It's a maginficent View 11:12am Friday 8th October 2004 FIFTY years since debuting in New York, Arthur Miller's dramatic, emotional and tragic script A View from the Bridge is re-produced at the Queen's Theatre, Billet Lane, Hornchurch. | Design museum celebrates Jaguar 11:08am Friday 8th October 2004 Speaking as someone who's never driven a car, or even admired their aesthetic beauty, I have to admit that the Design Museum's current exhibition on the history of one of Jaguar's most beloved and popular cars certainly turned my head. Obviously, the centrepiece of this display is the car itself, represented here by four versions of the legendary E-Type that won over many a car fan in the 1960s. |
Amateur dramatics 11:16am Friday 8th October 2004 OLIVER - WOODFORD OPERATIC AND DRAMATIC SOCIETY
THIS musical was an animated, boisterous Oliver but also atmospheric with traditional settings and costumes to give a pleasant, attractive production of Bart's much loved classic. | Sounds in Spaces at the V and A Museum, London 12:06pm Monday 26th July 2004
IT'S a novel idea. A group of musicians compose their own scores to accompany a specific section of the Victoria and Albert Museum in an attempt to complement and enhance exhibitions by conveying the feelings they get from the atmospheres of a particular room. |
| Death on show 2:05pm Friday 16th July 2004 TACKLING a topic no less important than life itself, the British Museum's ambitious new exhibition is situated in its Welcome Trust Gallery, which is specifically designed to host displays that explore the trials and tribulations of existence and how we as human beings confront them. |
Animals - the Haunch of Venison gallery 2:00pm Friday 16th July 2004
IF YOU like your animals cute, cuddly and furry, then the Animals art exhibition may prove to be a real eye-opener. This un-usual exhibition is a challenging study of animals, birds and insects from a very different angle. | In keeping with tradition 3:42pm Friday 9th July 2004 BEING beheaded certainly isn't a pleasant way to go but Henry VIII's ill-fated wife Jane Seymour's death was particularly nasty. |
| A dream night in the park 2:00pm Tuesday 6th July 2004
FORGET the rain. Forget the Tube strikes. Forget that weirdo who urinates on the rails at Walthamstow station at 9am. If there is one thing that makes living in London worthwhile it has to be seeing a play like A Midsummer Night's Dream at Regent's Park Open Air Theatre. |
| Alice Neel 1:59pm Friday 2nd July 2004 IF the name Alice Neel (1900-1984) isn't familiar to you, then this exhibition will change that. |
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