries. An extremely pleas- ing of a young musician as she played. ant evening was concluded with wine and r entries: October The partner school’s award went to refreshments. Deadline for entries: Sam Dunnett (The Castle) for the sec- Friday 26th October Zoe Backhouse, the winner of the though she quickly adds that she Brunner Prize is a student in the does not have issues with control- lower sixth of Richard College ling parents herself. studying English literature, classi- Her main influence lies in the cal civilisation, English language, American writer Lorrie Moore’s French and drama and hopes to short stories. ‘Her collection called carry on with English at Univer- ‘Self Help’ really inspired the voice sity. of the short story, she says. ‘It is The inspiration for her short sto- definitely Lorrie Moore’s style ry is her background in music. Un- which formed the ‘how to’, impera- til this year, when she had to focus tive persona of Great Expectations. on her academic studies, she had She is a fantastic writer.’ been part of a choir and played music in a band. She has, she says, The complete short story is repro- ‘grown up knowing children with duced on the following pages. pushy parents who themselves did not make it in the music industry, Left, Emily Beauchamp, winner of the Lucas Cup and right, Zoe Backhouse, winner of The Brunner Cup 43
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    Short Story keys down and slaps her ankle against the Great Expectations skirting board. Sit directly above her in Laugh as thick globules roll over his taut skin, reaching out, grasping his ears, his your room. Listen. Floss your bow with hair. Hoot as spit penetrates his mouth By Zoë Backhouse rosin. The G is flat. Tune it. Hum the Bee and floods his windpipe. Shriek when Gees whilst flicking to the third movement. he chokes, when he splutters, when he Fancy you can smell your eyeballs burn- Hear her footsteps outside your room. gasps. Howl when, like a nostalgic ing because you’ve looked at the sun too ‘Claire.’ fountain, saliva punches through his long. Flick your lids openshut. Watch Take in her damp hair, her dishevelled pale, pressed suit, and explodes with the sun’s shape morph into squares and clothes. Notice a rip in her trousers. Feel slow, satisfied pops. rectangles, and ooze into the edges of slightly grossed out by the eye of flesh. ‘What are you looking at Claire?’ your vision. Feel a flat pain stirring in It is pale and rippled. Resolve to remain Mutter a response. the side of your head. Light floods your thin. Fade back into mindless memories. view. Scrunch up your face in revul- ‘How was your day, Mother?’ Tap the lino with your patent leather sion. ‘I was knocked off my bike, Claire.’ shoe. Notice a spattering of mud on ‘Steve. Claire’s doing it again.’ Feel Feel surprised at her bluntness. Nod, un- the left shoe (ironically it mirrors the your father’s shadow on you. He is cran- derstanding. Worry she needs help, or a recent outbreak of spots on your nose). ing his neck over the pushchair. Know hug. Look around; find inspiration from Wonder why the previous interview is his pupils are sombre and wide.’ your conservative whitewashed room. taking so long. See a man hurry past, ‘Claire. Stop it.’ He says slowly and Ask: ‘Are you okay?’ lugging a tuba. Notice a loose stitch in carefully, like a hammer testing a nail. Watch her straighten. Notice her nod. his jumper. * You’ve done the job. Relax. Reflect on the day she died. Study Mrs Walters carefully. Trace her Tottering downstairs, she will sort herself Wonder whether the bike crash jolted face’s contours onto your thigh and fill out and research diabetes’ influence on her fattening tumour. Wonder whether them with paint. Feel wheezy at the the younger generation. After this, know she knew all along. Hate her for not tell- sweep of her hand up her cello’s neck. she will file everything away in her ring ing you. Hate your father for his hard Drum your fingers. Itch to play. binder and use paper polos for reinforce- and square tears. Think of his marble ‘Someone, somewhere, is always play- ments. You will share her satisfaction in skin. Think of the surface of your cello. ing Elgar.’ this but she will not see you, at the door- Feel a roll of nerves again. Inhale. Kick Slump at your father’s voice. Hate Mrs way, as she moves away from her desk and your legs against the chair. Try to forget Walter’s sheepish smile and plan multi- makes towards the kitchen. She will then them wheeling her in to the ambulance, ple ways of destroying her. Decide to cook pasta, or quinoa. You will eat duti- her head lolling stupidly to the side, you: cut up her cello strings and then twist fully. She will clear, murmur goodnight, void of words or thoughts, your hands them round her neck until her eyeballs and bumble upstairs at 8:30. Your father trembling, fumbling for an already gla- fall out. will roll his eyes. cial hand. Clench your jaw. Taste your Steve. She doesn’t like her, Steve. She is pathetic. tongue in your mouth. Rush through the She’s not leading a normal life. Think this as you watch her, slumped piece in your head. Stumble at dimin- Julie is the best around. She’ll take her against your doorframe. Think it all in the ished sevenths in the second movement. places we could never dream of. gasp of time it takes her to straighten up. Tense your neck. Jump: she is ready for Try the dotted rhythm Mrs Walters Work your brain in flashes. Turn back to you now. is suggesting. Think of mother’s new the music and click your neck to the right polka dot bag and its dead cow smell. like the men do in movies before they * Close your eyes a bit while you’re play- fight. Imagine the sound of bones. Taste Feel the beams of their eyes in the dark- ing. Lean into your cello’s body. Forget your new candy lip balm that you stole ness. Watch the dust particles, dancing Mrs Walters’ smudged lipstick, your fa- from that disabled girl. Lift the bow. In- to the whirrs of the cameras. Reckon ther’s hand on her chair. Lean on the C hale; ready. you can hear their swooping sniggers sharp and dance with the scale. Imagine * amongst the shushed and hushed crack- popping each of the notes like perfect As you sit, waiting to be called for the au- ling of a million salted crisps. bubbles, blue and silver on your pointed dition, remember this. Remember it now Swing your bow round to the spines tongue. Wonder if you can go to Bella as you eye your father eyeing you. of four strings. Bounce each one. Test Hoffman’s for tea. Picture yourself projecting a line of sa- their metal tautness. Position your skirt * liva at his blank face. Watch it slip down around you. Shift its waves of silk, their Your mother slams the door as she comes the bridge of his nose, seep into his tear vastness trapping you with a grand ges- home from the office. She throws her ducts, dribble down to his flat mouth. ture of condescension. Blush. Wonder 44
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    Massive spring sale 20%off new books from stock until the end of March* Named as one of the top 50 of all bookshops in the UK by the Independent Newspaper in February 2012 BOOKS: New Old Ordnance Survey Map Stockists 01823 337742 brendonbooks@gmail.com www.brendonbooksonline.co.uk *Excludes local books and books by local authors 45
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    if anyone realisesyou’re wearing the bra burning horsehair. Lick the cracks off ment. It nods. Its eyes are wide. Its your father binned when he saw you’d your lips and taste an echo of candy- innocence stifles you. bought it instead of the mute. pink lipstick. Grip the cello’s neck, so Sway under the imbalance of your Cock your head to each sound. Smile. familiar in your sweaty clench. slumped shoulders; great expectations Smirk. Know you’re good. Know you’re Picture its launch, an arc of wood and waltz with smoke and begin to strangle better than most, better than those other light and dust. Imagine the stream of air you. Through the light and dust and competitors sitting backstage, surrounded fizzing through the strings. They will smoke it pleads. by fraught, frail mothers and fathers and sing for one last time. Your tears will I am not him. teachers. They live vicariously. Know this be whipped into the whirlwind and will I was never him. is worth more than another’s pretty face, splash the fire. It too will fizz and splut- The fire, disappointed now, licks the more than a witty mind. Know you’re ter with this new body of food. Smug air with quietening flames. Hug the good enough to win. boas of smoke will announce victory cello’s slender shoulders. Like the Know your father will be proud, his hours and it will all be over. eternal lover, curl round its hips. Rock of calculations, of silent decisions, of blank, It will all be over. with its weight. Slow. blanketing pressure finally paying off. Finger the strings, lost in rebellion’s Someone, somewhere, plays Elgar. Think you have a void inside your struc- image. It nudges your thigh. Glance But today, darling, it will not be you. ture, gnawed at by missing birthdays, ab- down at the bowed head of your instru- sent embraces. Drip in your stale pre-re- hearsed passion. Feel melodramatic. Nod at Mark. Watch his arms rise, sense the orchestra stand to attention. Begin. * Drop the bottle on the garden patio. Watch the sun set. Snort. Return to the heap. Stand, framed by the orange glow. Fix hands on hips, chubby now from years of stagnant rehearsals and late night post-con- cert snacks. Trace a cello on the inside of your curled hand. Find yourself scratching the sharp lines of your father’s profile. Cackle. Swig. Feel the alcohol’s burn in your throat and lungs. Think: it’s good I’m not a singer. Yell: IT’S GOOD I’M NOT A CELLIST. Shriek at the only gift he ever gave you: the black, plain funeral dress. Shout every cubicle-door word you know (you’d learn them as hot, hurried urine streamed obedi- ently into the bowl before each perform- ance). Scream your mother’s name- tell her you hate her. Tell her you’re glad she’s dead. Tell her she killed your father and he killed you. Wail that your hair’s greasy, that you’ve bitten off your nails, that the whole world weighs a million lost piggy-back rides you never had, that you’re gay, that you’re straight, that you’re a man, that you hate all men, that you’re scared of the dark. Screech. Howl. Hoot. Breathe the fire’s smell of radiators and 46
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    My Favourite... We askedAnn Brayley to tell us about her favourite literature, art music and drama. Anne runs the book club at Brendon Books. She has had s short story read on radio 4 and is working on a collection of stories. Anne works as Marketing Manager at Chilton Cantello School Having run several book clubs over the truly audacious and laughably pompous years, you’d think it would be easy to lives of the last of the aristocracy and their pick my favourite authors and books. circle. Not so. It is with great difficulty that I Proust seemed to me to view everything pick just two authors knowing full well through a lens of reminiscence and im- that I leave behind bus loads of won- pending loss. Being a hopelessly senti- derful authors waiting for clearance to mental person, I found myself reading all jolt forward a foot or two. That will be three of volumes of his work: Remem- for another occasion. In the meantime, brance of Things Past, as though I was the two authors I have chosen as my fa- feeding on every word and characterisa- vourites are Marguerite Duras and Mar- tion while using a big fat spoon to capture Lucien Freud Photo: Procsilas cel Proust. all the delicious juices . has pushed the boundaries in our life- Duras because she wrote like a painter I have been to performances ranging from time and created a stepping stone into paints. She applied strokes of words opera to contemporary dance to something the future like da Vinci, van Gogh and wildly avant garde involving drums and Picasso did. I think that artist is Lucien singing in a disused warehouse in Vancou- Freud. How is that after centuries of ver I seem to remember a long time ago, painting by generations of artists, Freud but the one that stands tallest amongst this could come along and find yet another small crowd of contenders is Waiting for way to apply paint to the canvas? How Godot. I refer to the specific performance did he do that? I hold him up as my fa- with Ian McKellan, Patrick Stewart and vourite artist because his work is acces- Simon Callow at the Bath Theatre Royal sible, yet shocking and ground breaking a few years ago. Thanks to two friends at the same time. who bought tickets for me to join them as Finally, my favourite music is tradi- part of my ‘not insignificant birthday’ I tional Croatian music. I hear in it a Marguerite Duras saw this play, I think a third time, but with combination of gypsy, Klezmer, Hun- to the page and the end result is like a garian and even a bit of sub-continental painting that you want to look at again Indian. I grew up with this music being and again. She used fleeting imagery played on stacked 45’s during parties at and sharp observation interchangeably home and it immediately brings to me like that of a rare artist who can use the sound of laughter and of tears from both water colour and oil to full effect. missing the home country by my par- Duras let romanticism, bad love, pain, ents and their fellow immigrant friends. sentimentalism, ambiguity, even stu- It is bitter sweet music for me. por and spareness of thought all flow through her writing. She got it all down 2010 production, The Doon School, India on the page and I love that. The first Photo: Merlay Samuel book I read was The Lover and I highly recommend the same starting point for these actors it was lifted to pure artistry. anyone else. Simon Callow made the role of Pozzo My second most favourite and entirely entirely his own which was an added and different author, Proust, socialised with unexpected surprise. The whole thing was the upper classes in the fading twilight superb. of the 19th century. He wrote about the I think there is really only one artist that Croatian Gypsy Music. 47
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