National Theatre at Home – Small Island

This week with National Theatre at Home you can see Small Island,  the sell-out production of Andrea Levy’s novel.

NT at Home Small Island - photo of Leah Harvey inset into a photo of the sea

Streaming  from 7pm  tonight – Thursday 18 June, until 7pm  Thursday 25 June.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=pac-Furijsw

Embark on a journey from Jamaica to Britain, from the Second World War to 1948 – the year the HMT Empire Windrush docked at Tilbury, in this moving stage adaptation of Andrea Levy’s Orange Prize-winning novel. Hope and humanity meet stubborn reality as Small Island traces the tangled history between Jamaica and the UK and our characters dream of a better world. Hortense yearns for a new life away from rural Jamaica, Gilbert dreams of becoming a lawyer, and Queenie longs to escape her Lincolnshire roots, in three intricately connected stories.

A little warning: Please note that, as part of depicting the experience of Jamaican immigrants to Britain after the Second World War, some characters in the play use racially offensive terms.  BBFC rating is 15 due to some strong language, discriminatory behaviour, occasional sexual references and mild violence.  The running time is 2hrs 55mins with a very short interval and it is subtitled.  The performance also includes some strobe lighting

 

Shared Moments: Many congratulations on your 25th Year written by Pauline Garner

Dear All at Caring Together,
**
Wishing you many, many congratulations on your 25th Year.
Champagne celebrations | FOUR Magazine : FOUR Magazine
Not quite the lovely, happy year of celebrations you were surely all hoping for but nevertheless it is wonderful to acknowledge.
***
The work that has been done over the years is phenomenal and is so deserving of recognition.  The loyal and dedicated staff have, and still are, worthy of the highest of accolades and, although being one of the past members of staff myself I would wave these away, I certainly want to express my greatest admiration to all of you.  It is unbelievable that it is 25 years since Cherril joined a group of dedicated local people in Woodhouse as their first member of staff and her very hard work of connecting with the local older people, statutory organisations, local government and many, many more set Caring Together on it’s long and very successful road onto the organisation it is today.
Number 25 Balloons 16 Inch - Silver | Number balloons, Balloons ...
I was very privileged to join Cherril 24 years ago myself and I have very fond memories of those early years crammed together in the one little office sharing a borrowed typewriter and telephone!  The following year the lovely Valerie joined us and bless her, although Cherril and I have both now retired, she is still there with a strong link with those early years.  I believe we were always a great team and I am sure that has continued with yourselves.
Portable Typewriter with Case Cream One Size: Amazon.co.uk ...
I can honestly say despite some hard, very sad times, the fifteen years I worked at Caring Together were the happiest of my working life.  I regularly think of all the lovely people we worked with over the years and can see their faces and hear their voices and still miss them all.
**
I know that you all provide a wonderful support service and I say a big ‘well done’ to you for that and I will raise a glass to you (it may be tea) and say ‘here’s to the next 25 years of Caring Together’.
Please all keep safe and well.
Love Pauline x
Happy 25 birthday cake and candles on pink background

‘Virtual Afternoon Tea’ on Wednesday 24th June 2020 @3pm

Caring Together in Woodhouse and Little London are inviting you to our
‘Virtual Afternoon Tea’
on
Wednesday 24th June 2020 @3pm
*****
If you wish to join us please email: lisa@caringtogether.org.uk, or call: 07436 530 073 and I will send you a link. Also, if anyone would like to sing, or share something with us then let me know. And no worries if not, we would love to see you there.
Cake essential, dressing up optional 🙂

Poetry Corner take 2: ‘Imagine’ by Lemn Sissay

Dear all

Caring Together is also proud to be supporting Refugee Week this week too. I was chatting to Karen this morning who let me know Refugee Week 2020 this year is inspired by the theme ‘Imagine’.

The week is about inviting you to do one or more of their eight Simple Acts that can all be done at home. It can be chatting together as Karen and I have done this morning, or read a book, watch some talks on YouTube. It is a collective movement to imagine a better world.

I found this small yet moving poem on the below website.

“The poet Lemn Sissay once described his wonderment at the thought that everything around us was imagined first. Everything physical – the camera he was looking at, the microphone he was talking into – started as an act of imagination. He wrote a poem”:

I will not limit myself
I will not be afraid
If it were not imagined
How else could it be made?

sourced: https://refugeeweek.org.uk/simple-acts/

final-refugee-week-leeds-1 – Copy

Thank you for sharing your inspiring thoughts and words of wisdom this morning Karen.

The Refugee Week Logo | Refugee Week

Did Anybody Know A Ballet Rave was a thing?

No? We didn’t either, but it is and you can watch it on YouTube this week.

Bjork Ballet by Arthur Pita and the San Francisco Ballet is a Ballet Rave featuring the music of superstar Bjork, and described as an imaginative spectacle that will make you want to jump up and dance.

The Guardian says: ” Visually, the work is a cacophony of glamour, craziness and fairytale ”
” Björk Ballet is a wonderful watch – surprising, mysterious and a ridiculous amount of fun ” 

Available until 19th June – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98yI2LT26lw

Poetry Corner: My Lockdown poem – written by Luke Hazelgrave

We are proud to be supporting Learning Disability Week this week. It is a great way to raise awareness of learning disability across Leeds and the UK
Leeds Learning Disability Week logo - Connect in the North
Luke Hazelgrave who lives at Parkwood View in Specialised Supported Living Service has written a lockdown poem. Luke originally recorded himself reading the poem which he then shared to try and keep spirits up.
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I’ve written a poem about lockdown; a strange time for my generation.

It helps me express myself in this current situation.

I understand that lockdown is to keep me safe and sound,

But it makes me sad that I can’t have my family around.

The virus still scares me but I think I’ve been quite brave.

I like clapping for the NHS when having a shower, and having a good old wave.

I miss their smiling faces now that staff are wearing masks,

I’ve been kept busy by helping with household tasks.

I’m really missing sports but most of all rugby,

I’m really missing cuddles

Now that people can’t hug me.

I can’t wait to leave the house, further than the front door.

I can’t wait to go out to dance on the dance floor.

I really miss my family and I really miss my friends.

I can’t wait until this lockdown finally ends.

The lockdown is something I’ll remember forever.

We’ve all been so strong, let’s get through this together!

Luke Hazelgrave

The return of football and where you can watch some games for free

I suspect there will be a sharp divide between those who think that the return of football is good news and those who think exactly the opposite.

But, for those who are excited about this – Premier League games start tomorrow and the Championship resumes on Saturday 20th. (Leeds United kick off away at Cardiff on Sunday 21st). All matches will be played without fans present to be broadcast on TV.

Although Leeds will have a crowd of sorts for their home games as they have offered all season ticket holders the chance to send in a photo to be made into a cardboard cut-out to occupy their usual seat.  It’s intended to be of the person who holds the ticket but that’s not compulsory so they may have acquired a few unlikely celebrity supporters when they play the first home tie against Fulham on Saturday 27th June.

Many of the games are only available on a paid subscription channel but a third of the Premiership and FA cup games will be available to watch for free, in a variety of different ways:

BBC will show four Premier league games and four FA cup games including the final

Amazon Prime will be showing four league games – you normally have to pay for an Amazon Prime membership but they have said you will not need membership to watch these games – these will be internet streamed instead of on TV

Sky are making 25 of their games available free on the Pick channel this is free to watch and is on:

Freeview 11                                 Freesat  144                           Sky 159                                    Virgin 165

 

Sadly, it doesn’t appear at the moment that any of the Championship games are being shown for free.

For a full list of all the upcoming games in both leagues and where you can watch them visit,  www.live-footballontv.com

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Oliver continues…lock down written by Oliver Cross

Dear all,

THE present lockdown has lasted so long that I’ve found myself watching far too much on the freeview channel Talking Pictures.

This specialises in British films, usually in black-and-white, from the 1940s, 50s  60s, most of which feature some  combination of George Cole, Stanley Holloway, Alistair Simm, Jack Warner, Diana Dors or the cast of Dad’s Army when they were boys.

Nearly all films on the channel are preceded with a disclaimer to the effect that certain scenes may display language and attitudes which are not acceptable to modern audiences, particularly the ones involving Terry Thomas or the girls of St Trinian’s.

Incidentally, my partner Lynne and I often attended, in the far-off, per-lockdown days, Thursday matinees at the Cottage Road Cinema in Leeds, which serves free cups of tea and is thus irresistible to pensioners. One film – I forget which – came with a warning that it included sex, inappropriate language, nudity and violence, at which us pensioners erupted into spontaneous cheering while waving our polystyrene tea mugs like a bunch of delinquents.

But things have moved on and films should now also include a warning that certain scenes may appear to contravene hygiene, quarantine and social-distancing rules, which, although they have only been around for a tiny portion of my life, I’ve adopted so thoroughly that now it’s difficult watch any films at all.

When I see a couple jumping into bed together, I wonder whether they come from the same household. When I watch soldiers huddled together under fire in old war films, I no longer worry about the bullets, I’m more concerned that they might be exposing themselves to the Coronavirus, particularly as there don’t appear to be adequate hand-sanitising facilities.

Old dance musicals, with huge casts and much mingling, have become unbearable for me to watch because I have to pretend I’m Cecil B DeMille in order to mentally rearrange the dances into safe-distancing routines.

Apart from being traumatised by old films, I’ve spent much of the lockdown thinking about whether I should try and finish James Boswell’s Life of Dr Samuel Johnson, which is 1,700 pages long and which  I started reading about 50 years ago.

The problem is that I only read it in the loo, opening it at random and reading a few paragraphs at a time. I did think that, during the lockdown, I could try  reading it start-to-finish in a disciplined way, but decided quite quickly that the random method works best.

Nothing much happens in any of the 1,700 pages; Johnson is recorded writing and talking to just about every 18th century person living in London you’ve ever heard of  – Oliver Goldsmith, Sir Joshua Reynolds, David Garrick, Edmund Burke  and Jean -Jacques Rousseau are all there  try to outtalk each other until,  rather like  many viewers Loose Women, you long for a bit more silence.

Written by Oliver Cross

Lovely Oliver, thank you kindly, until next time…

Take 2 – Monday Mind Workout’ answers from you!

Dear all,

I have some more songs that were sent through – thank you to you all for kindly getting your answers to me. I have been able to have a listen to some of them on YouTube.

The below additions make it 51!
76 Trombones by the The Music Man
Happy Birthday Sweet 16 sung by Neil Sedaka
20 Tiny Fingers sung by the Stargazers
5 4 3 2 1  By Manfred Mann
2 4 6 8 Motorway sung by Tom Robinson
Highway 66 ?
Love Potion no 9 sung by the Searchers
December 63[oh what a night]; sung by Frankie Valli
2 out of 3 aint bad by Meatloaf
3 Coins in a Fountain film

‘Monday Mind Workout’ answers from you – 15th June 2020

Dear all,
It sounds like this one got you thinking and I do appreciate your replies. See below some answers I got from you. I have added a few of my own too.

1. ‘One’ by U2

2. ‘It Takes Two’ by Marvin Gaye and Kim Weston

3. ‘7 Rooms of Gloom’ by The Four Tops

4. ‘8 Days a Week’ by The Beatles

5. ‘9-5’ Dolly Parton

6. ‘Another One Bites The Dust’ by Queen

7. ‘I Would Die 4 U’ by Prince 💔

8. ‘When I’m 64’ by the Beatles

9. ‘One More Night’ by Phil Collins

10. ’99 Red Balloons’ by Nena
11.’2 become 1′ by the Spice Girls
12.’Three Times a Lady’ by the Commodores
13.’Love Plus One’ Haircut 100
14. ‘Nothing Compares 2 U’ by Sinead O’Connor
15. ‘One of Us’ by Abba
16. ‘Mambo No. 5’ by Lou Bega
17. ’19’ by Paul Hardcastle
18. ‘Summer of 69’ by Bryan Adams
19. ‘Three Little Birds’ by Bob Marley
20.  ‘I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles)’ by ‘The Proclaimers
21. ‘Tea for Two’ was sung by Doris Day in 1950
22. ‘Three Steps to Heaven’ was sung by Eddie Cochran
23. ‘Knock 3 Times on the Ceiling’ sung by Dawn
24.’123′ sung by Len Barry
25. ‘Only 16’ sung by Sam Cooke
26. ’16 going on 17′ Sound of Music
27. ‘7 little girls sitting in the back seat’ sung by The Avons
28. ’12 Days of Christmas’ by John Denver and The Muppets
29. ‘One More Night’ by Maroon 5
30. ‘7’ by Lucas Graham
31. ‘2000 miles’ by the Pretenders
32. ‘1 in 10’ by UB40
33. ‘8 Mile’ by Eminem
34. ‘Baby One more time’ – by Britney Spears
35.’ 50 ways to leave your Lover’ by Paul Simon
36. ‘Just the Two of Us’ by Grover Washington Jr
37. ‘All I Want for Christmas is My Two Front Teeth’ novelty Christmas song written in 1944
38. ’10 Green Bottles’ Children’s Nursery Rhyme
39. ‘1999’ by Prince
40. ‘Let’s All Meet up in the Year 2000’ by Pulp
And lastly
41. ‘One Way or Another’ by Blonde
Thank you everyone, until next time….