Classical musicians on life after Brexit - 2: violinist Victoria Sayles

CLASSICAL MUSICIANS ON LIFE AFTER BREXIT - 2: VIOLINIST VICTORIA SAYLES

First sequel to pianist Sophia Rahman's assembly of musical voices on the visa situation

In March 2020, all my work in Australia and Sweden, where I had won contracts for several months to come, was cancelled on the day I was due to fly. Both organisations who had engaged me promptly honoured their contracts with me financially nevertheless. Thank goodness they did, because as UK tax payers and residents, my partner Roland Palmer and I have, for 10 months now, received zero help from SEISS and UC.

'The total confusion about post-Brexit rules adds to the distress': classical musicians speak out

'THE TOTAL CONFUSION ABOUT POST-BREXIT RULES ADDS TO THE DISTRESS' 10 Classical musicians speak out about EU touring meltdown

Ten players and administrators on the fallout in government restrictions to EU touring

“Fuck business,” Boris Johnson is alleged to have said while Foreign Secretary. (He didn’t deny it). We have seen enough over the past three weeks of the impact of Brexit on fishermen, hauliers, wine merchants and a host of business people to know that he wasn’t joking.

What of the impact on musicians?

Nick Hornby: Just Like You review - funny but inauthentic Brexit novel

★★ NICK HORNBY: JUST LIKE YOU Funny but inauthentic Brexit novel

Hornby's latest novel tries so hard to be ‘woke’ that it ends up being tone-deaf

Nick Hornby’s protagonists are worlds apart. Joseph is a Black 22-year-old with a “portfolio career", which includes shift work at a butcher’s and a leisure centre and the distant dream of becoming a DJ. Lucy, a regular customer at the butcher’s where Joseph works, is a white, forty-two-year-old mother, recently divorced from an addict ex-husband and Head of English at a local “troubled inner city school.” When she asks Joseph to be a babysitter for her two children, the pair embark on an unexpected romantic relationship.

Theatre Unlocked 4: Shows in concert and a contemporary classic comes to TV

A New York duo celebrates Sir Noël; Samuel Beckett bewitches and bewilders once again

After months spent sifting amongst the virtual, I'm pleased to report that live performance looks to be on the (socially distanced) rebound. The week ahead sees the start of a six-week run at the Open Air Theatre in Regent's Park of the alfresco venue's seismically exciting revival of Jesus Christ Superstar, this time performed in concert with multiple casts due to the vocal demands of the score.

The Uncertain Kingdom review - Britannia agonistes

★★★ THE UNCERTAIN KINGDOM Twenty short films shine a light on Blighty right now

Twenty short films shine a light on Blighty right now

The Uncertain Kingdom is a VOD anthology of 20 short films, 10 directed by women, comprising a tapestry of life in – and, in one case, outside – Brexit-era Britain. Though hope, humour, and whimsy were threaded into the project, its dominant fabric is grey.

Re:Creating Europe, MIF Rewind review - last year's burning issue semi-dramatized

★★★ RE:CREATING EUROPE, MIF REWIND Last year's burning issue semi-dramatized

Ivo van Hove engages British and Dutch actors to debate the urgent question of 2019

Are we really past all this? From Ivo van Hove's 2019 polyphony of opinions and reflections down the centuries, so much has gone into the oven on a low heat while more Brits discover that "better together" in the European Union might be a better catchphrase than "take back control". The flames will flare up again as the government finds it has no better way of mastering the Brexit problem than it has the C-19 crisis which has so ruthlessly exposed its unpreparedness.

Albion, Almeida Theatre review - more rewarding and resonant than ever

★★★★ ALBION, ALMEIDA THEATRE Mike Bartlett's play has deepened in accordance with our divisive times

Mike Bartlett's play has deepened in accordance with our divisive times

It's not been three years since Albion premiered at the Almeida Theatre, since which time Brexit has happened and, not without coincidence, Mike Bartlett's time-specific play is beginning to look like one for the ages. Set amongst a community in physical and psychic limbo, Bartlett takes the pulse of a people, and a nation, at odds with themselves.

Madonna, London Palladium review - a fiesta of the surreal and the fiercely fabulous

★★★★ MADONNA, PALLADIUM A fiesta of the surreal and the fiercely fabulous

An intimate evening of surreal new sounds and fado fun - family and friends invited

The first time I heard Madonna, I was 8 years old at a school disco. Horrified parents, who came to pick us up as we jumped up and down yelling along to “Like A Virgin” in a fluorescent flurry of topknots, puffer skirts and lace gloves, subsequently lodged a formal complaint (it was a Catholic junior school) and thus, the spirit of Madonna, was borne into my story.

Matt Forde, Soho Theatre review - Brexit and beyond

★★★★ MATT FORDE, SOHO THEATRE Brexit and beyond

Cogent political analysis

Matt Forde sets out his stall in Brexit: Pursued by a Bear from the first line: “We meet in diabolical circumstances.” These aren't good times, he says, with two major leaders in the Western world whose relationship with the truth is merely that of passing acquaintance. Add in the UK's continuing divisions over Brexit, and diabolical seems apt.