Showing posts with label getting involved. Show all posts
Showing posts with label getting involved. Show all posts

Thursday, 22 April 2010

Get inspired with Barracudas carnival artists .... join now!

Join in the fun with Barracudas carnival artists - music, dance, stilts and costume.

Thursday evenings 5-6pm Beginner music - learn drums and saxophone

Thursday evenings 6-8pm Carnival night - all welcome!


Barracudas Carnival Centre
Corner Bath St (Abbey Rd)
Barrow in Furness
LA14 5TY

01229 812036

Tuesday, 23 March 2010

Matthew & Callum help out with the project....

Hi my name is Matthew and sat by me is my best mate Callum.  We are 11 years old and we go to Greengate Junior School. Over the last few weeks we have been helping with the Central and Hindpool Inspiring Community’s project.

We have made up slogans and thought of what we can put our main slogan on like footballs, caps, wallets/purses, and even key rings. We talked about our favourite role models for example Amir Khan, the Armed forces, Pat Ryan a local boxer who lives in Barrow. The girls said that their role models were Florence and the Machine and another local hero Andy High.
Last week the Bay came and interviewed us about the Inspiring Communities Project.  We did a group shout out, and they interviewed us singly and asked us about our ideas and we gave them some good advice which they recorded on a mini microphone. We talked about what posters would look like and how effective they would be too.

Oh yeah I almost forgot we eat loads of PIZZA.

Find out more about the project by coming along to our launch event (which we also helped to organise).

The event will be at our school, Greengate Juniors, on Saturday 17th April 2010. The fun starts at 11am and goes on until 3pm.

The Bay will be broadcasting live from there from 10am - 2pm .... and The Relilcs will be playing around 1.45pm.

Come and join in the fun!!

Photo courtesy of Cathy Rawlings.

Tuesday, 9 March 2010

The Likes of Us - Abbey Musical Society

A MUSICAL which tells the story of Dr Barnardo is being performed in Barrow for the very first time later this month.

Abbey Musical Society will be putting on a run of ‘The Likes of Us’ at Forum 28.

Along side the regular members of the society the show also features talented local youngsters playing the part of impoverished orphans in nineteenth century London.

Director Colin Smith explained the story of the show, he said “At one point there were 18,000 homeless orphans in London when Barnardo arrived there in 1865. They all moved into the area because of the Industrial Revolution.

“A lot of families had come into the cities to work and there was huge poverty. They were living in shacks and often families died or they just abandoned the kids because they couldn’t afford them.

“At the start of the show, Barnardo arrives in London on his way to China to be a missionary. When he gets to London he’s horrified to discover all the homeless children. He decides that his calling is to do something about that rather than go to China.

“Barnardo was also equally appalled by the gin palaces and drunkenness and debauchery of London and how nobody was looking after the children and the families – it was against all of his Christian beliefs. So he vowed to close down the gin palaces and inevitably that put him on a collision course.

“The locals weren’t very keen on Barnardo coming in and buying up the gin palaces but that’s what he managed to do. He got some powerful politicians on his side and he was excellent at raising money so he bought the gin palace, closed it down and opened a children’s home in it’s place.”

The musical was the first show written by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice when they were in their 20's at university. It was never performed professionally. Colin said “Two years ago they released it for amateurs. It was performed in London with Stephen Fry as the narrator to launch it. We are the first society in this region to put it on.

“We knew it was a good, rollicking, exciting show with a good story and lovely tunes so we got it as quickly as we could.”

The Likes of Us features local children and some of them have never performed on stage before. Colin said “We auditioned the children last November and from about 50, we narrowed it down to 14.

“We’ve now got a range of talented youngsters from around the area aged from five to 14 to play their parts in the show. For one or two of them, it’s their very first time on stage, they’ve never done anything like it before. Some have done things at school and one or two have done things with dance schools or youth societies so it’s a real mixture.

“They’re learning the story of Barnardo and what happened to the children in that age, and that’s partly the difficulty they’re having with the performance – they can’t imagine children being in such squalor and they’re all still a bit too polite and clean, but once the make up goes on I’m sure they’ll get into the spirit of it.

“People who come to see the show can expect lively dance numbers, risqué humour and also pathos. There will be tunes the audience recognise but not songs they will know. That’s because Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice later used some of the tunes for other shows – there are tunes people will recognise from Evita or from Jesus Christ Superstar because they recycled them.

“We have to pay royalties to be able to perform the show and ten per cent of those royalties are donated to the Dr Barnardos charity. Every ticket bought will mean money goes to the charity.”

The show runs at Forum 28 from March 22-27, starting at 7.30pm. Tickets are available from the box office on 820000