RSS

Category Archives: comedy

Performance, Ukraine and Singing

Yesterday was so busy that two important things were missed!

After the delightful party for J, 90 years old, in the evening we went with friends to see a fabulous Christmas show called Christmas.Time. This is the third time we have seen the show and loved it every time. It’s the 18th year that the two very talented young men who are Near-ta Theatre have performed the show which has become a staple hereabouts. If you, Dear Reader, live nearby, there are shows still to be seen at The Poly, Falmouth. Here’s the link.You won’t regret it!

I have ordered a beautiful jigsaw puzzle from Ukraine for the family to do together when they are all here over New Year.  I am here reprinting the whole message I received from the company yesterday. At the end you can hear The Ingleheart Singers with their first rehearsal this year of Carol of the Bells.

While our capacity to produce and to ship puzzles from Ukraine has been severely impacted by power outages caused by the constant shelling of Ukrainian power infrastructure by Russia (that’s why most of puzzles are shown as out of stock on our website), we still can continue telling about Ukrainian culture.

This week’s email is about Mykola Leontovych (13 Dec 1877 – 23 Jan 1921), the Ukrainian composer and author of the famous “Shchedryk” / “Carol of the Bells,” whose birthday we commemorate today.

Mykola Leontovych, the son of a priest, was also a conductor and teacher who specialized in a cappella choral music. He is best known for composing “Shchedryk,” which later became famous around the world as the Christmas classic “Carol of the Bells.” That happened thanks to enormous efforts of cultural figures and some politicians of the Ukrainian People’s Republic in the last months of its existence before the Soviet occupation of Ukraine in 1919. This treasure had all chances to be demolished and buried, as it happened with Boychukism and many other phenomena of Ukrainian culture, but in some miraculous way, it overcame all the obstacles along with the Ukrainian Republic Capella under the leadership of choral conductor Oleksandr Koshyts.

On January 23, 1921, while audiences in Paris were triumphantly applauding the newly discovered “Shchedryk,” its composer, Mykola Leontovych, was shot in his own home by a Chekist (a Soviet state security agent).

Important to note that Leontovych wrote “Schedryk” in the town of Pokrovsk, Donetsk region, which currently is one of the key battlefields in Russia’s war against Ukraine.

So, please keep the Ukrainian Warriors who are now defending Pokrovsk and all of Ukraine in your thoughts each time you hear “Carol of the Bells” this holiday season.

 

Tags: , , , ,

Tiles, Yellow Harvest and Circus

Going from the car park into town today, we noticed some new artwork, a collection of lovely handmade tiles on the wall of the Ope. .

Apart from the raspberries which just keep on producing, I think we are coming to the end of our harvesting at the allotment. There were dozens of tiny golden tomatoes ( Tom Clementine) and lots of bright yellow marigolds to bring home today.

Early this evening we went to the circus, NoFit State Circus: Bamboo in the Fairmeadow car park, another in the week long Harbour Festival of International Theatre that has been playing in town.  It was absolutely magical –  funny, clever, with breath holding moments and a joy to behold here in Redruth. My photos really cannot do justice. If you are local, they are on again tomorrow. Wrap up warm and enjoy the show. .

Scary moments towards the end

 

Tags: ,

Sculptures, Sunflowers and French Theatre

Another busy day at Roots, sowing, potting on, weeding and harvesting. There were two kinetic sculptures, left over from a festival last weekend, which I really liked.

The sunflowers all over the site are looking terrific.

Tonight we went to an hilarious performance called Cirque Content Pour Peu. It was a delightful show full of acrobatic lifts and humour borrowed from silent cinema where we were all constantly surprised at the twists and turns. It’s all part of a special theatre week in Redruth and was well worth going to. If they come your way, do go and see them – you will come out with a smile on your face!

Last Saturday , as part of the same theatre festival, we saw the Hooligan Art Community again and it was wonderful to catch up with our friends from last year’s hosting.

 

Tags:

Dahlias, Fans and Live Theatre!

The National Dahlia Collection is now just nearby at a local nursery and we went along to have a look. There were some real beauties.

On our way to the Buttermarket for a live theatre performance this evening, something in the distance across the carpark caught my eye. Zoom revealed a fan and some fabric. Another time I will go closer and investigate.

We have had just the best evening of magical live theatre, laughter and fun! The Pantaloons have just presented The Tempest in the liveliest and most anarchic production I have ever seen. Only four actors played the eleven parts with skill and imagination, drawing on the crowd to use their imagination and to provide local colour which was incorporated into the story seamlessly. They are touring until early September and are well worth seeking out. You will come away having smiled so much your cheeks will hurt!

 
 

Tags: , ,

Harbour Wall, Pop-up Art and St Ives

1. I love the pattern of stones in the harbour wall and the reflections in the empty harbour.

20130919-234312.jpg
2. The Splash Festival is on in Falmouth and lots of shops have pop-up art in them – paintings and sculptures by local artists. I was delighted to find this gorgeous unicorn in the shop where I bought my ‘going away’ outfit 46 years ago! The artist is Suzanne Crooke. The beautifully decorated Beach hut is also hers.

20130919-234659.jpg

20130919-234714.jpg
3 We went to St Ives tonight to see the wonderful John Cooper Clarke and laughed all evening, though there were of course, moments of poignancy too. How he remembers all the words, I just don’t know. St Ives in the early evening light was very lovely.

20130919-235036.jpg

<a

 

Tags: ,

Singing, Maypole Dancing and Simon Amstell

1  Just ten of The Ingleheart Singers and Claire went to sing at a special birthday party in a field this afternoon. We practised first in the Garden Centre at Lelant, and found ourselves with a very appreciative audience there and then at the party much appreciated again which was lovely.

The Inglehearts at the party

2   After the singing came the Maypole dancing which was just delightful.

Maypole Dancing

3   Just come back, chuckling all the way home,  from seeing the lovely Simon Amstell (he of Grandma’s House on BBC TV) at The Hall for Cornwall in Truro – made us laugh a lot – always a  good thing!

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Elephants, Embroidery and ‘Always Look on the Bright Side of Life!’

1   I love elephants! I’ve loved them since I was very little and today this beautiful story came in to my inbox and reminded me of our encounter with a herd of elephants after our Voluntouring in Mapoch, South Africa. The lovely Mr S spotted them from a long way away, we found them and watched them playing in the water for about 40 minutes. It was absolutely magical.

http://delightmakers.com/news-bleat/wild-elephants-gather-inexplicably-mourn-death-of-elephant-whisperer/#.T7AQOKty_Jo.facebook

Elephants enjoying the water

Leaving the water

Teenage elephant, reluctant to leave his playing

Mother and Baby

2   This beautiful embroidery is one of three made for me by Grace, the sister of the teacher at the school in Mapoch, near Pretoria where we, with local builders, built a classroom.

Grace’s beautiful embroidery

Sisters under the skin, Grace, me and Sibongile and their babies

3   We’ve hardly stopped laughing all evening! We’ve been to see ‘Spamalot’ at The Hall for Cornwall. The place was packed and the whole audience loved the show.

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Tourists in London 2 – Ephemeral Sand Art, ‘Two Gentlemen of Verona’ in Shona and Guy’s Hospital

Another day stomping around London, riding the underground and being glad we are just visitors and don’t have to travel like this every day!

1   At low tide there are occasional beaches on the Thames! We spotted this Frenchman creating a sand sculpture which would be gone in a few hours as the tide came back in.

Sand sculpture

2   I love The Globe! The matinee this afternoon, part of Globe to Globe: 37 Plays in 37 Languages at Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre, was ‘Two Gentlemen of Verona’ in Shona! The production was amazing, so funny and so clever! Just two remarkable actors played all eleven characters including the dog. We laughed so much our faces ached! Incredibly, it’s still only a fiver to be a Groundling as it was when it opened in 1997. We met two beautiful Zimbabwean women who were enjoying hearing a play they knew well in English in their mother tongue.

Skakespeare’s Globe

Waiting in the rain for the second half

Valerie and Chipo, Zimbabwean women in the audience

3   We walked to the tube via Southwark Cathedral with Guy’s Hospital in the background. Very mixed memories from 30+ years ago when Daniel was in Guy’s  for two of his three heart operations – one at 13 days in Leeds followed by two at Guy’s, one at 6 months and one at 30 months. The beautiful thing about this is that he survived against all the odds and is the beautiful young man who just got married in Senegal.

Southwark Cathedral and Guy’s Hospital

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,