Featuring Gig Guide and Out & About – full local listings Dorchester Voice Also serving local villages Issue No. 15 MAY-JUNE 2015 Far From the Madding Crowd – special feature A glimpse inside Dorchester Prison Charles Street: Multi-level car park on Wollaston Field now under discussion 80 years on – the mysterious death of Lawrence of Arabia Experts in Wills, Probate & Estate Management At Nantes, we have a dedicated team of professionals offering a range of legal services to help you get your family affairs in order and prepare for the future. • Drawing up Wills • Inheritance Tax and Estate Planning Hilary Neill Adam Hillier • Administering Probate • Putting in place Lasting Powers of Attorney Our team have extensive knowledge and experience, and an excellent local reputation. Kathryn Day We provide honest, clear advice to suit your individual circumstances; we are always sympathetic to your needs and aim to make every step as straightforward as possible. For legal advice that gives you peace of mind Call: 01305 250100 or Email: [email protected] Michelle O’Leary Cheryl Ford 48 High West Street, Dorchester DT1 1UT | 69 The Esplanade, Weymouth DT4 7AA www.nantes.co.uk Community News Multi-level parking for Wollaston Field? By Richard Reed A new lightweight multi-level car park could be built on the Wollaston Field car park site as an alternative to the controversial underground car park planned for the town centre redevelopment. The move follows savage criticism from English Heritage of the basement parking proposals due to the archaeological damage that would occur. Now top-level discussions have taken place with developers Simons and West Dorset District Council to look at Wollaston Field as an alternative. The news comes as the council confirmed its environment director, David Evans – the officer in charge of the development – is to retire. The car park proposal is revealed in a 10-page English Heritage report to the council on the Charles Street scheme – and it pulls no punches in condemning the impact on the site’s archaeology. The report states, “The proposed Charles Street development as presently configured will totally destroy a significant part of the surviving area within the walled Roman town, and represents one of the single most significant and harmful impacts on a Roman regional capital in England for many years.” However, it continues, “If the lower basement were omitted from the proposals, the archaeological impact would be much reduced. In discussions with yourselves and the developer, it appears that it might be possible to do this through providing the necessary car parking opposite the site by constructing a lightweight decked car park above the existing Wollaston Fields parking area.” The proposal to create decked parking on the An artist’s impression of the proposed development Wollaston Field site as an alternative to the Charles Street basement car park has been mooted in the Voice by the likes of former County Archaeologist Laurence Keen – who suggests some of the Roman baths beneath the site could also be put on display as a tourist attraction (see p12). Matt Prosser, chief executive of West Dorset District Council, said: “English Heritage set out in their planning response to the current application the suggestion that a lightweight decked car park on Wollaston Fields could be explored. This is the responsibility of the developer, Simons, to pursue at this stage as a concept and not the district council. “The district council has not taken a position on this as it is the responsibility of the developer. “Should they resolve these issues and think that it is a route to proceed down, then the district council would have to consider the planning implications of such an application and the impact that this might have on the existing development agreement.” Men’s Shed for Dorchester A new opportunity for men to meet socially and share their skills is set to come to Dorchester. The Men’s Sheds movement started in Australia and now has more than 150 sheds in the UK where members can come together to work on personal or group projects. Co-ordinator Graeme Tinder said, “When I broached the subject I was surprised at the enormously positive response I got. We are currently in the process of making an offer on a site.” You can contact Graeme on 01305 267722. www.dorchestervoice.co.uk 3 Dorchester Voice Crowds flock to explore Dorchester prison By Jerry Bird Hundreds of people flocked to see the Dorchester prison at a recent open day – the first time for most to take a peek at the grand architecture behind the forbidding walls. The prison closed in December 2013, and has been bought by the Essex-based company City & Country, for a mixed residential and commercial development. The company is keen to involve the local community in discussions about its future, and the open day also gave people a chance to discover its history. The Dorchester ‘Model’ Prison was completed in 1795 and cost £18,000 to build. It was built on the site of the old medieval castle built in 1154, but disused from about 1290. It replaced the previous jail in High East Street. Prisoners were segregated by their sex and the different grades of felony. The prison buildings are of a typical design for the period with wings radiating from a central hub with galleried landings. There were originally 88 cells, each 8’6” x 6’6” x 9’. In the early 19th century prisoners were employed in four trades – timber, hatting, netting and mop-making, though for some reason hatting was discontinued in 1808. For many years public hangings took place outside the prison gates, though they were quite rare. One of the first was John Higham, executed for highway robbery in 1801. Elizabeth Martha Brown, a mother of two, was the last woman to be hanged in public in Dorset and was executed in North Square for murdering her husband in 1856. Thomas Hardy, aged just 16, was among the crowd of 3,000 who witnessed the hanging. The hanging in Tess of the d’Urbervilles was, no doubt, inspired by this experience. Dorchester Voice 4 May-June 2015 Clockwise from left – the cavernous main hall, visitors quiz staff from City & Country at the open day, the little seen grandeur of the architecture, the tiny cells, and the prison clock. Photos: Jerry Bird www.dorchestervoice.co.uk 5 Dorchester Voice Historic village bridge rebuilt to halt flooding Minette Walters helps out Home-Start barn dance This summer will see a new bridge replace the existing listed bridge in Charminster. The current bridge has small arches and restricts the flow of the River Cerne through the village. At times this has caused flooding and damage to homes and the listed parish church. English Heritage have now agreed that the existing listed bridge can be dismantled and rebuilt with much bigger arches to allow a better flow of water through the bridge. Work on the new bridge is planned to start in May and is expected to last several months, with the road closed to both vehicles and pedestrians. The scheme design has been developed in discussion with the church, the local community and key organisations such as English Heritage. The replacement bridge is intended to reflect the character of the existing bridge, using as many of the original bricks as possible. The existing historic parapets will be carefully stored and re-used on the new bridge. When novelist Minette Walters offered her lovely thatched barn as a venue for a fundraising barn dance, staff and volunteers at local children’s charity Home-Start West Dorset were thrilled. Senior Organiser at Home-Start, Helen Horsley said: “When Minette kindly offered us the use of her barn in Whitcombe we were really delighted – it’s the picture perfect setting for a summer barn dance.” Helen added: “I’m sure very many people like me have often driven past the barn and admired it, so it’s a great opportunity to actually go inside it and have a proper look, and to have a fun evening as well!” Helen continued: “Home-Start West Dorset’s barn dance is on Saturday 6 June, we are having a hog roast and there will be a licensed bar. We are also proud to have Dorset’s premier ceilidh band Up & Running playing at the event.” Tickets are £15 per person and are available from the Home-Start office on 01305 265072. Dorchester Voice 6 May-June 2015 Far From the Madding Crowd hits town The new film version of Thomas Hardy’s Far From the Madding Crowd is taking the town’s cinemas by storm. Filmed largely in Dorset – unlike Polanski’s Tess – the Thomas Vinterberg film has attracted rave reviews. A lot of work went into finding a site for Bathsheba’s farm at ‘Weatherbury’ – Hardy’s name for Puddletown. Ultimately, production designer Kave Quinn decided on Mapperton House, a Jacobean manor near Beaminster. The film also includes scenes shot in Sherborne, including the abbey. “The people of Dorset were extremely welcoming,” says co-producer Allon Reich. “We recruited a lot of locals – farmers, thatchers and various skilled people – who were happy to grow their beards, put on their period clothes and really get into the Hardy spirit.” Three of the costumes worn by Carey Mulligan are on display at the Dorset County Museum until 8 June, and two more can be seen at Hardy’s Cottage until 5 July. www.dorchestervoice.co.uk Carey Mulligan as Bathsheba Everdene, Matthias Schoenaerts as Gabriel Oak and Michael Sheen as Boldwood 7 Dorchester Voice Lord Fellowes opens new Hardy centre A new visitor centre celebrating Thomas Hardy and bringing together his cottage and the landscape that inspired his writing,has been opened by Downton Abbey creator Lord Julian Fellowes. The timber-built visitor centre – a joint project between Dorset County Council and the National Trust – is in Thorncombe woods, at Higher Bockhampton, near Dorchester, a short walk from Hardy’s Cottage through the historic broadleaved woodland. The Hardy Birthplace Visitor Centre is designed to help visitors find out more about Hardy and the surrounding woodland and landscapes that influenced his work. At the ceremony, Lord Fellowes was joined by the New Dorchester Voice Lord Fellowes with the New Hardy Players at the opening of the visitor centre Hardy Players who performed songs and readings from Thomas Hardy. Hardy wrote several of his early short stories, poetry and novels including Under the Greenwood Tree and Far from the Madding Crowd in the cot- 8 tage, and a number of interactive activities and events are planned to help visitors learn about his life and work, as well as ongoing conservation work. The Hardy Players are due to return to the cottage for some performances later in the year. May-June 2015 Who will make sure Mum is OK? We know the most important things in life are our loved ones but it is not always possible to be near them. This obviously causes anxiety as you are not always sure that they are safe, secure, warm and managing their daily lives. We can provide daily or weekly support that will help alleviate your concerns. After each visit we will email an update to you. For more information phone Carers Required – We are looking for people to provide care to the elderly in their homes. www.dorchestervoice.co.uk 0845 603 4743 or visit www.apexcare.org 9 Dorchester Voice check she is safe and warm | change the light bulb | deal with the post | make time for tea and a chat ‘Why we need to support wind turbines plan’ There are lots of people who support the planning proposal for six wind turbines at Slyers Lane as a real opportunity for our community to support and benefit from a local renewable source of clean, safe and secure energy. It is interesting that the Nos’ article doesn’t raise any concerns about cost or noise; their concerns seem related to the potential visual impact – “the damage to our landscape and heritage” and “the visual impact on the town’s historic centre” which, of course, is a subjective viewpoint. There are residents of Charminster, Charlton Down and Stinsford who would be happy to see these turbines as part of the wider landscape north of Dorchester as a tangible commitment to the provision of renewal energy because: �We all need to take responsibility now for action to reduce carbon emissions. Every week there is evidence of the impact of global warming, most recently the reduction of Arctic ice. � The UK is the windiest country in Europe. With modern turbines able to generate power 70-85% of the time, six turbines have the capacity to provide the energy needs of 5,000 local homes. �Wind power technology is available now at an economic cost. In Denmark, wind power is the cheapest source of energy, providing a third of the county’s total energy needs. �This size of wind farm is on an appropriate scale in the context of the continuing development of Dorchester, including Poundbury, and visually will be absorbed into the wider landscape. The countryside is always changing, and has shown itself resilient. Dorchester Voice Members of the Slyers Lane Clean Energy Group Plans for a wind farm at Slyers Lane, Charminster have aroused fierce controversy. This is a summary of the views of those who support the project. �In the event of new and better future technologies, the wind farm site can be returned to its natural state after 25 years. Those of us who support the planning proposals refute the unfounded ‘doom and gloom’ arguments of the Nos’ article as to the impact of six turbines – “wilfully ignore the impact… on the number of tourists …and loss of income and employment”, and “how can our representatives be so blinded by ideology contrary to the interests of the town”. Where is the evidence for these assertions? Is it being seriously suggested that foreign and UK visitors are going to be prevented from enjoying the various Hardy reference points across Dorset? They do not seem to have been deterred from visiting Hardy’s Cottage by the concrete and constant background noise of the Puddletown bypass. Are the Nos also seriously suggesting that, say, people from 10 Bournemouth, Poole and Weymouth are going to stop visiting, shopping and doing business in Dorchester due to six wind turbines outside the town? Finally – and rather ironically – the Nos assert that “Dorchester Town Council were swayed by emotional arguments about green energy” when they seem to be influenced by their own emotive ‘Nimby’ assertions that are not backed by evidence. They would be much more honest if they just said they don’t like the look of wind turbines rather than use specious reasons to justify their perspective. Some of us have tried to engage in the process, look at the information, ask questions, and have reached an objective conclusion that the proposed wind turbines are an appropriate development for our community. Hopefully the planning committee will look at all the facts and the evidence and make an objective decision on planning grounds, aware of our need for renewable energy not just now but for the next generation. Slyers Lane Clean Energy Group, Charminster May-June 2015 Fond farewell for the vicar of St Peter’s Nearly 200 people packed into St Peter’s Church, Dorchester for the final service by the popular vicar, Rev Vicky Thurtell, who is leaving to take up a post as a canon at Exeter Cathedral. Clergy and congregation from the town’s other churches joined the service, presided over by the vicar of St Mary’s, and team rector, Rev Canon Thomas Woodhouse. Rev Thurtell was presented with a boxed set of tuning forks and a cheque as a leaving present. The Rev Thurtell, 55, will join Exeter Cathedral shortly as canon precentor, looking after the cathedral’s liturgy and music, and its choristers. All 36 boy and Rev Vicky Thurtell at St Peter’s girl choristers attend the cathedral school next door, and Vicky will also be priest to the school. Canon Anna Norman Walker was appointed as the first fulltime women canon to the cathedral in 900 years before Christmas. Vicky’s appointment means the cathedral now has two female full-time canons for the first time in its history. “I’m delighted to have been asked to join the cathedral and bring the experience I’ve gained in music and leading services in Dorchester with me,” said Rev Thurtell. “I believe very passionately that music plays an important part in children’s learning and I’m looking forward to building links with schools.” The Dean of Exeter Cathedral, the Very Rev Jonathan Draper, said: ““We look forward to Vicky and her husband Clive joining us shortly.” Green School ‘a sort of civilised St Trinian’s’ “A sort of civilised St Trinian’s,” was how guest speaker Rev Vicky Thurtell described the Dorchester Grammar School for Girls – widely known as the Green School from the colour of their uniforms – including their underclothing! The outgoing vicar of St Peter’s, Dorchester made history as the Old Hardyeans’ first female guest speaker in their 110-year history at the annual reunion dinner. Rev Thurtell said although Hardye’s [boys] school was not far away across Dorchester, there was a concerted effort to keep girls and boys apart. “The boys travelled by train from Weymouth, but we Weymouth girls caught a special Bere Regis bus for the trip across the Ridgeway to Dorchester,” she said. “Teachers repeatedly warned us about not catching the train, being much concerned the lights may go out in Bincombe tunnel! I don’t know what they thought we might be up to!” Rev Thurtell became head girl at the Green School. “Both of my children received a very good education at Thomas Hardye School and I welcome the warm links that exist between the parish church and the school,” she said. “I do hope the links will continue and I am going to miss you all in Dorchester.” www.dorchestervoice.co.uk 11 Dorchester Voice Baths: ‘Learn from Exeter’ Dorchester can learn lessons from how Exeter is planning to re-excavate its Roman legionary baths and put them on display. That is the message from former County Archaeologist Laurence Keen, who says at least part of Dorchester’s Roman baths could be put on show. “With the depth of the Wollaston House remains, the potential for display below a decked car park might merit investigation to obviate the massive archaeological interventions on the Charles Street site,” he said in a letter to the Voice. Mr Keen says he “greatly enjoyed” Suzanne Armstrong’s article in the last issue reminiscing on the excavation work on the baths in 1977-78. For the record, he says the excavations were not carried out because the site was to become a car park. Dorset County Council had selected the site for a new school, and the excavations were within the footprint of the school – eventually built elsewhere. It has always been his ambition that any important remains would be conserved and displayed as an educational resource, and believes this would be the ideal opportunity to do so. Dorchester Voice 12 May-June 2015 Town residents fuming over dog poop By Richard Reed Dorchester residents are fuming over dog owners who refuse to clean up after their pooch, leaving poop littering the town’s streets and parks. One responsible local dog owner told the Voice how her spaniel became covered in dog excrement while chasing a ball on Salisbury Field. “It’s absolutely disgusting the way irresponsible dog owners just leave dog poop everywhere without making any attempt to pick it up,” said the woman, who asked not to be named. “My dog was covered in it, and I had to take him home and bath him. Next time it could be a child playing football. “The town council now not only provides poop bins, but also poop bags in case people forget to bring their own, so there’s no excuse. It’s just sheer laziness. I always scoop the poop. “And it’s not just Salisbury Field – the path along the River Frome regularly has mess that hasn’t been cleaned up, despite notices everywhere, and often the pavements along Icen Way and Durngate Street are affected, too. www.dorchestervoice.co.uk “It’s simply not acceptable, and it gives all dog owners a bad name.” Barking and Dagenham Council recently became the first local authority in the UK to introduce DNA testing for dog poop. All dogs using their parks will be required to have their dogs’ DNA registered on a database, and will be fined £80 if testing on poop proves their dog to be responsible. Dog faeces can carry a number of dangerous bacteria and parasites that can infect humans, and children are particularly vulnerable. Town councillor Alistair Chisholm backed the idea of a Barking-style scheme. “I think that would be an excellent idea and I would certainly encourage the council to look at it,” he said. “If it works in Barking I see no reason why it can’t work in Dorchester. “If one or two people get hammered then the word will go out and more people will behave responsibly. “I just think it needs to happen and for people to know there is a real risk of the owner being identified. It’s a thoroughly unpleasant business.” 13 Dorchester Voice Folklore & Heritage Village bobby nearly ended Garland Day I By Jerry Bird n the 19th century, the fishermen of Abbotsbury appear to have been a pious and superstitious lot. In 1863 the Rev William Jenkins noted that the fishermen “have some old and very peculiar customs, which are strictly adhered to”. “Before the first launching of the boat in every week, when the net and all are ready, the captain says ‘Let us pray!’ when the whole crew, bareheaded, fall on their knees around the boat and join in silent address to the Almighty, recommending themselves and their undertaking to his protection and favour. Having gone through this ceremony, they rise, all saying, ‘In the name of God’, their united efforts thrust the boat from the shore.” In 1900, Wilkinson Sherren wrote in his guidebook The Wessex of Romance about a custom which seemed “to be a survival of votive offerings to Neptune, which still lingers in the fishing village of Langton Herring. Before the nets are taken to the beach the contents of a 7lb tin of biscuits are scattered on the adjacent field by the fishermen, in the hope that it will ensure a good season”. This peculiar, and rather pagan-sounding practice, was no doubt appreciated both by the local children and the resident seagulls of Chesil Beach. The garland ceremony at Abbotsbury was first recorded in 1867 in Hutchins’ History of Dorsetshire: A pleasing custom still obtains on Old May Day. The children belonging to the crew of each boat build up a large garland of handsome flowers upon a frame, and carry it from house to house, usually getting a few pence a-piece from those who can afford it. The people throng the beach, weather permitting, in the afternoon, when the garlands are taken out in boats and thrown into the sea. The late Lord Ilchester […] had of late years provided an entertainment for the children, often close upon 200 in number, and was accustomed to attend them to the beach, where the vicar read a suitable portion of scripture, a psalm was sung, and prayer offered for the general welfare. In 1893, Canon Charles Herbert Mayo, the vicar of Long Burton, wrote about the changing nature of this old tradition: The Abbotsbury children, having prepared their Dorchester Voice A painting of Garland Day by PR Morris from 1893 (since lost) shows the offering to Neptune garlands of flowers, which are as wide as a child’s hoop, and surmounted by two intersecting semi circular arches, so as to resemble a crown, proceed with them round the village from house to house, soliciting gifts of money from the inhabitants. There are separate garlands for each boat’s crew, this year 11 in number. After the perambulation of the village is concluded, the garlands are taken to the boats, which are rowed out from the shore, and their floral tributes deposited on the waves. Mayo also wrote that other garland ceremonies besides that at Abbotsbury survived at Swyre and Puncknowle, though in each case only a single garland was paraded. He missed out Burton Bradstock, where the children paraded single-handled garlands, smaller than Abbotsbury’s. Here the ceremony continued up to 1914, by which time the garlands were no longer deposited in the sea, but taken instead to the church. The garland ceremonies were gradually reduced in stature as the fishing fleets declined, until by 1906 only two or three garlands were made in Abbotsbury each May, though they were accompanied by those from Swyre and Puncknowle. After the First World War, one was sacrificed to the sea, and another was placed on the war memorial. Although it declined in the late 19th century, the ancient custom survived, with the schoolchildren being given an annual holiday. In 1954 the ceremony made national news. The Daily Express reported that the village constable 0 14 May-June 2015 Green living St Osmund’s gets a new bike shelter P upils at St Osmund’s School in Dorchester have unveiled new, secure cycle storage facilities. The new bike shelters will encourage more students and staff to cycle to school and is part of a project by charity Sustrans. Sustrans is working with schools, students and parents to persuade them to choose two wheels for the school run. The project is funded by Dorset County Council who provided the £55,000 funding for the shelters. Sustrans is also providing bike pump facilities at the schools. Jonathan Dixon from Sustrans, said: “Walking and cycling to work or school is a great way for people to get the exercise they need every day to keep healthy, and research shows it helps people to work more effectively whether they are working or studying. “Sustrans, the county council Pupils and staff at St Osmund’s School officially open their new bike shelter, provided by Sustans and Dorset County Council and schools are working together to encourage students and staff to cycle to school more often. These new cycle shelters mean that everyone has somewhere secure to leave their bikes.” Jim Williams, head teacher of St Osmund’s School, said: “Our ultimate aim is to have more children and staff cycling or scooting to school. The shelters of Abbotsbury had stopped the children’s Garland Day Procession as it danced its way to the sea, on the grounds that it constituted ‘begging’ and was therefore against the law. He also confiscated the collection, which amounted to £1.1s.71/2d. The resultant uproar reached John Fox-Strangways, chairman of the parish council and son of the Earl of Ilchester, who contacted a solicitor and said the village would take steps to preserve its ancient custom. In the evening the children put the Garland on its pole and again danced down to the sea. On 20 May, The Times announced that the Chief Constable of Dorset had expressed his sincere apologies for the “unfortunate occurrence” to Abbotsbury parish council and said the constable had acted without the knowledge of the divisional superintenwww.dorchestervoice.co.uk keep the bikes safe and dry, encouraging others to try travelling this way.” Matthew Piles, the county council’s head of economy, said: “By providing the infrastructure the county council is helping local residents find healthy transport alternatives that will help reduce congestion on the school run.” dent. “It is no part of my policy to interfere with old village customs”, he stated. Afterwards, in a letter to the Dorset County Chronicle John Fox-Strangways claimed that on the evening of that fateful Garland Day one of the best shoals of mackerel of the year came in, so clearly the sacrifice had worked. He also claimed that the garland ceremony might have originated in the fifth century AD and was certainly 1,000 years old. The school holiday continued until 1981 when Abbotsbury School closed, since when the ceremony has been held on the nearest Saturday to 13 May each year. Nowadays the ceremony is used to raise money for local charities, and, there being no fishing boats left on this stretch of coastline, the garlands are taken to the war memorial, instead. 15 Dorchester Voice Health & Wellbeing New home for town’s oldest gym By Laura Gardner D orchester’s longest-running gym has moved to a new home in the old Salvation Army hall in Durngate Street. Dorchester Health and Fitness club left its former home in Somerleigh Road and its 400 members are settling into the tastefully restored hall. Debbie Easter and daughter Rachel work together in running the gym. Debbie says people don’t come here just for a physical change but for a lifestyle makeover, to change both their bodies and mind. They work with clients to develop individually tailored programmes that help them develop into the person they want to be. It may sound like a cliché, but even as a visitor I was welcomed into the family. The gym is full of the latest equipment, catering for everyone’s needs – from free weights to machines that develop and tone specific muscle groups, from cross-trainers to stepping and running machines and bikes; it’s all there. There is also a range of classes such as spinning and body pumping, and hydraulics machines specifically designed to help slowly work out the body, for people who have had strokes or ME. The club’s oldest member is 80, showing that the gym appeals and caters to all age groups. It’s open seven days a week, and they are ready to motivate you in any shape or form. Walking into the thriving gym, I was greeted by owners and members alike. It was my first visit to the building since I was in the kids club way back when, and I still remember the beautiful architecture – to me it feels more homely than an ordinary ‘chain’ gym, perhaps a reflection of Debbie’s and Rachel’s caring influence. When speaking both to members who have been going for 20 years and new members alike, all agree that while going to a gym is normally a chore, they actually enjoy coming here. Debbie and Rachel have worked hard to make the new gym ‘happen’ – at one stage it looked as if they might have to close completely when a previous new venue fell through. But thanks to their hard work and dedication, Dorchester Health and Fitness is good for the next 20 years. Dorchester Voice Debbie (right) and daughter Rachel in their stylish new Durngate Street gym Photos: Laura Gardner 16 May-June 2015 Alexander Technique The Alexander Technique helps millions of people across the world to naturally overcome: o Back, neck and joint pain o Muscle tension and stiffness o Poor posture With gentle hands-on guidance and verbal instruction you can learn to use your body more efficiently, with greater poise and balance.. Rebecca Howard MSTAT 07769617739 www.AlexanderTechniqueDorchester.co.uk New Horizons Therapy STOP SMOKING – FAST! Want to stop smoking, but can’t kick the habit? Get help with NLP-based hypnotherapy – just £100 for 2 sessions, plus up to 2 more free if necessary. FIX THOSE PHOBIAS – FAST! Whether it be a fear of flying, vertigo or crowded spaces, NLP-based hypnotherapy can help you leave those fears behind. DISCOVER PAST LIVES Take a fascinating journey into your past through hypnotic regression. Using NLP, I can ‘reprogram’ your brain by ‘fuzzing out’ memories of the incident that triggered your phobia or traumatic life event, allowing you to move on with your life. For more details call Richard on 01305 267595 or visit our website www.newhorizonstherapy.biz www.dorchestervoice.co.uk 17 Dorchester Voice The mysterious Dorset deat By Jerry Bird T here can be few more evocative sounds than that of a powerful motorcycle speeding along a lonely country road. For those who live within earshot of a certain stretch of road between Bovington and Wareham it may send a shiver down the spine, for the ghost of a motorcyclist, who died after an accident here on 13 May exactly 80 years ago is said to haunt that stretch of road. The motorcyclist in question was the archaeologist, scholar, adventurer, army officer and political campaigner for Arab independence, T.E. Lawrence, the ‘Indiana Jones’ of his day – also known as ‘Lawrence of Arabia’. Thomas Edward Lawrence was born on 16 August 1888 in north Wales. His father, the aristocratic Thomas Chapman, had left his wife to live with Lawrence’s mother, a governess; and changed his surname. In 1896 they moved to Oxford, where Lawrence gained a first class honours degree in modern history at Oxford University in 1910. After graduating he joined a British Museum archaeological dig at the Hittite city of Carchemish in Syria, where he stayed from 1911 to 1914, and learned Arabic. He developed a deep sympathy for the Arab people who had lived under Turkish rule for centuries. The month the First World War began, Lawrence joined the map department of the War Office in London, charged with preparing a map of Sinai. By December 1914 he was a lieutenant in Cairo. By now regarded as an expert in Arab Dorchester Voice T.E. Lawrence affairs, he was posted to British Military Intelligence and joined an archaeological expedition exploring northern Sinai – useful cover for intelligence gathering behind enemy lines. In June 1916, the Emir of Mecca, Sherif Hussein, took up arms against the Turks – the Arab Revolt had begun. As Turkey was an ally of Germany, the British were keen to encourage the rebellion. Lawrence was sent to the Hedjaz to act as liaison officer and adviser to Feisal (or Faisal), the Emir’s son. Lawrence proved a superb tactician and of guerrilla warfare. His small but effective irregular forces attacked Turkish supply routes and communications, keeping the Hedjaz Railway from Damascus to Medina inoperable, and tying down thousands of Turkish troops who would otherwise have been fighting against the allied forces. Lawrence’s overriding aim, however, was to help the Arabs achieve a victory that would lead to self-government after the war. The Arab forces won their first major victory in 1917, seizing Aqaba, a strategically important Red 18 Sea port. The campaign continued, leading to the capture of Damascus in October 1918. Lawrence then left for London to continue the political campaign for Arab independence and attended the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, famously wearing Arab dress. Before the conference had even begun, however, the British and French had agreed on the future of Turkey’s Arab territories. Lawrence was disillusioned by his failure to bring the Arabs self-rule, but was by now a celebrity, largely due to the efforts of American journalist Lowell Thomas, who had shot dramatic film footage of him in Arabia, and brought his slide and lantern show to London. In 1921, Colonial Secretary Winston Churchill appointed Lawrence as an adviser, during which time he successfully lobbied for self-government for Iraq and Jordan, which at least fulfilled some of the promises he had made to his Arab friends and allies. In the summer of 1922 he completed his novel, the Seven Pillars of Wisdom, an account of his experiences during the Arab campaigns. By now, his wartime privations and the stress of political campaigning had brought him to the verge of a nervous breakdown. He resigned from the government and joined the Royal Air Force under the name of John Hume Ross in an attempt to find anonymity. Unfortunately he was tracked down by the Daily Express, which embarrassed the RAF and temporarily ended his career. With the help of an old friend in the War Office he then enlisted May-June 2015 th of Lawrence of Arabia in the Tank Corps as a private, under the name of T.E. Shaw, the pseudonym perhaps influenced by his friendship with George Bernard Shaw. He was posted to Bovington Camp in Dorset, where he continued his literary activities, working on an abridged, illustrated, limited edition of Seven Pillars. Finding living at the camp distracting, he began looking for a quiet refuge in 1923, and soon came across a tiny dilapidated cottage for rent, a mile from Bovington, called ‘Clouds Hill’. Clouds Hill had been built in 1908 as a labourer’s cottage, probably for a forester on the Moreton Estate. When Lawrence first saw it, the cottage was in a poor state, having been unoccupied for years, except by a few passing tramps. To pay for its renovation, he sold a gold dagger that had been made for him in Mecca during the war. He had the roof repaired and installed a large roof-light window to give him enough light to work on the new edition of his book, which he did nearly every day after fulfilling his military duties. Often, though, he would sit and “dream, or write or read by the fire, or play Beethoven and Mozart to myself on the box”. The ‘box’ was a large wind-up gramophone, which still sits proudly in his www.dorchestervoice.co.uk Lawrence on one of his beloved Brough Superior motorcycles ‘music room’, as he later called his upstairs study – the first part of the cottage he made habitable. Lawrence craved the company of other writers, and on moving to Dorset, he immediately sought out Thomas Hardy, visiting him at Max Gate. After the first meeting, Florence Hardy described Lawrence as ‘a most brilliant, magnetic young man’. When Hardy visited Clouds Hill, often with other literary figures such as George Bernard Shaw, E.M. Forster and Robert Graves. Lawrence’s hospitality would have been somewhat basic, however, as he was a strict vegetarian, ate his food mostly cold, out of tins, and eschewed alcohol and tobacco. Importantly for Lawrence, they all shared a love of music, particularly the work of the Romantic composers such as 19 Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Schubert and Brahms, and they would sit upstairs listening to the gramophone together. The overnight accommodation could only be regarded as spartan, guests being given a sleeping bag on the bed downstairs, while Lawrence slept on the floor. In his last days, he constructed a bunk bed in what had been his upstairs pantry. Lawrence much preferred the RAF to the Tank Corps, and eventually, in 1925, he managed to persuade them to take him back. He was stationed at Cranwell in Lincolnshire and then in India, but was obviously still enchanted by his tiny Dorset refuge at Clouds Hill, and, perhaps looking forward to retirement from the services, he decided to buy it. He returned to England in 1929, Dorchester Voice by which time his new version of Seven Pillars of Wisdom had been published, and had already become a collector’s item. A cheap, popular version was also published in 1927, called Revolt in the Desert, which had become a bestseller. He had also finished his second book, The Mint, and was working on a translation of Homer’s Odyssey. The advance from his American publisher for the latter enabled him to complete the purchase of Clouds Hill, and he then began to spend his royalties on renovating and furnishing the rest of the cottage. He also had an outside ‘convenience’ installed, as well as a small thatched garage for his beloved motorcycle. In December 1933 he wrote: “I have lavished money these last three months upon the cottage, adding a water-supply, a bath, a boiler, bookshelves, a bathing pool (a tiny one, but splashable into): all the luxuries of the earth. Also I have thrown out of it the bed, the cooking range: and ignored the lack of drains. Give me the luxuries and I will do without the essentials.” Unfortunately Lawrence was not able to enjoy his completed home for long. He loved riding his Brough Superior motorcycles, and owned eight between 1922 and 1932, always having the latest model, which he ordered direct from the works in Nottingham. The Brough was regarded as the Rolls-Royce of motorcycles and was the fastest and most expensive machine on the road between the wars, reaching speeds of up to 120mph in testing at Brooklands. Mysterious black car Lawrence enjoyed pushing it to the limit, much to the consternation of the local police, whom he always left standing – as he boasted to George Brough himself, who personally oversaw the building of the last model he rode, which he called George VII, and also (as he referred to all of them), Boanerges, meaning ‘Son of Thunder’. Its registration number was GW2275 (here, the much-lauded film starring Peter O’Toole is inaccurate), and he described it as the “silkiest thing he had ever ridden”. George VII was actually paid for by George Bernard Shaw, who was later lamented that giving it was like ‘handing a pistol to a would-be suicide’. May 13 1935 was a bright, clear, breezy day. Lawrence’s neighbour brought him his post, which included a letter from the writer Henry Williamson to say he would visit the next day. Lawrence went to Bovington to send him a telegram. On his return, emerging from a dip in the road, he swerved to avoid two boys on bicycles who appeared suddenly in front of him. He clipped the tyre of one of them and crashed the Brough. He died at the hospital in Bovington Camp six days later of head injuries, having never recovered consciousness. Then as now, when a celebrity and/or political figure dies suddenly in exceptional circumstances, conspiracy theories abound, and Lawrence was no exception. Much was made of some ‘mysterious’ circumstances such as a black car that was seen in the vicinity of the accident; a witness who reported seeing the car later killed himself; the two boys were kept incommunicado at Bovington Camp, but did not testify at the inquest; the inquest itself was conducted by MI5 rather than the local police. The most popular theory posits that like other veterans of World War I, Lawrence abhorred the idea of yet another coming war in Europe, and had sympathy for the peace movement, which unfortunately included Sir Oswald Moseley, who had launched his British Union of Fascists in 1934. Henry Williamson admired Hitler and supported Lawrence’s beloved Clouds Hill cottage Dorchester Voice 20 May-June 2015 Lawrence’s grave in Moreton churchyard Moseley, who believed dialogue with the German dictator was the only way to achieve lasting peace. Some conspiracy theorists believe that Williamson was about to visit Lawrence to set up a meeting with Hitler, which would have been embarrassing to the government, who had him assassinated as a result. Somehow the artist has managed to capture some of his subject’s fiery temperament in its eyes. It is likely that this temperament, which tended towards recklessness, and his love of speed combined to cause his downfall. It is even claimed that he once raced a biplane on his motorcycle. He had a Greek inscription carved into the lintel above his front door, which translates as ‘Why worry?’. Clouds Hill was bequeathed to the National Trust in 1939 by Lawrence’s brother Arnold, and is much as he left it, except that the rhododendrons have recently been grubbed out and replanted. His grave is in the churchyard at nearby Moreton, and a rather more elaborate memorial depicting a recumbent Lawrence in Arab dress, also by Kennington, is in the old Saxon church of St Martin, in Wareham. George VII was eventually repaired by Brough, and is now in the hands of an anonymous private collector, though in the past it has occasionally been displayed in public at exhibitions. The site of the accident is commemorated by two stone plaques, one by the old roadside, and another on the modern road, which has been slightly realigned, straightened and elevated to remove the hidden dip which proved so fatally dangerous in 1935. Rejected Hitler’s overtures However while he was a long-standing friend of Williamson, and had been courted by Moseley’s fascist movement, who wanted him as their chief of staff, he had publicly rebuffed them, saying “No please don’t make me any part of your club”. Interestingly, he had already been contacted by Hitler’s foreign affairs emissary Kurt von Lüdeke in 1932, but had rejected the overture. It is likely that Henry Williamson, who wrote for the Daily Express, actually perpetrated the Hitler rumours himself as an exercise in self-aggrandisement in the eyes of his fascist peers. Several times Lawrence referred to himself as a ‘philosophical anarchist’ and was a fierce anti-royalist who refused honours from King George V, so would have made an unlikely fascist. Despite his demonstrative character, robust physique and commanding presence, Lawrence was only 5’ 5” tall and very conscious of his stature. In Clouds Hill a bronze bust, by his sculptor friend Eric Kennington, is mounted on a wooden column at the actual height he would have stood. www.dorchestervoice.co.uk Advising the local community for over 40 years Insurance protection for all your personal and business assets COMMERCAL PROPERTY MOTOR pjaiken.com 01305 266 522 21 Dorchester Voice Hidden Dorchester Theatre sparked career for famous thespian S By Jerry Bird ome residents of Dorchester, and many visitors, must wonder at the curious name of the busy little café on the corner of High West Street and Trinity Street – The Horse With the Red Umbrella. It has to do with one of Dorchester’s lost architectural gems – a Georgian theatre demolished for redevelopment in the 1960s. The first theatre on this site, at 10 High West Street, was built for the well-known theatre manager and impresario Henry Lee in 1792 by Charles Curme, the architect son of a local builder, using part of a 17th-century building. Curme is inaccurately named as the theatre’s ‘proprietor’ on the building’s blue plaque. The same architect was also responsible for the new theatre on the same site, which incorporated part of the fabric of the old one, much heightened and almost doubled in size. It opened on 22 February 1828 with “the Comedy of John Bull and the Farce of the Spoil’d Child,” according to James Savage’s History of Dorchester. The new Dorchester Theatre, which later became known as the Loyalty Theatre, remained open until 1843, with Lee’s company presenting performances three times a week. The building was then taken over by Godwin’s Glass and China Stores, and the old theatre auditorium was used as a warehouse at the back of the shop until it was sold in 1963, and finally demolished in 1965. The frontage on High West Street was spared, however, and Dorchester Voice The former Loyalty Theatre and the erroneous blue plaque opened as the Horse With the Red Umbrella in 1970, its name supposedly taken from the last play performed there. Thomas Hardy took a great deal of interest in Dorchester’s theatrical history, and wrote three letters about it to the Dorset County Chronicle in 1897. In 1924, when Hardy’s own adaptation of Tess of the D’Durbervilles was being staged by the Hardy Players, he persuaded John Godwin to open up the old theatre building so that he and several famous guests could view it. They all signed Godwin’s visitors’ book, now in the County Museum. The signatures include author J.M. Barrie and T.E. Lawrence, who unusually (perhaps because Hardy was standing next to him) used his own name, instead of ‘T.E. Shaw’, the name under which he was living as a private in the Tank Corps (see p18). Hardy was particularly interested in the great Shakesperian actor Edmund Kean, who had a 22 close association with the Loyalty Theatre, having accepted an offer from Henry Lee to play there in 1813 that was to prove his breakthrough. Although the theatre was only a third full, S.J. Arnold, the manager of the Drury Lane Theatre in London, was watching the performance from his private box. Arnold immediately engaged Kean to appear at Drury Lane on a three-year contract. His first appearance, as Shylock in The Merchant of Venice in November 1814, was a sensation, and he went on to play Richard III and Othello, and was soon regarded as the leading tragedian of the age. He became very rich, but squandered his wealth in dissolute living. Eventually he was sued for adultery with the wife of Alderman Cox, a prominent Dorchester citizen, to whom he was ordered to pay £800. His career collapsed and he died in poverty in 1834. May-June 2015 Do you know identity of the lady in red? This haunting portrait of a beautiful young woman on the beach at Durdle Door has a timeless quality – yet it was taken in 1913 and is one of the earliest colour photographs, using the autochrome process. The picture was taken by Mervyn O’Gorman, who was involved in the introduction of the Highway Code in Britain in the 1930s, and was Superintendent of the Royal Aircraft Establishment – but the identity of the girl, Christina, is uncertain. Colin Harding, curator of photographs at the National Media Museum said: “The truth is we do not know who Christina is. There is no record of Lieutenant Colonel Mervyn O’Gorman and his wife, Florence, having any children. “There is a census record of a woman named Christina O’Gorman living in Dublin, who was born in the 1890s. We do know Mervyn O’Gorman had family links in Ireland. It is very possible she is a relative, but we can’t say for sure. “If anyone does know her identity we’d be very interested in finding out.” Several photos of Christina are on display at the National Media Museum in Bradford, as part of its exhibition Drawn by Light: The Royal Photographic Collection, which runs until 21 June. Do you know her identity? [email protected] www.dorchestervoice.co.uk 23 Dorchester Voice Wine & Dine Fifties memorabilia – and great food! W Re Loved, Cornhill eave your way through the crowds in Dorchester’s Cornhill and you will find Re Loved tearooms. At first glance, Re Loved looks like a shop, although the tables outside are a clue that there is a tearoom to be found upstairs. First, however, you have to go through a vintage shop; an eclectic mix of 1940s-50s hand-crocheted baby garments, embroidered cushions, odd bits of furniture from that era and vintage clothes. The shop assistant adorns a fifties hairstyle- pincurls with a bow or hair clasps and clothing makes you think you have indeed walked into a different era. Mount a narrow yellow-painted staircase, without carpet, and you will find the sun-filled tearooms upstairs. Here is a living room of the fifties complete with a large fireplace. You will certainly think you have taken a step back in time among the variety of different shaped tables covered with floral or checked table-cloths of different colours, odd chairs from straight-back and spindle to fiddle-back; and little nooks and crannies filled with memorabilia for sale. Scattered around is an extraordinary mix of knick-knacks that shout nostalgia. There is even a library filled with books dating back to the 1940s. The tearooms are truly a family business, run by mum Sandra, dad Terry and their son and daughter. The Hicks family opened the Dorchester-based Re-loved two years ago but there is another in Wareham (also extended family) which has been open for six years. When it comes to the food, be prepared to be tantalised not just by the menu and the generous portion on your plate, but by the surroundings, too, which will bring memories of your grandparents’ house flooding back. It certainly promotes conversation. When you arrive in the tearooms the large home-made cakes are guaranteed to catch eye. Lemon cake, gooey chocolate cake, Victoria sponge, spicy ginger cake, and Dorset apple cake. Little wonder this gem is a popular place to bring a friend for coffee or tea. Dorchester Voice Re Loved in Dorchester’s Cornhill The main menu is on large blackboard above the fireplace, and what a choice, with soups such as broccoli and Stilton, butternut squash, and spring vegetable and herb. Main courses include such delights as saffroninfused chicken with an almond crust and lemon mayonnaise; home-made beefburgers; and homecured salmon gravadlax with salad. Lighter bites include hot garlic mushrooms on toast, and I still have memories of the homity pie they had on their previous menu – and you can be sure every ingredient is fresh and locally sourced. Bistro nights are also becoming popular. Simply bring your own wine, and enjoy the Spanish guitarists who provide a fabulous atmosphere on Friday and Saturday nights 7 – 11pm. The food is a little different on a Friday Saturday night – beef and dark chocolate pie may sound like a strange combination, but do try it. In fact there are 11 main courses on offer in the evening, and the menu is about to change for the summer months. Re Loved tearooms are also open for bookings for hen parties and recently catered for a party for 150 people. Sheena Pain 24 May-June 2015 Visit the Poet Laureate in Poundbury and try our delicious home-cooked meals from our new Spring menu Plus… Special offer on Poet’s Puds! Buy a main course and drink, and get one of our delicious desserts for free!* For reservations & queries call Alex or Nicky on 01305 251511 or visit www.thepoetlaureate.co *Free dessert available with purchase of main course and drink – this advert must be presented when ordering. One dessert per advert, offer can only be used once. Expires 31st May 2015. The Poet Laureate, Poundbury, Dorchester DT1 3GW Tel: 01305 251511 [email protected] www.dorchestervoice.co.uk 25 Dorchester Voice Out & About Hardy returns home to celebrate new film release At 34 years old, Thomas Hardy had his first literary success with Far from the Madding Crowd, penned in the tiny cob and thatch cottage in deepest Dorset where he was born. Nearly 150 years on, actress Carey Mulligan’s costumes from the new film adaptation are bringing Hardy’s Cottage to life. Through the spring and summer, both Hardy’s Cottage and nearby Max Gate – where Hardy later lived and died – will be filled with the words and music of true Hardy country. The New Hardy Players (pictured) will be celebrating the work of Thomas Hardy, and this year some of the Players’ major claim to fame is as supporting artists in the new film of Far from the Madding Crowd. Howard and Alison Payton now live in Dorset, and have a lifelong passion for Hardy. Howard appears in the film as an Everdene farmer, and Alison as a farm worker. Sir Andrew Motion has always been hugely influenced by Hardy’s poems, and on Hardy’s birthday on 2 June he will open a new Writing Places season with a Hardy poetry reading and talk at Max Gate (www.nationaltrust.org.uk/writingplaces). On the evenings of 9 and 10 July, the New Hardy Players will perform Hardy’s The Return of the Native in the garden of Max Gate (booking 01305 266079.) Martin Stephen, National Trust Visitor Services Manager, said: “With the release of this major new film, we can bring both Hardy’s first and last homes to life with wonderful Wessex words and music.” Help remember VE-Day with 1940s garden party This Whitsun half-term, to coincide with the 70th Anniversary of VE-Day (Victory in Europe), the Tank Museum will be staging activities related to the Allied victories across Europe. The Tank Museum will also be hosting a 1940s garden party where you can take part in creating flags, bunting and other crafts for the occasion. There will also be an opportunity to climb in one of the main battle tanks, ride in a tracked vehicle, try on replica uniforms and take part in fun-filled family activity trails. Tanks In Action will take place every weekday at 1.00pm from 23-31 May. See tanks thunder into action and watch in awe at their firing capabilities. Meanwhile the weekend of the 27-28 June sees Tankfest at The Tank Museum, bringing the story of tanks, tank crews and soldiers to life – and an original Second World War Spitfire will be flying on both days. Historic vehicle displays will see a number of vehicles making their show debuts, and several old favourites returning to the arena. Dorchester Voice 26 May-June 2015 Out & About Gormley work unveiling at Kimmeridge Sponsored walk Clavell Tower at Kimmeridge Bay is welcoming everybody to celebrate 50 years of the Landmark Trust, with a sculpture by Antony Gormley and music by an awardwinning composer. A Golden Weekend on 16-17 May will mark the 50th anniversary of the Landmark Trust. Since May 1965 more than 200 significant buildings have been rescued by the historic buildings charity. Visitors to Kimmeridge will see a striking life-sized cast-iron sculpture on the shoreline, created for Landmark’s 50th anniversary by renowned artist Antony Gormley. Another highlight is a Golden Moment at 3pm on Saturday 16 May when local musicians across the country will simultaneously perform An Anthem for Landmark at each of the 25 open Landmarks. Sammy Hurden will lead the Freedance Choir in a performance of their interpretation of the anthem, and will also perform a repertoire of locally inspired music, plus a brand new composition by Sammy, again inspired by Clavell Tower and its surroundings, and supported by Dorset AONB. Joining the Freedance Choir are the Ridgeway Singers & Band, led by folk musicians Tim Laycock and Phil Humphries, performing a selection of folk songs. During the afternoon, Kimmeridge Village Hall Committee will also be serving cream teas, with funds going towards a new children’s playground. to River Jordan Would you like to be involved in a sponsored walk to the River Jordan as part of Christian Aid Week? An 18-mile walk is being staged, with several stops on the way, from Dorchester to Bowleaze Cove, Weymouth, and back. If you think that’s too far, there are various stopping off points for buses en route. Sponsorship forms are available from Steve Rider (St Mary’s Church) on 01305 262839. And don’t miss the Christian Aid Week Annual Market on Wednesday, 13 May at noon in the United Church Hall, South Street, Dorchester. FORDINGTON HATHA YOGA including asana, relaxation and breath work with British Wheel of Yoga Diploma holder fully insured and experienced local teacher All abilities and levels of experience including beginners are welcome at classes in Fordington and Dorchester MONDAY: Dorchester Middle School 5.30 and 7.30pm WEDNESDAY: St George’s Church Hall 9.30 - 11.00am (drop-in class) FRIDAY: St George’s Church Hall 9.30 - 11am £7.50 per class payable per half term or term (Discount if paying for whole term) For more information or to book your place please contact MARJ SNAPE on 07747 429559 or [email protected] www.dorchestervoice.co.uk 27 Dorchester Voice Dorchester Arts Scene Wilde returns with Picture of Dorian Gray Farewell act at arts centre Guitar phenomenon Rodney Branigan features at Dorchester Arts Centre for its farewell act. Artists are often described as having “a unique talent”; few epitomise this more than multi-instrumentalist Branigan. In fact, Texan-born Rodney’s talents are as plentiful as the many instruments he expertly plays side by side. Described by Music Connections magazine as “impossibly talented”, Rodney’s talent is jaw-dropping as he masterfully plays two guitars at once – but make no mistake: this is no novelty act. He manages to play with an almost piano-like capacity, focusing each of his hands on either melodic, rhythmic or percussive duties. Rodney Branigan will be the last blues night at the Arts Centre and all future events will be at the Corn Exchange venue. However, Dorchester Arts promises that while the venue will change, the upclose-and-personal feel will stay the same. Based on the rapturous response to The Trials of Oscar Wilde at Shire Hall last year, Dorchester Arts is welcoming back European Arts with its new theatrical adaptation of Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray. Set in the decadent world of Victorian London, a beautiful young man called Dorian Gray becomes infatuated by the exquisite portrait that Basil Hallward has painted of him. He makes a Faustian pact that he will remain forever young while the picture grows old. Adapted by Wilde’s grandson Merlin Holland and European Arts’ John O’Connor, this is a gripping and hugely entertaining theatrical event. Saturday 16 May, 8pm (doors & bar 7:30pm), Dorchester Arts Centre. Tickets: £13 / £6.50* in advance, £14 / £7* on the door, Senior Citizens £11 in advance / £12 on the door Fri 15 May, 8pm (doors and bar 7:30pm), Dorchester Corn Exchange, £12 / £10 members & concessions Scintillating flamenco In a scintillating fusion of heart-wrenching vocals, explosive footwork and virtuoso guitar playing, we welcome Jaleo as they return to Britain with their latest stage show. ‘A Compás’ (‘In Rhythm’) charts an evocative musical journey through the diverse flamenco regions of Andalusia. In this completely authentic show some of Spain´s finest artists combine their talents in a mesmerising tour de force. A spectacular evening encapsulating the very essence of flamenco. Thursday 14 May, 8pm (doors & bar 7.30pm), Dorchester Corn Exchange, £15/£13 members/conc Dorchester Voice 28 May-June 2015 Dorchester Arts Scene Thought-provoking yet uplifting look at war Rhum and Clay bring their Edinburgh Festival Fringe hit, A Strange Wild Song, to Dorchester in June. This critically acclaimed ensemble will enchant audiences with their unforgettably touching tale about finding light in the darkest of places. A Strange Wild Song takes the audience to northern France during the Second World War, where three children encounter a lost American soldier. Decades later, the soldier’s camera is unearthed and the photographs inside reveal an incredible story of childhood and imagination. Accompanied by an original award-winning musical score, the production fuses cinematic A Strange Wild Song – finding light in darkest places imagery, absurdist humour, and physical theatre to tell an epic story that is thought-provoking yet entertaining. Dorchester Corn Exchange, Thursday 4 June, 8pm (doors & bar 7:30pm) £10/£8 members/conc, 01305 266926 Bridport Arts Centre 5 June 7:30pm 01308 424204 Art exhibition and talks look at Hardy the man Artist Susan R Hughes returns to the home of Thomas Hardy with an exhibition of new art that looks at the final year of the relationship between Dorset’s most famous writer and his first wife. Open until the end of May, this show is situated in the Tess study at Max Gate and aims once again to present a visually stimulating show for National Trust audiences, Hardy enthusiasts and art lovers. Meanwhile, a series of illuminating talks about author Thomas Hardy and his work is taking place through the year at Dorset County Museum. Professor Angelique Richardson will give a talk on Hardy and the New Science on 28 May. Other talks in the series include professor Ann Heilman on Hardy, women and marriage (30 July) and Philip Mallet on Hardy, Wessex and the poetry of war (29 October). You will be moved! Independent Sales, Letting & Property Agent Talks begin at 7.30pm (doors open at 7pm). Free, £3 donation is welcome. Max Gate opens from Wednesday to Sunday until 1 November, from 11.00am-5.00pm (last entry 4.30pm). Admission £7 for adults and £3.50 for children. www.dorchestervoice.co.uk 49 High West St templehillproperty.co.uk Dorchester, DT1 1UT 01305 751772 29 Dorchester Voice Dorchester Arts Scene Kaz will get you dancing Aladdin is set to dazzle Underground for years as a secret songwriter, Kaz Hawkins is now established as one the biggest performers to come out of Northern Ireland. With support slots for Van Morrison, Nanci Griffiths, Chris Farlowe and Matt Andersen under her belt, Kaz was recently awarded the 2014 Rising Star Award from Blues & Soul magazine. Having recently launched her debut album Get Ready – a passionate celebration of her roots and inspirations in music – Kaz wants her live shows to evoke a time when people danced in the aisles, so invites her audience to dance and rejoice in the glory of her gutsy, heartfelt blues and soul songs. Saturday 13 June, 8pm (doors & bar 7:30pm), Dorchester Corn Exchange, £13/£6.50 conc. in advance £14/£7 on door. Rich European folk music In 19th century Eastern Europe, Jewish musicians travelled from town to town performing at weddings and other celebrations, meeting and playing with local musicians and sharing repertoire. London-based group She’Koyokh has spent the last decade soaking up the rich folk music of Eastern Europe, Turkey and the Balkans. This acclaimed group’s evolution spans the humble origins of busking at London’s Columbia Road flower market to performing in the concert halls of Europe, as well as Glastonbury. With a sumptuous mix of violin, accordion, clarinet double bass, guitar and percussion, and vocals from acclaimed Turkish singer Cigdem Aslan, expect a night of exhilarating music. Ballet Theatre UK is set to wow audiences Following the enchanting production of Swan Lake, Ballet Theatre UK returns with a dazzling retelling of Aladdin – an exotic tale boldly brought to life through the magic of classical ballet. With just one rub of the magical lamp, Aladdin’s journey will sweep you into an exotic world full of daring adventure, enchanting spells, unbelievable riches, treachery and of course true love. Ballet Theatre UK is building a reputation as one of the finest small-scale touring dance companies in the UK, and now there is the chance to see these talented young dancers and choreographer Chris Moore’s imaginative productions in Dorchester once more. Wednesday 3 June 2015 at 7:30pm, Buckland Newton Village Hall, tickets £9, £7 u18s, £28 family 01300 345455. Thursday 28 May, 7pm (doors and bar 6:30pm), Dorchester Corn Exchange, £15/ £13 members, £11 conc. Seascapes exhibition opens Down To The Sea is a new exhibition of paintings by Angela Goodman at The Gallery on the Square in Queen Mother Square, Poundbury during May. Angela, who lives in Weymouth, is an artist whose paintings and printings have sold widely throughout the South-West and in London, and whose recent work has centred around a series of Dorset cliff studies and seascapes. Dorchester Voice 30 May-June 2015 Dorchester Arts Scene Don’t miss Restoration romp Catch Curst Sons at Goldies Do the names Patrick Stewart, Daniel Day-Lewis, Jeremy Irons, Miranda Richardson, and Pete Postlethwaite ring a bell? They all trained at the renowned Bristol Old Vic Theatre School – so don’t miss the school’s flying visit to Frampton to stage The Beaux’ Stratagem. The Lichfield stagecoach is a’comin’ on over the hill, laden with gallants and intent on fine females and their even finer fortunes. But are they prepared for cross-dressing Irish priests, honourable highwaymen, lardy landlords and scheming servants? The stage is set for one of the finest Restoration comedies of the age. George Farquhar knits together a panoply of stock and ‘not so stock’ characters, weaving plots and sub-plots in an 18th century carnal comedy, where not all is as it seems and the country folk of Lichfield are not quite as dumb as we think. Curst Sons have a unique and entertaining take on American traditional music, playing blues, gospel and bluegrass with a kick-ass stomp and a large shot of wry humour. The Brighton-based trio have released five albums on their own Curst Mountain record label, played too many pubs and clubs to remember, played two sessions for Radio 2’s Mark Lamarr, and were both the Guardian’s ‘pick of the week’ and Time Out’s ‘critic’s choice’ in January 2014. Saturday 27th June 2015 at 7:30pm Frampton Village Hall, tickets £9, £7.50 u18s 07968 586906 Sunday May 10 4pm Goldies, High East Street, Dorchester. Birdy’s cellist Morse-Brown BBC Young Musician joins DCO creates moving soundscape Dorset Chamber Orchestra welcomes Cordelia Williams as the soloist in Grieg’s immensely popular but ever fresh and exhilarating piano concerto in a concert at St Mary’s Church, Dorchester. Cordelia (pictured) is the latest in a remarkable series of BBC Young Musician of the Year prizewinners to appear as soloist with the orchestra. She has appeared all over the world with major orchestras and performed Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto at the Barbican Hall, London in December 2014. Cordelia has been acclaimed as a pianist of “great power and delicate sensitivity”. She is recognised for the depth and maturity of her interpretations. The concert opens with Cinderella, one of Rossini’s most sparkling overtures, followed by Schubert’s famous Unfinished Symphony, conducted by Robert Jacoby. Duotone is the name under which Barney MorseBrown (cellist for multi-platinum artist Birdy) writes and performs his own contemporary acoustic songs. Single-handedly disproving the myth that men can’t multi-task, Barney loops guitars and cellos, percussion and voices to create ethereal soundscapes around which to weave his poignant lyrics. Following hugely successful appearances at the End of the Road Festival and Green Man, Duotone is fast growing in popularity, with his unique shows moving seamlessly between riotous energy and heartfelt intimacy. An emerging band not to miss. Meanwhile backing him is Indie/electro outfit The White Bicycles, who have gained a local following from their last two visits with Saturday Sun and Lily and Meg. Their hugely original sound weaves ambient electric guitar melodies and sparse drumscapes around Matthew Howe’s poetic and melancholic lyrics. May 16 7.30 pm St Mary’s Church, Dorchester. Tickets £12 in advance or £13 at the door. Under 18s free. Advance tickets from Harmony Music, 3-4 The Forum Centre, Trinity Street, Dorchester 01305 260360. Friday 12 June, 8pm (doors and bar 7:30pm) Dorchester Corn Exchange, £9/ £7 members/conc. www.dorchestervoice.co.uk 31 Dorchester Voice Out & About May 8-10 May Diesel Gala. Swanage Steam Railway. 9 May Printmaking Workshop. Create your own lino-prints with Sarah Morrish. The Kingcombe Centre. £80 includes materials. Book online at www.kingcombe.org 9-10 May Poole Harbour Boat Show. Poole Quay. 9-10 May 10.00am-5.00pm Saxon & Viking Academy. Corfe Castle. (Normal admission prices apply). 01929 481294 9-22 May 10.00am-4.00pm Dorchester Arts Centre Open 2015 Exhibition. The Grove. 10 May 10.00-6.00pm Animal Festival. Kingston Maurward. 01305 215003 10 May Willow Structures for the Garden. Create obelisks, hurdles and willow structures with Kim Creswell. The Kingcombe Centre. £85 includes materials. Book online at www.kingcombe. org or call 01300 320684 11 May 2.00pm Alan Payne talks at Max Gate about Brough Superiors. 01929 405616 11-17 May Lawrence Week at Clouds Hill. A week of talks, walks and activities. For further details call 01929 405616 11-23 May 11.00-4.30pm Art Exhibition in aid of Cancer Trust. The Studio, Vermont, Cheselbourne. 01258 837082 12 May 2.00pm Alan Payne talks at Max Gate about Lawrence’s journeys 01929 405616 13 May 1.30-4.00pm Tim Laycock performs Lawrence and Friends, an afternoon of stories, song and music in celebration of Lawrence and the interesting friends who visited him. Clouds Hill. 01929 405616 13 May From 12pm Christian Aid Week Annual Market, United Church Hall, South Street, Dorchester. Stalls galore. Coffee and tea, ploughman’s Lunches and desserts. 14 May 11.30am Peter Preen tllks about Lawrence’s notoriety. 12.15pm Roger Holehouse talks about the diplomatic background to the Arab revolt. 2.30pm Alison Jolly gives a short talk (approx 20 minutes) about the Kennington bust of T E Lawrence. 3.00pm Marilyn Holehouse talks about Lawrence’s family background. Clouds Hill. 01929 405616 14 May 7.00pm Dorset in Film. Dorset History Centre. Tickets £10 (including canapés & glass of wine) 01305 228945 Mid May – end June Cygnets hatching. Abbotsbury Swannery 15 May 8.00pm The Picture of Dorian Gray – European Arts Company. Dorchester Corn Exchange. £12/£10 members. 01305 266926 15 May 1.30-4.00pm Tim Laycock performs Lawrence and Friends, an afternoon of stories, song and music in celebration of Lawrence and the interesting friends who visited him. Clouds Hill. 01929 405616 15 May 2.00pm St Martin’s, Broadmayne. Community Market. 15 May 7.00pm A John Craxton Talk: John Craxton’s Dorset by Ian Collins. Dorset County Museum. 01305 756827 15 May 10.00-5.00pm Tank Experience Day. Bovington Tank Museum. 01929 462359 15 May Dawn Chorus Breakfast. Join Su Gough for a guided walk followed by a hearty breakfast. The Kingcombe Centre. £15. Book online at www.kingcombe.org or call 01300 320684 15-31 May Jawsome Sharks: BRP Roadshow. Weymouth Sea life Adventure Park. 16 May Christian Aid Week. Charminster & Charlton Down 16 May 11am-3.00pm Gathering of Brough Superior motorbikes.1.00am – 3.00pm National Trust Archaeologist Nancy Grace will be on hand with a display of archaeology finds and brass rubbings. Clouds Hill. 01929 405616 16-17 May 10.00-4.00pm Spring Tide Food Festival. Hive Beach, Burton Bradstock, Nr Bridport. 01297 489481 16-17 May 2.00pm-5.00pm Smedmore Hose & Gardens Open Day. Smedmore House, Kimmeridge, nr Wareham. 07811 871347 16-17 May 10.00am-5.00pm Saxon & Viking Academy. Corfe Castle. Free event (normal admission prices apply). 01929 481294 17 May 11.00am-3.00pm National Trust Archaeologist Nancy Grace will be on hand with a display of archaeology finds and brass rubbings. 2.30pm Guided walk around part of the Law- Dorchester Voice rence trail. Clouds Hill. 01929 405616 20 May 1.00pm & 3.30pm Adult Craft Workshop – Rug Weaving. Dorset County Museum. £10 per session. 01305 756827 21 May 7.30pm Tom De Wit – The Tolpuddle Protest. The Justice Café at Shire Hall. £5 01305 266926 22 May 7.00pm Talk: Stolen Images – Pagan Symbolism and Christianity by Peter Knight. Dorchester Museum. Free (donation of £3 encouraged) 01305 756832 23-25 May Hawk Experience. Weymouth Sea life Park. 23-25 May Kingcombe Arts Weekend. A celebration of nature, landscape and wildlife inspired art from Dorset and beyond including exhibitions, talks, sculpture, photography, painting and more. Full details at www.kingcombe.org 23-24 May 10.00am-5.00pm Saxon & Viking Academy. Corfe Castle. (Normal admission prices apply). 23 May – 7 June Purbeck Art Week. Various locations throughout Purbeck. 23-25 May Monkey World Big Banana Bonanza! Monkey World, Longthorns, Wareham. 01929 462537 23-31 May King Tut’s Treasure Hunt. The Tutankhamun Exhibition, Dorchester. 01305 269571 23-31 May 10.00-5.00pm Victory in Europe. The Tank Museum, Bovington. 01929 462359 24 May Dorset Tour Vintage & Classic Vehicle Rally. Lodmoor Country Park, Weymouth. 24-25 May 10.00-6.00pm Fayre in the Square. Trinity Road, Weymouth Harbour. 24-25 May 12.00-10.30pm Quayside Music Festival. Custom House Quay, Weymouth Harbour. 25 May 10.00-6.00pm Sherborne Castle Country Fair. 01963 220490 26-31 May The Spice Box. One-woman street theatre show. Corfe Castle. For times and more details tel. 01929 481294 27-30 May Royal Bath & West Show. Shepton Mallet, Somerset 27-30 May 7.30pm Evita. Weymouth Pavilion. Details and tickets from Pavilion box office. 01305 835554 27 May 10.30am to 12.30pm Family Activity – Become an Archaeologist’s illustrator. Dorset County Museum. 01305 756827 28 May 7.00pm Thomas Hardy Talk. Dorchester Museum. Free (donation of £3 encouraged) 01305 756832 28 May 7.00pm Aladdin – Ballet Theatre UK. Dorchester Corn Exchange. £15/£13 members/£11 concessions. 01305 266926 29 May 3.00pm Aladdin – Ballet Theatre UK. Dorchester Corn Exchange. £15/£13 members/£11 concessions. 01305 266926 31 May 3.00pm Pop! A Magical Comedy Show – Children’s Theatre. Dorchester Corn Exchange. £6/£20 family ticket. 01305 266926 June 4 June 8.00pm A Strange Wild Song – Rhum and Clay Theatre Company. Dorchester Corn Exchange. £10/£8 members and concessions. 01305 266926 5 June 6.00pm Archaeology Field Trip: Maumbury Rings. For details 01305 756832 6-7 June Historic Falconry at Corfe Castle. 01929 481294 7-11 June Flower Festival. Athelhampton House. 7 June 10.00-4.00pm Blue Pool 80th Anniversary Celebrations. Blue Pool, Furzebrook, Wareham. 01929 551408 10-11 June 7.00pm Alice in Wonderland/The Jungle Book. DYT double bill. Corn Exchange. Tickets £7.50/£4 under 18s. 01305 266926 13-14 June Historic Falconry at Corfe Castle. 01929 48129 13 June Behind the Castle Musical Festival. Sherborne Castle. Adults £46, children 8-17 £25, under 8 free. 01935 812072 14 June 10.00-5.00pm Open Day & Country Fair. Kingston Maurward. 01305 215003 17 June 1.00pm & 3.30pm Adult Craft Workshop – Midsummer Willow Garland. Dorset County Museum. £10 20 June 10.00-4.00pm Dorchester Craft & Gift Market. Corn Exchange 20-21 June Historic Falconry at Corfe Castle. 01929 481294 20-26 June Weymouth & Portland Armed Forces Day Celebrations. Weymouth Seafront. 01305 785747 21 June 2.00-5.00pm Abbotsbury Open Garden. The Old Gate 32 May-June 2015 Corn Exchange regular bookings Dorchester Bridge Club - Monday Evenings Leroc Dance Classes - Tuesday Evenings Taekwondo - Tuesday Evening Fizzy Boppers - Children’s Dance Classes - Wednesdays am Bridge Lessons - Wednesday Evenings Salsa Cascara - Salsa Classes - Wednesdays Dorchester Country Market - Friday Mornings Dorchester Family Church - Sunday Mornings The Kingcombe Centre, Toller Porcorum, offers a variety of courses and guided walks Visit www.kingcombe.org House, Abbotsbury. 25 June 7.00pm Thomas Hardy Talk: Whistler and Monet. Dorchester Museum. Free 01305 756832 26 June – 4 July Beaminster Festival of Music & Visual Arts. Beaminster. 01308 862943 27-28 June Historic Falconry at Corfe Castle. 01929 481294 27-28 June Armed Forces Weekend at Swanage Railway. 27 June 7.30pm The Beaux Stratagem by Bristol Old Vic Theatre. The Village Hall, Frampton. Tickets £9, £7.50. 07968 586906 27-28 June 10.00-5.00pm Tankfest! Tank Museum Bovington. 28 June 10.00-4.00pm Jurassic Mini Car Club Display. Jubilee Clock Weymouth seafront. 28 June 10.00am Chickerell Fun Day & Classic Car Show. School Hill, Chickerell Weymouth. Tickets £4 Local farmers’ markets Poundbury Farmers’ Market is held on the first Saturday of the month Bridport Farmers’ Market is held on the second Saturday of the month Sherborne Farmers’ Market is held on the third Friday of the month Dorchester Farmers’ Market is held on the fourth Saturday of the month July 3 July 6.00pm Archaeology Field Trip: Druce Farm Roman Villa. For details 01305 262735 4 July 3.00pm-9.00pm Show of Hands – Annual family open-air concert. Abbotsbury Subtropical Gardens. 01305 871130 4 July Coastal Festival. Corfe Castle. 01929 481294 9 July 7.30pm The Magnificent Three – Miracle Theatre. Outdoor theatre at Maumbury Rings. £12/£10 members, £8 concessions, £30 family. 01305 266926 Gig Guide May 10 May 3-5.00pm Jack Daniels. Durnovaria Wine Bar/Café, Dorchester 01305 756019 10 May 7.30pm Songwriters’ Open Mic. Night, Sydney Arms, Dorchester 01305 259250 10 May 4.00pm Curst Sons (Americana). Goldies, Dorchester 01305 458202 11 May 8.00pm Traditional music session, Fox & Hounds, Cattistock 01300 320777 13 May 1.30-4.00pm Tim Laycock performs Lawrence and Friends, an afternoon of stories, song and music in celebration of Lawrence and the interesting friends who visited him. Clouds Hill. 01929 405616 14 May 8-10.00pm Jerry Bird (English & Celtic folk on guitar & fiddle). Durnovaria Wine Bar/Café, Dorchester 01305 756019 14 May 9.00pm Open Mic. Night. Tom Brown’s Dorchester 01305 264020 14 May 7.30pm Jaleo: A Compas (Flamenco dance) Corn Exchange, Dorchester 15 May 10.30am Alan Davies with Merry Conceit (Playford dance workshop). Village Hall, Corfe Mullen 01202 872795 15 May 9.30pm Vanilla Radio (pop/rock covers). Tom Brown’s, Dorchester 01305 264020 15 May 1.30-4.00pm Tim Laycock performs Lawrence and Friends, an afternoon of stories, song and music in celebration of Lawrence and the interesting friends who visited him. Clouds Hill. 01929 405616 16 May 9.30pm Dusty Stray (alt. folk). Goldies, Dorchester 16 May 9.30pm Dinnerladies (60s/70s covers). Tom Brown’s, Dorchester 01305 264020 16 May 7.30pm Rodney Branigan (DA Blues) Arts Centre, The Grove, Dorchester 01305 266926 16 May 7.30pm Dorset Chamber Orchestra play Rossini and Schubert, with BBC Young Musician Cordelia Williams. St Mary’s Church, Dorchester. Tickets £12 in advance/£13 on door, Under 18s free. Tickets from Harmony Music, 3-4 The Forum Centre, Trinity Street, Dorchester. 01305 260360 17 May 3-5.00pm Kipper (Dylan covers/Americana). Durnovaria Wine Bar/Café, Dorchester 01305 756019 17 May 7.30pm Songwriters’ Open Mic. Night, Sydney Arms, Dorchester 01305 259250 18 May 8.30pm Traditional Folk Music Session. Goldies, Dorchester 01305 458202 20 May 8.30pm Jazz Club Open Session. The Three Compasses, Charminster 01305 263618 20 May 8.30pm Matt Tarling & Friends (Irish Folk Session). The Blue Raddle, Dorchester 01305 267762 21 May 1-2.00pm Mike Denham (ragtime piano). Dorset County www.dorchestervoice.co.uk pop, rock, folk, classical… Museum, Dorchester 01305 262735 21 May 9.00pm Open Mic. Night. Tom Brown’s Dorchester 01305 264020 21 May 8-10.00pm Steve Frapwell. Durnovaria Wine Bar/Café, Dorchester 01305 756019 22 May 1.00pm Lunchtime Concert: Illumine (classical piano and clarinet. Dorchester Museum. Free (donation of £3 is encouraged). 01305 756832 22 May 9.30pm Red Rooster (blues). Tom Brown’s, Dorchester 01305 264020 23 May 9.30pm Finnian McKurk (Celtic folk). Tom Brown’s, Dorchester 01305 264020 24 May 3-5.00pm Will Sear. Durnovaria Wine Bar/Café, Dorchester 01305 756019 24 May 7.30pm Songwriters’ Open Mic. Night, Sydney Arms, Dorchester 01305 259250 24-25 May 12.00-10.30pm Quayside Music Festival. Custom House Quay, Weymouth Harbour. 28 May 8-10.00pm Mitch Norman. Durnovaria Wine Bar/Café, Dorchester 01305 756019 28 May 9.00pm Open Mic. Night. Tom Brown’s Dorchester 01305 264020 28 May 8.00pm The troubadours. Sunray Folk Club, Village Hall, Broadmayne 07786 654074 29 May 9.30pm The Darwins. Tom Brown’s, Dorchester 29 May 7.30pm Namvula & Band (World music), Village Hall, Corfe Castle 01929 480483 29-30 May Lyme Regis jazz & Blues Weekend. 29-31 May Wessex Folk Festival. Trinity Street, Weymouth Harbour. 31 May 3-5.00pm Julie Lewis. Durnovaria Wine Bar/Café, Dorchester 01305 756019 31 May 7.30pm Songwriters’ Open Mic. Night, Sydney Arms, Dorchester 01305 259250 June 3 June 8.30pm Traditional Folk Music Session. The Blue Raddle, Dorchester 01305 267762 3 June 7.30pm She’Koyokh (gypsy/E European folk). Village Hall, Buckland Newton 01300 345455 3 June 8.30pm Jazz Club. The Three Compasses, Charminster 01305 263618 4 June 1.00pm Lunchtime Concert: Emilie Capulet. Dorchester Museum. Free (donation of £3 encouraged). 01305 756832 4 June 8-10.00pm Jamie Parker. Durnovaria Wine Bar/Café, Dorchester 01305 756019 4 June 9.00pm Open Mic. Night. Tom Brown’s Dorchester 01305 264020 5 June 9.30pm Skimmity Hitchers (Dorset scrumpy & western/ 33 Dorchester Voice Gig Guide cow-punk). Goldies, Dorchester 01305 458202 6 June 9.30pm T.B.C.. Goldies, Dorchester 01305 458202 7 June 3-5.00pm Jerry Bird (English & Celtic folk on guitar & fiddle). Durnovaria Wine Bar/Café, Dorchester 01305 756019 7 June 7.30pm Songwriters’ Open Mic. Night, Sydney Arms, Dorchester 01305 259250 8 June 8.00pm Traditional music session, Fox & Hounds, Cattistock 01300 320777 11 June 9.00pm Open Mic. Night. Tom Brown’s Dorchester 01305 264020 12 June 7.30pm Duotone/The White Bicycles (contemporary acoustic music). Corn Exchange, Dorchester 01305 267992 12 June 9.30pm Tom Clements. Tom Brown’s, Dorchester 01305 264020 12-14 June various times Wimborne Folk Festival www.wimbornefolk.co.uk 12 June 8.00pm Duotone + The White Bicycles. Corn Exchange. Tickets £9/£7 concessions. 01305 266926 13 June 8.00pm Kaz Hawkins and Her Band O’ Men - DA Blues. Dorchester Arts Centre. £13/£6.50 in advance, £14/£7 on the door 13 June 7.30pm Acoustic Strawbs. Village Hall, Harmans Cross, Swanage www.harmanscrosshall.co.uk 13 June 7.30pm Kaz Hawkins & her Band O’ Men (DA Blues). Corn Exchange, Dorchester 01305 267992 13 June 9.30pm Million Dollar Bash (Dylan/Band tribute). Tom Brown’s, Dorchester 01305 264020 14 June 7.30pm Songwriters’ Open Mic. Night, Sydney Arms, Dorchester 01305 259250 14 June 3-5.00pm Kipper (Dylan covers/Americana). Durnovaria Wine Bar/Café, Dorchester 01305 756019 15 June 8.30pm Traditional Folk Music Session. Goldies, Dorchester 01305 458202 17 June 8.30pm Matt Tarling & Friends (Irish Folk Session). The Blue Raddle, Dorchester 01305 267762 17 June 8.30pm Jazz Club Open Session. The Three Compasses, Charminster 01305 263618 18 June 9.00pm Open Mic. Night. Tom Brown’s Dorchester 01305 264020 19 June 9.30pm The Remedy. Tom Brown’s, Dorchester 01305 264020 19 June 7.30pm Dallahan (Irish/Hungarian folk). Powerstock Hut 01308 485264 19 June 7.00pm The Nash Ensemble (classical). Dorset County Museum, Dorchester 01305 756827 20 June 9.30pm Blue Commotion. Tom Brown’s, Dorchester 01305 264020 21 June 7.30pm Songwriters’ Open Mic. Night, Sydney Arms, Dorchester 01305 259250 21 June 7.30pm Dallahan (Irish/Hungarian folk). Village Hall, Studland 01929 450204 25 June 9.00pm Open Mic. Night. Tom Brown’s Dorchester 01305 264020 25 June 8.00pm Boo Hewerdine. Sunray Folk Club, Village Hall, Broadmayne 07786 654074 26 June 9.30pm Gill Anne. Tom Brown’s, Dorchester 01305 264020 26 June 7.30pm The New Jersey Boys. Oh What a Night – The Frankie Valli Story, Corn Exchange, Dorchester 01305 267992 26 June – 4 July Beaminster Festival of Music & Visual Arts. Beaminster. 01308 862943 27 June 9.30pm Inspire. Tom Brown’s, Dorchester 01305 264020 28 June 7.30pm Songwriters’ Open Mic. Night, Sydney Arms, Dorchester 01305 259250 pop, rock, folk, classical… 2 July 9.00pm Open Mic. Night. Tom Brown’s Dorchester 01305 264020 4 July 9.30pm The Skones (punk). Goldies, Dorchester 01305 458202 4 July 7.30pm Brooks Williams (DA Blues). Corn Exchange, Dorchester 01305 267992 4 July 9.30pm Howling at the Moon. Tom Brown’s, Dorchester 01305 264020 4 July 3.00pm-9.00pm Show of Hands – Annual family open-air concert. Abbotsbury Subtropical Gardens. 01305 871130 5 July 3-5.00pm Bitter & Twisted. Durnovaria Wine Bar/Café, Dorchester 01305 756019 5 July 7.30pm Songwriters’ Open Mic. Night, Sydney Arms, Dorchester 01305 259250 9 July 9.00pm Open Mic. Night. Tom Brown’s Dorchester 01305 264020 10 July 9.30pm~ Neon. Tom Brown’s, Dorchester 01305 264020 11 July 7.30pm~ Mozartissimo – An evening of Mozart opera, Swansea City Opera. Corn Exchange, Dorchester 01305 267992 Telephone numbers are those of the venue/box office/ organiser. Dorchester Voice suggests you check for ticket availability and prices (where necessary) before attending. Please note, regular music sessions sometimes vary times. Information in this magazine is published in good faith. The Dorchester Voice does not accept any liability for the accuracy of any material included, nor from any losses or claims arising from any such inaccuracies. All contributions are accepted on the basis that they are free from any copyright restrictions. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the publisher’s written permission. Published by New Media Horizons Ltd, 7 Durngate Street, Dorchester DT1 1JP. ©2015 July 1 July 8.30pm Traditional Folk Music Session. The Blue Raddle, Dorchester 01305 267762 1 July 8.30pm Jazz Club. The Three Compasses, Charminster 01305 263618 2 July 8-10.00pm Julie Lewis. Durnovaria Wine Bar/Café, Dorchester 01305 756019 Dorchester Voice 34 May-June 2015 BUSINESS DIRECTORY Casterbridge Trading Estate Marabout Industrial Estate Motor Body Repairs Windows Tony Johns Bodywork West Coast Window Centre Motor body repairs panel beating & spraying. Unit 20 01305 268594/07957 890645 UPVC windows, fascias, soffits & gutters Unit E4 01305 257267 [email protected] Dorchester & surrounding area Blinds Locksmith Dorchester Blinds Ltd 10 Pomeroy Buildings 01305 265555 [email protected] www.dorchesterblinds.com Smart Lock Solutions 24/7 local locksmith & glazing. No call-out fee. CRB checked; OAP service, 20% discount. 01305 789160 mob. 07551 713484 Motor Services Holiday Let X Ways Cars Ltd Holiday apartment in Weymouth [email protected] 01305 854719 Extra accommodation needed for visitors? 3-4 day bookings welcome. Sleeps 4 07875 842399 Cleansing Services Property Maintenance Tip-Top Cleaners Commercial and Domestic No job too large or small! 01305 266527 mob. 07805 494744 Dorset Paint & Property Maintenance Co Your local taxi company 0778 7031333 www.dorsetpaint.company.co.uk email: [email protected] Chimney Sweep Dorset Chimney Sweep available county-wide 01258 837914/ 0778 7031333 email: [email protected] Advertise for just £20! Advertise in the Trade Directory from just £20 — or £100 for six issues! Call Sheena on 07875 842399 or email [email protected] www.dorchestervoice.co.uk 35 Dorchester Voice Dorchester Voice 36 May-June 2015
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