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BOMBER’S MOON LAKESIDE AND LINCOLN PERFORMING ARTS CENTRE PRESENTS PREMIERE ON The University of Nottingham’s public arts centre APRIL-AUGUST 2010 WWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UK

Lakeside On Brochure April - August 2010

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Page 1: Lakeside On Brochure April - August 2010

BOMBER’S MOON

LAKESIDE ANDLINCOLN PERFORMING ARTS CENTREPRESENTS PREMIERE

ONThe University of Nottingham’s public arts centre APRIL-AUGUST 2010 WWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UK

Page 2: Lakeside On Brochure April - August 2010

APRILThursday 8 April CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Bob, The Man on The Moon 10.30am & 1.30pmThursday 8 April EXHIBITIONS: Gallery Talk - Without from Within 1pmFriday 9 April CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Bob, The Man on The Moon 10.30am & 1.30pmSaturday 10 April CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Bob, The Man on The Moon 1.30pm & 3.30pmSaturday 10 April MUSIC: Roy Howat 7.30pmSunday 11 April CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Bob, The Man on The Moon 1.30pm & 3.30pmWednesday 14 April COMEDY: Move Over Moriarty 8pm Thursday 15 April WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Tiny Finger, Tiny Toes startsFriday 16 April EXHIBITIONS: Meet the Artist - Kelly O'Brian 6 - 7.30pmSaturday 17 April EXHIBITIONS: Kelly O'Brien: Somewhere Between There and Home opensSaturday 17 April WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Little Lakesiders startsMonday 19 April DRAMA: Signs of a Diva 8pm Tuesday 20 April DRAMA: Signs of a Diva 8pm Wednesday 21 April MUSIC: Stefano Bollani Trio 8pm Thursday 22 April EXHIBITIONS: Gallery Talk - Without from Within 1pmThursday 22 April MUSIC: Salsa Celtica 8pm Saturday 24 April COMMUNITY ACTIVITY: Community Open Day at the University of Nottingham 11am - 5pmSaturday 24 April MUSIC: Schubert Ensemble 7.30pm Sunday 25 April CHILDREN & FAMILIES: To Have and To Honk 3.30pmThursday 29 April MUSIC: Guarneri Trio Prague 7.30pmFriday 30 April EXHIBITIONS: Saints, Sinners And Story Tellers opens

MAYMonday 3 May EXHIBITIONS: Without from Within closesTuesday 4 May WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES MUSIC: Wollaton Antiphonal Lecture 4.30pmWednesday 5 May EXHIBITIONS: Lunchtime Talk - Keeping Safe And Sharing Access 1 - 2pmWednesday 5 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon (Preview) 8pm Thursday 6 May MUSIC: Andreas Haefliger 7.30pmThursday 6 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon (Preview) 8pm Friday 7 May MUSIC: Allegri String Quartet 1.15pmFriday 7 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon (Press Night) 8pm Saturday 8 May EXHIBITIONS: Marek Tobolewski: New Paintings and Drawings opensSaturday 8 May WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES MUSIC: Wollaton Study Day 11am - 3.30pmSaturday 8 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon 8pm Saturday 8 May MUSIC: Pre-concert Talk with Andrew Kirkman and Philip Weller 6.45pmSaturday 8 May MUSIC: Binchois Consort 7.30pmMonday 10 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon 8pm Tuesday 11 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon 8pm Wednesday 12 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon (and post-show discussion) 8pm Thursday 13 May WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES - Tiny Fingers, Tiny Toes endsThursday 13 May EXHIBITIONS: Lecture - Marek Tobolewski (Followed by Private View) 6.30 - 7.30pmThursday 13 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon 8pm Friday 14 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon 8pm Saturday 15 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon 2pm & 8pmSunday 16 May WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Shaping Clay 10am - 4pmMonday 17 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon 8pm Tuesday 18 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon 8pm (S)Wednesday 19 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon (and post-show discussion after 2pm show) 2pm & 8pm (AD 8pm)Wednesday 19 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon Page to Stage 6.30pmThursday 20 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon 8pm Friday 21 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon 8pm Saturday 22 May DRAMA: Bomber's Moon 8pm Sunday 23 May EXHIBITIONS: Kelly O'Brien: Somewhere Between There and Home closesTuesday 25 May COMEDY: Best of Leicester Comedy Festival 8pm Wednesday 26 May EXHIBITIONS: Lunchtime Talk - God, Sex And Fashion 1 - 2pmWednesday 26 May WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES MUSIC: Drumming Circle 5.30pmWednesday 26 May MUSIC: Sandeep Raval & Swar Vishvam 8pm Thursday 27 May DRAMA: Knife Edge 8pm Saturday 29 May EXHIBITIONS: Young Curators' Exhibition opensSaturday 29 May WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Starting Point and Departures 10am - 4pmSaturday 29 May EXHIBITIONS: Meet the Curators - Young Curators 11am - 12noonSunday 30 May CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Whatever Next! 12.30pm & 3.30pmMonday 31 May WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Flying Panda Week 9.30am - 12noon & 1pm - 3.30pm

JUNETuesday 1 June EXHIBITION: Abigail Brown Craft exhibition opensTuesday 1 June WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Flying Panda Week 9.30am - 12noon & 1pm - 3.30pm Tuesday 1 June DANCE: 5 Soldiers - The Body is The Frontline 8pm Wednesday 2 June WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Flying Panda Week 9.30am - 12noon & 1pm - 3.30pm

DIARY 02 BOX OFFICE 0115 846 7777

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JUNE continuedThursday 3 June WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Flying Panda Week 9.30am - 12noon & 1pm - 3.30pm Thursday 3 June WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Tree Dressing 1.30pm - 4pm Friday 4 June WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Flying Panda Week 9.30am - 12noon & 1pm - 3.30pm Friday 4 June WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Sky Gazing 10am - 12.30pmFriday 4 June Wheee! Children’s Festival: Sheeptight 10.30am, 1.30pm & 3.30pmFriday 4 June Wheee! Children’s Festival: Luminarium 11am - 6pmSaturday 5 June Wheee! Children’s Festival: Sheeptight 10.30am, 1.30pm & 3.30pmSaturday 5 June Wheee! Children’s Festival: Luminarium 11am - 6pmSunday 6 June Wheee! Children’s Festival: Luminarium 11am - 6pmSunday 6 June Wheee! Children’s Festival: The Kurdish Garden 3.30pmMonday 7 June Wheee! Children’s Festival: The Kurdish Garden 10.30am & 1.30pmWednesday 9 June Wheee! Children’s Festival: Clouds 1.30pm & 7pmThursday 10 June Wheee! Children’s Festival: Clouds 10.30am & 1.30pmSunday 13 June EXHIBITIONS: Marek Tobolewski closesMonday 14 June MUSIC: String Orchestra & Collegium Musicum 1.15pmMonday 14 June MUSIC: Contempo 5pmTuesday 15 June MUSIC: Festival Orchestra 7.30pmTuesday 15 June COMEDY: Rabbi Lionel Blue 8pm Wednesday 16 June EXHIBITIONS: Fine Art Degree Show opensWednesday 16 June EXHIBITIONS: Lunchtime Talk - Sir Thomas Chaworth And His Books 1 - 2pmWednesday 16 June MUSIC: Wind Orchestra 7.30pmThursday 17 June WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES - Tiny Fingers, Tiny Toes startsThursday 17 June MUSIC: Festival Choir 7.30pmThursday 17 June DANCE: Transitions Dance Company 8pm Sunday 20 June EXHIBITIONS: Fine Art Degree Show closesSunday 20 June CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Across the Deep Blue Sea 12.30pm & 3.30pmThursday 24 June MUSIC: Blazin' Fiddles 8pm Friday 25 June EXHIBITIONS: Lecture - James Webb: Prayer (Followed by Private View) 6.30 - 7.30pmSaturday 26 June EXHIBITIONS: James Webb: Prayer opensSunday 27 June EXHIBITIONS: Young Curators' Exhibition closes

JULYThursday 1 July DANCE: Ten 8pm Saturday 3 July EXHIBITIONS: Gallery Art Group opensSunday 4 July CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Looking for The Rainbow 1.30pm & 3.30pmFriday 9 July EXHIBITIONS: Gallery Art Group closesSaturday 10 July WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Little Lakesiders endsWednesday 14 July EXHIBITIONS: Lunchtime Talk - Nottingham Alabasters In The Nottingham Castle Collection 1 - 2pmThursday 15 July EXHIBITIONS: Meet the Artists - Nick Dunmur & Paul Harrison 6 - 7.30pmThursday 15 July DRAMA: Memoirs of a Biscuit Tin 8pm Thursday 15 July WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Tiny Fingers, Tiny Toes endsSaturday 17 July EXHIBITIONS: Paul Harrison & Nick Dunmur: Edgelands opens

AUGUSTMonday 2 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Big Ideas! Big Art! 10am - 3.30pmTuesday 3 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Big Ideas! Big Art! 10am - 3.30pmWednesday 4 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Big Ideas! Big Art! 10am - 3.30pmThursday 5 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Big Ideas! Big Art! 10am - 3.30pmFriday 6 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Big Ideas! Big Art! 10am - 3.30pmSunday 8 August EXHIBITIONS: Saints, Sinners And Story Tellers closesSunday 8 August EXHIBITIONS: James Webb: Prayer closesMonday 9 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Play in a Week 10am - 4pmTuesday 10 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Play in a Week 10am - 4pmWednesday 11 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Play in a Week 10am - 4pmThursday 12 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Play in a Week 10am - 4pmFriday 13 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Play in a Week 10am - 4pmSaturday 14 August EXHIBITIONS: University Summer Exhibition opensMonday 16 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Elastic Fantastic Dance Week 10am - 12noon & 1pm - 4pmTuesday 17 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Elastic Fantastic Dance Week 10am - 12noon & 1pm - 4pmWednesday 18 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Elastic Fantastic Dance Week 10am - 12noon & 1pm - 4pmThursday 19 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Elastic Fantastic Dance Week 10am - 12noon & 1pm - 4pmFriday 20 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Elastic Fantastic Dance Week 10am - 12noon & 1pm - 4pmMonday 23 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Kathak Summer School 11am, 1pm, 3pm & 6pm Tuesday 24 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Kathak Summer School 11am, 1pm, 3pm & 6pm Wednesday 25 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Kathak Summer School 11am, 1pm, 3pm & 6pm Thursday 26 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Kathak Summer School 11am, 1pm, 3pm & 6pm Friday 27 August SUMMER SCHOOL: Kathak Summer School 11am, 1pm, 3pm & 6pm Tuesday 31 August EXHIBITION: Abigail Brown Craft exhibition closes

03 BOOK ONLINE WWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UKFront cover image: Bomber’s Moon

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Making art affordableExperience the best of contemporary craft at theDjanogly Art Gallery, with showcase displays featuringbeautiful jewellery and decorative arts from leadingmakers.

Own art loans are designed to make it easy andaffordable for you to buy original, high-qualitycontemporary craft. You can borrow up to £2,000, oras little as £100, to be paid back in equal instalmentsover a period of 10 months - interest free*

*Typical 0% APR

www.lakesidearts.org.uk Lakeside’s on-line shop selling craftfrom local and regional artists.

The Djanogly Art Gallery is a licensed broker of Own Art loans.

Registered address: Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park, Nottingham NG7 2RD

WWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UK

SARA

H K

EAY

Beautiful things for youand your home... All year round

ABIGAIL BROWNAs a young girl Abigail Browngrew up surrounded by the toolsof her grandma’s trade... loosethreads, scraps of fabric, pins andneedles, and the constant whirr ofthe sewing machine, andthis is where it all began.

She is fascinated by animals,particularly birds, because of allthe thoughts and feelings she canimagine they are experiencing butcan never truly hope to know.

She uses colour, pattern andtexture and a visual languagewhich is quirky and playful,reminiscent of a childhood thatshe holds very dear.

Abigail’s work is for sale.

CRAFT EXHIBITION

SHOP ON-LINE

1 JUNE - 31 AUGUST

Page 5: Lakeside On Brochure April - August 2010

SATURDAY 6 MARCH - MONDAY 3 MAYADMISSION FREE

WITHOUT FROM WITHIN

ART 05 DJANOGLY ART GALLERY

GALLERY TALKS

THURSDAY 8 APRIL1-1.45PMDJANOGLY ART GALLERYADMISSION FREE

Guided tour with Neil Walker, Visual ArtsOfficer, Djanogly Art Gallery

THURSDAY 22 APRIL1-1.45PMDJANOGLY ART GALLERYADMISSION FREE

Guided tour with Ruth Lewis-Jones,Galleries Education Officer, Lakeside

The talks are free but space is limited soplease book in advance by calling theBox Office on 0115 846 7777. If afterbooking you are unable to attend,please let us know so that we can offerthe place to someone else.

WWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UK

Taking as its subject the view through the window, this stunning exhibition looks atthe way artists have treated the relationship between interior and exterior space andexamines the development and variation of the motif in the work of major twentieth-century and contemporary British painters.

This modernist trope had its roots in the ground-breaking work of the Cubist andFauve artists at the beginning of the last century. In Britain, the artistic revolution inEurope was greeted eagerly by those artists wishing to break with tradition, evidentin the earliest works in the exhibition by the Camden Town and Bloomsbury Groups.The deceptively straightforward challenge to portray the dynamic tension “from thespace, through the space, to the space” continued to provide artists with theopportunity to reflect developments and movements in twentieth-century art at homeand abroad and to explore and extend their own visual repertoire.

Without from Within takes the viewer through the journey of these artisticmovements as represented by leading figures such as Duncan Grant, Paul Nash,Ben and Winifred Nicholson, Ivon Hitchens, David Hockney, Patrick Caulfield andHoward Hodgkin, and offers a rare opportunity to view their work in the context ofsome of their European contemporaries including Raoul Dufy and René Magritte.

Without from Within has been curated for the Djanogly Art Gallery by Anne Goodchild, formerlyCurator of Art at Museums Sheffield, and develops the theme of her exhibition The Absent PresenceGraves Art Gallery 1991.

Images from left: Harbour and Room 1932-6 Paul Nash. Tate: Purchased 1981 © Tate, London 2010

Open Window at Saint-Jeannet, c. 1926-7 Raoul Dufy. Tate: Bequeathed by Mrs A.F. Kessler 1983 © ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London/Tate, London 2010

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ART 06 DJANOGLY ART GALLERY

1LC DipSymR+M-Neg

Ivory Black on Indian Yellow, 2010

Page 7: Lakeside On Brochure April - August 2010

SATURDAY 8 MAY - SUNDAY 13 JUNEADMISSION FREE

MAREK TOBOLEWSKINEW PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS:CONTINUUM IN SYMMETRY

07 WWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UK

For the last 25 years Marek Tobolewski has devoted his creativeenergies to making ambitious large-scale abstract paintings anddrawings. These have been exhibited in galleries worldwideincluding Brussels, Paris and New York.

The new work in his Continuum series has been concerned withsymmetry and reflection. Rotating and mirroring linear forms, layeringsurfaces of pure colour and exposing under-painting throughnegative lines.

A constant in the artist’s formal abstraction is the arc of a circle -albeit in a state of perpetual evolution - and a preoccupation with theendless reinvention of his own compositions; he continually returns toexisting works, adjusting structures and refining each individual flowof a line in an attempt to reveal balance and perfect form.

Marek Tobolewski is currently artist-in-residence at Lakeside ArtsCentre where he is engaged in completing a new commission for theUniversity’s Music department. This is the first major solo exhibition ofthe artist’s work in the UK for over a decade and presents animportant opportunity to survey the key developments in his currentpractice.

LECTURES

THURSDAY 13 MAY6.30-7.30PM DJANOGLY ART GALLERYLECTURE THEATREADMISSION FREE

Marek Tobolewski introduces the themes and preoccupations of hispast and present work prior to a viewing of his exhibition.

The lecture is free but space is limited so please book in advance by calling the Box Office on 0115 846 7777. If after booking you areunable to attend, please let us know so that we can offer the place tosomeone else.

Images from Top:

1LC DipSymR-Neg

Red Deep on Ivory Black, 2010

1LC DipSymR-Neg

Ivory Black on Red Deep, 2010

Page 8: Lakeside On Brochure April - August 2010

James Webb insists he is not a ‘sound artist’ per se but a ‘media artist’ exploring the‘interplay of all media in our multi-hybridized world’.

The idea of making a work incorporating prayers came to Webb in 1999 upon hearinga story of a group of scientists who were to include information about human culturein their satellite in the event of an encounter by a higher intelligence. Webb wonderedwhat this material might be and further speculated on what it would be like to listen toall the prayers that were being recited at any given moment, and what impressionthat would give of our world. This idea took on a political dimension as randomdomestic terrorist attacks in his domicile of Cape Town resulted in heightened mediaspeculation fuelling public anxiety concerning the role of religion and religiousdifference in post-apartheid South Africa.

The first public presentation of Prayer was in 2002, in which the artist recorded 36prayers representing a broad cross-section of Cape Town’s faiths. The resulting audioinstallation presented audiences with an uncharacteristic experience of the city as aculturally rich interdependent landscape.

ART 08 DJANOGLY ART GALLERY

SATURDAY 26 JUNE - SUNDAY 8 AUGUSTDJANOGLY ART GALLERYADMISSION FREE

JAMES WEBB PRAYER

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09 WWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UKWWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UK

James Webb considers his worksto be open-ended explorations. InNottingham, his latest version ofthe piece, comprising a range ofprayers recorded from a diversespectrum of the city’s religiousfaiths, is presented as a multi-channel sound installation. Theresultant work, straightforwardly,in real-time and with minimalediting, fuses voice, melody andlanguage to envelop the galleryvisitor with the resonant texture ofeach religion’s hopes, desiresand entreaties.

The realisation of James Webb’sPrayer in Nottingham has beenmade possible with the generoussupport of the curator AnnaDouglas and the people of manyfaiths who have agreed to therecordings of their prayers.

LECTURES

FRIDAY 25 JUNE6.30-7.30PM(FOLLOWED BY PRIVATE VIEW)DJANOGLY ART GALLERYLECTURE THEATREADMISSION FREE

James Webb will give anintroduction to the making ofPrayer within the wider context ofhis sound installation work.

The lecture is free but space islimited so please book inadvance by calling the Box Officeon 0115 846 7777. If after bookingyou are unable to attend, pleaselet us know so that we can offerthe place to someone else.

Images courtesy of Huddersfield Art Gallery / Zoe Graham

Page 10: Lakeside On Brochure April - August 2010

WEDNESDAY 16 JUNE - SUNDAY 20 JUNE ADMISSION FREE

The University of Nottingham’s School of Education isproud to present the 2010 BA (Hons) Fine Art Degree show.Over the six years of this dedicated part-time degreeprogramme, students develop their own art practicethrough a contemporary response to a wide variety of fineart media from video and installation to print media andphotography.

ART 10 DJANOGLY ART GALLERY

FINE ARTDEGREE SHOW

Image: Helen Williams

SATURDAY 14 AUGUST - SATURDAY 4 SEPTEMBERDJANOGLY ART GALLERYADMISSION FREE

This popular annual summer event provides ashowcase for the talents of students, staff andalumni of the University and an ideal opportunityto buy modestly priced works of art.

UNIVERSITY SUMMEREXHIBITION

Page 11: Lakeside On Brochure April - August 2010

SATURDAY 17 APRIL - SUNDAY 23 MAYADMISSION FREE

KELLY O’BRIENSOMEWHERE BETWEEN THERE AND HOMESelected from last year’s NottinghamTrent University Photography Degreeexhibitions, Kelly O’Brien is the firstrecipient of the NTU/Hive/DjanoglyBursary Award. Her first body of work isa poignant exploration of immigration ina series of photographic portraits ofindividuals who exist on the fringes ofour society.

PREVIEW AND OPPORTUNITY TO MEET THE ARTISTFRIDAY 16 APRIL 6-7.30PM

ART 11 WALLNER GALLERY LAKESIDE’S SMALL-SCALE EXHIBITION SPACEDH LAWRENCE PAVILION

Image: Michal

SATURDAY 17 JULY - SUNDAY 5 SEPTEMBERADMISSION FREE

PAUL HARRISON & NICK DUNMUR EDGELANDSEdgelands is a photographic explorationof neglected and largely forgottenlandscapes where nature and peoplehave left indelible marks on each other.Unusable, marginalised andunattractive, these wastelands arehowever embedded with personal andhistoric resonance.

PREVIEW AND OPPORTUNITY TO MEET THE PHOTOGRAPHERSTHURSDAY 15 JULY 6 - 7.30PM

Image: 53°04’27.04” N 1°13’49.58” W

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SATURDAY 29 MAY - SUNDAY 27 JUNEADMISSION FREE

Behind the scenes at the art gallery: thisexhibition is the culmination of a projectinvolving 14 to 18 year olds who have chosen tolearn about curating, and exhibition selection.The group have worked with gallery staff onmarketing, administration and the technicalaspects of mounting a show. They have alsovisited studio groups and exhibitions, meetingwith individual artists who have helped informtheir choices as they travel the fascinatingjourney from tentative ideas to public display.

PREVIEW AND OPPORTUNITY TO MEET THE CURATORSSATURDAY 29 MAY 11AM-12NOON

SATURDAY 3 JULY - FRIDAY 9 JULYADMISSION FREE

GALLERY ART GROUP Running on Saturday mornings, GAGprovides an opportunity for youngpeople to create art work exploring thethemes of the Djanogly and WallnerGallery programme.

This exhibition showcases some of theirwork produced throughout the year.

ART 12 WALLNER GALLERY LAKESIDE’S SMALL-SCALE EXHIBITION SPACE

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Eating at LakesideLakeside is a great place for lunch, dinner or drinks. Aqua, by the lake and Café L near the Djanogly Art Gallery both serve a selection of freshly prepared hot meals as well as specialitycoffees, flavoured teas, wines and beers in a relaxed and friendlyatmosphere.

Eat before a Show?The only place to enjoy a pre-show supper is Aqua! On performance evenings our delicious menu servicebegins at 5.30pm with last orders at 7pm (for 7.30pmperformances) and 7.30pm (for 8pm performances).

You can now book a table at the Box Officewhen booking tickets for a show or youcan call Aqua direct on 0115 846 7179.

Page 14: Lakeside On Brochure April - August 2010

SPECIAL COLLECTIONS 14

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15 BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777

A local collection of manuscript volumes offers an extraordinarily rich perspective onthe literary tastes and religious faith of our medieval ancestors. Illustrated Frenchromances and fourteenth-century texts in English demonstrate the move of literaturefrom Latin to native languages, while a single leaf records in English the life of St Zita,the Italian saint of housekeepers.

The volumes in question represent a remnant of the rich library collection formerlyhoused at Wollaton Hall, together with the magnificent Wollaton Antiphonal. Suchbooks have faced many risks to their survival over the centuries and original bindingfeatures are often lost in later repairs. While the Wollaton volumes all remain fragile,they provide valuable evidence about their first creation and use.

The decoration of medieval volumes is an essential part of their charm for modernreaders. The Antiphonal’s conservation programme allows the display of more thanone illuminated page, and digital images enable the details of illustrations to beviewed for the first time.

A series of talks and events will be held to accompany the exhibition. Places arelimited so please book your tickets with the Box Office on 0115 846 7777.

WESTON GALLERY EXHIBITIONS MANUSCRIPTS AND SPECIAL COLLECTIONS

FRIDAY 30 APRIL - SUNDAY 8 AUGUSTADMISSION FREE

SAINTS, SINNERS AND STORY TELLERS MEDIEVAL WOLLATON MANUSCRIPTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM

LUNCHTIME TALKS1PM - 2PM ADMISSION FREE

WEDNESDAY 5 MAYPERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP

KEEPING SAFE ANDSHARING ACCESSThe curators reveal more about thedevelopment of the exhibition in thecontext of recent conservation,digitisation and research projects.

WEDNESDAY 26 MAYDJANOGLY THEATRE

GOD, SEX AND FASHION:THE READING HABITS OFTHE FIFTEENTH-CENTURYENGLISH GENTLEWOMANDr Rob Lutton of the University’s School ofHistory investigates what the texts tell usabout their owners and readers.

WEDNESDAY 16 JUNE PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP

SIR THOMAS CHAWORTHAND HIS BOOKSProfessor Thorlac Turville-Petre,academic advisor for the exhibition,looks at the life and legacy of Sir ThomasChaworth (d.1459), the original owner ofthe Wollaton Antiphonal.

WEDNESDAY 14 JULYPERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP

NOTTINGHAM ALABASTERSIN THE NOTTINGHAMCASTLE COLLECTIONSarah Skinner, Keeper of Art atNottingham Castle Museum, talks aboutthe alabaster trade in medievalNottingham and the image of St Zita, ondisplay in the exhibition.

LINKED EVENT... BINCHOIS CONSORT performs rare items from the WollatonAntiphonal. See p21.

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MUSIC 16

CHAMBERSATURDAY 10 APRIL 7.30PMDJANOGLY RECITAL HALL£12 (£9 CONCESSION)

ROY HOWATPIANOCHOPIN Préludes in C and B flat, Op. 28 DEBUSSY ‘Danseuses de Delphes’ fromPréludes, Book 1CHOPIN Nouvelle Etude in A flatDEBUSSY ‘Pour les sixtes’ from Douze EtudesCHOPIN Nouvelle Etude in D flatCHABRIER ‘Idylle’ from Pièces pittoresquesCHOPIN 3 Valses, Op. 64CHOPIN Étude in A flat, Op.25 No.1RAVEL ‘Ondine’ from Gaspard de la nuitCHOPIN Sonata in B minor, Op.35FAURÉ Barcarolle No.5 in F sharp minor,Op.66CHABRIER ‘Mélancolie’from Dix pièces pittoresquesCHOPIN Barcarolle, Op. 60

This year marks the 200th anniversary ofChopin’s birth, providing the focus forthis concert by pianist and scholar RoyHowat. Roy was one of the co-foundingeditors of the New Complete Debussyedition and has produced acclaimedcritical editions of piano and chambermusic by Fauré and Chabrier. He is theauthor of two groundbreaking books,Debussy in Proportion (CUP) and The Artof French piano music (Yale UP, 2009).The latter was awarded an ‘Outstanding’citation from International RecordReview and named ‘Book of the Year2009’ from International Piano. Royholds the post of Keyboard ResearchFellow at the Royal Academy of Music inLondon.

As a concerto soloist he has appearedwith orchestras from Scotland to HongKong, Australia and New Zealand. His CDrecordings include Debussy’s completesolo piano works, Chabrier piano musicand a two-CD album of Fauré pianomusic for ABC Classics.

“…In short, imagination and elegancecharacterise the playing…”International Piano Quarterly

Concert finishes at approximately 9.15pm

JAZZWEDNESDAY 21 APRIL 8PMDJANOGLY THEATRE£15 (£12 CONCESSION)£5 RESTRICTED VIEW

STEFANO BOLLANITRIOStefano Bollani, pianoJesper Bodilsen, bassMorten Lund, drums

The remarkable Italian pianist Stefano Bollani returns to Lakeside with his Danish trio, a group that hasbeen honing its improvisationalunderstanding for the last six years. The three players move with immensesubtlety through a fascinating andsophisticated programme that includesnew pieces by Bollani and Bodilsen,plus ballads by Caetano Veloso andAntonio Carlos Jobim, as well as a pieceby Poulenc. Bollani is a star of theinternational jazz scene, having won theEuropean Jazz Prize in 2007. He hassince performed in capacity halls acrossEurope and the UK to great acclaimfrom audiences and critics alike. TheTrio’s CD Stone in the Water on the ECMlabel was released last autumn.

“There are thoughtful originals fromBollani and Bodilsen here, but also anabsorbing programme...highlightsBollani’s startling harmonicimagination”John Fordham, The Guardian

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Photo: Bridget Elliot

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17 BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777

FOLKTHURSDAY 22 APRIL 8PMDJANOGLY THEATRE£15 (£12 CONCESSION)PLEASE NOTE: STANDING/DANCING ONLYNO SEATING

SALSA CELTICASalsa Celtica’s rich mix of Scottish andIrish traditional music with all the LatinAmerican elements of salsa has takenthem and their music all over the world.

A line-up which combines some ofScotland and Ireland’s most excitingtraditional musicians mixed with astellar group of world, jazz and salsamusicians from the U.K. and LatinAmerica, Salsa Celtica is a stunningcombination of virtuosity and energy,making them one of the most excitinggroups on the world music circuit.

Salsa Celtica hit the road again, playingwell-loved music from their last fourstudio albums and new material whichwill feature folkloric musical influencesfrom Afro-Cuban rumba to Scots Gaelicvocals.

“A stunning marriage of musicalstyles...” The Scotsman

“This unique group is a dynamic forceon the world music scene” Songlines

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MUSIC 18

CHAMBERSATURDAY 24 APRIL 7.30PMDJANOGLY RECITAL HALL£12 (£9 CONCESSION)

SCHUBERT ENSEMBLEWilliam Howard, pianoSimon Blendis, violinDouglas Paterson, violaJane Salmon, cello

MONTEVERDI arr. Anthony Powers Lamento della NinfaAnthony POWERS Nightsongs for Piano Quartet WEBER Piano Quartet in B flatBRAHMS Piano Quartet No.1 in G minor, Op.25

Taking Monteverdi’s madrigal ‘Lamento della Ninfa’ as itsinspiration, Anthony Powers’s Nightsongs is a hauntinglyatmospheric response to the famous and magically beautifulgardens at Ninfa, the ancient settlement southeast of Rome.Weber’s youthful Piano Quartet is full of sparkling exuberance, witha demanding piano part that Weber wrote to show off his ownpianistic brilliance. Brahms’s Piano Quartet in G minor completesthe programme with a rousing gypsy finale.

CHAMBERTHURSDAY 29 APRIL 7.30PMDJANOGLY RECITAL HALL£15 (£12 CONCESSION)

GUARNERI TRIO PRAGUECenek Pavlík, violinMarek Jerie, celloIvan Klansky, piano

SUK Piano Trio in C minor, Op.2SMETANA Piano Trio in G minor, Op.15DVORÁK Piano Trio in E minor, Op.90 ‘Dumky’

Regular visitors and firm favourites of the Djanogly RecitalHall audience, the Guarneri Trio Prague returns for an all-Czech programme. Josef Suk’s Piano Trio in C minor waswritten in 1889 at the age of just 15. An air of tragedypervades Smetana’s G minor Piano Trio written in memoryof his first child who died at the age of four. Dvorák’s set ofsix dumka known as the ‘Dumky’ trio is one of his mostwell known chamber works. A dumka is a Ukranianlament, a folksong that alternates sombre and light-hearted moods, providing Slavonic composers with arecognisable link to their folksong heritage as well as aform that lent itself to creative exploration.

The concert finishes at approximately 9.15pm

“...they gave a performance so forthright andpassionate that at times it sounded as if a chamberorchestra were playing. A hugely impressive concert”The Strad

The concert finishes at approximately 9.15pm

v

v

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CHAMBERTHURSDAY 6 MAY 7.30PMDJANOGLY RECITAL HALL£15 (£12 CONCESSION)

ANDREAS HAEFLIGERPIANOMOZART Sonata in C, K330WAGNER arr. LISZT Isolde’s Liebestod MOZART Sonata in A, K331 SCHUBERT Piano Sonata in B flat, D960

The distinguished Swiss pianist AndreasHaefliger is renowned for his elegantand musically sensitive performances.His recordings of Mozart sonatas andSchubert Impromptus on the SonyClassics label have received criticalacclaim for the ‘exquisite’ and ‘deeplymusical’ performances. As aninternational artist of the highest calibrehe has performed with the greatorchestras of the world including theNew York Philharmonic, BostonSymphony, Pittsburgh and ChicagoSymphonies, and in Europe the RoyalConcertgebouw and London SymphonyOrchestra as well as appearances at theLucerne and Salzburg Festivals and theBBC Proms.

“Unlike many virtuosos, Haefliger is amusician first and pianist second...Andreas Haefliger is a pianist towatch. More importantly, he is apianist to listen to” Chicago Tribune

The concert finishes at approximately9.25pm

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MUSIC 20

CHAMBERFRIDAY 7 MAY 1.15PMDJANOGLY RECITAL HALLADMISSION FREE

ALLEGRI STRING QUARTETOfer Falk, violinRafael Todes, violinDorothea Vogel, violaKatherine Jenkinson, cello

with guest artistJonathan Pether, cello

Student compositionsSCHUBERT String Quintet in C, D956 (1st mvt)

Dr Gavin Wayte introduces quartetmovements written by final-yearcomposition students. Third-year cellistJonathan Pether joins the Allegri StringQuartet to perform the first movement ofSchubert’s great C major String Quintet.

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EARLYSATURDAY 8 MAY 7.30PMDJANOGLY RECITAL HALL£12 (£9 CONCESSION)

BINCHOIS CONSORTDirector: Andrew Kirkman

The celebrated Wollaton Antiphonal, aglorious musical manuscript of Latinchant from the fifteenth century, hasbeen lovingly and painstakinglyconserved over recent years. Itsrenewed splendour will be celebrated ina concert of English polyphonic music ofthe time, sung by the internationallyrenowned Binchois Consort. This richlyvaried programme will include rareitems from the manuscript itself, andcompositions directly connected with it,as well as a varied selection of Englishpre-Reformation styles. The selection ofmusic has been devised to illustrate insound the period of time from themanuscript’s original making to itssubsequent arrival in St Leonard’sChurch, Wollaton, in the later fifteenthcentury.

The concert finishes at approximately9.20pm

6.45pm Pre-concert talk with AndrewKirkman and Philip Weller

LECTURETUESDAY 4 MAY 4.30-5.45pmDJANOGLY RECITAL HALLADMISSION FREE

PHILIP WELLER, SPEAKER‘John of Bridlington, two King Henrys,and the ‘Quem malignus spiritus’ mass:Chant, polyphony and the WollatonAntiphonal’

Members of the public are warmlyinvited to attend the lecture by PhilipWeller in the Department of Music’sweekly colloquia series.

STUDY DAYSATURDAY 8 MAY 11AM-3.30PMDJANOGLY RECITAL HALL£8 (£5 CONCESSIONS); COMBINEDCONCERT & STUDY DAY TICKET £17 (£12CONCESSIONS)

The study day will feature specialist talksby Dorothy Johnston (Keeper ofManuscripts and Special Collections),Nicolas Bell (British Library), Philip Weller(University of Nottingham), and MatthewCheung Salisbury (University of Oxford).

BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777

LINKED EVENT...MEDIEVALMANUSCRIPTSEXHIBITION PAGE 14The exhibition provides anopportunity to see themagnificent WollatonAntiphonal for the first timesince the current conservationprogramme began.

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MUSIC 22

UNIVERSITYMONDAY 14 JUNE 1.15PMDJANOGLY RECITAL HALLADMISSION FREE

STRING ORCHESTRA & COLLEGIUM MUSICUMTwo of Mussoc’s smaller ensembles join forces for this lunchtimeconcert.

UNIVERSITYMONDAY 14 JUNE 5PMDJANOGLY RECITAL HALLADMISSION FREE

CONTEMPO‘The American Modern’

Aaron COPLAND Fanfare for the Common ManCarl RUGGLES AngelsJohn ADAMS China GatesJohn CAGE 4’33’’Elliott CARTER 3 Poems by Robert FrostCharles IVES The Unanswered QuestionSteve REICH Music for Pieces of Wood

Contempo presents a selection of works that typify America’s burgeoning art music scene in thetwentieth century. This eclectic selection expresses the manydifferent strands of American music, and how they contributed to agrowing sense of American musical identity.

The concert finishes at approximately 6pm

WORLD/CONTEMPORARYWEDNESDAY 26 MAY 8PMDJANOGLY THEATRE£15 (£12 CONCESSION)£5 RESTRICTED VIEW

SANDEEP RAVAL WITH SWAR VISHVAMSandeep Raval, percussionSteve O’Gorman, saxophoneMahesh Vinayakra, voiceKiran Thakrar, keyboardsDick Berrie, bassJacob Stoney, guitar

Sandeep Raval is one of the most versatilemulti-instrumentalist/composers performing inthis country today. During his nationwide tour,a Drum Circle workshop and performance willfeature tracks from his latest Album Mosaic inMotion. This mystical feast blends global andwestern musical styles into a fresh andcompelling mosaic of sound.

DRUM CIRCLEWORKSHOPPERFORMING ARTSWORKSPACE5.30-6.30PM

STUDENTSUMMERMUSIC FESTIVALThe students of the University of Nottingham presenttheir annual summer festival of music

Come and makesome noise and losesome inhibitions asSandeep Raval leadsa room full of rhythmicdrum beating.£5 Space limited,book early to avoiddisappointment

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23 BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777

UNIVERSITYTUESDAY 15 JUNE 7.30PMGREAT HALL, TRENT BUILDING£8 (£5 CONCESSION, £4 UON STUDENT)

FESTIVALORCHESTRACharlotte Daniel, conductorsJonathan Tilbrook

Jonathan Pether, cello

BRAHMS Academic Festival OvertureSHOSTAKOVICH Cello Concerto No.1SCHUMANN Symphony No.3 in E flat(Rhenish)

The final orchestral concert of the yearbegins in a triumphant mood withBrahms’s Academic Festival Overturewhich incorporates student songs in arousing celebration written for BreslauUniversity. Final-year music studentJonathan Pether performs Shostakovich’sFirst Cello Concerto, one of the greatworks of the cello repertoire written forMstislav Rostropovich in 1959.Schumann’s uplifting final symphony wasinspired by the spirit of the Rhinelandalthough it was his publisher Simrock thatappended the title ‘Rhenish’ to the work.The second movement is in the style of apeasant ländler while the ceremonialsolemnity of the trombones at thebeginning of the fourth movement wassaid, by Schumann, to have beeninspired by the sight of themagnificent Cologne Cathedral.

The concert finishes atapproximately 9.10pm

UNIVERSITYWEDNESDAY 16 JUNE 7.30PMGREAT HALL, TRENT BUILDING£8 (£5 CONCESSION, £4 UON STUDENT)

WIND ORCHESTRA‘The Big Bang’

Patrick Burnett, conductorsKieran O’RiordanMatthew Smith

Stephen MONTAGUE Intrada 1631Bruce FRASER The King Across the WaterJurriaan ANDRIESSEN Suite for JazzEnsemble and BandArr. Goff RICHARDS Breezin’ DownBroadwayMichael KAMEN Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves

Michael Kamen’s enduringly popular musicfrom the film Robin Hood, Prince of Thievesis a feast for the percussion section, whileJurriaan Andriessen’s joyous Suite, mixesjazz, blues and samba in an exhilaratingdialogue for jazz quintet and band. BruceFraser’s dramatic The King Across theWater, in which the entire ensemble areinstructed to play hand drums, vividlyrecreates the era of Bonnie Prince Charlie.Stephen Montague’s unique Intrada 1631develops a South American liturgical chantinto an extraordinary sound world,featuring symphonic brass choir, marchingdrums and up to thirty triangles. There will

also be a chance for a littleaudience participation to end

the evening with a bang!

UNIVERSITYTHURSDAY 17 JUNE 7.30PMGREAT HALL, TRENT BUILDING£8 (£5 CONCESSION, £4 UON STUDENT)PLEASE NOTE: 75 MINS CONCERT, NOINTERVAL

FESTIVAL CHOIRFestival Choir presents an excitingprogramme of choral works inspired byethnic music from around the world. Thechoir will embark on a musical journeythrough the varied sound-worlds of non-Western music, at times employingunconventional vocal techniques andembracing an array of different cultures.The programme will include BobChilcott’s African inspired cantata TheMaking of the Drum, and Mike Brewer’sHamba Lulu - 5 African Songs.

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MUSICTHEATRE 24

FOLKTHURSDAY 24 JUNE 8PMDJANOGLY THEATRE£15 (£12 CONCESSION)£5 RESTRICTED VIEW

BLAZIN’ FIDDLES

Catriona Macdonald, fiddleBruce Macgregor, fiddleAllan Henderson, fiddleIain Macfarlane, fiddleAnna Massie, guitar/fiddleAndy Thorburn, keyboard

Following their sell-our performance atLakeside in 2008 we are thrilled towelcome back Blazin’ Fiddles. Theirdistinctive flavour of fiddle music isdrawn from across the ScottishHighlands and Islands.

From infectious solos to high energyensemble sets, they all come together ina fiery blend that raises the roof.

This award winning band is one of themost exciting and memorable fiddleensembles ever to take the stage.

“Absolutely mindblowing” Mike Harding BBC Radio 2

COMEDYTUESDAY 15 JUNE 8PMDJANOGLY THEATRE£20 (£15 CONCESSION)£12 RESTRICTED VIEWRUNNING TIME: 115 MINS INCLUDING INTERVAL

AN EVENING WITH RABBI LIONEL BLUERabbi Lionel Blue is known to millionsthrough his broadcasting on BBC Radio.Many others know him from hisnumerous TV appearances and hisbooks, among them Bolts from the Bluesand Simply Divine.

Using his own experiences and offbeatsense of humour, Rabbi Lionel Blue tells aselection of stories, incidents andconversations whose dottyinconsequential flavour will appeal topeople from all religions, and from none.

He’s thoughtful and funny with it, mixinghumour with humility, compassion andcommon sense. He talks about the

people he has known with affection andabout himself with a delicious sense ofthe ridiculous. He can spot when hisdog is having an existential crisis andknows that the best cure for insomnia isa straight-from-the-tin baked bean feast.“My aim”, Lionel says, “is to give peoplethe courage to get out of bed”.

“Highly recommended” Bolton Evening News

“Radio’s favourite Rabbi” Bristol Evening Post

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25 BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777

CHILDREN & FAMILIESTHURSDAY 8 & FRIDAY 9 APRIL 10.30AM & 1.30PMSATURDAY 10 & SUNDAY 11 APRIL 1.30PM & 3.30PMDJANOGLY THEATREALL TICKETS £6RUNNING TIME: 50 MINSSUITABLE FOR AGE 3 - 7 YEARS & FAMILIES

TRAVELLING LIGHT AND SIXTH SENSE THEATRE COMPANIESPRESENT

BOB, THE MAN ON THE MOONBob has a very special job - he looks after the moon.

Every morning, Bob rises at six, has his breakfast and boardshis rocket for the daily commute. Bob vacuums space junk outof craters (quite often astronauts drop candy wrappers andcans) and enjoys a club sandwich with the Man on Mars andthe Man on Saturn.

He knows almost everything about the moon. But there’s onething he’s blissfully unaware of: ALIENS!

Sixth Sense and Travelling Light’s funny and delightful new showis inspired by the hugely popular award-winning book by SimonBartram and incorporates puppetry & musical narrative.

DRAMA/COMEDYWEDNESDAY 14 APRIL 8PMDJANOGLY THEATRE£12 (£9 CONCESSION)£5 RESTRICTED VIEWRUNNING TIME: 100 MINS INCLUDING INTERVAL

LIPSERVICE THEATRE PRESENT

MOVE OVER MORIARTY25TH ANNIVERSARY SHOW

LipService, aka Maggie Fox and Sue Ryding, are Holmes andWatson. The intrepid pair investigate a series of mysteriousMusic Hall murders in The Garibaldi Biscuit Affair, a case asimpenetrable as a London pea souper.

Gothic horror combines with Victorian Music Hall as thisextraordinary mystery unravels. Meet Flying Fernando - Titanof the Trapeze, the Musical Motherless Twins and the NoveltyChicken Act! It is down to the brilliant violin-playing, opiumsmoking, French knitting detective and his little friend Watsonto solve this fiendish crime.

Award-winning comedy duo, Maggie Fox and Sue Ryding playan array of characters, moving effortlessly - well, almost - fromfrock to frock in their unique style.

“The glorious,splendidly silly comic duo that is LipService.” The Independent

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THEATRE 26

DRAMAMONDAY 19 & TUESDAY 20 APRIL 8PMDJANOGLY THEATRE£12 (£9 CONCESSION)£5 RESTRICTED VIEWRUNNING TIME: 120 MINS PLUS INTERVALSUITABLE FOR AGES 14+

GRAEAE THEATRE COMPANY INASSOCIATION WITH THEATRE ROYALSTRATFORD EAST PRESENTS

Tammy, the alter-ego of undertaker SueGraves (played by the wonderful CarolineParker), has to make a life-changingdecision with the help of her most trustedfriends - Judy Garland, Dolly Parton, BillieHoliday, Dusty Springfield and Patsy Cline.In a choice between love and fame, willshe make the right decision or live toregret the path she takes?

Signs of a Star Shaped Diva takes us onan emotional rollercoaster of signed song,interpreting and telling the stories of songsthat have touched a generation... but it isSue's story that will touch your heart.

Featuring captioned dialogue and signedsongs, Signs of a Diva was originallyconceived by Graeae’s Artistic Director,Jenny Sealey and this new production hasbeen expanded so we can enjoy evenmore of Sue’s story and the songs thatprovide a soundtrack to it.

“A remarkable piece of theatre fromdisabled-led company Graeae” BritishTheatre Guide

CHILDREN & FAMILIESSUNDAY 25 APRIL 3.30PMDJANOGLY THEATREALL TICKETS £6RUNNING TIME: 60 MINSSUITABLE FOR AGE 4+ AND FAMILIES

THE HONK PROJECT PRESENTS

TO HAVE AND TO HONK

Directed by John Wright

Fourteen musical instruments, fourclowns and one wedding.

In The Honk Project’s new show, fourmusicians are on their way to a wedding.But, in true Honk form, the journeydoesn’t quite go according to plan...

With their special blend of amiablechaos and physical theatre, The HonkProject will have you laughing until youcry, even as you thrill to the musicaldelights on offer.

Enjoy a honkingly good show - a joy foraudiences of all ages.

“One of the most accessible, inventivepieces of theatre I have seen for sometime.” Adrian Berry, Jacksons Lane

“The music is wonderful and at thecore of what is special and differentabout the show.” Pete Talbot, Rude Mechanical Theatre Company

SIGNS OF A STARSHAPED DIVABY NONA SHEPPHARD

Directed by Jenny Sealey & Nona Shepphard

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Open to the general public, this collection covers the Palaeolithic to the postmedieval period and comes primarily from the East Midlands. The wide variety ofobjects in the collection reflects the everyday lives of people living in this area, andincludes Paleolithic, Roman and Anglo Saxon material. There is also a small displayof objects from other countries including Egypt, Italy and Cyprus.

ADMISSION FREE Open: Monday to Friday, 10am-4pm 0115 951 4815 www.nottingham.ac.uk/museum The Museum is based in the Department of Archaeology.It is along Cut Through Lane opposite the Hallward Library.

NOTTINGHAMMUSEUM

the university of

is the new name for Lakeside’s International Children’s Theatre and Dance FestivalWheee!

See page 34 for details of this year’s festival, withcompanies from Spain, Belgium and Italy and the returnof Architects of Air’s ever-popular Luminarium, Levity II.

See you there!

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THEATRE 28

BOMBER’S MOONLAKESIDE AND LINCOLN PERFORMING ARTS CENTRE (LPAC)

PRESENTS PREMIERE

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DRAMAWEDNESDAY 5 - SATURDAY 22 MAY 8PMPREVIEWS: WEDNESDAY 5 & THURSDAY 6 MAY 8PM PRESS NGHT: FRIDAY 7 MAY 8PM MATINEES: SATURDAY 15 & WEDNESDAY 19 MAY 2PMNO SHOWS ON SUNDAYS

DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW MATINEES/PREVIEWS: £10 (£7 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW

LAKESIDE AND LINCOLN PERFORMING ARTS CENTRE PRESENTS PREMIERE

BOMBER’S MOONBY WILLIAM IVORY

Directed by Matt Aston

Designer Laura McEwenLighting Designer James FarncombeSound Designer Damian Coldwell

From the writer of The Retirement of Tom Stevens, Bomber’s Moon is a love story. Toldthrough the unflinching eyes of an octogenarian misanthrope, it unravels a war timemiracle and a modern day tragedy, to reveal the true nature of Faith.

Bomber’s Moon was presented as a rehearsed reading in June 2009 and has sincebeen developed into a full Lakeside production.

SIGNED PERFORMANCETUESDAY 18 MAY 8PM

AUDIO DESCRIBED PERFORMANCEWEDNESDAY 19 MAY 8PMwith touch tour at 7.15pm

POST SHOW DISCUSSIONS

WEDNESDAY 12 MAYPost show discussion with writer WilliamIvory and director Matt Aston.

WEDNESDAY 19 MAY (after 2pm show)Post show discussion with writer WilliamIvory and director Matt Aston.

William Ivory

“An outrageously honest analysis of character and relationships whichdeserves a national audience”Alan Geary, Reviewsgate on The Retirement of Tom Stevens

PAGE TO STAGE

WEDNESDAY 19 MAY6.30PM - 7.30PM16+ YEARSFREE

Widen your theatrical horizons byfinding out more about the best in newwriting. Page to Stage is an in-depthdiscussion designed for students &adults to provide access to the writersand directors of Lakeside’s in-houseproductions. This is a rare opportunityfor you to ask questions of writerWilliam Ivory and director Matt Astonabout the processes and choices thatwere made along the way in theproduction of Bomber’s Moon.

PLEASE NOTE: This show containsstrong language. We recommend adiscretionary age

limit of 14+.

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THEATRE 30

COMEDYTUESDAY 25 MAY 8PMDJANOGLY THEATRE£15 (£12 CONCESSION)£5 RESTRICTED VIEWRUNNING TIME: 120 MINS INCLUDINGINTERVAL

BEST OF LEICESTERCOMEDY FESTIVALON TOURMARK OLVER, DOC BROWN, JIM SMALLMAN + SPECIAL GUESTS

The UK’s longest running comedy festivalpicks up its bags and heads across theUK with the freshest and funniest actsaround. Having supported RussellHoward on his national tour last year,“cheerful and funny” (The Guardian) MarkOlver is quickly establishing himself asone of the circuit’s best comperes.“Olver has a great story to tell” (The List).Doc Brown was once an undergroundrapper who worked with, among othersDe La Soul and Mark Ronson.

Ben “Doc Brown” Smith is taking thescene by storm with his unique brand ofhip hop comedy. He “looks as if he wasborn on stage... with an irresistiblyamiable demeanour that gives him aneffortlessly charismatic aura... could yetbe the Bill Bailey or Tim Minchin of rap.”(Chortle). Supported by Jim Smallman,who touches on his odd life, hisobsession for knowledge and hisdownright silliness.

DRAMATHURSDAY 27 MAY 8PMDJANOGLY THEATRE£12 (£9 CONCESSION)£5 RESTRICTED VIEWSUITABLE FOR AGES 14+RUNNING TIME: 90 MINS NO INTERVAL

HARD GRAFT THEATRE PRESENT

KNIFE EDGEA NEW THRILLER BY MARK WHITELEY

In January my son was stabbed on his way home from work. Hedied on the pavement before the ambulance arrived. There weremany witnesses but not one had the courage to stand up in court.We all know who is responsible. Therefore I have no alternative. Ichallenge John Stetanovich to a duel to the death here.

“Well-acted and compellingly written.” Manchester Evening News

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31 BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777

CHILDREN AND FAMILIESSUNDAY 30 MAY 12.30PM & 3.30PMDJANOGLY THEATREALL TICKETS £6RUNNING TIME: 50 MINS, NO INTERVALSUITABLE FOR AGES 3-7 YEARS & FAMILIES

TUTTI FRUTTI AND YORK THEATRE ROYAL PRESENT

WHATEVER NEXT!By Jill Murphy, adapted by Juliet Forster

“Can I go to the Moon?” asked Baby Bear.“No you can’t,” said Mrs Bear. “It’s bathtime. Anyway, you’d have tofind a rocket first.”

Undeterred, Baby Bear finds a rocket, packs a picnic and visits themoon, accompanied by a friendly owl he meets along the way.Using puppetry, movement, object animation, a bit of juggling anda lot of imagination, Whatever Next! explores the joy of imaginativeplay and the wonders of space.

tutti frutti and York Theatre Royal bring this much-loved children’sclassic to life, accompanied by a specially composed, magicalmusical score. Whatever Next?

DANCETUESDAY 1 JUNE 8PMDJANOGLY THEATRE£12 (£9 CONCESSION)£5 RESTRICTED VIEWRUNNING TIME: 80 MINSSUITABLE FOR AGES 12+

ROSIE KAY DANCE COMPANY PRESENTS

5 SOLDIERS - THE BODY IS THE FRONTLINE

A New Commission by choreographer Rosie Kay

5 Soldiers is a timely, controversial,thought provoking and movingexploration of war in modern times. Adance theatre work one female and fourmale dancers, it looks at how thehuman body is essential to, and used in,warfare. 5 Soldiers explores the physicaltraining that prepares you for war, aswell as the possible effects on the body,and the injury caused by warfare.

Featuring Kay’s trademark intensephysicality and athleticism, 5 Soldiersweaves a journey of physicaltransformation, helping us understandhow soldiers are made and how waraffects them.

5 Soldiers is a unique collaborationbetween award winning choreographerRosie Kay, visual artist David Cotterrelland theatre director Walter Meierjohann.It follows an intense period of research,where Rosie learnt battle training withThe 4th Battalion The Rifles and Davidspent time in Helmand Province with theJoint Forces Medical Group. The piecehas an original sound score by AnnieMahtani and dramaturgy by PetraTauscher.

Please note: There is a small amount of partial nudityduring this show and as a result thecompany recommend a discretionaryage limit of 12+.

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THEATRE 32

DANCETHURSDAY 17 JUNE 8PMDJANOGLY THEATRE£12 (£9 CONCESSION)£5 RESTRICTED VIEWRUNNING TIME: 90 MINS

TRANSITIONS DANCE COMPANY

Join eleven dynamic young dancers asthey perform work by some of the mostengaging choreographers on theinternational contemporary dancescene. Bursting with energy and appeal,Transitions Dance Company offerssomething for everyone to enjoy,performing a rich and varied repertoireof exciting new work.

Don’t miss the opportunity to see thisinspiring dance company performchoreography by Angela Woodhouse,Cameron McMillan and Colin Poole.

“Performances by this enterprisingand annually reconstituted companyare always an eye-opener.” The Guardian Guide

“The sheer physicality of the movesbeing performed was art at its best,awe inspiring and spectacular”Marina Thomas, The Docklands, May 2009

CHILDREN & FAMILIESSUNDAY 20 JUNE 12.30PM & 3.30PMDJANOGLY THEATREALL TICKETS £6RUNNING TIME: 50 MINS, NO INTERVALSUITABLE FOR AGES 3+ & FAMILIES

STUFF AND NONSENSE THEATRE COMPANYWITH SALISBURY PLAYHOUSE PRESENT

ACROSS THE DEEPBLUE SEADirected by Niki McCretton

Singing whales, pestering Pirates and amultitude of deep sea creatures swim tothe surface in this fantastic aquaticadventure…

Across the Deep Blue Sea is the story of alittle man who wakes up to find himselfbobbing around in a make-shift boatsomewhere in the middle of a vastocean. For you or I that might bedisastrous but for him, it’s a breeze! Thereare plenty of fish to keep him company,he doesn’t have to make phone calls oranswer a million e-mails every day andhe can sail around to his heart’s content.

That is until the storms arrive!!!

Inspired by the works of internationallyrenowned mime artist Nola Rae, Frenchphysical comedian Jaques Tati andunder-sea explorer Jaques Cousteau,Across the Deep Blue Sea is a theatrejourney like no other - comic, touching,slightly surreal and full of inventivemechanical staging!

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CHILDREN & FAMILIESSUNDAY 4 JULY 1.30PM & 3.30PMPERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACEALL TICKETS £6RUNNING TIME: 50 MINS, NO INTERVALSUITABLE FOR 18 MONTHS - 3 YEARS & FAMILIES

BIG WINDOW THEATRE PRESENTS

LOOKING FOR THE RAINBOW

Written by - Nick WoodDirected by - Penny Breakwell Set Designer - Kelly Jago

One morning Kirsty wakes up to see the most beautifulrainbow ever and the rainbow’s end is only three gardensaway. She persuades her mum to come with her and togetherthey set off to find it. Soon they are lost and the real adventurebegins - how to find their way home. Join Kirsty and her mumas they adventure through the colourful world of the rainbow,climbing mountains, exploring caves and receiving help from- amongst others - a clockwork mouse!

Looking for the Rainbow is participatory theatre for childrenaged 18 months to 3 years and their families.

BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777

DANCETHURSDAY 1 JULY 8PMDJANOGLY THEATRE£12 (£9 CONCESSION)£5 RESTRICTED VIEWRUNNING TIME: 55 MINUTES

DANCE 4 PRESENTS

HETAIN PATELTENTEN is rooted in a personal explorationof the rich spectrum between British andIndian identities. Three men make thisjourney together. Dance, live music andspoken word collide, brought togetherby the contagious rhythm of an ancientIndian ten beat time cycle. Devised incollaboration with acclaimedNottingham based writer MichaelPinchbeck and Indian Tabla player HirenChate of Complicite Theatre Company,this seductively physical performance isvisual artist Hetain Patel’s first piece forthe theatre.

Hetain Patel was Visual artist inresidence at Lakeside 2005 - 2007.

Production: Co-Commissioned by Dance4 and The New Art

Exchange supported by Lakeside Arts Centre and Arts Council

England, East Midlands.

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THEATRE 34

DRAMATHURSDAY 15 JULY 8PMDJANOGLY THEATRE£12 (£9 CONCESSION)£5 RESTRICTED VIEWRUNNING TIME: 55 MINSSUITABLE FOR AGES 14+

MAISON FOO PRESENTS

‘MEMOIRS OF A BISCUIT TIN’An intriguing tale for grown ups filled withmischief, disobedience, isolation andforgetfulness. This charming and excitingnew piece of visual theatre follows the storyof a forgotten old lady, a decaying houseand the memories that lie within.

With an inventive blend of physical theatre,puppetry, clowning, and objectmanipulation, Maison Foo brings to life theimaginative topsy turvy world lurkingbehind the door of number 92.

“Quite simply a stunning piece of theatre.”Derby Evening Telegraph

www.maisonfoo.co.uk

Co-commissioned by Déda, Supported by the

National Lottery through Arts Council England.

FAMILY ACTIVITIES WEEKENDSATURDAY 5 & SUNDAY 6 JUNE, 12 NOON - 5PM

Making the most of our lovely green surroundings in Highfields Park,this year the theme for Lakeside’s International Children’s Theatre andDance Festival is the environment.

Navigate your way through our artist’s labyrinth, have a go on a wackybubble bike, take a hike in our green wildnerness, and meet Lakeside’smost famous bird-watcher in a series of fun activities for all ages. Takepart in some art workshops, enjoy some stories, and look out for somespecial performances on the Saturday featuring young people who havebeen involved in Flying Panda’s half-term workshop week (see page40)inspired by the masks, stories and characters in Sichuan Opera.

No need to book, just come along, and join in the fun. All activities arefree of charge, with the exception of ticketed performances in thetheatre or entrance to the Luminarium.

Illustration: Fox Graphic Design. Photo: Robert Day

Wheee!Lakeside’s International Children’s

Theatre & Dance Festival 2010

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35 BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777

Wheee!Lakeside’s International Children’s

Theatre & Dance Festival 2010

FRIDAY 4 & SATURDAY 5 JUNE 10.30AM, 1.30PM & 3.30PMALL TICKETS £760 MINS INCLUDING PLAYTIMESUITABLE FOR 2 – 4 YEARS AND PARENTS/CARERS

NAT GRAS (BELGIUM) PRESENTS

SHEEPTIGHT Moon in the sky, story in your ear, boy in bed - andsheep jump over the fence… Good night, sheep tight!

Snuggle up and enjoy Nat Gras’s delightfulperformance. Specially created for toddlers, this gentleand charming dance theatre about bedtime rituals willbring smiles all round as children and their carersrecognise much of their own experience in thisperformance!

Immediately following the performance, there’s achance to enjoy a special playtime in the theatre spacewith a range of fun things to do.

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SUNDAY 6 JUNE 3.30PMMONDAY 7 JUNE 10.30AM & 1.30PMALL TICKETS £7APPROXIMATELY 50 MINSSUITABLE FOR AGE 4+ AND FAMILIES

TPO (ITALY) IN CO-PRODUCTION WITH TEATROMETASTASIO STABILE DELLA TOSCANA AND LYRIC THEATRE HAMMERSMITH PRESENTS

THE KURDISH GARDEN

Imagine a mysterious path leading fromfour gateways, each travelling throughdifferent Kurdish landscapes and takinginspiration from Islamic gardens beforearriving at a place dedicated to adifferent colour and element: yellow -earth; blue - water; green - leaves; andred - love. Two dancers, an evocativesoundscape, and artist Rebwar Saeed’sbeautiful paintings combine in thisentrancing performance for everyone.

A welcome return for the company whoenchanted audiences in 2005 with TheJapanese Garden, and in 2007 with TheItalian Garden.

Wheee!Lakeside’s International Children’s

Theatre & Dance Festival 2010

THEATRE 36

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WEDNESDAY 9 JUNE 1.30PM & 7PMTHURSDAY 10 JUNE 10.30AM & 1.30PMALL TICKETS £7APPROXIMATELY 50 MINSSUITABLE FOR AGE 4+ AND FAMILIES

ARACALADANZA (SPAIN) PRESENT

NUBES (CLOUDS)

Wheee!Lakeside’s International Children’s

Theatre & Dance Festival 2010

37

Firm favourites of Lakeside audiences who raved about previous showsNada Nada, Pequenos Paraisos and Visto Lo Visto, Enrique Cabrera’scompany return with their newest work Nubes (Clouds).

Inspired by the work of the Surrealist artist Magritte, this fabulous dancetheatre plays with the theme of clouds in the most magical way. Expectthe company’s trademark playfulness in which the most extraordinaryobjects are imaginately brought to life, a flipper dance which is laughout loud funny, and a ladder dance which takes your breath away. Thisis classic Aracaladanza.

Research supported by the Jerwood Studio at Sadler's Wells.

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CRAFTEXHIBITIONAbigail Brown’s work isinspired by memoriesof her childhood. See page 4.

CHILDREN & FAMILIESLAKESIDE INTERNATIONAL CHILDREN’S THEATRE AND DANCE FESTIVAL

FRIDAY 4 - SUNDAY 6 JUNE 11AM - 6PMARCHITECTS OF AIR PRESENT

LUMINARIUMALL TICKETS £3

Alan Parkinson’s big, beautiful, inflatable structures of colour,light and sound are in demand for festivals world-wide, andwe’re delighted to be welcoming the company back to theirhome-base in Nottingham. Suitable for everyone, Architects ofAir invite you to wander and wonder your way through theirpods of colour and light, and soak up a very specialexperience.

Please note at peak periods visits will be limited to 15 minutes.

THEATRE 38

Wheee!Lakeside’s International Children’s

Theatre & Dance Festival 2010

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FAMILIES (OPEN TO ALL)

THURSDAY 15 APRIL - THURSDAY 13 MAY& THURSDAY 17 JUNE - THURSDAY 15 JULY10AM - 11AM PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE18 - 36 MONTHS £4

TINY FINGERS TINY TOESJoin us at Tiny Fingers Tiny Toes, whereyou can explore all that moves. Jump,hop and skip into the space. Groove,wiggle and clap your hands to music.Climb, swing and crawl around. Stretch, twist and shake your body. Play, perform and dance all the way home!

SATURDAY 17 APRIL - SATURDAY 10 JULY10AM - 11AM 5 - 7 YEARS £30 PER TERM

LITTLE LAKESIDERSCome and join our new weekly LakesideYouth Theatre as we explore imaginaryworlds through drama and creative play.Get ready to get messy, make somenoise, and have fun!

WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES 39

GET INVOLVED, GET CREATIVE!Lakeside’s Visual Arts and Performing Arts Education teams have joined forces to create a whole new exciting world to explore! Places for all workshops should be booked in advance on 0115 846 7777.

LITTLE ONES

THURSDAY 3 JUNE1.30PM - 4PMVISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACEAND HIGHFIELDS PARK£8 PER PERSON

TREE DRESSINGMake a wish and dress a tree! Usingpaints and fluttery materials, makecolourful hangings to temporarily adornone of the magnificent trees inHighfields Park. You will be able to takeyour hanging home.

FRIDAY 4 JUNE10AM - 12.30PMVISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE AND HIGHFIELDS PARK£8 PER PERSON

SKY GAZINGClouds in all their glory will be thesubject for this family workshop. Usingfabrics and a range of decorativematerials, you will be seeking inspirationfrom the skies above and in the cloudpaintings of artists through the ages, tocreate your own original artefacts.

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FLYING PANDA WEEK !Four Nottingham theatre makers havebeen in China as guests of the SichuanOpera and now they are back in town toshare some of what they have learnt:

MONDAY 31 MAY - FRIDAY 4 JUNE9.30AM - 12NOONPERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE 7+ YEARS£8 PER SESSION

Explore aspects of this colourful art formwith Flying Panda, including masks,stories, music, puppets and thecharacters of the Sichuan Opera. Therewill be mask making and puppetry onMonday, banner, flag and fan makingon Tuesday, storytelling on Wednesday,music and movement on Thursday andcreate a character on Friday. Join us forall sessions or choose the ones youwould like to attend.

MONDAY 31 MAY - FRIDAY 4 JUNE1PM- 3.30PMPERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE 10 - 14 YEARS£40

Work with Flying Panda to devise a shortshow to be performed at the end of theweek as part of our InternationalChildren’s Theatre and Dance Festival.You need to book for the whole weekand be available to perform on Saturday5 June.

SUNDAY 16 MAY 10AM - 4PM VISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE £30/£25 CONCESSIONS

SHAPING CLAY

Join artist Claire Morris-Wright for acreative clay workshop. The artist’s 3-Dshapes and forms are inspired bylandscape and land shapes and in thisexploratory session she will be givingyou the opportunity to create sculptures.No previous experience necessary andall materials provided.

SATURDAY 29 MAY10AM - 4PMVISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE£30/£25 CONCESSIONS

STARTING POINTS AND DEPARTURESSpend the day with exhibiting artistMarek Tobolewski. Following a visit toMarek’s exhibition at the Djanogly ArtGallery and his studio in the DHLawrence Pavilion, participants will begiven the opportunity to translate soundand objects into marks and structures,abstracting from observation anddeveloping these visual ideas aspersonal journeys into large scaledrawings.

No previous experience necessary andall materials provided.

WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES 40

CHILDREN

ADULTS (18 YEARS AND OVER)

Work in photograph: 3LC Prussian Blue, 2009 by Marek Tobolewski.

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MONDAY 2 AUGUST - FRIDAY 6 AUGUST10AM - 3.30PM8 - 12 YEARS, £65

BIG IDEAS! BIG ART!Fee Fi Fo Fum!! How did the Lilliputiansfeel when they came across Gulliver onthe seashore? The Borrowers on theiradventures with the ‘human beans’?Jack as he climbed the beanstalk andarrived at the giant’s castle? Join artistLiz Sparks to imagine life as a tinyperson in a huge world and create aspectacular installation in the theatre towhich your family and friends will beinvited at the end of the week.

MONDAY 9 AUGUST - FRIDAY 13 AUGUST 10AM - 4PM9 - 11 YEARS, £65

CREATE A PLAY IN A WEEK Come along and make a play in a week.Last year we created a play based onscary things that live under your bed, sowho knows what will happen this year…If you want to be a theatre designer or aperformer then this is an opportunity notto be missed. There are 15 places forperformers and 5 places for theatredesigners to work with professionalartists on a weeklong intensive project tocreate a fun and exciting show which willknock your audience’s socks off!!

MONDAY 16 AUGUST - FRIDAY 20 AUGUST10AM - 12NOON 6 -7 YEARS, £351PM - 4PM 8-10 YEARS, £45

ELASTIC FANTASTICDANCE WEEKBack by popular demand, local dancespecialist Lucy Killingley will stretch yourimagination with her unique style andhighly creative approach to dance.

MONDAY 23 AUGUST - FRIDAY 27 AUGUST11AM - 12NOON 3 - 5 YEARS, £25 1PM - 2.30PM BEGINNERS KATHAK, £40 3PM - 5.30PM INTERMEDIATE KATHAK, £606PM - 9.30PM ADVANCED KATHAK, £75

KATHAKSUMMER SCHOOL

Vina Ladwa is the inspirationalArtistic Director of Manushi

Dance Company and shewill be leading theseKathak dance sessionsfor a wide range ofages, from as young as

3 years. You will be ableto develop new skills in

Indian classical dance as acomplete beginner or an

experienced Kathak Dancer.The intermediate and advance

sessions will beaccompanied by a tablaplayer.

*Reduced fee of £110 whenIntermediate andAdvanced are bookedtogether

AUGUST 2010

41 BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777

SUMMERSCHOOLS!

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WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES 42

GALLERY ART GROUP(GAG)For ages 11-16, GAG is designed tointroduce young people to a variety ofart skills from painting and drawing tosculpture and photography, and allsessions are connected to our galleryexhibitions.

Saturday mornings from 10am to 12noon during school term times. The costis £45 for the term.

LITTLE GAGFor ages 8-10, Little GAG provides areally enjoyable week by weekintroduction to painting, drawing andsculpture. Saturday afternoons from1.30pm to 3pm during school termtimes. The cost is £35 for the term.

Bookings for GAG and Little GAGopen on Saturday 27 March. Contactthe box office on 0115 846 7777.

Anyone aged 7 - 12 years may borrowan Art Investigator bag in the DjanoglyArt Gallery to help them look at theexhibitions for free! Including an activitysheet with questions to encouragechildren to really look at the art, thebags are a popular addition to theLakeside visitor experience.

Once the bags have been used andreturned to the gallery counter, every ArtInvestigator may claim their specialstickers and badges. See website formore details.

LEARNING

IN THE GALLERIESThe htree galleries at Lakeside (WestonGallery, Djanogly Art Gallery and theWallner Gallery) provide an inspiringrange of changing exhibitions tostimulate educational activity withschool, college and community groups.

The Galleries Education Officer, RuthLewis-Jones, is available to work withteachers and community leaders todevise and deliver tailor-made learningopportunities for visiting groups.She can be contacted by email on

[email protected], orby telephone on 0115 823 2218.

YTLLakesideyouththeatre

needs you!

Lakeside Youth Theatrecompany is for young peopleaged between eight andeighteen working withprofessional staff to create andproduce a broad range of highquality theatrical experiences.

For information, you cancheck out our website atwww.lakesidearts.org.uk.Bookings for LYT open onMonday 15 March. To book aplace call the Box Office on0115 846 7777.

DO YOU WANT TO BE AN ART INVESTIGATOR?

artLAKESIDE ARTinvestigator

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BOX OFFICE OPENING HOURSPERFORMANCE NIGHTSMonday to Saturday 10am until half anhour after start of the performanceNON-PERFORMANCE NIGHTSMonday to Saturday 10am - 5pmSunday 12pm - 4pm

Payment can be made by cash, cheque(with valid guarantee card), debit or creditcard. Cheques should be made payableto The University of Nottingham. Thefollowing cards are accepted Delta, Visa,Maestro, Mastercard and Solo.

OPENING HOURSDjanogly Art Gallery Monday - Saturday 11am - 5pmSun/Bank Holidays 12noon - 4pmCafé LMonday - Friday 9am - 4.30pmSat 11am - 4.30pmSun/Bank Holidays 12noon - 3.30pmWeston GalleryMonday - Friday 11am - 4pmSat/Sun/Bank Holidays 12noon - 4pmWallner Gallery and AquaMonday - Saturday 10am - 5pm(until 11pm on performance evenings)Sun 11am - 5pmBank Holidays 12noon - 4pm

ACCESS FOR ALLLakeside is fully accessible to people with adisability. There is level access, toilets for thedisabled, designated car parking across allthe venues and wheelchair spaces in boththe Djanogly Recital Hall and DjanoglyTheatre. Where possible please bookwheelchair spaces in advance. There is aSennheiser Infrared enhanced hearingsystem in Djanogly Theatre and PerformingArts Workshop Space (where possibleheadsets should be booked in advance)and an induction loop in Djanogly RecitalHall, Box Office, Djanogly Art Gallery Desk,Cafe L and Aqua.

ASSISTANCE DOGSAssistance dogs are welcome in all areas of the building.

CONCESSIONSAvailable to full-time students, inpossession of a valid NUS card withphoto, state pensioners, registereddisabled and their carers, unemployedand children under 16. Please bring proofof concessionary status when buyingtickets.

RESERVATIONSReservations will be held for a maximumof three working days. On the day of aperformance reservations are held until30 minutes before the start of a show.

STUDENT STANDBY TICKETSLimited numbers of £5 tickets areavailable for students and under 18s formost performances. Available from 5pmon the day of the performance, subject tostatus and availability.

GROUP DISCOUNTSSchool and college groups receive onefree ticket for a teacher / carer for everynine tickets purchased. All other groupscan buy nine tickets and get the tenth onefree. (Applies to the cheapest ticket.) Toreceive a group booking tickets MUST bebooked in advance at the same time.Discounts do not apply to workshops.

LATECOMERSLatecomers may only be admitted duringa suitable break in the performance andat the Duty Manager’s discretion.

RETURNSUnfortunately no refunds are available forunused tickets. However if an event sellsout we will endeavour to sell on sparetickets if requested.

ALL INFORMATION IS CORRECT AT TIME OF GOING TOPRINT. LAKESIDE ARTS CENTRE RESERVES THE RIGHT TOMAKE ALTERATIONS TO THE PROGRAMME AS DEEMEDNECESSARY.

INFORMATION 46

LAKESIDE ARTS CENTREUNIVERSITY PARKNOTTINGHAM NG7 2RDBOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777BOOK ONLINE: WWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UK

Brochure design: Tom Partridge www.tompartridge.co.uk

Printed by: Pyramid Press www.pyramidpress.co.uk

Page 47: Lakeside On Brochure April - August 2010

47

TO M1

A52 DERBY ROAD

WOODSIDE RD

A52 DERBY ROAD

CITY CENTRE

ABBEY BRIDGE

A52 CLIFTON BVD

A6005 UNIVERSITY BOULEVARD

PPGREAT HALL(in Trent Building)

HOW TO GET HERELakeside Arts Centre is located at the South Entrance to the University ofNottingham campus, just off the A6005,University Boulevard. If approaching bythe M1, leave the motorway at junction25 and join the A52 to Nottingham. Turnright at the third roundabout (Priory), fromthere the University is signposted.

BUSESRegular bus services operate betweenthe City Centre and the University SouthEntrance: Trent Barton from BroadmarshBus Station: Indigo (to Long Eaton/Derby)every 6-8 minutes during the day andslightly less frequently in the evening; 18(to Stapleford) every 20 minutes duringthe day and hourly in the evening. NCT 13/14 (from Market Square toBeeston/Chilwell) every fifteen minutesduring the day and less frequently in theevening; 34 (City Centre/University ParkLoop) every ten minutes. Term time only,Monday - Friday daytimes only. For times and details please callNottingham City Transport 0115 9506070 or www.nctx.co.uk, Trent Barton on01773 712265 www.trentbarton.co.uk orTraveline 0871 200 22 33

CAR PARKING

EVENING Visitors may use any of theUniversity parking areas, which are freein the evening and weekends. The mostconvenient of these can be found onScience Road.

DAYTIME Limited free daytime parking isavailable. This can get busy, so allowextra time. When entering UniversityPark from the south entrance onUniversity Boulevard the Lakeside carpark is on the left hand side. Additionalpay and display parking is on ScienceRoad, which is first right after the southentrance.

DISABLED PARKING There are designatedspaces located close to Lakeside’svenues. If you are visiting the Djanogly ArtGallery or Recital Hall enter UniversityPark from the south entrance onUniversity Boulevard, turn first right intoScience Road, and then first right again.For the Djanogly Theatre or other venueslocated inside the DH Lawrence Pavilionthere are 2 spaces in the main Lakesidecar park, and an additional 9 spaces nextto the lake - these can be accessed bydriving past the main Lakeside car park(to your left), around past the gatehouse,first left off East Drive along the northapproach to the DH Lawrence Pavilion.

UNIVERSITY BOULEVARD

After 6pm

CAR PARK

CAR PARK

P

EAST

DRI

VE

MAINVISITOR

CAR PARK

CUT THROUGH LANE

EAST DRIVE

DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL

DJANOGLY ART GALLERY

ANGEAR VISITORS CENTRE CAFÉ L

D H LAWRENCE PAVILION DJANOGLY THEATREWESTON GALLERYWALLNER GALLERYAQUA

SOUTH ENTRANCE

BUS STOPSCIENCE ROAD

Page 48: Lakeside On Brochure April - August 2010

LAKESIDE ARTS CENTREUNIVERSITY PARKNOTTINGHAM NG7 2RDBOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777BOOK ONLINE: WWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UK

THIS BROCHURE IS AVAILABLE IN LARGE PRINT. PLEASE CALL 0115 846 7777

DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL DJANOGLY ART GALLERY DJANOGLY THEATRE WALLNER GALLERY WESTON GALLERY

Lakeside is The University of Nottingham’s public arts centre, comprising...

COMING SOON TO LAKESIDE...SATURDAY 2 OCTOBER 7.30PMDJANOGLY RECITAL HALL£15 (£12 CONCESSION)

SINFONIA VIVACOLIN CURRIE MARIMBA

Charismatic and virtuosic percussionist Colin Currie joinssinfonia ViVA to perform Kurt Schwertsik’s ‘Now you hearme, now you don't’ for Marimba and Strings, in aprogramme that also includes music by Mozart andStravinsky’s Apollon Musagète.

Phot

o: C

hris

Daw

es