Wednesday, 24 September 2014

Welcome to the NEW Visitor Information Centre!



In the last couple of weeks, you may have noticed a few changes in ol' Ludlow town. On the 15th of September the Visitor Information Centre on Castle Square closed its doors, and since then we've been working extra hard to relocate the VIC which now sits in the Assembly Rooms and reopened earlier this week!

We've even got a nice before and after shot, just to show the amazing work that's gone in to get the service back up and running!

Before

After

 



The new service's opening times are 10am to 8pm.

It is currently being run by our brilliant volunteers, who have our ongoing thanks for all the help they give us, especially through these very exciting changes where there is that extra demand. 

The VIC is located on Level 3, with lift access -  there will always be someone about to until 4pm each day. The service will remain open into the evening, unstaffed.


And we've made sure we've got plenty of information that will match all your needs and interests to get the best out of your time at Ludlow!  

If you would like to give us hand with this new service then we would love to hear from you! Contact our friendly Box Office team on 01584 878141 or email admin@ludlowassemblyrooms.co.uk

So what are you waiting for? Come round and have a nosey!

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This is only the beginning of some even more changes to come, including moving the museum over to the Buttercross later this year and building work towards the reconfigurement of the Assembly Rooms, which is currently at the planning stage. 

As they say, stay tuned!


Wednesday, 3 September 2014

Introducing: A Streetcar Named Desire

 Last week, we announced the showing a delayed broadcast of A Streetcar Named Desire, on Sunday 19th October. The live production has already become the fastest selling show in Young Vic's history, with some great promises to be a fantastic show. Holly Williams from the Independent gives us an idea of the collaboration of this freshend-up  historic masterpiece.

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By Holly Williams


Australian stage director Benedict Andrews certainly likes to put a new spin on the classics.
But with his latest venture, he is quite literally putting a new spin on things: his take on Tennessee Williams’s 1947 play A Streetcar Named Desire at the Young Vic is being staged in the round, and on a revolve that doesn’t stop revolving. Throw in a starry cast – the redoubtable Gillian Anderson as the fading southern belle Blanche DuBois, rising British actress Vanessa Kirby as her sister Stella and Hollywood star Ben Foster as Stella’s violent husband Stanley Kowalski – and it’s no wonder this is the most anticipated production of the London summer. 
Andrews has directed Streetcar before – in Berlin in 2009, translated into German, and also with a spinning stage. Why return to it? “I love this play almost more than any other,” he explains. But it was also, well, because he was asked to: Anderson had long wanted to play Blanche, and had seen his previous British productions – surreal German drama Gross und Klein with Cate Blanchett and that exhilarating Three Sisters, both in 2012. “There was something about the immediacy and the truth in his interpretations that resonated with me,” she says.
Gillian Anderson and Vanessa Kirby in rehearsal with Andrews
This time, Andrews is dealing with Williams’s poetic language in its original form – in German, it was “much uglier” he concedes – while, unlike in Berlin, all the props mentioned in the text will appear on stage. But he is determined not to treat it as a museum piece. All the Streetcars he’s seen tricked out in lavish period detail have been dead, he says: less realistic than twee, bogged down in a fetishised, romantic view of 1940s New Orleans. “It makes the play genteel: nice quaint people from the past with nice quaint problems. It betrays the play – which was considered shocking at the time – they’re raw people, raw situations.”  

While Andrews luxuriates in Williams’s lyricism – “I’ve fallen in love with the song of it” – he also wants to bring out the violence that underpins it, “the drive of desire, writhing away under everything. From the moment Stanley and Blanche lock eyes, they lock into this destructive, sexual dance of death.”

So, how is the sexual chemistry in the rehearsal room? “Sparks are flying …” he begins mischievously, “in a good way! There’s a sense of camaraderie, they’re pushing each other.”
 It sounds like he pushes them, too. “He demands bold choices,” says Kirby. “I thought Stella was a grounded, earthy person, and then all these demons came up – she’s a sex-and-love addict, actually.” “You just let go, and fall into his embrace of the project,” says Anderson. “He’s a perfectionist, but he’s also a conductor – he sees it musically, he scores the drama.”

Andrews has several justifications, in fact, for the turning stage. It amplifies Blanche’s inexorable downward spiral into madness and, more simply, how her whole world is set spinning, but it also invites the audience into a voyeuristic relationship: when a door tracks past, it may block your view momentarily, reminding you of your own desire to see, to snoop.

Radical stagings of classics always anger some audience members and there’s a certain type of critic who loathes Andrews’ work, too, dismissing it as wilfully interventionist, novelty-seeking “director’s theatre”. But for others, Andrews excels in providing fresh journeys into the core of great plays.
Anderson is obviously in the fan camp: “Everything makes sense in his productions – there’s nothing gratuitous. We are bringing out the simplicity and truth of what Tennessee Williams has written. ”


You can read the full article here
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Tickets are £15 or £14 concessions, and are available to buy online, at the Box Office or by calling 01584 878141

Thursday, 28 August 2014

Review: The Two Gentlemen of Verona

September is rather exciting, and here we have another event we want to show you, The Two Gentlemen of Verona. This is pretty special since this is historically one of Shakespeare's first plays and there hasn't been a full production of it at the Stratford -Upon-Avon stage for 45 years! Below is a nice four star review from the Daily Telegraph....

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By Charles Spencer (****)

This is one of the earliest of Shakespeare’s plays, possibly the first he ever wrote, and it has a lovely bloom of youth about it. Famously it is also the play with a dog in it, a subject much discussed in the new and wonderful production of Shakespeare in Love in the West End, which has a splendid hound of its own.
The Two Gentlemen of Verona is rarely revived — this is the first production on the Stratford main stage for 45 years - but it’s a delightful work, and for Shakespeare buffs absolutely fascinating as it contains the seeds of so much that he wrote later.

This is the first of his plays in which the heroine disguises herself as a boy to go in search of her beloved, the first in which the characters find themselves in all kinds of trouble in a wood, the first in which love and youth triumph over the opposition of hidebound and obstructive parents.

It all works a treat in Simon Godwin’s production, niftily designed by Paul Wills and set in modern Italy, with a dolce vita buzz of scooters, nightclubs and open air cafés.

The staging has a winning comic fizz but it also does justice to the play’s more complex feelings, which at times cut surprisingly deep. There aren’t many comedies in which one of the leading characters comes close to the object of his desire, and in Godwin’s deftly balanced staging the supposedly happy ending has a fascinating ambivalence about it.

Below is also a trailer of some of the performance highlights:


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Broadcasting Wednesday 3 September, 7pm
Tickets are £15 or £14 concessions and available to buy online, at the Box Office, or give us a call on 01584 878141

Wednesday, 27 August 2014

Interview with Helen Mcrory

On Thursday 4th of September, here at the Assembly Rooms we have a live screening of National Theatre Live's Medea. To give you an idea of what to expect, here's an interview that  Time Out's Daisy Bowie-Sell did with starring actress Helen Mcrory and her experiences with taking on the ultimate female role.



Over a lengthy career, Helen McCrory has played villains (Narcissa Malfoy in the Harry Potter films), romantics (Rosalind in ‘As You Like It’) and goons (Cherie Blair in ‘The Queen’). Now she stars as the ultimate anti-heroine, Euripides’s Medea, in a new NT production. She explains why it is the role for women.

Is Medea a bit like a female Hamlet?
‘It is, it’s one of the greatest parts you’ll ever play as an actress. Except it’s the reverse of Hamlet because he spends three hours worrying and does nothing, whereas Medea takes an hour and 15, massacres the whole stage and walks off. But it’s great because she uses every shred of femininity that she has to do it, and she also has the complexity of guilt.’

Medea does some pretty nasty stuff:  filicide, regicide. Is she a villain?

‘Ben Power’s adaptation focuses on disenfranchisement, on what happens when this highly educated, powerful, manipulative, eloquent woman, is not allowed to be part of society. But it also looks at acts of extreme violence, which often come from long-term brutalisation – which is Medea. She’s a product of a warring society, which is very relevant to today.’

The play is almost 2,500 years old. Why has it endured?
‘It’s the same reason that people love crime dramas: you want to know how she’s going to do it and you’re wondering if this is some chemical imbalance. But it’s not. She basically says: I choose to take back my life. And, even in the twenty-first century, we’re not used to women speaking like that. Although, judging by the two Greek families I know, it’s clear women have always run that society.’

You and your husband Damien Lewis are pretty famous now. Has it been hard keeping your feet on the ground?
‘I have a six-year-old and a seven-year-old. There can be no illusions when one of them is shouting “I’ve run out of toilet paper mummy! Shall I use my hand?” It’s lovely to dress up and go out with your husband. But all of that is really just a by-product of the work we do.’

Is your plan to continue doing theatre? Or is more film and TV on the horizon?

‘I’m just constantly distracted by the next pretty thing in the headlights. I still see myself as building my career up. But I’d really like to do comedy next. I’d really like to do a comic film. Or a comic play, or comic TV, just comedy. I may just set myself up at the end of the street and tell a few gags.’

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Tickets are £15 or £14 concessions, and are available to to book online, by popping into our Box Office or giving us a call on  01584 878141

Monday, 18 August 2014

The life of a Marketing Intern at the Assembly Rooms.

Having joined the assembly rooms a little under three months ago, it seems poignant for me to talk about my experiences as a marketing intern as I embark on my next three months here. Kind of like marking an anniversary, I suppose.

Being a recent graduate, I know exactly what it’s like to have a degree in ‘the modern world’.  It’s pretty bleak, no one wants you because either:-
  • a)      Employers know that you aren’t for keeps, and as soon as a better job comes round the corner, you’ll be off.
  • b)      The old catch 22 with experience. You haven’t got enough, but you can’t get the experience in the first place.
In fact in the final weeks of my time at university, whilst handing in those remaining assignments, lecturers were quite blatantly telling us that there was no hope, at least not for a few months. 

That's why I’ve been lucky enough to grab this internship at the Assembly Rooms, especially since the initial 3 month contract has just doubled, so they must like me.

As the marketing intern it is my ultimate duty to make sure you all know about our amazing upcoming events (Seriously, they’re pretty cool, you should go check them out). What you probably won’t realise is that for the most part, it is my voice that you hear when reading about our activities (And also Tony, of course, our Marketing and Publicity Officer).  So in the three months that I’ve spent here already, I have learnt many marketing-y things from: making posters, writing press releases, audience feedback, communicating with the public through various means… and you’ve also probably seen me in town struggling to put up posters in those locked noticeboards (I have also learnt that the people of Ludlow are lovely).
 
Since being here, I have come to appreciate what it means to be in a great job. I enjoy the tasks, every day is different, the volunteers and staff in the office are friendly and most importantly, there’s always cake.   

Ludlow is very lucky to have a place that is so unique with plenty of history… and vice versa. That must be the reason why it works so well.

Here’s to the next three months! (And many many more for Ludlow Assembly Rooms – hip hip!)

Wednesday, 30 July 2014

New Film Season - OUT NOW!

We're hope you're enjoying the summer holidays so far, with some great films this August, but we thought we'd let you know about the film season for September and October thats now available here at the Assembly Rooms!

You can find the full list of events here, but here are just a few of the highlights!

Mr's Brown Boys D'Movie (15), Mon 1 & Tues 2 September, 7.30pm


Kicking off the new season we have the delightfully funny Mrs Brown's Boy: D'Movie, that is sure to ache those cheeks of laughter following the crazy antics of Anges Brown, played by Brendan O'Carroll, let loose in the town of Dublin. This is an adaptation of the international comedy phenomenom Mr Brown's Boys and is guaranteed to please!

Wakolda (12A) Mon 15 & Thurs 18 Sept, 7.30pm

 
For those who fancy something a bit different, this Spanish thriller documentary is based on the true story of  a strange doctor who insinuates himself into the lives of a young girl and her Argentine family. Unkown to this family, the doctor is in fact an exiled Nazi ‘Angel of Death’ called Joseph Mengele. As the doctor-patient bond intensifies, his obsessive quest for genetic purity is reawakened.



The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) Mon 6 Oct, 2pm & Tues 7, Wed 8 & Thurs 9, 7.30pm

 
Based on the novel by  Richard C. Morais, this comedy drama focusses on the quaint village of Saint-Antonin-Noble-Val in the south of France, where Hassan Kadam (Manish Dayal), a culinary ingénue who moved over from her home country India, opens an Indian restaurant, the Maison Mumbai. That is, until the chilly chef proprietress of Le Saule Pleureur, a Michelin starred, classical French restaurant run by Madame Mallory (Helen Mirren), gets wind of it.This enchanting film explores the fabulous intensity of the Indian cuisine matched with the beautiful surroundings of southern France. Not to be missed!

Planes: Fire & Rescue (U) Mon 27, Tues 28 & Wed 29 Oct, 2pm

 

This a great one for the kids!  This Disney comedy-adventure is about second chances, featuring a dynamic crew of elite firefighting aircraft devoted to protecting historic Piston Peak National Park from raging wildfire. When world famous air racer Dusty (voice of Dane Cook) learns that his engine is damaged and he may never race again, he must shift gears and is launched into the world of aerial firefighting. Together, the fearless team battles a massive wildfire and Dusty learns what it takes to become a true hero.

Tuesday, 29 July 2014

75 year old Ludlow resident falls from the skies!


On Saturday 19 July, Ludlow Assembly Rooms volunteer Joyce Hughes, (who is 75!) jumped out of a plane from 14,000 feet in the airall in the name of charity.


Look at that view!
Some would say she should be sat in a comfortable chair with a nice cup of tea, but for this 75 year old adrenaline junkie, a skydive was just the latest achievement in a long line of daredevil feats! Since retiring, Joyce has been on countless other adventures, including parascending in Cyprus, flying in a hot air balloon and walking on a glacier in Canada.



However, it will take a lot to top her tandem skydive! Despite a stormy forecast, the weather remained perfectly clear, and Joyce was able to enjoy the spectacular view.



Following the event she said: “It was absolutely fabulous and I enjoyed every second. I'd do it again in a heartbeat!” Joyce’s daughter Meg who also took part in this event, commented on Facebook: “She was amazing!!! So calm! Proud skydiving daughter”



The incentive for Joyce was not only to take advantage of her good health, but to raise money for Ludlow Assembly Rooms where she is a dedicated volunteer. Already, Joyce has raised an estimated £500, (and still counting!) which will go towards the venue’s running costs.



She won’t be resting for too long though: Joyce already has her sights set on North Wales where, later this summer, she will ride the longest zip-wire in Europe with her daughter and grandchildren!



Well done Joyce!
There are still opportunities to sponsor Joyce on her fantastic achievement, which can be done via www.ludlowassemblyrooms.co.uk or the Box Office where there are collection points available. Joyce has also set up a Just Giving page: www.justgiving.com/Joyce-Hughes2