Wondrous West Wycombe Chamber Music Festival

Liz Nicholls

Shows & Reviews

Dick Morbey tells us about the enchanting West Wycombe Music Festival, 19th to 21st September, founded by international star (& Wycombe born & raised) musician Lawrence Power

West Wycombe Chamber Music Festival was established 13 years ago by Lawrence Power who is now recognised as a performer of the very highest calibre on the world stage.

Each September Lawrence returns to the area to direct and perform in this three-day music festival which offers audiences five attractively programmed concerts. He brings with him an array of top-flight musicians who join him to perform in this exclusive series of concerts.

The festival has firmly established its place as one of the key musical events in our locality. It was hailed by the Guardian newspaper as “One of the top ten classical music events of 2021”.

After last year’s success in Hambleden, where we received a very warm welcome from the community and our audiences, we are delighted to be returning to the village this year. The festival will take place from Thursday 19th to Saturday, 21st September.

Five concerts will be given, with an Enchanted theme, all in the beautiful 12th century Parish Church of St Mary the Virgin, Hambledon, RG9 6RX, in the heart of one the most attractive villages in the Chiltern hills in Buckinghamshire. In addition to three evening concerts, there will also be a lunchtime concert on the Friday and a late morning concert on the Saturday. You can find full details of the five concerts and performances & book at westwycombemusic.org.uk and also follow the Facebook page. For further details, ticket sales and enquiries please email the festival organisers on [email protected] or you can call 01494 528659 or 07948 897148.

The West Wycombe Chamber Music Festival is an entirely non-profit concert series which aims to bring the very best of live music performance to the area, given by top calibre musicians. In current times this is increasingly costly, but thanks to the support of audiences and Friends of the Festival we are able to cover most, but not all of our costs.

We invite music-lovers to consider becoming a Friend. The Friends of the Festival are a thriving, friendly group who have offered great support for the festival for over a decade. Friends’ subscriptions and subsequent generous donations have been instrumental in supplementing the income we receive from our generously-priced concert tickets and enabling the continuance of the concert series.

For further info, ticket sales and enquiries please email the organisers by emailing [email protected] or call 01494 528659 or 07948 897148.


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Dawn French Brand New Live Show

Ellie Cox

Shows & Reviews

Dawn French, the Queen of British comedy, returns to the stage this autumn with a brand new solo show, ‘Dawn French Is A Huge Twat‘.

Dawn will tour the UK from 15th September, opening at Peterborough’s New Theatre and then perform a further 19 shows across the country until 16th October. Tickets for all shows are on sale now from https://dawnfrenchontour.com/

The award-winning actor, best-selling novelist and all-round very funny lady is here to tell us more:

“This show is so named because unfortunately, it’s horribly accurate. There have been far too many times I have made stupid mistakes or misunderstood something vital or jumped the gun in a spectacular display of twattery. I thought I might tell some of these buttock clenching embarrassing stories to give the audience a peek behind the scenes of my work life…

Roll up! Book early to see the telly vicar lady be a total twat on stage, live in front of your very eyes. And ears.”


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NOW that’s nostalgia with musical magic

Ellie Cox

Shows & Reviews

Nina Wadia to star in NOW That’s What I Call A Musical, directed and choreographed by Craig Revel Horwood and with special guest star, Sinitta

Nina Wadia will star as Gemma in the world premiere of NOW That’s What I Call A Musical, opening at Aylesbury Waterside Theatre on Friday 6th September before embarking on a major UK and Ireland tour. The brand-new British musical is written by award-winning comedian Pippa Evans and directed and choreographed by Craig Revel Horwood.

Click to read Q&A with Craig Revel Horwood.

Joining Nina will be NOW icon, Sinitta.

Nina said: “I grew up listening to the NOW tapes so for me being a part of this musical is like going home. When I read the script I immediately fell in love with the characters and Pippa’s story. I can’t wait to get started on my first ever musical and to see you all there.”

Sinitta said: “The most exciting thing about being involved in this project is the music. Dust off your spandex, crimp your hair and I’ll see you there.”

Get ready to relive the playlist of your life by celebrating 40 years of the iconic and chart-topping compilations brand NOW That’s What I Call Music, which has sold an estimated 200 million copies worldwide. This fun-filled evening is bursting with hits from Whitney Houston, Wham! Blondie, Tears For Fears, Spandau Ballet and so many more.

It’s Birmingham, 1989. Two school friends, Gemma and April, are busy with very important business – planning their lives based on Number One Magazine quizzes and dreaming of snogging Rick Astley. Cut to Birmingham 2009 and it’s the most dreaded event of their lives – the school reunion. Drama, old flames and receding hairlines come together as friends reunite and everything from the past starts to slot into place. The biggest question is: what was with all that hairspray?

Don’t miss this nostalgic evening bursting with 1980s hits. Tickets on sale at Aylesbury Waterside Theatre Box Office


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Sinodun Players stage Broadway show

Karen Neville

Shows & Reviews

The Sinodun Players are staging the off-Broadway contemporary show The Last Five Years in the intimacy of The Corn Exchange’s Studio Theatre

The Last Five Years is an emotionally powerful and intimate musical, which has captivated audiences and critics alike earning cult status.

Cathy, a struggling actress, and Jamie, a budding novelist on the brink of wild success, are 20-something in New York who meet, fall in love, marry, and divorce over the span of five years. Cathy tells the story from the end of their marriage; Jamie begins from when they first meet.

As the musical unfolds, Jamie shares his story from the spark of their relationship’s giddy beginning, whilst Cathy’s side is told in reverse, from the end of their turbulent partnership. The two characters cross paths just once, as their stories collide in the middle of the show.

It has been performed in many productions around the world and a film adaptation was released in 2015.

This production stars Freya Jacklin-Edward (BBC Singers, session singer for major films plus principal opera roles) and Poppy Jackson (actor and musical theatre singer) as Cathy with Andy Rainsford (Oxford Operatic singer & actor) and Jake Willett (trained at Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts and actor/singer for over 20 years) as Jamie supported by a four-piece orchestra.

Performances Tuesday 10th to Saturday, 14th September. Tickets £15, book at cornexchange.org.uk


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Music on the Views in Fleet

Round & About

Shows & Reviews

Have you heard the news about The Views? The park is gearing up for the first family friendly live music festival right here on your doorstep in Fleet with Music on the Views. Sue Tilley invites us to join the party.

The people of Fleet certainly like to have fun so go along and join them for a fabulous family friendly event in Fleet town centre – a brand new music festival called Music on the Views.

On Sunday, 25th August, between noon and 9.30pm Fleet’s first ever outdoor live music festival will take place on The Views Park and EVERYONE is welcome. So, bring the kids, bring your friends and come and join the party!

The full line up for our first music festival is still to be announced – we like to keep you guessing and build the anticipation! In the meantime, as a teaser, we can confirm some great crowd pleasers – The ABBA tribute – FEVER, as well as Pod Gods of the 80s and 90s. More extra special bands will be announced very soon so do keep in touch by following us on Facebook at Music on the Views | Facebook.

Aside from some fabulous musicians, there will be a Pimm’s tent, a beer tent with a great selection of real ales, fabulous food stalls and special stalls of festival fun. If you want to bring your blanket, chairs and food, then do feel free to do so – although why not support some of our local small businesses who will be on site with a fabulous selection of tasty treats.

The event is being run by a small team of volunteers working in partnership with Fleet Town Council.

Sue Tilley, Chair of the Committee, said: “We are so excited about launching this new event, which we are hoping will grow to be a real bright star in Fleet’s expanding events calendar.

“We are of course, immensely thankful to our sponsors – Hampshire County Council, Hart District Council, Fleet Town Council, Church Crookham Parish Council, as well as Fleet Business Improvement District, Kirk Rice Accountants & Financial Advisers, KJM Salons, Fleet Lions, the Scouts and others. Without these wonderful local organisations and businesses this really, really could not happen.

“All we need now is for you to come down and party with us! See you there!”


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The Unknown Warrior theatre tour

Round & About

Shows & Reviews

John Nichol, the former RAF Navigator who was taken hostage during the Gulf War who is now a successful author, shares his thoughts with us ahead of his theatre tour including the Elgiva in Chesham

“It’s rare to find a tale so strange, intimate and human yet at the same time so enormous, so global in its importance.” These are the words from historian Dan Snow upon reading John Nichol’s book, The Unknown Warrior – A Personal Journey of Discovery and Remembrance.

John, the former RAF Tornado Navigator, and Sunday Times best-selling author, is embarking on his first theatre tour. He hit the headlines in 1991 when his plane was shot down during the Iraq war. John and his pilot John Peters were taken captive, tortured, and paraded on TV. Since that fateful moment, John has established himself as a bestselling author with 17 books to his credit, including Tornado Down, written with Peters, describing their ordeal.

Of joining the RAF John says: “We were a family of six living in a council house. I was lucky to go to a grammar school, and I got eight O Levels. I was expected to stay on and do A Levels and go to uni. I would have been the first in the family, but I didn’t want to do that. I wanted to get out and experience the world. I’d always been interested in electronics – batteries, bulbs, magnets. I was building burglar alarms when I was 12 years old. I loved it. I had Meccano sets, electrical sets, chemistry sets. I applied for 40 or 50 apprenticeships and got an interview in Newcastle for the Central Electricity Generating Board. As I was waiting for the bus home, I was standing outside the RAF careers office. and I noticed they had glossy brochures. Now, my brother was in the Air Force, so I knew a little bit about it, but I’d never thought about joining myself. But I got a glossy brochure, took it home, read it and more or less on the spot thought, ‘this might be for me’.

“I joined as an electronics technician and loved every minute. For somebody like me, who’d been in the Scouts and was happy under canvas and having adventures, the RAF was great. Four years later, I applied for a commission to be an officer as I wanted to be a pilot, but I wasn’t good enough for that. So, I trained as a Tornado navigator, and the rest, as they say, is history.”

So how did John deal with the trauma of captured, and how was he dealt with the PTSD? “What choice did I have? What else could I have done when I was being beaten with rubber hoses or when they were stubbing cigarettes out on my ears or stuffing burning paper down the back of my neck? Being a Geordie who enjoyed a few pints, my concept of recovering was going straight back to my mates and having one quiet beer followed by 15 extremely loud ones. I just wanted to get on with my life.”

During the First World War (1914-1918) more than 9.7 million military personnel and about 10 million civilians were killed. More than 1 million soldiers from the then British Empire lost their lives. Over a century later, around half of them still have no known grave.

John’s emotive show retraces the Unknown Warrior’s journey home from the battlefields of Northern France to Westminster Abbey to be buried “Among the Kings”. The grand state occasion culminated with a funeral at Westminster Abbey on Armistice Day, the 11 November 1920. An estimated 1,250,000 people visited the Abbey to see the grave.

“It was important at the time, and it continues to be important now because it is still a focal point,” adds John. “At Westminster, there are many, many hundreds of graves. The Tomb of the Unknown Warrior is the only one nobody ever steps on. Even the Royal Family, as they walk past it when they come in, never step on it. It’s surrounded by a rampart of poppy crosses. It’s always the one with the biggest crowd around it. It’s still so significant because it represents loss.

“I hope the audiences on this tour with be enthralled, I hope they will be entertained, and I hope that they will be enlightened in the same way that I was when I discovered the story. It’s an astonishing story. My hope is that people go away at the end and say, ‘wow, that was amazing story. I really learned something, and I was really entertained for two hours.”

The Unkown Warrior A Personal Journey of Discovery and Remembrance will be brought to life with haunting visuals and a sound scape. You can book tickets for The Elgiva in Chesham on Saturday, 5th October, St Albans on 16th October, the Royal & Derngate in Northampton & more.

For tickets and info please visit John Nichol’s The Unknown Warrior – Norwell Lapley Productions Ltd.


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Will Young’s luminous return to pop

Liz Nicholls

Shows & Reviews

Multi award-winning British pop star and actor Will Young is back with his ninth studio album Light It Up

Multi award-winning British pop star, actor and all-round good egg Will Young is back with his ninth studio album Light It Up – out now via BMG.

To celebrate the new album, Will is also embarking on his most intimate tour yet this autumn. The sold-out Light It Up Live 2024 Tour is an up-close-and-personal evening of acoustic performances of all his hits and new songs, stories and conversation. The tour kicks off on 3rd September.

Light It Up is a shimmering return to from for one of Britain’s best-loved and steadfast pop singer-songwriters of the 2000s. The new body of work captures the musical richness of 1970s and ’80s soulful pop with a modern twist. A testament to Will’s magnetic vocals and storytelling prowess, each song – whether designed for escapism or reflection – feels perfectly tailored to soundtrack a moment.

Will says: “I really hope this is the go-to pop album for a dance, for a cry and for a celebration. I know I do all three with it. It is just so exciting to produce a complete pop album. Crafting pop music can be so fun and the challenge to sing those songs is something I’ve relished.”

“I really hope this is the go-to album for a dance, for a cry and for a celebration.”

Young has teamed up with renowned Scandinavian hitmakers PhD (who has worked with Kylie and Little Mix), and reunited with Andy Cato of Groove Armada, as well as long-term writing partners Jim and Mima Elliot (who worked on Will’s defining album, “Echoes”).

The euphoric lead single Falling Deep (BBC Radio 2’s Record of The Week) sets the tone for the ’80s pop inspiration that colours the album. Punchy synth-pop numbers like ‘Talk About It’, which Will wrote with Jim and Mima Elliot, and ‘Feels Just Like A Win’ bring confessional lyrics to the dancefloor.

The Worst is an introspective song that stands tall next to Young’s evergreen classic Leave Right Now as one of his best ballads yet. It is produced by PhD, who co-wrote the track with Celine Svanbäck (Dagny) and Sam Merrifield (Mimi Webb).

The intimate acoustic arrangement illuminates every relatable lyric that portrays an overthinker terrified of opening up to the possibility of new love in fear or being hurt again. Will sings: “I hate not knowing how the hell it’s gonna end. What if you’re the worst? What if this could hurt? Maybe I should self-sabotage as for nothing, cutting you off when I start feeling something.”

A theme that appears to underscore the album is the joy and complexity of life in your 40s. The anthemic title track Light It Up (BBC Radio 2 A-List) is a life-affirming call to celebrate your individuality and to never let the world diminish your true self. Over a sumptuous, soulful ’70s pop production, Will sings: “Light it up, and let them know it. You’re too loud to be quiet, too bright now to stop glowing. Don’t waste who you are.”

On the wistful electronic pop track Midnight, we get a glimpse of Will’s humour in the tongue-in-cheek lyrics. “Texting every ex, trying to get my fix. Why does no-one tell me that they are married?”

The album closes with a reimagination of ’80s hit I Won’t Let You Down, co-produced by Andy Cato. Showcasing Will’s uncanny ability to breathe new life into a song, the new arrangement, with its transcendent electric guitar solo and spacious rhythmic beat, is the perfect soundtrack to drift away into the sunset.


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Ben Elton on Authentic Stupidity tour

Liz Nicholls

Shows & Reviews

Comedian & actor Ben Elton shares his thoughts ahead of his new tour which stops at Newbury Corn Exchange on 28th August, Milton Keynes on 15th September & Wycombe Swan on 16th September

Ben Elton’s always had a lot to say. You don’t write countless sitcoms (including Upstart Crow, The Thin Blue Line, The Young Ones and Blackadder), pen 16 novels, four West End plays and musicals (including Queen’s We Will Rock You) if you’re not an ideas guy.

And it’s fresh ideas which have always driven his groundbreaking stand-up comedy routines, plenty of which will be explored in Ben’s new stand-up tour – his first since 2019 (the previous one was 15 years before that). The show’s called Authentic Stupidity, and it’s all about the ridiculous things we humans do and think.

Ben says: “The tour title is a little joke about how we’re all saying that Artificial Intelligence is this great threat to humanity, which of course it is, but I reckon the biggest threat is actually… Authentic Stupidity! Never mind AI, let’s start by worrying about AS! But really all my tours could have been called Authentic Stupidity, because they’re always comic explorations of the essential absurdity of existence. I think all good comedy is.”

“I’ve always done that in my routines. Sharing my own fears and joy and exasperations. Just being as funny as I can about the sh** that’s on my mind”. “Every part of my comedy is an exploration of human inadequacy,” he says, using Blackadder as one of his earliest examples “Blackadder thinks he’s so clever but his vanity, his jealousy and his ambition screw him every time. We need to accept that we are not everything and that we don’t know everything. If we did that I think we’d do less harm to ourselves and to the planet. The world would probably be a lot nicer and safer if we all embraced our inner Baldrick!”

That’s not to say that is all misanthropy, though. “In some ways, the world is better now. I think younger people have started to accept that weakness is OK; that weakness is merely an acknowledgement that you might need help, that you aren’t necessarily the thing you want to be or that people expect you to be. All these things that we used to hide are coming out more.”

There are, of course, aspects of modern life that have emphatically not improved, in his opinion. And while insisting he’s not a Luddite, he’s acutely aware of where technology is going wrong. His most recent novel, Identity Crisis, has some clever themes about how technology is deployed in culture wars.

“Personally, I would rather the internet wasn’t around because, although it’s an ingenious and useful, it’s destroying democracy as we speak because we’re too stupid to tell the difference between verifiable facts and undiluted arse porridge,” he says.

“And now we’ve invented AI, I mean how stupid is that? If a terrorist went on television and said, ‘We’ve come up with a machine that will literally make human beings redundant’ we’d in MI5! We’d think this is a genuinely existential threat. But because this is a bunch of tech bros and billionaires in California, we’re all just going, ‘Oh well, apparently it’s going to be able to write new Beatles songs.’”  

So is Ben looking forward to his new tour? “Absolutely. There’s just so much to talk about. Finding the funny has never been more important”.  

Funny bones

Interestingly, Elton doesn’t think of himself as being a great comic performer; for him it’s all about his writing, which he’s repeatedly proven himself to be great at, ever since the cult sitcom The Young Ones hit BBC Two in 1982.  

“Look, I think I can be pretty funny in my delivery but it would be nothing without the material. I’m not a natural clown who can get a laugh just pulling a face”, He recalls taking his wife and then young children to the home of pal Rowan Atkinson.  

“Rowan was handing out the cakes and the cat was lurking nearby and appeared about to pounce. Rowan removed the fondant fancies and then without any knowledge of doing it, he did a little mime of an outraged cat,” he says. “For a moment, he inhabited the creature in front of him and the kids and us fell about. It was perfect. I couldn’t do that. I could be funny in conversation, but my funny bones are all about the words.”  

He’s doing himself down a bit though: he did a cracking job hosting the one-off revival of Friday Night Live – the variety showcase of comic talent – for Channel 4 in 2022. The show wouldn’t have won the Bafta against some stiff competition if he wasn’t a great performer.

It’s fascinating how a comedian’s early forays into stand-up can shape their persona. Those accustomed to today’s (relatively) polite audiences would blanche at the often-brutal atmosphere of the Comedy Store in London, where Elton – along with Rik Mayall, Adrian Edmondson, French & Saunders and Jo Brand – cut his teeth.  

“Back then it was two shows a night, the early one at 10pm, then one at midnight, in a strip club in Soho. It was 1981, Brixton was in flames, Thatcher was starting her ten-year war on society and sometimes audiences were tense and angry,” he explains.  

“People weren’t tuned into what we now call ‘alternative comedy’, which I would describe as the comedy of ideas. People were used to comedians who told jokes and part of the joke might be about dealing with hecklers, so there was this idea that that was what a comic did – they dealt with hecklers. I hate hecklers. I’ve never heard a witty heckle. They’re mythical.  

“I developed what was probably an overly combative style just to shut the idiots down” says Elton. “It took me a long time to get out of the shadow of the gong.”  

But over a lifetime of hugely successful stand-up he’s learnt to have faith in audiences. “I learnt not to trust them, thinking that, if I paused, someone would shout out,” he says. “I can pause a little bit now, but I still don’t pause much… because I’ve just got too much to say.” 


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Two Weeks In Nashville trio triumph 

Liz Nicholls

Shows & Reviews

This Surrey band are earning fans and rave reviews thanks to their indie rock sound with a modern twist, and hard graft

Two Weeks In Nashville (TWIN) – who live together in Lingfield – have been making waves within the music industry for the past couple of years thanks to their indie rock sound with a modern twist, their love of live gigs and their aim to bring back fresh, raw energy, personality and big guitar riffs in a hark back to the 70s.

The three-piece band have already had multiple sell-out headline shows as well as supporting a series of major artists including The Hoosiers, Tom Grennan, Supergrass, Razorlight, the Boomtown Rats and more.

Their online videos have more than 8million views and their music has been steamed almost 3 million times.

TWIN won Glastonbury’s Pilton Stage competition in 2023 which led to them supporting Arlo Parks and The Streets at The Pilton Party in Glastonbury. They also reached the final of the Emerging Talent Competition 2024 and were Sir Michael Eavis’ choice and favourite act on the night. Also, in 2022 the band performed at the Silverstone Formula One Grand Prix.

The three band members (Billy LeRiff – Vocals and Guitar; Marc De Luca – Guitar; Ian Wilson – Drums) live together and have a busy summer of gigs ahead.

The band were founded in 2019 after a two-week trip to Nashville which helped them gain clarity on their sound… and their name.

Billy, Marc and Ian all bring their own unique style and personality to the band, with interests varying from tennis, bitcoin, skiing and cooking to Formula 1, handstands and service stations! The band are part of the Purple Heart Records and the lead singer Billy LeRiff also runs a recording studio in Lingfield which is used by other artists and producers, as well as podcast recordings.

You can catch them on tour this summer at Priory Live Festival in Orpington on 10th August, Tilford on 20th September and more dates including London. Make sure to catch the TWIN wave, and watch this space for more from them!


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London City Ballet at Theatre Royal

Liz Nicholls

Shows & Reviews

Resurgence tour comes to Windsor for three performances, August 9th and 10th, after 30-year break

London City Ballet, the new company of celebrated dancers from around the world, will return to touring after a break of almost 30 years, arriving at the Theatre Royal Windsor.

Formerly the resident company of Sadler’s Wells, and internationally recognised as one of the world’s leading dance collectives, the prolific touring company was famously patronised by Diana, Princess of Wales. The original London City Ballet closed its doors in 1996 after 18 years of operations.

The Resurgence tour includes performances at many of the former company’s beloved venues in the UK, including the Theatre Royal Windsor. The company will also perform in Italy, Portugal, China and New York. The UK tour concludes at Sadler’s Wells in London in September.

London City Ballet is a touring company for a new generation bringing their experience and artistry to the stage, presenting engaging stories through dance. Under the direction of Artistic Director Christopher Marney (former principal dancer at New Adventures and director of the Joffrey Ballet Studio Company of Chicago), the company will present a programme of acclaimed works by British choreographers including the revival of Kenneth MacMillan’s 1972 one-act ballet Ballade, unseen in Europe for over 50 years.

The repertoire also includes Ashley Page’s Larina Waltz marking the ballet’s 30th anniversary, and Olivier award-winner Arielle Smith premieres a new creation Five Dances. A full company work by Christopher Marney called Eve, which premiered at Sadler’s Wells in 2022, will close the evening.

Christopher Marney has spent two years rebuilding London City Ballet with insights from its early pioneers. The works selected for the 2024 international tour pay homage to the company’s roots in the form of rarely seen archival footage. The Resurgence tour is shaped by the repertoire selected and to highlight the re-launch of this famous dance company.

He said: “London City Ballet informed my own career. Seeing the company perform as a child stimulated my enthusiasm for the artform.

“I am drawn to reviving past repertoire of influential choreographers alongside presenting dynamic new works from current dance talent.”

Christopher continues: “The Resurgence tour offers audiences the chance to enjoy some of the most compelling dancers from around the world perform choreography rarely seen, many of whom are former principals from leading dance companies. We’re a progressive and diverse company celebrating exceptional dancers presenting engaging work for a new generation.”

The company comprises 14 dancers, many of whom are former principals from leading dance companies. This international troupe originate from countries including Brazil, South Korea, UK, Romania, Canada, Spain and from ballet companies including the Royal Ballet, Scottish Ballet, Orlando Ballet, Ballet Black, San Francisco Ballet, Staatsballet Berlin and ENB.

Performances: Friday 9th @ 7.30pm and Saturday 10th @ 2.30pm and 7.30pm.

Tickets: £23.50-£39.50. Book at Resurgence – Theatre Royal Windsor


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