Hamlet, Tobacco Factory, Bristol

HAMLET, TOBACCO FACTORY, BRISTOL Hamlet as wayward teen spirit

Hamlet as wayward teen spirit

Alan Mahon’s Hamlet in Andrew Hilton’s production for Shakespeare at the Tobacco Factory bristles with teen spirit and this is no bad thing. The Prince of Denmark, even before his father dies, is beset with the angst that goes with the territory of late adolescence. The production presents, on one level, a tragic coming of age drama, one in which the young heroes are consumed by madness and caught in the political and sexual machinations of their elders.

The Odyssey, Mark Bruce Company, Circomedia, Bristol

THE ODYSSEY, MARK BRUCE COMPANY, CIRCOMEDIA, BRISTOL 21st-century Homer fizzes with energy, but reaches too high

21st-century Homer fizzes with energy, but reaches too high

Mark Bruce did very well with his last dance theatre production Dracula, but this time around he has reached a little too far. The Odyssey is a great text, but with the twists and turns of Ulysses’ return to Ithaca, burdened with the karmic debt of multiple crimes against the gods committed during the Trojan War, Homer’s epic is an unwieldy beast: it’s at times as if Bruce had himself succumbed to the avalanche of challenges the tired and traumatised warrior has to face on his way home.

CD: Tricky – Tricky Presents Skilled Mechanics

The Tricky Kid keeps the Bristol flame burning

Tricky navigates a kind of penumbra, a fertile and ever-renewing source of inspiration in which his mixed-race, gender-fluid self can re-invent itself periodically, while staying true to his roots and his unique self-taught take on the world of electronics and beats.

Sleeping Beauty, Bristol Old Vic

SLEEPING BEAUTY, BRISTOL OLD VIC Scintillating gender-bending version of panto classic

Scintillating gender-bending version of panto classic

Christmas pantomime is all about letting go, and being carried away on a wave of communal jollity. The genre also delights in carnivalesque gender-bending, the anarchic undermining of authority and the playful representation of evil. There is always a danger when a tradition that thrives on predictable tropes is re-invented, but Sally Cookson, after her very successful productions of Peter Pan and Treasure Island, has once again made something immensely original and new, while paying homage to this particularly British seasonal entertainment.

The Crucible, Bristol Old Vic

THE CRUCIBLE, BRISTOL OLD VIC Stirring production of Arthur Miller classic about a community turning against itself

Stirring production of Arthur Miller classic about a community turning against itself

Tom Morris has a strong feel for drama that explores the personal implications of fanaticism: his production of John Adams’s powerful opera The Death of Klinghoffer for New York's Met and the ENO, used a language of great simplicity that allowed the work’s most disturbing complexities to come through with formidable power. Once again with Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, an equally rich text, there is a stripped-down quality to his overall vision, supported by a generally superlative cast and finely tuned pacing.

Living Quarters, Tobacco Factory Theatres, Bristol

LIVING QUARTERS, TOBACCO FACTORY THEATRES, BRISTOL A Brian Friel theatrical treasure revealed in this devastating tale of a family tragedy

A Brian Friel theatrical treasure revealed in this devastating tale of a family tragedy

Brian Friel’s Living Quarters ranks with his best plays but isn’t well known. This powerful story of family dysfunction was first performed in the UK in 1991, directed by Andrew Hilton for Bristol’s legendary pub theatre company Show of Strength and was then not seen on the English stage until now – once again with the Bristol director at the helm.

We Made It: Cameron Balloons

Business is ballooning for a Bristol company that trades in hot air

An air of busy calm greets me as I walk onto the top floor of Bristol’s Cameron Balloon factory. Considering this company is the largest manufacturer of hot air balloons in the world, my novice expectations of behemoth machinery raging back and forth in huge production lines are somewhat undone by the sight of six women sitting at industrial sewing machines, dotted around the farthest edges of the vast room, quietly stitching.

CD: Julio Bashmore - Knockin' Boots

Bristolian house don's debut has its tasty moments

“Julio Bashmore” is actually the nom-de-dancefloor of Bristolian DJ-producer Matt Walker who’s been slowly building a rep over the last five years. Outside clubland, music-lovers may have heard of him via his production on Jessie Ware’s early singles. In the nightworld, he’s better known as the purveyor of classy, propulsive house sprinkled with a smidgeon of grit. His debut album combines both these aptitudes to increasingly enjoyable effect as it progresses.

The School for Scandal, Tobacco Factory, Bristol

THE SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL, TOBACCO FACTORY, BRISTOL Pitch-perfect Sheridan satire with present-day resonance

Pitch-perfect Sheridan satire with present-day resonance

Andrew Hilton’s immensely enjoyable Shakespeare at the Tobacco Factory production of the Sheridan classic opens with a display of hilarious brio from Byron Mondahl, who steps into the intimate arena of this South Bristol venue, only half in character as he has yet to don his powdered wig, to deliver a quick fire introduction on the joys of gossip. He is wearing salmon pink brocade and breeches and suddenly whips out a red mobile to catch up with the latest tweets, shooting a selfie of himself in front of the audience. 

Romeo and Juliet, Tobacco Factory, Bristol

Teen spirit, stirred but not deeply shaking

Teen spirit explodes time and time again in the intimate space of Bristol’s Tobacco Factory, with piercing electronic sounds, fierce lighting and a torrent of high-energy movement. The frenetic pace of Baz Luhrman’s film has left its mark on intepretations of Shakespeare's classic love story, and this isn't necessarily a good thing.