Hormonal Housewives
Hormonal Housewives
Hormonal Housewives
STE-E01-S2
STE-E01-S2
Scunthorpe Telegraph
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THE Scunthorpe Art Group Society Exhibition at North Lincolnshire Museum in Scunthorpe is running until Sunday, April 28. Call 01724 843533 for more details. ON SUNDAY (April 28) an open day will take place at 51 Fleetgate from 1pm to 4pm. The property is an old domestic dwelling. Call 01469 519144 for more information.
CINEMA
Listings shown for Vue Cinema, Scunthorpe, Friday, April 26-Thursday, May 2
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FOLK band Faustus are playing at the Ropery Hall in Barton on Saturday (April 27). Doors open at 8pm and tickets are 12 or 14 on the door. Call 01652 660380. SHOW: Hospital Players in Up and Running THE Hospital Players are perfor ming the comedy Up and Running at the Plowright Theatre in Scunthorpe every day until Saturday (April 27). Performances start at 7.30pm. Visit www.scunthorpe theatres.co.uk for more details. A WEDDING fair will take place at Heslam Park, Scunthorpe, hosted by venue decoration company Be-Dazzled and take place on Wednesday, May 1 from 5.30pm to 8.30pm.
THE Scunthorpe Male Voice Choir will perform a concert at St Barnabas Church, Barnetby on Saturday (April 27). Doors open at 7pm. Call 01652 659127 for more details and tickets.
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EUROPEAN Arts will present Four Farces at Ropery Hall in Barton tomorrow (April 26). Doors open at 8pm and tickets are 10 or 12 on door. Call 01652 660380.
TEPPING inside the mind of a woman is a scary thought for some men. But if you want to imagine what it is like for us girls, this show will give you an idea. Three friends will confess all in an evening at the Baths Hall, Scunthorpe, on Thursday, May 2. Hormonal Housewives features sketches looking at everything that makes todays woman tick (or ticked off), from the joys of teenagers, and the challenge of IKEA, to the madness of holiday reps and the insanity of DIY. On stage for the shenanigans is Toyah Wilcox, writer Julie Coombe and Hollyoaks actress Sarah Buckley. In a career spanning 30 years, Toyah has had 13 top 40 singles, recorded 20 albums, written two books, appeared in more than 40 stage plays, made ten feature films and presented television programmes as diverse as The Good Sex Guide Late and Songs Of Praise. Toyah admits she saw the Hormonal Housewives script and thought it was fantastic. I love comedy as an art form, she said. Ive only ever done three comedies before and this is something really fantastic. We dont leave the stage its two hours of dialogue. Were just having the greatest time. The show is for all the women out there whose man is more James May than Christian Grey. Hormonal Housewives is written by husband and wife team Julie Coombe and John McIsaac. Since graduating in 1992, Julie has enjoyed a varied career in theatre, radio and television in productions ranging from Shakespeare to pantomime. Julie has also been a regular at Scotlands number one comedy venue, The Stand Comedy Club in Edinburgh, for the past 10 years. She and her husband, John, run a monthly new comedy writing night there called Melting Pot, which offers a platform to aspiring authors. This show is very much about women, said Toyah. Its not feminist. Its about women who talk about their lives and shared experiences. We want to be hilarious, naive and generate pleasure and weve added in a number of new scenes to this musical drama. Without giving too much away, the set is very colourful and has wobbly bits. Toyah says she shares her own personal experiences in the show. Julie and her husband have written 99 per cent of the script, showing both sides of the coin, said Toyah. Its obviously about women but we dont exclude men. Its just like women going to see a male comic they would expect to get a baiting at some point. Were on that stage worshipping men and women, not hating them. The show will be hard work but
NOW SHOWING:
gadgets and gizmos, he embarks on a harrowing quest to find those responsible. But left with nothing more than a ruined Iron Man suit, hes forced to survive by his own devices, relying on his ingenuity and instincts when he crash-lands in a small town in Tennessee. At every turn his mettle is tested, not least by Aldrich Killian (Guy Pearce), who Stark met years earlier. With the aid of his own research through a brain-trust organisation known as AIM, hes now transformed himself into a smooth but dangerous operator. As Stark fights his way back home, and to save a kidnapped Potts, he finds the answer to the question thats secretly haunted him: does the suit make the man or the man make the suit?
Iron Man 3 in 3D (12a), Sat/Sun 12.30pm, daily 1.10, 3.20, 4.20, 6.20, 7.30, 9.10, Fri/Sat/Wed 10.20pm Iron Man 3 (12a), Sat/Sun 11am, daily 2.10, 5.20, 8.30 GI Joe: Retaliation (12a), Sat/Sun 10.40am, Fri/Sat/Wed 10.30pm The Croods (U), Sat/Sun 11.20am, daily 1.50, 4.10 Olympus Has Fallen (15), Sat/Sun 11.30am, daily 2.20 (subtitled Sun), 5.10, 8.00 (subtitled Tues), Fri/Sat 10.40pm Evil Dead (18), Sat/Sun 10.40am, daily 1.10, 3.30, 5.50, 8.15, Fri/Sat/Wed 10.30pm Scary Movie 5 (15), daily 6.30, 8.45, Fri/Sat/Wed 10.50pm Oblivion (12a), Sat/Sun 11.00am, daily 1.50, 4.50, 7.45 Wreck it Ralph 3D (PG), Sat/Sun 10.00am KIDS AM: Hotel Transylvania (U), Sat/Sun 10.30 Senior Screen: Hitchcock (12a), Tues 1.00pm
HORMONAL HOUSEWIVES
The Baths Hall, Scunthorpe, May 2
HITCHCOCK: Sir Anthony Hopkins as Alfred Hitchock