the 2016 entertainment handbook

Transcription

the 2016 entertainment handbook
10th July to 6th August 2016
E N T E R TA I N M E N T
INTRODUCTION
Welcome to Marlborough College Summer
School’s programme of entertainment, giving
details of an exciting and eclectic mix of lectures,
recitals and concerts for summer 2016.
The Summer School team works very hard throughout the year to
devise this tantalising line-up, which offers a wide range of events to
suit all tastes and interests.
All
Entertainment
is Free for
Summer School
residents
Some entertainment carries
a charge for non-residents
The twice weekly gala concerts, which, for the most part, are held
in our famous and historic Memorial Hall, are the highlight. This
year, we are thrilled to welcome Michael Palin, Natalie Williams, a
return performance from Illyria, Collabro, The Locrian Ensemble
of London, Si Cranstoun, Bella Hardy and Lee Jackson as Elvis
to round things off!
In addition, there are recitals given by two of Marlborough
College’s leading music scholars, a performance by the excellent
Exultate Singers in Chapel, and the usual weekly lunchtime organ
recitals, which feature the College’s famous Beckerath organ.
With a further array of choral, jazz, classical, film, folk and
alternative events it is very much hoped that this will complement
perfectly the inspirational educational opportunity of Marlborough
College Summer School.
Following the success of 2015, Summer School is once again a four week event, which enables the
entertainment programme to promote more concerts and events than ever before. Whether you are
visiting us for the first time or returning, you won’t be disappointed. With picturesque surroundings,
fascinating architecture and excellent performance facilities, this should prove a refreshing, enriching
and rewarding experience.
We look forward to meeting you, or renewing our acquaintance, and sharing our enthusiasm for the
finer things in life!
PHILIP AND CAROLINE DUKES
Artistic Directors
Marlborough College Summer School
Tickets on sale at www.summerschool.co.uk, the Summer School office
and Sound Knowledge, 22 HughendenYard, Marlborough High Street.
Week 1 | 11-15 July
Victorian Marlborough College
Clare Russell
Monday 11th July
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
Marlborough College was founded as part of the
Radicalism of the 1840s to give a cut-price but high
quality education to the middle classes, broadening
educational access, with a firm religious grounding.
The influence of Thomas Arnold and Tom Brown’s
Schooldays is apparent in early Masters’ close
connections with Rugby School.
Discover the hardships of the Spartan regime
of poor heating, food and sanitation along
with epidemics of diseases such as scarlet fever,
the Great Rebellion of 1851 and the origins
and uses of the College’s Victorian buildings,
including its great jewel, Bodley and Garner’s
magnificent High Gothic Chapel.
Marlborough College Scholar Recital
Helena Mackie - Oboe
Paul Turner - Piano
Monday 11th July
Ellis Theatre 8.00pm – 9.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
Helena’s musical training began as a chorister at Salisbury Cathedral at the age
of eight, one highlight of which was singing in a concert at the Wigmore Hall for
Elizabeth Kenny. After starting on the violin, she took up the oboe aged nine
and is now in her third year in the National Youth Orchestra. She has interests
in composing, a cappella singing and is a big fan of The Great British Bake Off!
www.summerschool.co.uk 3
Week 1 | 11-15 July
General Haig: ‘Butcher of the Somme’?
David Du Croz
Tuesday 12th July
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
The centenary of the Battle of the Somme is an appropriate time
to consider a number of related issues, not least the quality of the
generalship in that battle. This talk will focus on Douglas Haig in
particular, a general whose performance has been the subject of
almost constant reinterpretation since the end of the First World
War. The talk will not anticipate the outcome of the war over the
next two years, but will attempt a balanced assessment of Haig’s
leadership in the context of the events of the second half of 1916.
An Evening with Michael Palin
Tuesday 12th July
Memorial Hall 8.00pm – 10.00pm
Free for Summer School Residents
Non-Residents and General Public £20
GALA
Michael Palin established his reputation with Monty
Python’s Flying Circus and Ripping Yarns. His work
also includes several films with Monty Python, as
well as A Private Function, Fierce Creatures and a
BAFTA winning performance as the hapless Ken
in A Fish Called Wanda. Michael wrote and
appeared in the films The Missionary, American
Friends and the television plays East of Ipswich
and Number 27.
Michael has written books to accompany his
eight very successful travel series Around the
World in 80 Days; Pole to Pole; Full Circle;
Hemingway Adventure; Sahara; Himalaya;
New Europe and Brazil.
Michael has published three volumes of diaries;
1969–1979: The Python Years and 1980-1988:
Halfway to Hollywood and 1988-1998: Travelling
to Work. In July 2014, Michael, with his fellow
Pythons, performed a ten night sell-out show at
the 02 Arena in London – Monty Python Live
(mostly) - One Down Five to Go.
In 2000, Michael was awarded a CBE for services
to television. Between 2009 and 2012 Michael was
President of the Royal Geographical Society and in
2013 Michael was awarded the BAFTA Fellowship.
Week 1 | 11-15 July
At a Crossroads: Taft, Roosevelt,
Wilson, Debs and the 1912
Presidential Election.
Richard Willmett
Wednesday 13th July
Ellis Theatre 1.05pm – 1.40pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
The awkward incumbent, the returning behemoth,
the Ivy Leaguer from the reborn South and the
evangelist of the working man – the 1912 election
was the USA at its most diverse.
At a time when the country was poised to
turn growth and regional control into global
dominance the electorate faced a choice far
wider than the norm.
The National Trust in Bath: Past,
Present and Future
Tom Boden
Wednesday 13th July
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
The resurgent Democrats – desperate to leave
their Civil War legacy behind – faced off against
a Republican Party irrevocably split by the
personal ambition of its favourite son. All the
while the left made its most emphatic assault yet
on national power.
in Bath including the Bath Assembly Rooms, Prior
Park Landscape Garden and the Bath Skyline.
The talk will conclude with a summary of the
opportunities and challenges facing the National
Trust in Bath today and in the future.
The National Trust was established in 1895 and
its core purpose is to look after special places
for ever for everyone. In this talk Tom Boden,
General Manager of the National Trust in Bath,
will outline the history of the National Trust’s
acquisition and management of its special places
Film Night
Wednesday 13th July
Ellis Theatre 8.00pm – 10.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
The Ellis Theatre will transform into a cinema for our very own film
night, complete with popcorn! So come and watch a Hollywood
blockbuster, suitable for children 12 years and over. Confirmation
of the film to be shown will be made nearer the time.
www.summerschool.co.uk 5
Week 1 | 11-15 July
Organ Recital
Jeremy Woodside
Thursday 14th July
Chapel 1.05pm – 1.40pm
Free
Jeremy Woodside was born in Christchurch,
New Zealand, where he was a chorister at
Christchurch Cathedral. He became Organ
Scholar at Christ’s College, Canterbury in 2004.
September 2014 saw Jeremy take up the
Organ Scholarship at Westminster Abbey. In
September 2015, Jeremy took up a post at
Repton School as School Organist and Teacher
of Music.
Worlds Apart
Azi Ahmed
Thursday 14th July
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
In 1999, the British Army took a great leap forward in
history by putting women through the rigorous British SAS
selection process. The experience was raw and changed Azi’s
life forever. This is the story of one woman’s fight not only
to be ‘the best of the best’, but to remain true to herself.
Exultate Singers
Thursday 14th July
Chapel 7.30pm – 9.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
Bristol-based choir, Exultate Singers, present a
feast of beautiful choral music on the theme of
love. Sensuous motets with words from the Song
of Songs by the Renaissance masters Victoria
and Palestrina are contrasted by ravishing songs
by Lauridsen and Whitacre. The programme
is completed by a selection of hot and steamy
dance-inspired pieces from South America in
anticipation of the Rio Olympics. Founded in
2002, the choir has performed in more than 150
concerts, radio broadcasts and has appeared
on BBC’s Songs of Praise and The One Show.
Conducted by David Ogden with Richard Johnson
on the organ.
Week 1 | 11-15 July
Choral Workshop Course Celebration
Friday 15th July
Chapel 1.05pm – 1.40pm
Free
Tutor John Jenkins leads his course students
in a celebration of choral music; ranging from
madrigals and motets to contemporary
part-songs.
Natalie Williams
Friday 15th July
Memorial Hall 8.00pm – 10.00pm
Free for Summer School Residents
Non-Residents and General Public £20
In association with
GALA
Natalie Williams has been a veteran of the
British jazz and soul scenes for over a decade.
Her Ronnie Scott’s residency, Soul Family
Sundays, has sold out every month for over
8 years. Her two year stint as a lead vocalist
in Incognito brought her worldwide acclaim
and saw her perform at festivals throughout
the globe. As a lead artist in her own right,
Natalie has performed to large audiences at
Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Manchester Jazz
Festival, Love Supreme Festival and the
London Jazz Festival.
www.summerschool.co.uk 7
Week 2 | 18-22 July
Saint or Sinner: The Life of
Sir Bernard Spilsbury
Diane Janes
Monday 18th July
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
Almost seventy years after his death, Sir Bernard Spilsbury
remains one of the best known names in pathology and his
influence on various criminal trials continues to be a source
of argument and debate. This lecture will explore the life,
career and legacy of one of the most controversial figures
in the annals of criminal investigation.
American Roots Music:
Guitars and Songs
Brooks Williams
Monday 18th July
Ellis Theatre 8.00pm – 9.15pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
Guitarist, singer, songwriter Brooks Williams
digs deep into the roots of American music
with a programme of original and traditional
country blues. Kris Kristofferson’s classic,
‘Nobody Wins,’ Dave Alvin’s ‘King Of California’
and the jazz-tinged ‘Hesitation Blues’ sit neatly
alongside Williams’ own J.J. Cale influenced
‘Joker’s Wild,’ blues-rocker ‘My Turn Now’ and
the Evil Knievel tale ‘Year Began.’
Ranked in the ‘Top 100 Acoustic Guitarists’ and
nominated ‘best male vocalist’ by Spiral Earth,
Williams is the ‘real deal.’ Born in Statesboro,
Georgia, USA, and raised in the cradle of blues
and Americana country, Williams’ music later
took flight in the Boston and New York music
scene - the same scene that gave rise to the likes
of Bonnie Raitt and Chris Smither.
concert appearances in the UK, Europe and
the USA.
His non-stop worldwide tour, which tonight
brings him to Marlborough, includes regular
Come and see for yourself the man Roots says
is ‘Americana at its finest.’
Week 2 | 18-22 July
Parks for the People
Letta Jones
Tuesday 19th July
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
Offering fresh air, a ‘civilising’ influence and an
improvement to physical health, the founders of
the nineteenth century new, free public parks for
urban dwellers were confident of the benefits of
green space for all.
Public Parks became famous for their fabulous
flower displays, fine buildings, lakes, sports
facilities and grand designs. In this lecture, Letta
will explore the origins of these innovative
designed spaces in the cities of Victorian Britain,
using Victoria Park in London as a case study.
Letta Jones, MA, is a Lecturer in Garden History
and Horticulture who taught at Capel Manor and
Illyria
William Shakespeare’s
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Birkbeck Colleges for 15 years. She has been
a Summer School tutor for 12 years. As a
Green Flag Parks Judge, she is jointly responsible
for assessing parks and open spaces for the
national standard awards of Green Flag and
Green Heritage status in the heart of 21st
century London.
GALA
Tuesday 19th July
Court 7pm – 9pm
Free for Summer School Residents
Non-Residents and General Public £15
Free for under 18s accompanied
by an adult
In their 25th season, Illyria are performing
William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s
Dream. Perennially popular, universally loved, the
play follows four couples – three human and one
fairy – whose passions are sorely tested when
a troupe of amateur theatricals rehearse a play
about a doomed love affair.
Add into the mix a heady brew of confusion,
magic and mischief and you have the perfect
comedy for a summer’s evening.
www.summerschool.co.uk 9
Week 2 | 18-22 July
1791: Mozart’s Last Year
Robin Nelson
Wednesday 20th July
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
In 1781, released from his musical duties in
Salzburg and the overbearing influence of his
father, Mozart began a new life as a freelance
musician in the Austrian capital.
He was soon busy teaching, composing and
performing in music-mad Vienna and establishing
an array of musical friends and intellectual
associates such as Joseph Haydn and Baron van
Swieten. After a seven year period of popularity
and success his fortunes began to decline
however: neither he nor his wife managed their
financial affairs properly and both were suffering
from bouts of ill-health.
In 1791, The Magic Flute was successfully
premiered, a strange messenger came with a
commission for a Requiem Mass and an urgent
request arrived from Prague for a new Opera.
In between times, Mozart somehow conjured
up a sublime Clarinet Concerto, but as the year
went on Mozart’s health took a downward turn.
Robin Nelson, former Director of Music at
the College, tells the story of a dramatic, final
twelve months in the tragically short life of a
musical genius.
Film Night
Wednesday 20th July
Ellis Theatre 8.00pm – 10.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
The Ellis Theatre will transform into a cinema for our very own film
night, complete with popcorn! So come and watch a Hollywood
blockbuster, suitable for children 12 years and over. Confirmation
of the film to be shown will be made nearer the time.
Week 2 | 18-22 July
Organ Recital
Jonathan Vaughn
Thursday 21st July
Chapel 1.05pm – 1.40pm
Free
Jonathan Vaughn is Assistant Organist at Wells
Cathedral and Musical Director of the Somerset
Singers. His principal duty at the Cathedral is
to the daily round of services and the nurturing
of its choristers’ talents. He is also involved in
the Cathedral Choir’s programme of broadcasts,
tours, outreach, commissions and recordings.
Aged sixteen, Jonathan became a major
prizewinning Fellow of the Royal College of
Organists. His organ studies were with Simon
Williams and Dame Gillian Weir. He regularly
performs recitals across the UK and this five
recital tour marks his US debut. He recently
released his first solo organ CD, Wagner at the
Organ, recorded at St Mary Redcliffe, Bristol.
Hawking: A Brief History
of Black Holes
David Roberts
Thursday 21st July
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
One of the most eminent scientists of our age,
Stephen Hawking came to prominence in 1974
with his remarkable insight that Black Holes are
not quite as black as people imagined. During this
talk, David will give a historical account of these
fascinating objects, from their 18th Century
origins to the latest theories of Hawking and
his contemporaries.
The Invitation Theatre Company
presents a Brief History of Musicals
Thursday 21st July
Ellis Theatre 8.00pm – 10.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
The Invitation Theatre Company performing
A Brief History of Musicals has been described
as the ‘best thing I’ve ever seen in Devizes, sent
shivers down my spine and I left with tears rolling
down my cheeks. Outstanding, world class - we
knew it would be good, but never expected it to
be THAT good!’.
Come on a journey through Music Theatre time
and have a truly wonderful evening.
www.summerschool.co.uk 11
2016/2017
75th
SEASON
WORLD CLASS
MUSICIANS IN
MARLBOROUGH
Programmes:
18TH SEPTEMBER 2016
7.30PM
WOLF HALL LIVE!
with award-winning composer
DEBBIE WISEMAN & The
Locrian Ensemble of London
9TH OCTOBER 2016
7.30PM
PAUL TURNER
(piano)
6TH NOVEMBER 2016
7.30PM
BAND OF THE
GRENADIER
GUARDS
22ND JANUARY 2017
3.00PM
ACADEMY OF
ST MARTIN IN
THE FIELDS
SEXTET
Ticket enquiries
01672 892566
[email protected]
www.marlboroughconcertseries.org
Lead Sponsor
5TH FEBRUARY 2017
3.00PM
THE CHOIR
OF ST JOHN’S
COLLEGE,
CAMBRIDGE
Acting Director of Music
JOHN CHALLENGER
Week 2 | 18-22 July
COLLABRO
Friday 22nd July
Memorial Hall 8.00pm – 10.00pm
Free for Summer School Residents
Non-Residents and General Public £20
Collabro are an English boy band who won the
eighth series of Britain’s Got Talent in 2014.
The band have an enthusiastic following who
they refer to as their Collaborators.
Specialising in musical theatre, the group consists
of Michael Auger, Richard Hadfield, Jamie Lambert,
Matthew Pagan and Thomas J Redgrave.
Their debut album, Stars, was released in
August and debuted at number 1 in the
UK charts.
GALA
www.summerschool.co.uk 13
Week 3 | 25-29 July
The European Project
Michael Hart
Monday 25th July
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
The roots of the EU are to be found, not in utopian federalist dreams, but in a concrete political project,
largely driven by France, to refrain Germany from becoming, for the third time, the hegemon of Europe.
In time, the project developed its own dynamic, creating a successful Common Market, integrating former
fascist and communist states and aspiring to become a third power between West and East. But more
ambitious schemes – the euro, a common foreign policy, open frontiers – have revealed the limits of
European solidarity. It is, once again, nation before continent and the future is uncertain.
Marlborough College Scholar Recital
Sarah Mattinson - Flute
Clare Toomer - Piano
Monday 25th July
Ellis Theatre 8.00pm – 9.30pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
Sarah Mattinson has enjoyed being a music scholar at Marlborough
College, where she sings in the choir and plays in many ensembles. She
gained distinctions in her ATCL, LTCL and ABRSM diplomas on the
flute, as well as achieving her ABRSM diploma on the piano. She enjoys
playing the violin, the organ and some jazz piano on the side.
They Also Served: Animals in
the First World War
Peter Street
Tuesday 26th July
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
War Horse gives a valuable insight into how
animals were involved in, and affected by, the
First World War. The lecture considers the role
of certain animals, birds and fish involved in
the fighting ranging from the horse, camel and
dog to the pigeon and glow worm. Similarly the
war also impacted on animals in Britain itself.
Here reference will be made to animal welfare
organisations, dogs and their owners and the
response of London Zoo.
Finally, the lecture explores what happened
to dogs and horses who survived the war and
how those animals who did not were to
be remembered.
Week 3 | 25-29 July
The Locrian Ensemble
Tuesday 26th July
Chapel 8.00pm – 10.00pm
Free for Summer School Residents
Non-Residents and General Public £15
Bringing together some of the most
prominent string soloists in London, The
Locrian Ensemble, was formed in 1995 and
immediately established an enviable reputation
for its recordings, broadcasts and live
performances. The group frequently records
scores for film and TV and have recently
topped the classical music charts with their
recording of Debbie Wiseman’s score for
BBC TV’s critically acclaimed dramatisation
of ‘Wolf Hall’. They have also recorded on
the soundtracks to films such as ‘Gladiator’,
‘Da Vinci Code’ and the James Bond and
Harry Potter movies.
GALA
Organ Recital
Jeremy Filsell
Wednesday 27th July
Chapel 1.05pm – 1.40pm
Free
Jeremy Filsell is one of only a few virtuoso performers as both
a pianist and organist, with a discography of more than 30 solo
recordings on both instruments. He is on the international
piano roster of Steinway Artists and lives and works primarily
in North America. An international recital and teaching career
has recently taken him across the USA and UK and to Germany,
France, Finland, Sweden and Norway. In this recital, he will
perform one of the undoubted masterpieces of 19th Century
organ literature, the Fantasy and Fugue on ‘Ad Nos, ad salutarem
undam’ by Franz Liszt.
www.summerschool.co.uk 15
Week 3 | 25-29 July
The Merry Monarch:
The Mistresses of Charles II
Martin Evans
herself as ‘The Protestant Whore.’ Charles reigned
at a turbulent time, when the French and Dutch
dominated foreign policy and the Plague and The
Great Fire, wreaked havoc on this country. To
many people, Charles was essentially loveable and
he turned Whitehall into a Palace of Fun, where
men held most of the advantages and the King
most of all!
Wednesday 27th July
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
Charles II was described as ‘The Merry Monarch’,
which his lifestyle gave some credence to. This
lecture will illuminate the ‘lovely ladies’ he got
to know well from the flirtatious Lucy Walter,
the mother of the future Duke of Monmouth,
to the scheming Barbara Villiers, later Duchess
of Cleveland, who bore the King five illegitimate
children. The King lived for pleasure and thirteen
mistresses helped, including the notorious Nell
Gwyn, an actress and orange seller who described
Film Night
Wednesday 27th July
Ellis Theatre 8.00pm – 10.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
The Ellis Theatre will transform into a cinema for our very own film
night, complete with popcorn! So come and watch a Hollywood
blockbuster, suitable for children 12 years and over. Confirmation
of the film to be shown will be made nearer the time.
More Secrets of a Crossword Setter
Tim Moorey
Thursday 28th July
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
A setter for several newspapers, Tim Moorey (aka
Mephisto) is well-known at the Summer School for his fun
workshops over the last nine years. He will share some
more tips and tricks of the trade in a light-hearted talk.
You may even be invited to crack some enjoyable cryptic
clues; easy if you have done one of Tim’s workshops!
Week 3 | 25-29 July
Singing for Pleasure Course Celebration
Thursday 28th July
Ellis Theatre 8.00pm – 9.00pm
Free
The Singing for Pleasure celebration is something not to be missed,
so let the choir, along with their talented course leader entertain you
with music and popular songs from around the world.
Vivaldi’s Gloria Course Celebration
Friday 29th July
Chapel 5.15pm – 5.45pm
Free
Led by Alex Hodgkinson (Choirmaster,
Marlborough College). A course celebration
from our largest course!
Si Cranstoun
Friday 29th July
Memorial Hall 8.00pm – 10.00pm
Free for Summer School Residents
Non-Residents and General Public £20
Si Cranstoun is set to be the voice of 2016.
He has achieved so much with his initial step
up from King of the Vintage scene to success
at Radio and Television. Cranstoun’s vocal style
has been compared to the likes of Jackie Wilson
and Sam Cooke, while his music is a pure blend
of northern soul, Motown and vintage pop. His
sound is full of the classic energy and verve of
a bygone era but brought up to the present day.
‘Wow! How good is Si Cranstoun! ’ –
Chris Evans Radio 2 Breakfast Show
GALA
www.summerschool.co.uk 17
Week 4 | 1-5 August
Charles Dickens: A Tale of Two Sisters
Ronald Dukes
Monday 1st August
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
Charles Dickens’s domestic life was a troubled one, the circumstances
of which are presented in a fascinating and novel way in this lecture.
A tale is woven around the lives of the two women with whom
Dickens had the closest bond and is not one which can be said to
end happily. Relationships are traced from first to last in a colourful
contrast of social position and personality. The disturbed side of this
great writer is there to be explored. This lecture lifts the veil on a
significant part of his life which was meant to be concealed.
Recital
Philip Dukes - Viola
Anna Tilbrook - Piano
Monday 1st August
Ellis Theatre 8.00pm – 9.30pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
International viola soloist and Marlborough College Artistic Director, Philip Dukes, is joined by the
renowned British pianist Anna Tilbrook in an evening recital of music for viola and piano. Hailed by The
Times as ‘Britain’s most outstanding viola player’ and ‘a world class performer’ by The Strad magazine this
promises to be an evening of real beauty, with music by Henri Vieuxtemps and Brahms, interspersed with
solo piano repertoire during the performance.
Images from the Edge: Part 2
Brian Anderson
Tuesday 2nd August
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
After his wonderful and popular ‘Cold Images
From The Edge’ lecture in 2015, Brian Anderson,
photographer and tutor, returns to Summer School
to present the follow up ‘Images From The Edge: Part
2’. This beautifully illustrated new talk features some
of world’s greatest travellers and explorers, including;
David Livingstone, David Roberts, Hiram Bingham and
Ferdinand Hayden. Travelling between four continents
we will see Brian’s images of the stunning Inca city of
Machu Picchu in Peru, the ancient ‘rose red’ city of
Petra in Jordan, the awesome Victoria Falls in Zambia
and the magnificent Yellowstone Park in the USA.There
is something for everyone here, this illustrated talk is a
must for adventurers and those with ‘wanderlust’.
Week 4 | 1-5 August
Bella Hardy
Tuesday 2nd August
Memorial Hall 8.00pm – 10.00pm
Free for Summer School Residents
Non-Residents and General Public £15
GALA
Bella Hardy grew up in Edale in the Peak District,
but now lives in Edinburgh. Although the Hardy
family sang in the local choir, it was a combination
of her childhood love for ballad books and visits
to local folk festivals that decided her future.
At 13, she began performing at Cambridge and
Sidmouth festivals and in 2004 reached the final of
the BBC Young Folk Award, having taught herself
to ‘fiddle sing’.
Bella was named BBC Radio 2 Folk Singer of the
Year in 2014.
Piano Recital
Alice Michahelles
Wednesday 3rd August
Ellis Theatre 1.05pm – 1.40pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
Alice Michahelles has appeared in recitals in Europe, the Middle
East and Chile, and taken part in International Festivals such as
Eilat Chamber Festival in Israel, Festival Bled in Slovenia and the
Ascoli Piceno Festival in Italy.
Alice teaches Piano in the Conservatorio Santa Cecilia in Rome.
Her recital will include works by Beethoven, Elgar, Mendelssohn,
Chopin and Debussy.
Sir John Soane: Architect of
a Lost London
Chris Rogers
Wednesday 3rd August
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
Best remembered today as a collector, connoisseur and founder of a much–loved museum, Soane was
one of the leading architects of Regency England. He built a series of lovely villas and, along with John
Nash, created the great terraces overlooking Regent’s Park. However, his contemporary fame rested on
a series of great public buildings in London, of which the Bank of England was the grandest. Sadly most of
these buildings have not survived, victims to barbarism, fire or bomb. His work and his influence deserve
greater recognition.
www.summerschool.co.uk 19
Week 4 | 1-5 August
Film Night
Wednesday 3rd August
Ellis Theatre 8.00pm – 10.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
The Ellis Theatre will transform into a cinema for our very own film
night, complete with popcorn! So come and watch a Hollywood
blockbuster, suitable for children 12 years and over. Confirmation
of the film to be shown will be made nearer the time.
Organ Recital
David Bednall
Thursday 4th August
Chapel 1.05pm – 1.40pm
Free
David Bednall is recognized as one of the leading choral
composers of his generation and studied for a PhD in
Composition with Professor John Pickard at the University
of Bristol. He is Organist of The University of Bristol, Sub
Organist at Bristol Cathedral and conducts The University
Singers. He was Organ Scholar of The Queen’s College,
Oxford, held a number of posts at Gloucester Cathedral,
and was Assistant Organist at Wells Cathedral. His teachers
included Dr Naji Hakim and David Briggs.
Suffragette: The Prequel
James Dickie
Thursday 4th August
Ellis Theatre 5.15pm – 6.00pm
Free for Summer School customers
General Public £5 (on the door)
2016 is the 150th Anniversary of the first speech in
Parliament in favour of giving the vote to women.The
campaign for women’s right to vote in Britain began
in 1866, when the great Utilitarian philosopher J.S. Mill
spoke in Parliament in favour of granting women the
right to ‘a voice in determining who shall be their rulers’.
This lecture will examine the early stages of this
campaign, and how Mill became one of its first and
most passionate supporters.
Week 4 | 1-5 August
Singing for Pleasure Course Celebration
Thursday 4th August
Ellis Theatre 8.00pm – 9.00pm
Free
Lee Jackson as Elvis
The Singing for Pleasure celebration is something
not to be missed, so let the choir, along with their
talented course leader entertain you with music
and popular songs from around the world.
GALA
Friday 5th August
Memorial Hall 8.00pm – 10.00pm
Free for Summer School Residents
Non-Residents and General Public £20
Lee Jackson causes a stir wherever
he goes, in character or out, as
people just cannot believe the natural
resemblance to the King himself. Add
the looks to his speaking and singing
voice and Lee Jackson is the ultimate
Elvis impersonator.
Lee is not your typical ‘Elvis with a
white jumpsuit’. With Lee Jackson
you will get a feel of what it would
have been like to have seen the
King of Rock ‘n’ Roll in the flesh.
www.summerschool.co.uk 21
AT-A-GLANCE GUIDE
Tickets on sale at www.summerschool.co.uk, the Summer School office, Sound Knowledge,
22 Hughenden Yard, Marlborough High Street or on the door (subject to availability).
Entertainment marked with an asterisk (*) is FREE to all 2016 Summer School customers
(residents or non-residents) providing they are attending a course in the week of this event.
Week 1 | 11-15 July
Monday
11th July
Victorian Marlborough College
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Oboe Recital by Helena Mackie
Ellis Theatre
8.00pm-9.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Tuesday
12th July
General Haig:
‘Butcher of the Somme’?
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Memorial Hall
8.00pm-10.00pm
£20
At a Crossroads: Taft, Roosevelt, Wilson,
Ellis Theatre
Debs and the 1912 Presidential Election
1.05pm-1.40pm
£5 (on the door)*
The National Trust in Bath:
Past, Present and Future
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Film Night
Ellis Theatre
8.00pm-10.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Organ Recital by Jeremy Woodside
Chapel
1.05pm-1.40pm
Free
Worlds Apart
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Exultate Singers
Chapel
7.30pm-9.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Choral Workshop Course Celebration
Chapel
1.05pm-1.40pm
Free
Memorial Hall
8.00pm-10.00pm
£20
Saint or Sinner: The Life of Sir
Bernard Spilsbury
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
American Roots Music: Guitars
and Songs
Ellis Theatre
8.00pm-9.15pm
£5 (on the door)*
Parks for the People
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Court
7.00pm-9.00pm
£15
GALA
Wednesday
13th July
Thursday
14th July
Friday 15th July
GALA
An Evening with
Michael Palin
Natalie Williams
Week 2 | 18-22 July
Monday
18th July
Tuesday
19th July
GALA
Illyria: A Midsummer
Night’s Dream
Wednesday
20th July
1791: Mozart’s Last Year
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Film Night
Ellis Theatre
8.00pm-10.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Thursday
21st July
Organ Recital by Jonathan Vaughn
Chapel
1.05pm-1.40pm
Free
Hawking: A Brief History of Black Holes Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
A Brief History of Musicals
Ellis Theatre
8.00pm-10.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Memorial Hall
8.00pm-10.00pm
£20
Friday 22nd July
GALA
Collabro
Week 3 | 25-29 July
Monday
25th July
The European Project
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Flute Recital by Sarah Mattinson
Ellis Theatre
8.00pm-9.30pm
£5 (on the door)*
Tuesday
26th July
They Also Served: Animals in the
First World War
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Chapel
8.00pm-10.00pm
£15
Organ Recital by Jeremy Filsell
Chapel
1.05pm-1.40pm
Free
The Merry Monarch:
The Mistresses of Charles II
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Film Night
Ellis Theatre
8.00pm-10.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
More Secrets of a Crossword Setter
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Singing for Pleasure
Course Celebration
Ellis Theatre
8.00pm-9.00pm
Free
Vivaldi’s Gloria
Course Celebration
Chapel
5.15pm-5.45pm
Free
Memorial Hall
8.00pm-10.00pm
£20
Charles Dickens:
A Tale of Two Sisters
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Viola Recital by Philip Dukes
Ellis Theatre
8.00pm-9.30pm
£5 (on the door)*
Images from the Edge: Part 2
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Memorial Hall
8.00pm-10.00pm
£15
Piano Recital by Alice Michahelles
Ellis Theatre
1.05pm-1.40pm
£5 (on the door)*
Sir John Soane:
Architect of a Lost London
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Film Night
Ellis Theatre
8.00pm-10.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Organ Recital by David Bednall
Chapel
1.05pm-1.40pm
Free
Suffragette: The Prequel
Ellis Theatre
5.15pm-6.00pm
£5 (on the door)*
Singing for Pleasure Course
Celebration
Ellis Theatre
8.00pm-9.00pm
Free
Memorial Hall
8.00pm-10.00pm
£20
GALA
Wednesday
27th July
Thursday
28th July
Friday
29th July
GALA
The Locrian Ensemble
Si Cranstoun
Week 4 | 1-5 August
Monday
1st August
Tuesday
2nd August
GALA
Wednesday
3rd August
Thursday
4th August
Friday
5th August
GALA
Bella Hardy
Lee Jackson as Elvis
Information correct at time of going to press (May 2016). May be subject to alteration.
www.summerschool.co.uk 23
£
Entertainment Booking
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number printed on the signature strip on the back of
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made payable to Marlborough College Summer School
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Booking Ref. No.
Please tick as appropriate:
Non-Resident
General Public
If you are attending Summer School you may pay for your tickets with your final instalment on 1st June 2016. The deposit of £50 payable on your courses/
accommodation booking form will reserve your Gala Performance tickets and will be included on your confirmation of booking. Tickets will not be dispatched
before Summer School starts. Residential customers can collect their tickets from their House Manager in their accommodation. Non-residents should collect
their tickets on the door of the performance or from the Summer School office from Sunday 10th July 2016.
Marlborough College Enterprise Ltd. Company Registered Number: 2967713.
All prices are inclusive of VAT. VAT Registration No: 639537992.
Please return the completed form to: Marlborough College Summer School, Marlborough, Wiltshire, SN8 1PA
1
2
2
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3
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4
Tuesday 19th July
Friday 22nd July
Tuesday 26th July
Friday 29th July
Tuesday 2nd August
Friday 5th August
Forename
Lee Jackson as Elvis
Bella Hardy
Si Cranstoun
The Locrian Ensemble
Collabro
Illyria: A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Natalie Williams
An Evening with Michael Palin
Performance
E-Mail
Telephone
Address
Title
Contact Details
1
Friday 15th July
Week
Tuesday 12th July
Date
Gala Entertainment
Number of Full
Price Tickets
£20
£15
£20
£15
£20
£15
£20
£20
Ticket
Price
Payment £
Total Number of
Tickets required
Total
Costs
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Mobile
Postcode
Surname
Number of FREE
Tickets (Residents only)
Tickets can also be purchased at www.summerschool.co.uk, the Summer School office
and Sound Knowledge, 22 HughendenYard, Marlborough High Street.
ENTERTAINMENT BOOKING FORM
www.summerschool.co.uk
01672 892388 | [email protected]
Marlborough College Summer School
@MCol_Summer
Marlborough College Summer School, Marlborough, Wiltshire, SN8 1PA
Marlborough College is a registered charity (no. 309486) incorporated by Royal Charter to provide Education
All information provided within this brochure is, to the best of our knowledge, correct at the time of going to press (May 2016).
However, Marlborough College Enterprises Limited reserves the right to correct or amend any aspect of the Summer School in
the event of circumstances when such changes are deemed necessary.