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1. Kiss Me Kate
Get Wokingham, Tuesday 29 April 2008This was another good production by The Sainsbury Singers but not perhaps quite up to the standard of their most recent shows – somehow it lacked their special sparkle. However there were some excellent moments and performances.
2. George And The Dragon, South Street, Sunday 27/4/08.
Get Wokingham, Tuesday 29 April 2008Garlic Theatre have won numerous awards for their puppetry shows and it’s quite obvious why.
3. Review:B Is 4 Black
Get Wokingham, Thursday 24 April 2008This is the second play staged at South Street by Reading’s own 2Heavy Productions and, as such, is an indication of South Street’s ongoing participation in local arts and local artists at the grassroots level which should always be applauded and remembered.
4. Review: Oliver
Get Wokingham, Thursday 24 April 2008This was an impressive production of Lionel Bart's famous musical.
5. Review: Kiss Me, Kate
Get Wokingham, Wednesday 23 April 2008If there’s one thing Cole Porter could be trusted to do, that was to write great tune after great tune and, from the very outset, Kiss Me, Kate is filled with them.
6. Star treatment for Agatha mysteries
Get Wokingham, Monday 21 April 2008The golden age of radio will be re-created on stage at Windsor Theatre Royal this week and next in a star-studded tribute to Agatha Christie.
7. Players’ next production is bound to be pure heaven
Get Wokingham, Monday 21 April 2008One of the biggest stage successes of all time will be staged by The Shinfield Players’ Theatre.
8. Double treat for musical lovers
Get Wokingham, Monday 21 April 2008Two classic musicals hit the local amateur stage this week.
9. ‘We nurture talent in those who had never tried theatre before’
Get Wokingham, Friday 18 April 2008On a cold day in February, 2006, a motley group of eight people gathered in the main auditorium of the South Street Arts Centre.
10. Four Nights In Knaresborough, 15/4/08
Get Wokingham, Wednesday 16 April 2008This is the second ‘what happened next’ play in a row that the Progress have put on. First came After Juliet, imagining Verona in the aftermath of Shakespeare’s big romantic tragedy, and now this play, dealing with a year stuck in a castle in rainy Yorkshire following the assassination of Thomas à Becket.
