Fri 3 June The Lady in the Van

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2015 Cert. PG 13 104mins.
Rotten Tomato

Critics Consensus: Led by a marvelous performance from Maggie Smith, Lady in the Van wrings poignant, often hilarious insight from its fact-based source material.

This film tells the true story of the relationship between Alan Bennett and the singular Miss Shepherd, a woman of uncertain origins who ‘temporarily’ parked her van in Bennett’s London driveway and proceeded to live there for 15 years.
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_lady_in_the_van/?search=the%20lady%20in%20the%20van

Categories: Past Events

Gérard Leclerc – Post Event Comments and Review

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NWN 14 04 16

To read the review more easily click here

10 Young cellists and a great afternoon concert thanks to Gérard Leclerc, Jude Barnby and Phillip Brown.

We started with a masterclass for three extremely talented students and a class for 10 young cello players.

Then an afternoon concert and tea party with over 90 people, followed by an amazing evening concert.

Categories: Music Classical Press

Gérard Le Clerc – Sat Apr 9 – 2 Concerts

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For details of concerts and tickets Click Here
Here he recounts his time as a pupil of Jacqueline du Pré. Please see : http://www.jacquelinedupre.net/memorabilia/mem_encounter03.htm

It was a beautiful spring day in 1983 that I came to know the extraordinary Jacqueline du Pré. I had written a letter to her in great admiration some weeks earlier, and had asked if she would accept meeting a young cellist and if she might consider hearing me play. I promptly received a reply to call at her house in Knightsbridge, at 2 Rutland Gardens Mews.

I was surprised (and rather panicked) to be able to not only meet one of the century’s greatest musicians, but to be able to play for her as well. I decided that on this earth, to meet such an extraordinary and unique person must be one of the greatest privileges, and that I had to make the most of this encounter with her.

I decided to come with my pianist, thinking that it would not be proper to ask her to listen to a cello sonata without a pianist and in addition decided to prepare three complete recital programs, hoping that maybe something in it would strike her fancy.

At her house we were let in by her wonderful and caring nurse Ruth Ann Cannings, and I could feel my apprehension growing by the minute. Finally she came downstairs and I was able to introduce myself and my pianist. ‘So what would you like to play for me today?’ she asked me with that eternally sunshiny face and I said, ‘Well, I’ve got this and that, those three sonatas etc. etc…’ And then she said to me ‘Did you say the Arpeggione sonata? I would LOVE to hear the Arpeggione sonata.’

So, with my bow trembling in the air, I set about to start….’It is SO easy to play!’ she said, ‘…Oh, by the way, would you like ANOTHER lesson soon?’, before I had even played the first note. I told her that if she could bear to hear what I played, then it would indeed be my biggest pleasure to come back. ‘Play me the first eight bars and I’ll let you know!’ she said with an amused grin, and so I did. That was the beginning of five years of close work with this genius of geniuses.

There is something so unique with Jacqueline. Later that year I attended the Prussia Cove International Music Seminar in Cornwall, England, for a masterclass with Jacqueline’s own teacher William Pleeth, and had another lesson with Jacqueline just after that. In his masterclass Pleeth heard a wonderful cellist playing the Beethoven A Major Sonata, and stopped him just after the first three notes (which starts with an A, going towards the E and F sharp) saying, ‘How can you play like that with the glissando [sliding from one note to another] between the first two notes? The piano must play the same phrase [after the introduction by the cello alone] and cannot use a glissando so you must not as well.’ After this I went proudly to Jacqueline’s to play the same sonata knowing that I held a truth of truths from her own teacher. She stopped me after the first three notes saying ‘Why don’t you use a glissando between the first and second note?’ and upon hearing my reason that the piano couldn’t do it in the same way so I shouldn’t, she exclaimed, ‘But if he COULD have, he WOULD have done it, so DO IT!!!’

Her intensity of communication is legendary, as well as her sense of humour. At another lesson she said to me, ‘Put down your cello [I was playing on her 1970 Peresson cello] and listen to me. Do you know that I have an incurable disease, one that overtakes one, it takes everything with it – there is no escape.’ At my cringing at the thought of the next part she said, ‘Death is the only escape. Do you know what the name of this disease is?’ Struck dumb, I could only nod… ‘It’s called…… glissanditis!!!!!’ she said, howling with laughter.

Sometimes we would listen to her beloved records together, and even when she could no longer play, she would know the exact number of trills given to a note, such was her power of observation. Once, upon a return trip from San Francisco, I was scheduled to have a lesson at 9.30am at her home as usual. I jumped off the plane at Heathrow into the tube running with suitcase and cello to come eye-to-eye with her in the brilliant morning sunlight in the courtyard, her mum at her side. ‘You are 3 minutes LATE!’ she giggled. It turns out that her mother had popped by. And just as well for me, for we met later in the day. Whew!

In one lesson, when I played the Elgar concerto for her she said, ‘Can’t you do it this way, or like that?’ Finally, in exasperation I said, ‘But I’m trying as HARD as I can’ to which she looked at me and simply said ‘Why don’t you just try it EASY?!’

The last time we met was two weeks before she left us all, and it was during a last call a few days after I asked her ‘What’s news this week, Jacqueline?’ and she said ‘Quick – go listen to my Boccherini concerto – I can’t believe the beauty of this work. It’s springtime everywhere…’
—–

Back To MEMORABILIA

If you have a personal recollection of a concert or a meeting with Jacqueline, please let me know. Thank you.

Jacqueline du PréDiscographiesBooks & FilmsMemorabiliaLinks

This tribute and all related pages are conceived and designed by Miguel Muelle purely as a labor of love, meant solely for the pleasure of all those who are interested in Jacqueline Du Pré. All photographs are credited where possible, and all recordings and corresponding photographs used are assumed to be copyright and property of EMI Records, Ltd., unless otherwise acknowledged.

Fri 29 April – Jazz All Stars

Jazz All Stars – 29 April Doors 7.30pm for 8.00pm. The first of our regular café style Jazz events featuring four world class musicians.  Fronted by Adam Winslet with , Matt Holland –  Trumpet, Laurence Cottle – Bass, Richard Cottle – Keyboards. + Drummer

Matt Hooper – Trumpet

Laurence Cottle – Bass

Richard Cottle – Keyboards

Michael William Connolly – Drummer

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Fri 18 March Que Horas Ela Volta?

 2015  Cert. 15   112mins.  Buy Tickets

Rotten Tomato

Critics Consensus: The Second Mother’s compelling characters serve an artfully drawn, thought-provoking story that’s beautifully brought to life by a talented cast.

This film centers around Val, a hard-working live-in housekeeper in modern day Sao Paulo. Val is perfectly content to take care of every one of her wealthy employers’ needs, from cooking and cleaning to being a surrogate mother to their teenage son, who she has raised since he was a toddler. But when Val’s estranged daughter Jessica suddenly shows up the unspoken but intrinsic class barriers that exist within the home are thrown into disarray. Jessica is smart, confident, and ambitious, and refuses to accept the upstairs/downstairs dynamic, testing relationships and loyalties and forcing everyone to reconsider what family really means.

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_second_mother/?search=que%20horas

Categories: Past Events

Sat 9 April The Romantic Cello – Gérard Le Clerc with Pianist Anne Cholet

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Cello Masterclass and concert 9 April the magical cello playing of Gerard Leclerc, to include a masterclass for young musicians, a children’s concert and the grand finale, an evening concert. Our format for a number of musical events this year, where talented young local musicians play with a professional artist, followed by the opportunity to enjoy an outstanding concert.

Click Here for tickets

Programme:

Gabriel Fauré, Clair de Lune, Op 46 no 2

Claude Debussy, Beau Soir

Gabriel Fauré, Elegie (c. 1883)

Jules Massenet, Thaïs, (Meditation)

Robert Schumann, Stücke im Volkston, Op 102

Mit Humor
Langsam
Nicht schnell, mit viel Ton zuspielen
Nicht zu rasch
Stark und markiert

Pre Show Food is available between 6.30pm – 7.00pm before the main concert at 7.30pm

Duck Shepherd’s Pie with Sweet Potato Topping, Braised Peas & Dressed Leaves or

Vegetable Filo Pie, Parmentier Potatoes, Mixed Leaf Salad

Tickets available from Hungerford Bookshop or to purchase online Click Here

 

Sat 2 April – The Bookshop Band

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8.00 pm The Croft Hall Hungerford, Bar from 7.30 pm Tickets £6

Tickets are available online Click Here or from the Hungerford Bookshop from the 1 March

Come and have a great time enjoying an evening of music, based on books you know and many you won’t and have the opportunity to buy the books and hear about the next batch of Arts for Hungerford events. Most importantly relax with a beer and wine, some old friends or new friends and have a great evening.

The Bookshop Band are unique. They write songs exclusively inspired by books. They formed as part of the author events at local muti-award winning independent bookshop, Mr Bs Emporium Of Reading Delights. When an author comes in to do an author event, the band read their book before hand and write two songs inspired by it, to be performed in front of the author and audience at the start of the event.

Three years later, the band have written 100 songs inspired by books

The events at Mr Bs remain the core of the band’s songwriting, but the songs and their performances have taken the band all over the UK, playing in many of the nation’s bookshops, as well as overseas to Ireland and mainland Europe. They are regularly featured on the BBC, and their songs are starting to grace the airwaves Europe, Canada, Australia, the US and Mexico!

“Really fabulous new music” Bob Harris – BBC Radio 2

“There is something incredibly moving about hearing a song that has been inspired by that story from your head. It is like seeing your children do something without them knowing you are watching. The book acquires a life of its own. It made me cry listening to The Bookshop Band’s Harold and Maureen songs. The beauty, the tenderness, and the independence of them. That is something I will never forget.” Rachel Joyce, author

 

Mr Holmes Fri March 4 Croft Hall

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Critics Consensus: Mr. Holmes focuses on the man behind the mysteries, and while it may lack Baker Street thrills, it more than compensates with tenderly wrought, well-acted drama.

MR. HOLMES is a new twist on the world’s most famous detective. 1947, an aging Sherlock Holmes returns from a journey to Japan, where, in search of a rare plant with powerful restorative qualities, he has witnessed the devastation of nuclear warfare. Now, in his remote seaside farmhouse, Holmes faces the end of his days tending to his bees, with only the company of his housekeeper and her young son, Roger. Grappling with the diminishing powers of his mind, Holmes comes to rely upon the boy as he revisits the circumstances of the unsolved case that forced him into retirement, and searches for answers to the mysteries of life and love – before it’s too late.

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/mr_holmes/

 

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Categories: Past Events

X&Y Friday 5/2

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Guardian Film Review

Rotten Tomato

IMDB

USER REVIEW
The Awkardness of Life
26 July 2015 | by northshoremobile (United States) – See all my reviews
I pre-ordered “X+Y” from the UK, not realizing it was being released in the US (under a different name). This ended up being one of my favorite movies of this year, but I feel like many people will not give it a chance for several reasons, but mainly the subject matter.

“It” is a delicate petal to step around to a lot of people. Nathan is not the epitome of all people on the spectrum, he is unique and also based on a real person (albeit loosely). You don’t have to have any kind of “diagnosed condition” to understand the hardships portrayed in the film. His is not the only struggle, just the most emphasized.

I must say that I was impressed with Asa Butterfield’s portrayal of Nathan. Not many actors can convey emotions or thoughts without actually saying much of anything. When you feel empathy for a character, you know the actor is doing far more than just saying their memorized lines. That being said, everyone did a pretty good job bringing their characters to life.

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Categories: Past Events