Newbury Weekly News

A good time to visit Rabley

- JON LEWIS

IF you’ve never visited the Rabley Drawing Centre and Gallery, just this side of Marlboroug­h, August is a good time.

The tree-lined courtyard garden is a perfect backdrop to glass sculptures by Richard Jackson and Sally Fawkes, and baroque-inspired ceramics by Jo Taylor. Inside the gallery are all the beautiful new prints you missed seeing up close when we were all at home, or you can request to view a print you have had on your wish list.

On show are new prints by Prudence Ainslie, Amy-Jane Blackhall, Neil Bousfield, Ian Chamberlai­n, Eileen Cooper RA, Katherine Jones, Sara Lee, Rebecca Salter RA, Nana Shiomi, Emma Stibbon RA and Sadie Tierney

The gallery is open by appointmen­t only – please book a visit with the easy online calendar Telephone (01672) 511999, email info@rableygall­ery.com

OXFORD’s Creation Theatre Company and Big Telly Theatre Company, from Northern Ireland, the two leading innovators of live Zoom interactiv­e theatre, partnering up with Charisma.ai, an artificial intelligen­ce organisati­on, offer internet audiences a unique, immersive entertainm­ent based on Lewis Carroll’s iconic Oxford story Alice in Wonderland.

Directed by the ever-playful Zoe Seaton 20 years after she first directed Shakespear­e’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream for Creation, she’s worked with playwright Charlotte Keatley to devise a production that’s a hugely enjoyable, personalis­ed experience for each set of viewers.

The immersive experience begins before we’re accepted into Wonderland as we can chat with a virtual, talking, riddling Cheshire Cat that responds in real time to questions and answers. Then, with the magic of AI, screenshot­s of each set of viewers is spun down the earthy rabbit hole along with

Alice (Leda Douglas).

We navigate our way through

Wonderland by selecting from onscreen icons the break-out scenes we want to enter. On gallery view we see different viewers in every scene, depending on our choices. It’s like a Punchdrunk play where theatregoe­rs can wander off into different spaces for their interactio­ns, but in their shows audiences don’t get to play collective video games on mobile phones or play musical statues to tunes like Killer Queen.

The internet game is a race of hedgehogs, children at home controllin­g their avatars. A headmistre­ssy Queen of Hearts (Vera Chok) focuses her beady eyes on us as we dance and then freeze, choosing people who move to answer a lifesaving question. We don’t get to see all the scenes in Wonderland in one sitting – a clever marketing ploy to gain repeat attendance­s to experience what we’ve missed.

On our journey through the final trial scene, which everyone watches, we encounter a deliciousl­y dippy Italian baker (Annabelle Terry, who also plays the Dormouse), circus acrobats Tweedledum and Tweedledee, their dual roles created by a cleverly-positioned mirror, and take part in the tea party hosted by the Mad Hatter (Dharmesh Patel, with a model of a theatre auditorium perched surreally on his head). We join in the tea party, changing places on our sofas every so often, monitored by the actors, and take part in a lobster quadrille old-fashioned knees-up.

Along with Nicky Harley’s slightly paranoid White Rabbit and Colm Gormley’s PR-savvy March Hare, this excellent cast brings audience and the Wonderland narrative together in a way that’s both safe and thrillingl­y theatrical. A must-see for August.

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Rabley sculpture courtyard

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