King Lear William Shakespeare Théâtre de Nesle Review – Paris

King Lear  William Shakespeare Théâtre de Nesle Review – ParisHow do you put Shakespeare’s King Lear on a stage the size of a postage stamp with 6 actors (3m,3f) running 90 minutes?

The answer is – carefully.

This is a very careful production with everything timed meticulously.  The 6 actors obviously play many parts each and the changes of costume/character are carefully thought through and executed with a seamless precision; one actor walking past another who is ready to hand the scarf and take the jacket that indicates the character change (for example).  The staging is organised and choreographed to the centimetre and the use of the sparse décor (rostra particularly) highly effective.

 

The text has been cut intelligently and some of the subplots sacrificed to bring the running time to the 90 minutes that the theatre demands.

 

What the production lacks is a certain passion and a rhythm.  The poetry of the verse has been sacrificed in the interests of clarity – creating a rather controlled and intellectual production.  But then this is a question of personal taste when it comes to Shakespeare and I prefer passion.  The intricacies of the plots and the machinations of Goneril and Regan – not to mention Edmund – are abundantly clear and easy to follow; the surtitles enabling those whose English is not “native” to keep up to speed.

 

On the whole a huge “bravo” to the entire team and a production well worth watching if you are in Paris soon.

 

Colin David Reese

 

 

Gustave by Arnaud Bédouet

Théâtre de l’Atelier, PARIS

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With Jacques Weber

and Philippe Dupont.

 

There are moments in the theatre when one is privileged to observe something which is – in the truest sense of the word – extraordinary.

 

Gustave, as performed by Jacques Weber, is one of those.

 

For most French people, the name “Gustave” will immediately evoke either Eiffel or Flaubert.

 

Gustave Flaubert is known to English speakers mostly for “Madame Bovary”, a character which has become an icon and a point of reference; but his list of works is much longer than that.  He wrote for the theatre as well as other novels and also a work unfinished at his death and concluded and subsequently published by his friend the publisher, Louis Conard, entitled “Dictionnaire des Idées Reçues” (A dictionary of preconceived ideas) in which, with a black humour, he mocks the society of the day.

 

In the introduction to the play Arnaud Bédouet, the author, describes Flaubert as “an anarchist in the body of a bourgeois” and describes the anger of a free spirit trapped in society’s constraints.

 

By using passages from Flaubert’s letters and with reference to his published works, M. Bédouet has created an impassioned monologue which rails against mediocrity in all its forms; artistic, social and political.  Whilst the references are firmly grounded in Flaubert’s world, the resonance for today’s society and particularly the artistic world are stunningly appropriate.  One line, for example, ‘Success is a result – not a target’.

 

Jacques Weber has been one of France’s leading actors for over 40 years in film, TV and theatre.  His presence on the stage is overwhelming and his performance in this play is nothing short of spectacular.  He moves through a range of emotions;  drawing us deeper and deeper into Flaubert’s world, sharing agony, joy, despair, delight (at a thunderstorm), cynicism, fury (at the mediocrity he sees in published works) … the evening is a roller coaster ride which M. Weber shares with the audience in a total commitment to the character.

 

This is one of those “must see” productions, but it only runs until the 31 December.

 

 

All Hell Let Loose In World War 1 By Wendy Breckon

THE UNTOLD STORY OF WILLIAM AND TOM so that we can give thanks to all those represented by the poppies planted in commemoration at the Tower before memory fades into the frenzy of Christmas.

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Patriotic fever, uncertainty and a touch of sadness are in the air. The year is 1915. Our country is at war. This is the moving story of two men, both connected to my family.

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The first, my great grandfather William Ralph Wootton, was born in 1877 in Ardwick Manchester.  The other, born in Bedfordshire in 1884 many miles away, Thomas Henry Seamer, my husband’s grandfather.

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Two young men leaving their families, not sure of their future, but that is where the similarity ends.  One returned and sadly one did not.

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The father of five sons, William Ralph, Lance Corporal Wootton (2748) of the 5/7th Lancashire Fusiliers was killed on the 9th August 1915 in Gallipoli.  He met his bloody end a few weeks after joining up in the battle of Krithie Vineyard.

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My poor great grandmother paid the price as he did, for the ‘Hell Let Loose’ campaign, (a term coined by one of the battalion survivors).  Now the repercussions started.  My grandfather, William Richard, the oldest son, had to go out to work to support the family.  As well as losing his dad, his dreams of further education as he was such a bright lad, were scuppered.  He never got over this and remained resentful.

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Years later, he and his brothers were working in a mill in Lancashire when Winston Churchill visited.  As they blamed him for their father’s death, due to the mishandling of the Gallipoli conflict, all five of then turned their backs on him and continued working, as Churchill walked down the aisles.  Each of the Wootton brothers had their pay docked for not switching off their machines.  Such feelings are understandable, as sadly they had all paid the price of growing up without their father.

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In my hand, there is a faded brown leather wallet, a bullet, and a selection of torn letters. Their owner was my husband’s late grandfather, Private Tom Henry Seamer of the 1/8 Middlesex Battalion who fought at Ypres in France.  One of these was from his little daughter Lizzie, saying ‘she looked like a toff in her new coat’ and ‘please come home soon daddy’.

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The other one was from his employer who owned a flour mill in Hertford.  The rich owner of the business, wrote from Falmouth on his honeymoon, to Tom in the trenches.

‘We are having a blissful time.  The weather is beautiful.   You wouldn’t have thought there was a war on here Seamer because all the men are away’.

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One evening whilst on active service, Tom took out his prayer book to read a psalm and noticed that… a stray bullet had penetrated the wallet which he kept in his breast pocket.

This had ripped through his letters and photographs but miraculously, because of its full contents, his life had been saved.

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Private Tom Henry Seamer did return to Hertford after the war to his wife and daughter, taking up his old job with the mill, driving a cart and his horse.  Life in the trenches was rarely talked about to friends and family.  Always at the back of his mind, he would have realised that he was a survivor, whilst too many of his friends were not. I suspect a great loneliness was his companion as he went through life.

 

 This article is dedicated to the memory of Lance Corporal Wootton and Private Seamer and written by Wendy Breckon, (nee Wootton) x

 

 

 

Cara Delevingne Wears Caslazur Gijima To Leonardo DiCaprio’s Birthday Party

Cara Delevingne wears Caslazur Gijima jacket and chief shorts to Leonardo DiCaprio’s birthday party in St. Tropez

 

Who: Cara Delevingne

What: Caslazur Gijima jacket and Chief shorts

Where: Leonardo DiCaprio’s birthday party – St. Tropez, France

When: 23rd  July 2014

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Brides Embrace Grey Wedding Dresses After Kim Kardashian’s Vogue Cover

She is not exactly known as a high-fashion icon but it seems that notorious Vogue cover really has given Kim Kardashian some of the credibility she craves, along with some fashion kudos. eBay has seen a mammoth 260%* surge in sales of grey wedding dresses since Kim Kardashian’s recent appearance on the cover of Vogue (with fiancé Kanye West), wearing a similar design.

 

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Despite growing rumblings about ‘Kimye’s’ upcoming ceremony in France, the chosen design for Kim’s wedding dress is still tightly under wraps. But it’s the stunning grey number she wore on the fashion bible’s April cover – with a sweetheart neckline and nipped waist – that British brides-to-be are coveting, proving that this surprising trend is one-to-watch this spring.

Credit: Vogue. (http://www.vogue.com/magazine/article/kim-kardashian-kanye-west-cover/)

Credit: Vogue. (http://www.vogue.com/magazine/article/kim-kardashian-kanye-west-cover/)

Muted grey tones, punchy floral designs, pastel blues and girlish greens were among the big hitters at the London Bridal Show in April, all prompting many women to reconsider the conventional white dress. Sales of these fashionable colours have similarly increased on eBay, with green wedding dresses up by 72%, blue gowns by 95%, and floral prints up by an incredible 107%*.

 

 

When I Was Young By Mary Fitzgerald Book Review

When I Was Young By Mary Fitzgerald Book ReviewWhen I Was Young quickly becomes gripping. It is hard to put the book down as you just want to know what is going to happen next. It is not immediately obvious and you wonder what secrets this family has. The characters draw you in with their mysteriousness and you wonder what it would be like to live in a post-world war world. With all of the scars and memories; the trauma and loss. Secrets can be toxic and so can lies. Nowhere it this most clear than in 1950s postwar France.

Eleanor is only 16 when she goes to the Loire Valley on a French Exchange. But her maturity and intelligence is beyond her years. Her arrival in France is only welcome by some of the family she is to stay with, and initially she cannot help feeling that it is her fault. At home her mother works the farm as her father sustained serious mental and physical injuries whilst he was a prisoner of war in a Japanese camp. Throughout the story Eleanor becomes even stronger, she becomes a women.

Eleanor falls in love in France, but love is always complicated. I do not want to give away too much of what happens- always hard in a book review- but the book is wonderful at capturing emotion and the fact that home can be anywhere, and when you find it, that’s it.

This is a wonderful book that you will want to read all the way through to the end without stopping. Highly enjoyable.

Published by Arrow and out on the 27th March 2013. Also available as an eBook.

 

On the backcover:

‘When I was young the war started. When I was young my father was a soldier. When I was young I moved to the country. When I was young I went to France and fell in love’

 

1950

Eleanor is sixteen when she goes to the Loire Valley on a French Exchange. But the beauty of her surroundings are at odds with the family who live there. It is a family torn apart by the memories of the German occupation, and buckling under the burden of the dark secrets they keep.

 

Etienne, the dark and brooding owner is friendly, but his wife Mathilde’s malicious behaviour overshadows Eleanor’s days.

 

As the secrets reveal themselves one by one, Eleanor begins to understand the terrible legacy of war, and when death comes to the vineyard, she learns the redemptive power of love.

When I Was Young

Pitchup.com Launches Interactive Tour de France Map

cyclingFollow the Tour de France route and stay in holiday parks and campsites along the way using Pitchup.com’s new interactive route planner
Outdoor accommodation specialist Pitchup.com is gearing up for this year’s Tour de France with a new interactive Tour route planner on its website. The planner details the 2,000-mile route the Tour de France will take, as well as a comprehensive list of bookable campsites, holiday parks and lodges for every stage of the race.

 

The route planner covers all 20 stages of the Tour, beginning with the Grand Départ in North Yorkshire, on Saturday July 5, right through to the finish at Périgueux, on Saturday, July 26.

 

The interactive planner is in the form of a map, with the Tour route stages clearly marked. Users can click the map anywhere along the route to find details of each stage, the dates they take place, the nearby towns and the route itself. Clicking on the map will also give details of up to 10 nearby holiday parks and campsites along the way, which can be booked on Pitchup.com.
Users simply need to click the name to go to its listing page, add in the dates they want to stay, pick their accommodation and book – all done!
The map also has a ‘Find out more’ section for a lowdown of other attractions in the vicinity.
Stage No 1: Leeds/Harrogate. Saturday July 5

Campsite directly on the route – £12 per person per night

 

Spen House is a family-run site in the village of Minskip, two miles from Boroughbridge, near Harrogate, North Yorkshire and is directly on the Tour de France route. Bookings are coming in quick, but there is still plenty of space on the farm’s second field, for caravans, motorhomes and tents not requiring electricity. The owners will charge batteries at no cost. Dogs are welcome and there’s an off-lead exercise area. There is a combined shower/toilet block with hairdryer and shaver sockets, ladies-only shower, separate washing-up area with hot water and a fridge/freezer for campers’ use.

Price: £72 per pitch for three nights (July 4-7), based on two adults, which works out at £12 per person per night.

 

Stage No 20: Périgueux. Saturday July 26

Holiday lodge with swimming pool and breakfast delivery – from £19 per person per night.

Camping L’Hermitage des 4 Saisons is set in four acres of countryside, surrounded by the forest and farmlands of Périgord Vert in the Dordogne, 13 miles from the Tour de France’s finish town, Périgueux. Accommodation is in two-bedroom holiday lodges, which sleep up to six. There’s a swimming pool, jacuzzi, pétanque court, table tennis, archery and pony rides on site. During high season the owners organise Perigoudin meals, barbecues and local produce tasting sessions. As an added bonus, breakfast is delivered to your door.

Price: Two weeks in a two-bedroom lodge for four people costs £1,069 (£133.75 per person per week/£19 per person per night).

 

Paris in Pictures Part 2

Here is Part 2 of Paris in Pictures. We hope you enjoy. From top to bottom: Laduree, an excellent cake shop and restaurant. Try their famous macaroons. The Eiffel Tower, the view from half way up and then the view from the top. Side View of Notre Dame, from the front, a gargoyle, the view from the top and the view from inside. Part 1 is here.

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