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T HE cast of Tom’s Midnight Garden are under an unenviable amount of pressure. Taking on Philippa Pearce’s classic tale? That’s some feat. Since it was first published in 1958, generations of children have grown up with Tom and Hatty as literary playmates. They are characters that lodge inside your head, pottering alongside you as you leap and bound from single figures into doubles, merging into your childhood as though they were real friends; real adventures. It’s touching, magical stuff that, like all the best children’s stories, never quite leaves you. Translating that into a 1 hour and 40 minute production (including an interval), is more than a challenge . . . After stumbling upon a grandfather clock that chimes 13 times, Tom finds himself whisked through time to a secret Victorian garden locked away in the past. Staying with his aunt and uncle in the present, under quarantine thanks to his measles ridden brother Peter, the garden – sunlit and beautiful sometimes, dark and stormy others – offers a night time escape from the drudgery of summer without his sibling. There he meets Hatty, lonely like him, and together they embark on a tangle of a friendship, but Tom must work out this time travelling business. Adapted by David Wood and performed by the Birmingham Stage Company, it’s in the same weepy children’s fiction cache as Goodnight Mr Tom, and no, you weren’t the only one reduced to distraught tears by both. They quite rightly scar you for life. Faithful to the book and constructed so that even the youngest in the audience won’t be tripped up by the slipping and sliding of time, you are forced to imagine the garden, it’s twists and turns, vegetable patches and the great old fir tree, wrought out of a set the morphs and winds with the ticking of the clock. The costumes are exact, the live music impressive (they troop on stage with cellos and violins that saw at your heartstrings), and although it’s slightly strange having adults play children – it particularly gives Hatty’s unruly, spiteful cousins an even more malicious air – the cast are unerringly enthusiastic. David Tute (Tom) stirs laughter and screws up his face with confusion at the question of time, while Caitlin Thorburn (Hatty) skitters and bounds across the stage, battling physically with the confines of Victorian rules for girls. Together the pair captures something of the looping friendship of Pearce’s heroes, the fun of it and the pain of being divided by decades and dreams, but sadly it doesn’t quite live up to the magic and the memory of the book. 26 | April 24, 2014 | cambridge-news.co.uk | Cambridge News The critical list: more hot tickets Theatre Round-up ɀ BUDDING directors, Cambridgeshire Film Consortium is running a new film production workshop: Introduction to Filmmaking (21+). The six-week course starts on Wednesday, April 30 and there are still places if you’re keen to learn the ins and outs of filming. You’ll get to grips with cameras and editing software, work with live actors and learn the art of cinematography and location shooting while making two short films. The course costs £250. Contact Cambridge Arts Picturehouse on 08719025720 for details. ɀ THE Music in Quiet Places summer series launches tomorrow at St Andrew’s Church, Girton. The concert programme, which hosts classical evenings within the hushes confines of churches in and around Cambridge, will begin with La Serenissima at 7.30pm. German Baroque violinist Johann Georg Pisendel will be paid tribute to through four virtuoso sonatas written by Vivaldi, Albinoni and Montanari. Tickets are £14 from (01223) 357851. ɀ THE Cambridge Arts Picturehouse is welcoming actor and director Crispin Glover to the city on Wednesday, April 30. He’ll be attending a screening of his new film It Is Fine! Everything Is Fine and presenting Crispin Hellion Glover’s Big Slide Show, an hour long dramatic narration of his books, with a slideshow projected behind him. There’ll also be a Q&A and a book signing. You’ll definitely be getting your money’s worth. Tickets are £18 from 08719025720 and the event starts at 8pm. ɀ THERE’S an open stage tomorrow night at Cambridge Folk Club. Brave ones can grab their guitars and warm up their vocal chords ahead of headline act Saul Bailey. Saul plays the English concertina and melodeon, switching between English dance and folk music, as well as the odd bit of Morris dancing, as you do. Apparently he “found his love for folk music at the Cambridge Folk Festival, and once he’d started going there, his life was never quite the same again . . .” Entry is £4 on door. Check it out from 8pm at the Golden Hind. ɀ WRITTEN by Tom Stuchfield, The Angel Rails is a dark exploration of what happens when people take justice into their own hands. Four strangers leave a courtroom having witnessed the driver of a train walk free – they consider him the murderer responsible for a rail disaster that has killed their loved ones. Now it’s their turn to go on the rampage. Tickets are £5-£6 (01223) 300085 and the show is on from Wednesday, April 30 until Saturday, May 3. It starts at 11pm at the ADC. Review Tom’s Midnight Garden Follow us on Twitter @CamWhatsOn Spring Awakening ANY play that caused riots is definitely one to see in our book. Spring Awakening, written by Frank Wedekind, did just that when it first struck the stage in 1906. Sadly, we expect this new version, overhauled by director Ben Kidd and Anya Reiss (who’s won the Evening Standard and the Critics’ Circle Awards for Most Promising Playwright), isn’t going to have people burning down the velvet curtains or screaming abuse at the box office staff. Then again, that’s probably a good thing. You don’t really want to get distracted from the unnervingly dark and twistedly funny plot which sets out to discover what hope teenagers and youngsters have in a world run by a generation that doesn’t understand them, and perhaps doesn’t even care. It’s nothing if not utterly relevant – quarter-life crisis agogo. Spring Awakening, Cambridge Arts Theatre, until Saturday, May 3 at 7.45pm. Tickets £15- £27 from (01223) 503333 / cambridgeartstheatre.purchase- tickets-online.co.uk. Tom’s Midnight Garden, Cambridge Arts Theatre, until Saturday, April 26 at 7pm. Tickets £12.50-£17.50 from (01223) 503333 / cambridgeartstheatre.purchase-tickets-online.co.uk

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Page 1: Tom's Midnight Garden

THE cast of Tom’s Midnight Gardenare under an unenviable amount ofpressure.

Taking on Philippa Pearce’s classic tale?That’s some feat.

Since it was first published in 1958,generations of children have grown up withTom and Hatty as literary playmates. Theyare characters that lodge inside your head,pottering alongside you as you leap andbound from single figures into doubles,merging into your childhood as though theywere real friends; real adventures.

It’s touching, magical stuff that, like all thebest children’s stories, never quite leaves you.

Translating that into a 1 hour and 40 minuteproduction (including an interval), is morethan a challenge . . .

After stumbling upon a grandfather clockthat chimes 13 times, Tom finds himselfwhisked through time to a secret Victoriangarden locked away in the past.

Staying with his aunt and uncle in thepresent, under quarantine thanks to hismeasles ridden brother Peter, the garden –sunlit and beautiful sometimes, dark andstormy others – offers a night time escapefrom the drudgery of summer without hissibling.

There he meets Hatty, lonely like him,and together they embark on a tangle of afriendship, but Tom must work out this timetravelling business.

Adapted by David Wood and performedby the Birmingham Stage Company, it’s in

the same weepy children’s fiction cache asGoodnight Mr Tom, and no, you weren’t theonly one reduced to distraught tears by both.They quite rightly scar you for life.

Faithful to the book and constructed sothat even the youngest in the audience won’tbe tripped up by the slipping and sliding oftime, you are forced to imagine the garden,it’s twists and turns, vegetable patches andthe great old fir tree, wrought out of a set themorphs and winds with the ticking of theclock.

The costumes are exact, the live musicimpressive (they troop on stage with cellosand violins that saw at your heartstrings), andalthough it’s slightly strange having adults playchildren – it particularly gives Hatty’s unruly,spiteful cousins an even more malicious air –the cast are unerringly enthusiastic.

David Tute (Tom) stirs laughter and screwsup his face with confusion at the questionof time, while Caitlin Thorburn (Hatty)skitters and bounds across the stage, battlingphysically with the confines of Victorian rulesfor girls.

Together the pair captures something of thelooping friendship of Pearce’s heroes, the funof it and the pain of being divided by decadesand dreams, but sadly it doesn’t quite live upto the magic and the memory of the book.

26 | April 24, 2014 | cambridge-news.co.uk | Cambridge News

The critical list: more hot ticketsTheatreRound-up

� BUDDING directors, CambridgeshireFilm Consortium is running a new filmproduction workshop: Introductionto Filmmaking (21+). The six-weekcourse starts on Wednesday, April 30and there are still places if you’re keento learn the ins and outs of filming.You’ll get to grips with cameras andediting software, work with live actorsand learn the art of cinematographyand location shooting while makingtwo short films. The course costs £250.Contact Cambridge Arts Picturehouseon 08719025720 for details.

� THE Music in Quiet Places summerseries launches tomorrow at St Andrew’sChurch, Girton. The concert programme,which hosts classical evenings withinthe hushes confines of churches in andaround Cambridge, will begin with LaSerenissima at 7.30pm. German Baroqueviolinist Johann Georg Pisendel will bepaid tribute to through four virtuososonatas written by Vivaldi, Albinoni andMontanari. Tickets are £14 from (01223)357851.

� THE Cambridge Arts Picturehouse iswelcoming actor and director CrispinGlover to the city on Wednesday, April30. He’ll be attending a screening ofhis new film It Is Fine! Everything IsFine and presenting Crispin HellionGlover’s Big Slide Show, an hour longdramatic narration of his books, witha slideshow projected behind him.There’ll also be a Q&A and a booksigning. You’ll definitely be getting yourmoney’s worth. Tickets are £18 from08719025720 and the event starts at8pm.

� THERE’S an open stage tomorrownight at Cambridge Folk Club. Braveones can grab their guitars and warmup their vocal chords ahead of headlineact Saul Bailey. Saul plays the Englishconcertina and melodeon, switchingbetween English dance and folk music,as well as the odd bit of Morris dancing,as you do. Apparently he “found his lovefor folk music at the Cambridge FolkFestival, and once he’d started goingthere, his life was never quite the sameagain . . .” Entry is £4 on door. Check itout from 8pm at the Golden Hind.

� WRITTEN by Tom Stuchfield, TheAngel Rails is a dark exploration ofwhat happens when people takejustice into their own hands. Fourstrangers leave a courtroom havingwitnessed the driver of a train walkfree – they consider him the murdererresponsible for a rail disaster that haskilled their loved ones. Now it’s theirturn to go on the rampage. Tickets are£5-£6 (01223) 300085 and the showis on from Wednesday, April 30 untilSaturday, May 3. It starts at 11pm atthe ADC.

Review

Tom’s Midnight Garden

Follow us on Twitter@CamWhatsOn

Spring AwakeningANY play that caused riots isdefinitely one to see in ourbook.Spring Awakening, written byFrank Wedekind, did just thatwhen it first struck the stage in1906. Sadly, we expect this newversion, overhauled by directorBen Kidd and Anya Reiss (who’swon the Evening Standard andthe Critics’ Circle Awards forMost Promising Playwright),isn’t going to have peopleburning down the velvet curtainsor screaming abuse at the boxoffice staff.Then again, that’s probably agood thing. You don’t really

want to get distracted from theunnervingly dark and twistedlyfunny plot which sets out todiscover what hope teenagersand youngsters have in a worldrun by a generation that doesn’tunderstand them, and perhapsdoesn’t even care.It’s nothing if not utterly relevant– quarter-life crisis agogo.

� Spring Awakening, CambridgeArts Theatre, until Saturday,May 3 at 7.45pm. Tickets £15-£27 from (01223) 503333 /cambridgeartstheatre.purchase-tickets-online.co.uk.

� Tom’s Midnight Garden, Cambridge ArtsTheatre, until Saturday, April 26 at 7pm.Tickets £12.50-£17.50 from (01223) 503333 /cambridgeartstheatre.purchase-tickets-online.co.uk