Get Loaded in the Park (© Chris Woodage)
COMEDY N20 Comedy Festival
A
pre-Fringe BAC showcase with a good eclectic mix of acts doing solo
shows including Josie Long, The Penny Dreadfuls, Simon Day, Susan Calman and
Pappy’s Fun Club. Until July 29, BAC.
AROUND TOWN Greenwich Observation Wheel
SE10 already boasts some of the capital's most ravishing sights and stunning views, now enjoyable panoramically from this 60-metre-high wheel. Until Sept 28, College Approach, SE10.
THEATRE Watch This Space
The
National Theatre’s popular free outdoor summer theatre festival
includes Avanti Display with ‘Leak’, Teatr Biuro Podrózy with ‘Macbeth:
Who is That Bloodied Man?’, with motorbikes, stilts and a burning
castle, and ‘The Threepenny Ring Cycle’ in which Les Grooms present 16
hours of Wagner in 79 minutes. Until end of Sept, National Theatre Square.
COMEDY Edinburgh Previews
The
Arts Theatre and Hackney Empire are running impressive pre-Edinburgh
festivals of fun with all the major acts heading up to this year’s
Fringe trying out their shit. Check out Miles Jupp, Richard Herring,
Mark Watson, Pippa Evans, Alex Horne and Terry Saunders. Until July 26, Arts Theatre and Hackney Empire.
Feature continues
KIDS Brilliant
This
Fevered Sleep production creates a world made of light, employing live
music, movement and inventive lighting to conjure up an
intimate experience for young children, directed by David Harradine. Age 3-4. July 9-Aug 16, Polka Theatre.
|
| 'Moonlight and Magnolias' |
THEATRE Moonlight and Magnolias
Return
of Ron Hutchinson’s comic account of the rewriting of ‘Gone with the
Wind’ (the film, not the musical) and the politics of 1930s Hollywood.
Producer David O Selznick, writer Ben Hecht and director Vic Fleming
make up the characters. From July 10, Tricycle Theatre.
MUSIC Summer series
This established series of outdoor gigs returns to the Palladian
splendour of Somerset House this year with a hit-and-miss line-up of
headliners including Justice, Adele, Lupe Fiasco, The Blue Nile and We
Are Scientists. Whatever, the surroundings always make shows here
enjoyable, and it's bang in the middle of town. Somerset House, Strand.
CLASSICAL & OPERA Mostly Mozart
Over
at the Barbican, this annual festival presents 11 top-flight concerts.
It gets underway with Steven Osborne playing Mozart’s Piano Concerto No
27 with the Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields. Other highlights
include soprano Danielle de Niese singing Handel and Mozart arias on
July 17 and, also fresh from Glyndebourne, Alice Coote performing in
‘La Clemenzo di Tito’ on July 26. It all rounds off as ever with the
Requiem. July 10-Aug 2, Barbican Hall.
COMEDY Ealing Comedy Festival
Great
bills of summer fun held in the Big Top in Walpole Park over eight
nights. Acts include Micky Flanagan, Rhod Gilbert, Jo Caulfield, Tim
Minchin, Ed Byrne and a rare trip away from home for the Comedy Store
Players. July 11-18, the Big Top, Walpole Park.
|
| Jonny Woo's International Woman of Mr E |
ALTERNATIVE NIGHTLIFE Jonny Woo’s International Woman of Mr E
Where
other trannies dabble in wigging up and frocking on stage to mime the
odd pop song, Woo delivers phenomenal original material that turns
preconceptions about drag acts inside out. International Woman of Mr ‘E’
is Woo’s first full-length solo show. Boasting linguistic skills to put
the most nimble council-estate MC to shame he runs through a Richard II
monologue, surreal costume changes and songs that range from the
humorous (‘Sports Kit Trannies’ looking forward to Hackney 2012) to the
shocking (‘Bareback Riding’ covers). When Time Out saw the show last
October, it wasn’t polished – at times, the mic cast a face-covering
shadow, cues didn’t work, the sound wasn’t as clear as it should have been
to fully appreciate his voice. But 'International Woman...' is clear
evidence that when it comes to alt-drag, performance art and modern
cabaret, Jonny Woo owns them all. July 14-19, Soho Theatre.
THEATRE Under the Blue Sky
David
Eldridge’s Time Out Award-winning play gets a revival in the West End
with Francesca Annis, Lisa Dillon, Chris O’Dowd, Dominic Rowan and
Catherine Tate. Six teachers explore lust and love outside the
classroom. July 15-Sept 20, Duke of York’s Theatre.
MUSIC Leonard Cohen
Fresh from Glasto and on his first tour in 15 years, the darkly
debonaire troubadour proves that at 73 he is still relevant, while hits
like 'Suzanne', 'Hallelujah!' and 'Chelsea Hotel #2' remain affecting
and poignant.
Expect previews from his 12th album, due later this year. July 15, O2 Arena.
MUSIC Points of the Compass
Spanning
four nights in, crucially, four different parts of London, this is
’08’s best opportunity to get your folk on. Organised by folkmasters The
Local, it covers all points both geographically and musically, with
neo-folk from David Thomas Broughton, power-folk from Emily Barker,
minimal folk from This Is The Kit and post-rock, kitchen-sink folk from
Revere. July 17-20, various venues.
THEATRE Street Scene
The
Young Vic will stage Kurt Weill’s ‘Street Scene’ in a co-production
with The Opera Group and Watford Palace Theatre for the first time in
the UK for 20 years. It will include a mass ensemble company made up of
15 singers drawn from the worlds of opera and musical theatre, a chorus
of 50 (including 25 young people recruited locally for each venue), a
chamber orchestra of 30 and a dog. July 17-22, Young Vic.
THEATRE Wink the Other Eye
Wilton’s
first true music-hall show since 1880 is set between 1859 and 1922, in
Wilton’s and around the East End. The show centres on two artists,
Daisy and Walter, as they fall in love while desperately seeking fame
and fortune in the music hall. Acts ranging from escapology, tight-rope
walking, flying trapeze, songs, dance and pyrotechnics will be
performed by seven musician-actors. July 17-Aug 16, Wilton’s Music Hall.
|
| Pixar's Wall-E (© Walt Disney Pictures/Pixar Animation Studios) |
FILM Wall-E
Pixar’s
last film, ‘Ratatouille’ proved that the innovative company is making
the best animated films at the moment and that, since reasserting its
independence from Disney, it’s back on track making the most sheerly
cinematic, literate and enjoyable mass-market films in the world today.
Its summer release of ‘Wall-E’, written and directed by Andrew Stanton,
describes the adventures and sentimental education of a 20-inch robot
(a Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth Class who spends his time sifting
the rubbish dumps of abandoned earth). It’s Pixar’s most exciting
project to date, a movie that promises not only to rival but to exceed
the rich pleasures of its breakthrough movie, ‘Toy Story’. Released July 18.
CLUBS Fabric Live
Wall
of Sound, Kill ’Em All and Fabric Live only combine once every couple
of months, but it’s worth waiting for, as they come together to deliver
three rooms of cutting-edge partying. It’s set to thrill with live sets
by electro-rockers The Whip, XX Teens and Slagsmalklubben, Norwegian
electropop star Annie and Das Pop plus the dirty, flirty electrobeats
and krautrock stylings of DJs Riton, the Filthy Dukes, Headman and
Trevor Jackson. If that’s not edgy enough for you, head up to room
three for the mash-up magic of DJ-producers Sinden, Boy 8 Bit and
Patchwork Pirates. July 18, Fabric, EC1.
THEATRE Edward ll
Michael
Oakley, the winner of this year’s James Menzies-Kitchin Young Director
Award 2008, stages Christopher Marlowe’s ‘Edward II’ at BAC as his
prize. The play describes the bloody fate of the homosexual English
king. July 18-Aug 9, BAC.
SPORT Football: Fulham v Celtic
Attractive
warm-up game for the club whose relegation from the Premier League
seemed almost certain with a month of the season remaining, but whose
late rally has kept them among the elite for another campaign. This is
important for London football in general, since Craven Cottage is the
only ground where casual fans have a chance of buying tickets for
top-flight matches. July 19, Craven Cottage.
CLASSICAL & OPERA BBC Proms: Nigel Kennedy Twice
The big event this year, and every year, is the at the Royal Albert
Hall. This time around the Proms promise an exciting line-up, kicking
off with two concerts from the ever-young Nigel Kennedy – first playing
the Elgar Violin Concerto and then returning with his quintet for some
late-night jazz. July 19, Royal Albert Hall.
See all Proms listings.
SPORT Football: London Masters
The waistlines may be thicker these days, but the appeal of watching
the old-timers in action grows with each passing year. Since the
Emirates is a sell-out each week, perhaps this is the only way many
Arsenal fans can actually watch a team wearing red and white play live.
The Gunners will be up against West Ham, Tottenham Hotspur, Watford,
Crystal Palace and 2007 champions Chelsea, who beat Spurs after a
penalty shootout in the final. Sat July 19, Wembley Arena.
MUSIC Lovebox London Weekender
It’s a two-day explosion of rock, pop, funk, dance, hip hop, global
beats and everything you can squeeze in between, but most people will
simply want to know who the headliners are. Fair enough: Goldfrapp,
Manu Chao, The Flaming Lips, Groove Armada, Jack Peñate, The Human
League and Young Knives should whet your appetite, and the likes of
Roni Size & Reprazent, The Go! Team, Lightspeed Champion, Lethal
Bizzle, Sébastian Tellier and Buraka Som Sistema demonstrate the range
of acts on show. There are eight stages and lots of DJ action driven by
Mulletover, Secretsundaze, Horse Meat Disco, The Glimmers, Stanton
Warriors, The Nextmen and many more, plus cabaret, kids’ areas, circus
rides and 30 acres of lovely Victoria Park to play in. See the Lovebox
London website for full line-up details. July 20-21, Victoria Park, E3.
CLUBS Trailer Trash Summer Camp
This is easy to love, as we’re already fans of Trailer Trash’s
unfeasibly popular weekly electrotech party for Shoreditch’s polysexual
ravers, and the same applies to the disco shenanigans at South London’s
Horse Meat Disco and Dalston’s Disco Bloodbath. This follows the
Lovebox weekender’s Saturday shows, so many of the crowd will already
be warmed up for guest DJ sets from continental aces Brodinski and
Tomboy (aka Who Made Who) alongside Hannah Holland, Mikki Most and Ian
Robinson in the ‘Rave Tent’. Expect sizzling sibling rivalry of epic
disco proportions in the ‘Disco Tent’ as HMD’s DJs Jim Stanton,
Severino, James Hillard and Luke Howard take on Disco Bloodbath’s Dan
Beaumont, Damon Martin and Ben Pistor. Their weapons of choice: rare
re-edits, spaced-out Italo beats, strung-out pop and twisted
proto-house. It’ll be a scream. Which reminds me, there’s karaoke and a
games area too. July 20, a secret outdoor Shoreditch location.
|
| Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2008 (under construction). Designed by Frank Gehry. © 2008 Gehry Partners LLP |
AROUND TOWN Serpentine Gallery
This year’s annual architecture commission taking up temporary
residence beside the Serpentine Gallery is designed by Frank Gehry and
will feature a network of overlapping glass planes, large steel planks
and huge steel columns. Evening events include talks, peformances and
music, plus film shows on a 50-foot open-air screen curated by
exhibting artist Richard Prince, among them director Monte Hellman’s
1971 road movie ‘Two-Lane Blacktop’ and George Stevens’s Academy
Award-nominated ‘A Place in the Sun’, from 1951. Serpentine Gallery, Jul 20-Oct 19.
CLASSICAL & OPERA Humperdinck at Glyndebourne
If
you enjoy dressing up and spending an afternoon in the country, the
Glyndebourne Festival continues, with the much under-performed ‘Hänsel
und Gretel’ by the original Englebert Humperdinck. July 20-Aug 29, Glyndebourne Festival Opera.
TV The Wire Season Five
Narrative sideswipes and shock revelations as this modern American saga
reaches its fittingly ambiguous conclusion, this time filtered through
the increasingly warped viewpoint of Baltimore print journalists in the
field. Starts July 21, FX.
ALTERNATIVE NIGHTLIFE Marc Salem’s Out of his Mind
Don’t
believe in mind readers? If you don’t, Marc Salem might well ‘read’,
then change, your mind. His acclaimed show reveals tricks of the trade,
how to spot when someone’s lying and, apparently, how genuinely to read
someone’s mind. Freaky? Not half. July 22, Shaw Theatre.
AROUND TOWN Skeletons: London’s Buried Bones
Over the past 30 years the Museum of London’s Centre for Human
Bioarchaeology has examined and archived more than 17,000 skeletons –
all removed for their preservation from building sites around London.
Representing 2,000 years of history, 26 of the more noteworthy examples
go on display in this exhibition at the Wellcome, including the
skeleton of a young woman discovered at the Royal Mint, whose bones
were stained green from copper residue, and another with traces of
syphilis in her bones. Each skeleton is accompanied by information
about the health and social conditions of the individual and a
photograph of the burial site where they were discovered. Associated
events include family activities (July 31) and a panel discussion (Sept
18). July 23-Sept 28, Wellcome Collection.
FILM Rushes Soho Shorts Festival 2008
All
hail the short film. Bite-sized, easy to digest and, in many instances,
impressively thought-provoking, short films are the wannabe filmmaker’s
best route to recognition. Rushes is an annual event that champions the
works of both known and unknown filmmakers. The shorts – often made
with the aid of established industry folk – are screened to the public
and judged by a panel of experts. Previous winners have included Chris
Sadler’s ‘Shaun the Sheep’ and newcomer Richard Murphy’s marvellous
‘Fish Can’t Fly’. This year’s event boasts an expanded programme and
roster of venues. See www.sohoshorts.com for the year’s line-up. July 23-Aug 1.
|
| Wizard of Oz (© Darren Hope) |
KIDS Wizard of Oz
Southbank
Centre’s big summer offering for families is directed by its artistic
director, Jude Kelly, and based on the RSC stage version, which is
faithful to the 1939 film classic of L Frank Baum’s story. During the
production’s run, a yellow-brick road will lead visitors to the Royal
Festival Hall, an Emerald City illuminated in green. The familiar songs
– ‘Somewhere Over the Rainbow’, ‘We’re Off to See the Wizard’ – are
performed live by a 20-piece band. Age 7+. On July 25-26, and every
Friday and Saturday in August, free performances entitled ‘Somewhere
Over the Rainbow’ take place at 6pm in The Clore Ballroom, suitable for
all ages. July 23-Aug 31, Southbank Centre.
THEATRE Her Naked Skin
Rebecca
Lenkiewicz’s play is the last of this year’s Travelex £10 season.
Lesley Manville plays Lady Celia Cain, a suffragette in London in 1913
who meets a young seamstress while serving time in Holloway jail. From July 24, National Theatre Olivier.
AROUND TOWN Hadrian: Empire and Conflict
Everyone knows about Hadrian’s most famous legacy in Britain – the
eponymous, 73-mile-long wall he had built between England and Scotland
following his first tour of the country in AD 121 – but few other facts
about the Roman emperor (AD 117-138) have become common knowledge. The
BM’s major summer exhibition seeks to redress this by examining,
through 180 exhibits – including the museum’s bronze head of Hadrian –
the complex life of this leader. A ruthless military man who was also
devoted to his young male lover, Antinous, he showed tolerance for
other cultures and took a great interest in architecture, commissioning
buildings including the Pantheon in Rome. July 24-Oct 26, British Museum.
|
| Christopher Nolan's 'The Dark Knight' |
FILM The Dark Knight
Christopher Nolan’s much anticipated follow-up to his excellent,
brooding ‘Batman Begins’ finally receives its worldwide release, and
it’ll be interesting to see whether the untimely death of one its
leading men (Heath Ledger playing The Joker) will effect the film’s
commercial prospects. Christian Bale dons the figure-hugging rubber
suit once more as Gotham’s caped crusader in what promises to be an
altogether darker blockbuster compared to much of this summer’s sunny,
big-budget fare. Released July 25.
CLASSICAL & OPERA BBC Proms: Musorgsky – Sir John Tomlinson, Thomas Adès
The award-winning bass sings with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, made famous by Simon Rattle. July 26, Royal Albert Hall.
See all Proms listings.
AROUND TOWN Village Fête
The
V&A’s alternative village fête is held in the John Madejski Garden
and features stalls run by contemporary artists and designers, a
tombola with designer prizes you might actually want, live music and
tongue-in-cheek games such as ‘Pimp my Plimsoll’. Some events are
ticketed. See the website for details: www.vam.ac.uk/fridaylate. July 25-26, V&A.
SPORT Athletics: Aviva London Grand Prix
A
rare sprint showdown between Tyson Gay and Asafa Powell should be the
highlight of a meeting which gives the world’s top athletes one last
chance to find form before the Beijing Olympics. July 25-26, Crystal Palace National Sports Centre.
AROUND TOWN Summer Opening of Parliament
Entertaining,
anecdotal tours conducted by Blue Badge guides during the summer recess
of Parliament run every 15 minutes. Starting at Victoria Tower, they
take in the Queen’s Robing Room, the Royal Gallery, the Prince’s
Chamber, the Chamber of the House of Lords, the Central Lobby, the
House of Commons, the Members’ Lobby and St Stephen’s Chapel. Tours
last an hour and a quarter. July 28-Sept 27, tours Palace of Westminster, Houses of Parliament, Whitehall.
|
| 'Love is in the Hair' at Camden Fringe Festival |
COMEDY Camden Fringe Festival
The
Etcetera Theatre and Liberties Bar in Camden host a month of comedy
from all the funny people who aren’t going up to Edinburgh. There’s an
impressive line-up of some truly alternative acts. Highlights include
Gothic Tales Volume One, Abigail Burdess, Improtwat (a night of impro
with Marek Larwood, Greg Davies and Sophie Black), Chris Neill, Rosie
Wilby and Scott Capurro. July 28-Aug 24, Etcetera Theatre and Liberties Bar.
THEATRE …Some Trace of Her
Katie Mitchell’s exploration of Dostoyevsky, with Hattie Morahan and Ben Whishaw. From July 30, National Theatre, Cottesloe.
MUSIC Time Out Vortex Festival
The
Vortex in Dalston has long been one of our favourite venues. So much
so that next month we’re taking it over for our own nefarious ends,
like a parasitic wasp. Time Out and the Vortex will be offering up a
selection of astounding new musical, theatrical and comedic talent –
and much of it will be free. Miss it at your peril. Especially you,
subscribers. We know where you live. July 31-Aug 3, The Vortex.
FILM Film4 Summer Screen
Slightly
odd selection of films (does 'Léon' really merit the state-of-the-art
outdoor cinematic technology used here?) that, like all events at
Somerset House, is transformed by the spectacular surroundings. Chief
draw is the Soviet-sounding 'People's Premiere' of 'Hellboy II', and
serious cushioning is recommended for the 'Elephant Man'/'Wild at
Heart' double bill. July 31-Aug 9, Somerset House.
ALTERNATIVE NIGHTLIFE Miss Behave Variety Nighty
Divine
sword-swallower, husky-voiced comic and gorgeous live cartoon, Miss
Behave hosts a month-long variety show. Stomp and cheer for Marjo, the
Québécoise circus performer making her UK debut, Frank Sanazi and his
Iraq Pack who are darkly and hilariously similar to Sinatra, Australian
hula girl Kalki, pyromaniac freakshow artist Lucifire, physical
comedians Spymonkey and exquisite aerial artist Bret Pfister. Drop-in
performers will vary each night (although expect Dusty Limits for much
of the run) picked from her staggering contacts book. July 31-Aug 24, The Roundhouse.
TV Arena: Cab Driver
After
the tube and the Routemaster, the ‘Arena’ team completes its London
transport triptych with the stories of five cabbies whose experiences
of the capital span 70 years. Late July, BBC4.
THEATRE Blood Wedding
The
sixth annual summer season of free theatre at The Scoop at More London
amphitheatre, next to City Hall on the South Bank of the Thames, will
include Lorca’s tragedy and ‘Petite Rouge: A Cajun Red Riding Hood’, a
new family musical version of the ‘Little Red Riding Hood’ story, from
New Orleans. 31 July-7 Sept, The Scoop at More London.
July | August | September
3 comments
crappy site and didnt help and had things to do with your friends!!!
would like to receive e mail updates for when Idont always have magazine with me, food and music, especially open air a must.
Great info. Check it out