Tag: Winterville

  • Puppet-powered Snow White panto comes to Winterville

    The cast of Snow White
    The cast of Snow White

    When it comes to pantomimes, Londoners are – let’s face it – spoilt for choice.

    But while in the past one might have to schlep into the West End to catch the best shows, there seem each year to be more Christmas productions opening on our doorstep in East London.

    One of the newest recruits to the East London panto circuit is at Winterville, the winter festival in Victoria Park, which this year is staging Snow White in its resplendently mirrored Spiegeltent.

    With the inclusion of ‘dwarfs’ being somewhat problematic in this day and age, the production uses puppets – or rather Jim Henson-style muppets – as Snow White’s seven forest-dwelling companions.

    “I think when the puppetry is good, the audience and the kids are going to believe them,” says director Peter Joucla, who has adapted the pantomime from a script he originally wrote more than 20 years ago.

    “All of our puppets have different names, there’s no Sleepy, Dopey and all that, and we’ve given them different personalities too. And as they all look different, we’re taking the liberty of making them all ethnically different.”

    “I don’t think anyone’s going to pick up on it, but I see the puppets as the outcasts, the economic refugees that have been thrown out of the city.”

    Joucla is the founder of Tour de Force, a theatre company that since 1996 has toured world-wide, staging theatrical classics and adaptations in English and French including The Sting at Wilton’s Music Hall this year, and one of the first adaptations of The Great Gatsby in 2011.

    Last year, at the first ever Winterville festival, Tour de Force staged a swash-buckling version of Robin Hood, complete with multiple-costume changes and choreographed fight scenes.

    “The Spiegeltent is an amazing space to perform,” says Joucla. “The atmosphere in there is lovely, it’s absolutely enchanting. I think this year at Winterville they’re going to do a lot more for young people than last year. I think the organisers really want it to be an alternative to the more commercial Winter Wonderland.”

    Alternative the production may well be, although Joucla promises that audience participation, hissing at the baddie and silly comic routines will still be part of the fun.

    Another crucial difference is the music. Fitting an orchestra in the Spiegeltent would mean no room for the audience, so Joucla, himself a musician and singer, co-wrote all the songs himself, creating “sophisticated and complicated” four-part vocal arrangements.

    Having the seven dwarfs belt out ‘Uptown Funk’ would be anathema to Joucla, who will not at any price sacrifice the story at the altar of “cheap contemporary references”.

    “I’ve got written on the side of my van disbelief suspension services, because all my life I’ve thought that telling stories is the most important thing,” Joucla says.

    “I think stories like Snow White have a lasting impact because there’s a kernel of truth in it. For this one the darker theme is about vanity, that Snow White may be beautiful but her message is about what’s lying underneath.”

    Snow White is at Victoria Park, East London until 23 December.
    winterville.co.uk

  • Winterville to make welcome return to Victoria Park

    Winterville
    Horse-drawn frolics at Winterville. Photograph: Winterville

    The seasonal town of Winterville is set to descend upon Victoria Park once more, with this year’s festival promising more attractions and good times than you can shake a multi-coloured candy stick at.

    Winterville takes place from 26 November to 23 December, and will see ten acres of Victoria Park transformed into a winter town, centred around a clock tower festooned with festive lights.

    Combining Christmas classics with a contemporary twist is a big part of Winterville’s appeal. Amongst a snowstorm of activities and events, pleasure seekers can parade their skating skills on a 600-square-metre ice rink, or enjoy Winterville’s own circus featuring dare devil feats from the world famous Moscow State Circus.

    Proving the entertainment isn’t just for grown ups, there’s a chance to experience a reimagined Santa’s Grotto designed by interactive events specialists Bearded Kitten, as well as a Snow White pantomime within the dedicated Kids’ Quarter.

    Perhaps the only known Dutch Spiegeltent in East London makes a welcome return, housing comedy, cabaret, theatre, DJ sets, live music and more, and for those in need of liquid refreshment after almost certain stimulatory overload, there’s Winterville’s very own local ‘Bar Humbug’ pub, and (naturally, given this is East London) street food galore in the artisan festive markets.

    Organisations and acts from all over East London are included in the programme, such as Backyard Cinema, who will be curating a five-week season of films inside an enchanted forest called ‘The Winter Night Garden’, only accessible via a secret tunnel of trees.

    Winterville takes place in Victoria Park from 26 November to 23 December and is free to enter. Ticketed events available include the Ice Rink, Circus, Backyard Cinema and Spiegeltent. To buy tickets and for more information see www.winterville.co.uk.

  • Fake Bush to perform at Winterville

    Faking it to make it: Lucy Bundy is Fake Bush. Photograph courtesy of Lucy Bundy
    Faking it to make it: Lucy Bundy is Fake Bush. Photograph courtesy of Lucy Bundy

    It was the cultural event of the year; sold out in no time, zealously anticipated and, in the end, almost unanimously praised.

    But for Lucy Bundy, seeing Kate Bush in concert must have been a strange experience, irrespective of the dancers in lifejackets wielding axes, or giant paper aeroplanes.

    For as tribute act Fake Bush, Bundy is more used to being on the receiving end of fans’ adulation.

    Bundy has been performing as Fake Bush for the past 15 years, and will this month be bringing her act to the Winterville festival in Victoria Park.

    How does one choose such a career? “It had very undignified beginnings,” Bundy explains. “It was just a drunken accident with a karaoke machine. I discovered I sounded just like her and from there it grew organically, doing small community festivals and private party bookings.”

    While they can funny, tribute acts are no longer a joke. It takes more than a white jump suit and stick on sideburns to be Elvis. The Oasis tribute band No Way Sis scored a top 20 hit, and Australian ABBA tribute act Bjorn Again has spawned multiple groups touring under the same name.

    “There’s an act I really like called Princeless, who are of course a Prince tribute band. They are incredibly skilled, the guy who plays Prince is incredibly witty, and his take is that basically if you can really do it, if you can hit the notes like Prince can or Kate Bush can, then it’s hard for people to criticise.”

    Bundy calls Fake Bush “an affectionate comic salute” rather than tribute act, choosing to go down the route of improvised banter in between songs and tongue-in-cheek humour rather than being overly serious.

    As a case in point, the Winterville gig will be her last one for the immediate future as she’s about to go on maternity leave. The pregnancy has made her rue the decision she made to give up wearing catsuits and leotards.

    “I thought ‘ok, now Kate’s getting older and so am I, I’m not going to wear any more cat suits and I gave them all away’. But now I’ve got a huge pregnancy bump I’m wishing I’d kept one because it would have been hilarious to have a huge brilliant bump poking out of this fitted leotard.”

    Bundy has never met Kate Bush, the closest she has come being a message on Facebook. “She wrote: ‘Great page Fake Bush, I love it.’ It was like a blessing from the Pope.”

    As well as being Fake Bush, Bundy sings in a trio and is an actor and visual artist. Even so, I half hoped her Kate Bush act might spill into our conversation. As it happens, Bundy knows where to draw the line between work and reality.

    “I don’t think there are many actors who are method actors these days,” she says, swatting aside my suggestion. “And besides, Kate’s a real down-to-earth star. If I were trying to replicate a Kate-like existence for the method tribute artist it would be just cups of tea and chocolate biscuits.”

    Fake Bush is performing at Winterville, Victoria Park on 13 December
    www.winterville.co.uk

  • Winterville gets underway in Victoria Park

    Sink the Pink at Winterville. Credit: Sink the Pink
    Performance party: Sink the Pink are coming to Winterville. Photograph: Sink the Pink

    Victoria Park has been transformed into an East London Christmas kingdom this December, guaranteed to get East Londoners in the festive swing.

    Taking place throughout the month until 1 January, the festive event has something for everyone, even the grinches among us. Covering most of the park, Winterville transports Londoners to a frozen wonderland. Set out like a mini town, it features a classic fairground, market place and town square, brimming with festive treats.

    Crash about in a dodgem cart, shriek your way through the hotel of terror or try your luck at winning a plush soft toy. If that’s enough to make your stomach turn, sup a craft beer at Brewdog or warm your cockles on hot buttered rum cider in the Hot Cider Bar.

    What’s more, feast on a scrumptious array of the best street food East London has to offer, including jian bing pancakes at Mei Mei’s Street Cart, burgers at Butchies fried buttermilk chicken and soft shell crab at the Crabbie Shack. For those with a sweet tooth, Bad Brownie delivers with decadent flavours like peanut butter and bacon and maple syrup.

    For Christmas shopping, peruse The Bizarre Bazaar Victorian Market run by Marbles and Ware Collective for an incredible selection of handmade gifts including puppets, paintings and kaleidoscopes.

    Skating lovers can slip and slide over to the outdoor ice rink, or hit Bump Roller Disco with special guests like Optimo and Will Viper to provide the soundtrack. The little ones will love The House of Fairy Tales for the ‘Make it Market ‘with live shows and artists to entertain.

    One of the highlights is the Dutch wooden Spiegeltent with a huge variety of cabaret, club nights and the Robin Hood pantomime.

    Whether you’re a kid or just a big kid at heart, wrap up in your warmest woollies, grab your spare change and head to Winterville for top quality food and entertainment this Christmas.

    Winterville is running throughout the month until 1 January in Victoria Park. See website.

     

  • Winterville festival reveals more programme details

    Lucy Benson-Brown in Cutting Off Kate Bush
    Lucy Benson-Brown in Cutting Off Kate Bush

    Those who missed out on seeing Kate Bush live can take solace in the line-up for Winterville, the winter festival set to take over part of Victoria Park this December.

    Cult tribute act Fake Bush will perform a comic tribute to the singer, and the programme also includes the one-woman show and Edinburgh Fringe sell-out play Cutting Off Kate Bush, which charts the plight of a woman’s personal crisis through the medium of Kate Bush.

    The Festival organisers are aiming to provide something for everyone at the month-long event. The town itself is free to enter with a selection of ticketed attractions available to buy from the Winterville website.

    Scottish songwriter James Yorkston will be taking to the stage for his annual Christmas performance, while the Winterville bespoke spiegeltent is set to host two shows by one of London’s finest burlesque cabaret companies, Cirque du Cabaret.

    With club nights, street food markets, an ice rink and fairground rides, Winterville is covering all the bases when it comes to winter-themed entertainment.

    Grown ups and children should be equally at home. The Winterville’s Kids’ Quarter will be graced by artists Gavin Turk and Deborah Curtis and their travelling arts circus House of Fairy Tales, while Big Fish Little Fish will be hosting family-friendly dance parties complete with pro DJs, glowsticks, bubble machines and glitter.

    There’s even going to be a pantomime of Robin Hood, produced by Hackney-based theatre company Tour de Force. The daily hour-long show will feature pupils from schools across East London and will be packed with traditional slapstick humour and live music.

    Winterville will be running throughout December with an extended day of celebrations on New Year’s Day. The launch on 2 December will take the form of a ‘Winterville Revue’ featuring highlights from the programme – a good way for the uninitiated to learn more about what’s in store.

    Winterville is at Victoria Park, E3 5TB from 2 December – 1 January
    www.winterville.co.uk

  • Winterville festival is coming to Victoria Park this Christmas

    Christmas jumpers at the ready for Winterville
    Christmas jumpers at the ready for Winterville

    Part of Victoria Park will this Christmas be transformed into a mini-town with its own ice rink, club nights and enough festive entertainment to make Scrooge himself feel merry.

    Winterville takes place from 2–31 December and aims to provide an array of traditional and alternative Christmas fare.

    An outdoor ice rink will be joined by a Ferris wheel, horse-drawn carriages, an indoor pub and street food vendors galore including pizzas from Voodoo Ray’s and Dorshi dumplings.

    There will also be an hour-long Christmas panto, club nights, comedy, cabaret and live gigs in a wood and mirror panelled Spiegeltent, as well as performances of Magnificent Bastard Productions’ Shit-Faced Shakespeare.

    Sundays will be an LGBT takeover day, and a crop of London’s best alternative nightlife and cabaret artists are on the bill, including Jonny Woo, John Sizzle, Ma Butcher’s cult bingo series and a Christmas Extravaganza by the legendary Sink The Pink.

    Food and drink are very much on Winterville’s agenda, with a world food street market planned and bespoke bars to serve warming hot cocktails. Meanwhile Winterville’s Produce market offers a chance to buy artisan produce directly from local farmers.

    Entry is free to the Winterville ‘town’ with tickets for a select number of attractions going on sale from 30 September (see the Winterville website to purchase tickets).