NEW CARTOON: the rise in dubious legal actions against sign-makers
New cartoon for SignLink magazine based on an editorial about the sign industry. New commissions always welcome via email on…
Rapscallion Diary: Theatre for April and May
Going out: Madame Bovary, Holly Golightly and Helena prepare for a night out but in Blavatsky’s Tower, Ingrid is staying…
RAPSCALLION MAGAZINE: film diary for April and May
Rebellious Turkish girls, Jane Austen’s Susan is finally screened and Far From The Madding Crowd at the Roxy Pining for…
THEATRE REVIEW: Sex, facelifts and being ugly in Sarah Bradley’s near masterpiece of comic theatre at the Alma Tavern, Bristol
The Ugly One. Alma Tavern Theatre, Bristol. “I love me” is the dying refrain in Marius Von Mayenburg’s tragic comedy…
THEATRE REVIEW: Familiar American family setting suits the suits and fitted dresses of Axbridge’s actors in Arthur Miller’s moral drama about greed, lies and cover-ups
All My Sons. Axbridge Town Hall. Cover-ups, complicity, concealment. Welcome to the great American corporate scandal where greed overturns…
CARTOON: SignLink’s Soap Box for Link Publications
New cartoon for SignLink magazine based on an editorial about the sign industry. New commissions always welcome via email on…
THEATRE REVIEW: Dressed in her underwear Jane Austen gave voice to the quirks, the quibbles and the asides of her characters
More in Rapscallion Magazine at: www.harrymottram.co.uk Austen’s Women, Bridgwater Arts Centre It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single…
BOOK REVIEW: Bitter sweet stories from middle America that are universal in their ordinariness
A Spool of Blue Thread, By Anne Tyler Meet the family. There’s Abby and Red in their extended domesticity, Junior…
JOURNALISM: how one street in Somerset has changed in just 45 years
How one street in Somerset has changed in the last 45 years. Then (1973) and now – Cross Street in…
REVIEW NOVEL: Apparently, fat Americans are nice – that’s about the extent of the theme in McCall Smith’s novel – it makes you want to go on a diet in protest
Fatty O’Leary’s Dinner Party, By Alexander McCall Smith Not so much a comic novel more the defense of fat folk.…
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