Shrew business

Round & About

Pranksters Theatre Company return to Guildford’s historic Castle Keep from 13th – 21st July to stage William Shakespeare’s rollicking comedy The Taming of The Shrew

“Of all mad matches, never was the like!” Shakespeare’s outrageous comedy is host to one of theatre’s greatest double-acts, a couple hell-bent on confusing and outwitting each other right up to the play’s controversial conclusion. 

Sparks fly, identities are confused and parents fooled in this tale of money, marriage and love! Will Petruchio tame tempestuous Katherine, the shrew? Can Lucentio outwit his rival suitors and win the love of fair Bianca. 

Jenny Swift co-director of the show says: “The Taming of the Shrew is a brilliantly fun and fast-moving play from beginning to end and we have loved picking the script apart to play to Shakespeare’s humour and his love of complications! With such a small and intimate setting within the Castle Keep, the audience can almost become a part of the action which will be a very special experience for all.” 

Pranksters Theatre Company create site-specific productions. Recent successes include sold-out Henry V also in Guildford Castle Keep and TWO by Jim Cartwright at the Keep Pub. The Taming of The Shrew will be their fourth production in Castle Keep.

Tickets £15 adults (£12 students/under-16s) are restricted to 50 per show. Book from Guildford Tourist Information Centre, 155 High Street, Guildford, GU1 2AJ, 01483 444333. Visit www.pranksterstheatre.org.uk

Ebb & flow

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Author Sofka Zinovieff explains more about her new novel inspired by the patch of south-west London where she grew up and which is being hailed as a summer must-read…

I spent much of my childhood living by the river in Putney. We lived so close to the bridge that the house trembled every time a Tube train went over, and passing “pleasure boats” blaring dance music were a feature of summer evenings.

My father had an electronic music studio that started in a shed in the garden, and later graduated to the basement. Vast banks of computers and synthesisers let out mad squawks and bleeps and I would regularly return from school (Putney High School) to find rock groups like Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin, as well as experimental musicians from around the world.

When I decided to write a novel set in the 1970s, it was too tempting not to use elements from my own environment as the setting. Although the story is not my own, the physical setting is largely based on the place I lived and the heady atmosphere of barefooted, flower-powered, wild-child indulgence is inspired from the world I knew.

Daphne is only 13 when she falls in love with Ralph, an upcoming composer, 20 years her senior. Ralph is married, but he has long been obsessed with Daphne – “dark, teasing, slippery as mercury, more sprite than boy or girl”. He is also close to her alluring bohemian parents, Ellie (a Greek political activist) and Edmund (a successful writer). In the hot summer of 1976, Daphne and Ralph travel to Greece together and manage to “disappear” for a few days to an island. Only one person knows of their passionate trysts: Daphne’s best friend Jane, whose awe of the intoxicating Greenslay ensures her silence.

Daphne looks back to her first love as a romantic secret. After a rackety life with a brief, disastrous marriage to a Greek billionaire and years of drug abuse, she is finally back on track. She and her 12-year-old daughter now live on the other side of the Thames, with a view across to her old home. When Daphne re-connects with Jane, she is forced to reconsider her relationship with Ralph. Growing anxiety over her own adolescent daughter leads her to confront him, the truth of her own childhood, and an act of violence that has lain hidden for decades…

Woodland Wonder

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Woods are amazing. They’re where imagination takes root. Where a love of nature grows and thrives. And they’re the lungs of our county. They are also the best place to escape to, and shrug off your cares. The Japanese have a name for it; Shinrin-Yoku, which, poetically coined, means “forest bathing”. Living in this part of the world, we’re spoilt for choice, so we have teamed up with The Woodland Trust, a charity that exists to protect native woods, trees and their wildlife for the future. They focus on improving woodland biodiversity and increasing peoples understanding and enjoyment of woodland.

Harpsden & Peveril Woods

Harpsden & Peveril Woods is an 18-hectare area that has been designated as “ancient semi-natural woodland”, an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, Site of Special Scientific Interest, Special Area of Conservation and has Tree Preservation Order work. This site, next to Henley Golf Club, approximately a mile south of Henley-on-Thames, and within the Chiltern Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, has a 50-year management plan with the minimum of silviculture intervention in place.
Harpsden & Peveril Woods is dominated by mature beech, pedunculate oak, ash trees and sessile oak. Also hazel, holly, field maple, rowan, wild cherry all present.

The majority of the land of this wood was acquired by The Woodland Trust in 1991, after the Great Burns Day Storm of 1990. There were a lot of wind-blown trees, and these gaps are being filled with younger trees of a variety of species.

The Woodland Trust says there will be a loss of ash through ash dieback disease, which is very likely to occur in the next 10 years and this will add further gaps to the mature tree canopy. Over time this wood is likely to become more of mixture of beech, oak, birch and sycamore.

The open canopy gaps have allowed other flora and fauna to flourish. There have been 40 recorded species of flowering and uncommon plants strongly associated with old woodland including bird’s nest orchid, narrow-lipped helleborine, green-flowered helleborine, cow-wheat, goldilocks and the yellow bird’s nest. The deadwood habitat is also very rich, and this wood has been noted for its diversity of fungi. In a fungal survey in 1999 recorded 171 species of which nine are rare.

Penn and Common Woods

Walk back in time in Penn and Common Woods, once home to Iron Age smelting, a Roman settlement, a wood-turner’s workshop for High Wycombe’s chairmaking businesses, and even an army base during World War II.

You can find this place, which is at the very heart of the Chilterns Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, close to the amenities in the village of Penn Street, near Beaconsfield in Buckinghamshire.

These woods today have taken their shape as a direct result of its rich and changing history. For those interested in archaeology, there are a number of features to look out for which point to the wood’s past, such as banks, ditches, pits and dells.
As well as providing a home and source of income for individuals, Penn and Common Woods has had an interesting history of wildlife. Wild boar, wolves and deer roamed the wood in the Middle Ages, and there are still roe deer to be seen today.

Medieval farmers would bring their cattle, horse, sheeps and pigs to graze on common ground. The Woodlands Trust has reintroduced cows to Penn Wood to maintain open pasture by trampling down thickets and fertilising the ground, encouraging a vast array of flora and fauna back.

Penn Woods is renowned for its rich stock of ancient woodland. Over much of the site the canopy is dominated by broad-leaved tree species including oak, beech and birch – some of which are over 200 years old. However, there are also areas of dense coniferous plantation and open pasture.

The range of habitats here supports a diversity of species adapted to completely different ecological niches. This can be illustrated by the rare butterflies and unusual beetles. A survey in 2000 discovered 10 nationally scarce beetles.

Overhead a wide range of birds can be spotted including brambling, tawny owl, cuckoo, garden warbler, red kite, kestrel and buzzard.

Puttenham Village Walk

The Puttenham Village Walk (3miles) Leg 1. Follow the signs for a footpath, you’ll pass a cottage, keep left round the corner, down steps to a bridleway, then turn right (you’ll see yellow arrows, follow them). Pass through some swing gates, over stiles and a flat bridge towards a large metal gate, which, leads you to Puttenham Lane. Turn left, pass through a kissing gate, into the meadow, keep left and follow the winding path steeply uphill. In the distance, you will see Puttenham Priory on the right. At the final stile, continue ahead to a T-Junction in the village. (On the right is St John the Baptist – well worth a visit.) Reward yourself with a pint and lunch.
The Culmill Circuit (7½miles) Leg 2. From the village head towards the North Downs Way. It’s a five-mile straight walk, with a few twists and turns, but you will have a fine view of the Hog’s Back. This path will take you towards Totford Wood to meet a junction with fields. Look out for the yellow arrows, that will guide you through an area called Payn’s Firs. Look out for the little fairy house in the trees. Go right on the road. (If you need a toilet break head towards St Laurence.)

Next the trail is a zig-zag, starting from the left towards Binton Wood. There are lots of chestnut trees here. Stay on the path, following the green-and-white signs, past beautiful, tall pine trees, to a place known as Culver’s Well. The track runs through open woodland of Crooksbury Common, and onwards to the timber works, keep an eye out for the vehicles. You’ll get to a crossing. On the otherside is Britty Wood.

Leg 3 (2½miles). The route goes up through pines, beeches and a coppice. Then it’s downhill into a beautiful area of silver birches. You come to views of Cutmill Pond, this used to serve an iron mill in the 16th century. Pretty soon you’ll pass Rodsall Manor, with its proud stone eagles. When you see the steps on the left, you’ll be back at the car park.

Stratfield Brake

Stratfield Brake, OX5 1UP, two miles outside Kidlington, is really family-friendly. The Woodland Trust began managing the 18.5-hectare site from 1997 after establishing a lease with the site’s owner, Oxfordshire County Council.

The wood is made up of a mature wood, a young wood and a wetland area. This wood contains tree species such as oak, field maple and elm, as well as many bird species such as tree creepers, rooks and woodpeckers. Old oak trees provide habitats not just for birds but also fungi, mosses, insects and bats.
Sadly, at the moment, access is restricted to the mature woodland area in response to the presence of a disease called acute oak decline, which affects native oak trees, leading in some cases to their death. The disease poses no threat to either humans or animals, but it may be spread through movement of bacteria picked up on visitors’ shoes and clothing or by vehicles. Therefore, on the advice of Forest Research, the Woodland Trust has temporarily closed Stratfield Brake’s mature woodland area to the public.

There’s still plenty to observe at Stratfield Brake this summer including the meadows and the wetland. Just park near the sports club and follow the signs to the wood. There are four entrances to the site from here, creating a network of 1.5miles, buggy-friendly surfaced and unsurfaced paths in Stratfield Brake, which are level and have no width restrictions (but can get muddy in wet weather).

One short loop of surfaced path leads to a bird-watching area overlooking the wetland. All year round it attracts all sorts of birds – you might be lucky to hear the drumming of great spotted woodpeckers high in the trees. There’s a good chance you’ll see mute swan, tufted duck, heron and coot and, if you’re lucky you might spot a rarity such as a little egret. This small heron is hard to miss as it has whiter than white plumage.

Stratfield Brake is also a good place to join the Oxford Canal towpath; a 4.7-mile (7.6km) circular walk using the footbridge to Yarnto, developed by local Ramblers for the Canals & Rivers Trust.

Visit www.woodlandtrust.org.uk for more woodland walks. Please remember when setting off for a walk, to take a compass, a good map, a bottle of water and a snack.

Thrills & Spills!

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Direct from London’s West End, where it’s in its record-breaking 10th year, Thriller Live returns to Woking’s New Victoria Theatre between Monday, 2nd and Saturday, 7th July.

There is no doubt about it, this show is going to be a real crowd pleaser. Thriller Live will be throwing hit after hit onto the stage at Woking’s New Victoria Theatre, paying homage to Michael Jackson’s incredible repertoire and making sure his slick choreography lives on in time to the syncopated beat.

But what about the man, stepping into the shoes, busting the moves, and moonwalking his way into the hearts of MJ fans?

Britt Quentin easily takes on the King of Pop, with his pitch-perfect vocal range and uncanny Jacko looks. 

In his biography, according to his parents, Britt was born into this world with perfect lungs, and as a youngster, growing up in Michigan USA, being in the church band felt more natural than being on the baseball pitch.

In his own right, this dynamic vocalist is a producer, director, and prolific songwriter, holding the position of Musical Director (1997-2009) for the internationally-acclaimed, Los Angeles-based, jazz-funk-pop vocal group, M-pact. 

After M-pact, Britt spent more than six years in London’s prestigious West End where he was resident director of Thriller Live, and now goes on tour nationally with the show.

Thriller Live, from Monday, 2nd until Saturday, 7th July, at New Victoria Theatre, Peacocks Centre, Woking, GU21 6GQ. Tickets from £26.15, fees apply. Book tickets by calling the Box Office on 0844 871 7645.

Headway Highlight

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Headway Surrey is the Mayor of Guildford’s chosen charity for 2018. Its five paid staff, supported by wonderful volunteers, won the Queen’s Award for Voluntary Services last year.The charity helps adults across the county with an acquired or traumatic brain injury, offering cognitive rehabilitation and family support.

There are two types of brain injury:  

• Acquired via a stroke, heart attack, brain tumour, blood clot, encephalitis, haemorrhage, aneurism, meningitis, hydrocephalus, carbon monoxide poisoning and other medical issues.  

• Traumatic event such as a road accident, sports injury (skiing, football, rugby, boxing), work incident, assault, combat, falls, trips and slips. 

Brain injury affects cognitive ability, things we take for granted such as making a cup of tea, walking, talking, reading, writing, cooking and dressing. Headway staff support those who now have problems with social skills, conversation skills and behaviour, helping individuals to control their lost inhibitions. The brain needs executive skills to make sense of information and then to make decisions. Using selected exercises and strategies, individuals can find new brain pathways around the damaged area of the brain.  

The fastest recovery time is within the first two years (using cognitive rehabilitation therapy), however long-term slow stream rehabilitation can go on for decades. Headway Surrey provides a range of services: individual programmes, group workshops, home community visits, hospital  liaison visits, a befriending scheme, a helpline and supportive activities for family and carers.    

Another often forgotten area is the family. One minute your husband/wife, dad/mother or son/daughter is normal, the next minute they are not.  Brain injury is a hidden disability – your loved one may look the same, but they are “not the same”.  They may have issues not only with thinking, decision making, prioritising, memory, but also with clumsiness, balance, slurring words, hand/eye co-ordination, taste… the list is endless. 

Families have their own issues and may suffer loss of friends and depression. Partners often have to give up their jobs to become full-time carers and relationships can break down. 

Headway’s support activities for carers and families, therefore, are extremely valuable. Clients are matched with volunteers who enjoy similar social or recreational activities. They meet weekly, fortnightly or monthly, and might go for a coffee, a walk, visit the cinema or whatever.

Sonja Freebody, CEO of the charity, is passionate about fundraising and she and her team will take part in the Guildford Raft Race on Saturday, 7th July. Please sponsor them by visiting www.uk.virginmoneygiving.com

Please contact Headway about fundraising, volunteering and services on offer. Visit www.headwaysurrey.org or call 01483 455225  or email [email protected]

Peace and equality!

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Everyone is invited to the free family celebration of peace and equality at this year’s Party in the Park on Saturday, 7th July, at Woking Park from 12noon to 9pm.

On Sunday, 11th November, 2018, it will be 100 years since the guns fell silent on the Western Front, and World War One came to an end. 

This year also sees the centenary of the monumental victory won by women as they achieved voting rights, with local suffragette Dame Ethel Smyth leaving her legacy in the shape of the iconic anthem March of the Women. After the WWI Armistice there was an enormous party across Woking with parades, sports, games, music and tea. Now, a century on, and we still know how to throw a party that would make our ancestors proud!

Explore five different fields packed full of family-friendly activities. Enjoy live music and dance on the Eagle Radio Main Stage, watch and participate in the Dance Woking Encounters Tent or get active in the Freedom Leisure Sports Zone with traditional outdoor games. Discover tonnes of terrific children’s activities in the Children’s Zone and take a fun fair ride! Meet some furry farm friends and learn about what people grew 100 years ago in the Eco Zone. When you’ve had enough excitement, relax, browse and learn from local history exhibitors in the Bandstand Field against a soundtrack of live bands or take in a performance in the Culture Zone. At the end of a long day, relax whilst the sun goes down and ‘laugh loud, and long, and clear’ to Mary Poppins on the New Victoria Theatre Big Screens.

The event is sponsored by Woking Shopping, Freedom Leisure, New Victoria Theatre, Dance Woking and Eagle Radio and supported by #WeAreWoking. Visit www.celebratewoking.info/partyin the park for more information. 

It’s got to be … Purdy

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As a child, growing up on a farm, with three older brothers, Purdy (AKA Rebecca Poole) admits she was given to escaping, with a lot of fanciful, romantic dreams.

“There was not much to do, other than avoid my brothers’ teasing,” she says, “I discovered song-writing when I was 11 years old, because I enjoyed writing poetry. I’ve always had a fascination with matters of the heart and my songs reflect that. I used to be shy about singing, and then, crazily, I joined a jazz band. It was a good learning curve for me; I found my voice.”

And what a voice! Purdy’s songs may tell tales of triumph in love and heartbreak, but her delivery is certainly not schmaltzy, saccharine wallow. Her vocals are deep, warm, and full of purpose. “I’ve not had much vocal coaching. It must be the red wine, whiskey and occasional cigars,” she jokes.

Check out her debut album, Diamond In The Dust. Produced by Grammy award-winning producer Andy Wright, online at www.purdymusic.co.uk. It was her vocal uniqueness that caught the imagination of boogie-woogie legend Jools Holland who invited her to tour as support, with the last date being at the Royal Albert Hall.

“It was nerve-wracking beforehand,” she says about the experience. “When I sing, I sing from the heart. When I walked on stage at the Royal Albert, my heart was floating to the rafters. It was a dream come true. I felt incredibly privileged. My dream has never been to be famous, it’s been to do what I love.”

When I ask about her stage name “Purdy” she explains: “When I was starting my career in singing, I met Alan McGee, manager of Oasis, for advice. He told me two things: ‘jazz is not cool’ and to change my name. I didn’t listen to his musical tastes, but I did change my name. I was inspired by Purdy, because my brothers were in a band, at the time, with the same name, and I chose the heroine’s name. Having that pseudonym has been a good friend; I have metaphorically hidden behind her. She allows me to reveal my heart on stage.”

Expect a number of Purdy’s original timeless compositions, along with some of the standards that have inspired her – made famous by those she calls ’the Golden Girls’ (the likes of Ella Fitzgerald, Julie London and Peggy Lee).

Purdy performs on Wednesday, 4th July, at 606 Club, 90 Lots Road, Chelsea, SW10 0QD; 020 7352 5953 or www.606club.co.uk. She also one of the stars at Henley Festival, 11th-15th  July, which Round & About is proud to sponsor. Visit www.henley-festival.co.uk

Match of the day

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Charity begins at home, but when you’re a business, and want to do good in your local community, where do you find what is most needed on your doorstep?

Support A Local Charity is one such initiative working hard to support corporate responsibility. It works just like a dating agency to find a compatible partner, but of course, it’s business, and the point is to align a business with a social cause. 

This initiative was launched as part of Gloucestershire’s Local Business Charity 2018 awards, sponsored by risk strategy and commercial insurance consultants Jelf and Ageas. 

Requests for help can include anything from looking for new trustees to help with fundraising, volunteering, accounts, marketing, PR, social media, HR etc. Businesses are asked to submit a form stating what they are willing to offer; from sharing the firm’s core skills, to supporting the charity for a year, or more general fundraising and volunteering support. 

Forms to support or register a charity can be downloaded from www.localbusinesscharityawards.co.uk. Upon joining, charities and firms can browse the register until they see a potential match, at which point the magic happens.

This is how IT firm, Cyber Security Associates, met women’s charity, Gloucestershire Bundles. Madeline Howard, of Cyber Security Associates said: “We loved the idea of ‘Support A Local Charity’ and were delighted to receive a call, asking for help with GDPR compliance from this charity.” 

Stacey Brayshaw, trustee of Gloucestershire Bundles added: “We are so grateful, without this initiative and finding a match, we would have spent vast amounts of money on becoming compliant.”

Seeing red

Round & About

Tony Hersh of Newbury Astronomy Group explains more about what we can see in the skies above us this month, including the red moon.

July is exciting for astronomers due to the total lunar eclipse between 8.45pm and 9.30pm on Friday, 27th.

During this event Earth comes between the moon and sun. Instead of plunging the moon into darkness from Earth’s shadow, something unusual happens. Sunlight is made of light of all the colours of the rainbow mixed together, but as it travels through Earth’s atmosphere, the path of the light changes as it hits air molecules and particles. Colours with shorter wavelengths, such as blue, are scattered off in random directions but colours with longer wavelengths, such as the reds, are scattered less. So the light that emerges after being bent in the Earth’s atmosphere has more red colour and turns the moon an amazing ruby hue. Have a look out and see how red the moon becomes!

Turning to constellations, see if you can find part of Sagittarius which is visible low in the sky directly south and appears as the shape of a teapot. Planets are difficult to spot in a lightish sky but Mars is at its largest and brightest all year this month and should be visible close to the moon on the first of the month. Venus should be clearly visible just to the left of a crescent moon at 9.30pm on 15th July and Saturn again just to the left of the moon around the same time on 24th.

Object of the month

When a comet approaches the sun, the frozen gases trapped beneath its surface evaporate and dislodge dust grains from the surface of the comet which can be seen from Earth as the comet’s “tail”. In 2014, after a 10-year journey, the European Space Agency’s Rosetta spacecraft finally reached its destination with Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. For the next two years, Rosetta orbited the rubber-duck-shaped comet, analysing the dust the comet was losing. Recently a landmark study was published, reporting about half of the 35,000 dust grains captured and analysed by the Rosetta probe were made of organic molecules; carbon-based molecules such as proteins, carbohydrates, and nucleic acids. The finding adds weight to the suggestion that comets were responsible for “seeding” the early Earth with organic matter which eventually gave rise to life.

Newbury Astronomical Society hosts monthly meetings for beginners and experienced astronomers. Visit www.newburyastro.org.uk. Email any questions to [email protected]

Monelise magic

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Visitors to the Thame Town Music Festival this month will be in for a treat as they listen to the haunting compositions of Monelise.

Her classically inspired soundscapes, which are truly twenty-first century tone poems blurring the lines, rather than crossing over between classical and contemporary, lyric and poetry, reality and dream. It was in an ethereal dream-like place, Iceland, she spent time last year as she recorded the video for her latest single The Flood which was released last month. You may be able to hear the single quite often as you shop, as the TopShop Group have signed an agreement for the song to be played in their stores during June and July,

Speaking of fashion, Monelise is pleased to return to Edinburgh earlier this year performing at the Alternative Fashion Week. Monelise was born in St Petersburg, she has lived in Russia, Houston Texas, Luxembourg and five years in Edinburgh. She is now living in London and studying for a Masters’ degree in Popular Music at Goldsmiths University as well as performing at some of London’s best kept secret haunts.

She gives her inspirations from across the musical spectrum including Kate Bush, Bjork, Michael Nyman, Yann Tiersen, Enrico Caruso, Frederic Chopin amongst others. If you are inspired to go and listen to her, then details of her performance and all the acts at the Thame Town Festival which is on at various locations across Thame on the 13th and 14th July can be found at www.thametownmusicfestival.org.