On Thursday 10th April, 2025, me, my boyfriend Aaron and friends Robyn, Joanne, Sophia, Lou, Emma and her teenage son Lucas attended Cast in Doncaster to see the spectacular Easter pantomime, ‘Pinocchio’
The storyline to this production is centred on a naughty puppet, Pinocchio (Ryan Greaves), who appears to have no morals, and partakes in frowned upon endeavours such as truanting from school. He will only become a ‘real boy’, if he proves himself brave, selfless and true
Greaves is a regular to Cast theatre, appearing in every Anton Benson Productions (ABP) Easter pantomime; ‘Beauty and the Beast’, ‘Wizard of Oz’, ‘Rapunzel’ and ‘Robin Hood’. He co-wrote and directed ‘Pinocchio’! He has a first class degree in acting from Manchester Met School of Theatre and is absolutely hilarious! 😂
Phylip Harries is also extremely funny, the pantomime Dame, who has performed in countless pantomimes throughout the years, and even nominated in 2023 and 2024 for the prestigious Best Dame award at the Pantomime Awards
The malicious baddie this Easter was the well known versatile celebrity Bobby Davro as the sinister Italian Stromboli! This was Bobby’s 48th pantomime, however it is only the first time he has played a villain.
SPOILER ALERT: Stromboli forces Princess Tik-Tok (Kate Salmon), a doll wound by a key, to pretend to be in love with Pinocchio as to convince Pinocchio to be a part of Stromboli’s devious, greedy, money ridden schemes of stardom.
Kate studied at the Royal Central School of Speech Drama, graduating with a distinction Masters, and is an Associate Director for Anton Benson Productions (ABP). She is immensely talented
The Blue Fairy was played by Amanda Henderson in the panto we saw (a fan favourite, playing the lovely staff nurse Robyn Miller on BBC’s Casualty, for a decade). However, in the official programme it includes British media personality Katie Price in the credentials.. which may explain why there were a lot of Katie Price jokes 🤣
There was also special guest appearances from Zippy and George, characters from the popular children’s television programme Rainbow 🌈 Zippy is a five year old orange/brown puppet, with a zip for a mouth and George an eight year old pink anthropomorphic hippo [www.fandom.com]
The band consisted of Jamie Todd, a musical director and keyboard player and Jake Greville, a drummer and sound effects technician. The musical supervisor was Olivia Zacharia, the choreographer Beth Portman and the dancers were from the Allegro Theatre Dance Academy, situated in Doncaster
There were plentiful comical interludes and cheeky ‘dad jokes’, many of which teased Doncaster residents (i.e jokes about living in Doncaster). The Dame, Mama Geppetto flirted throughout with one of the poor adult male audience members! 😜
At one point, huge inflatable balls were bouncing all around the auditorium, water pistols squirting the unfortunate few at the front. There was a really funny scene assembling a table, to which it collapsed but then pretend nails were knocked with an inflatable hammer on poor Mama Geppetto’s head!
There was also an array of comical tongue twisters and rhymes, and so many innuendos which went completely over the heads of the younger audience members… words which rhymed with a ‘wonky’ donkey 🫏 🤪 and words rhyming with women names, for example, Pat and hat, Cath and bath, Pearl and swirl, Ruth and tooth, Jane and plain, Sue and blue, Annie and… 🤣🤣
With regards to musical numbers, quite a few songs came from Disney’s ‘Pinocchio’ such as ‘When You Wish Upon a Star’, ‘Hi-diddle-dee-dee’, and ‘I’ve Got No Strings’, but also others such as ‘Popular’ (Wicked) and ‘The Greatest Show’ (The Greatest Showman). Bobby Davro did an amazing job memorising and reciting hundreds of countries in his ‘Circus Medley’ (Act two)
As aforementioned, Anton Benson is the managing director and producer. The production team were astounding in relation to stage and technical management and production. The lighting, sound, scene, props etc were brilliant, the backstage crew playing a crucial role in ensuring a smooth operation, bringing organisation and dedication, coordinating well.
One very memorable scene, and a great example of clever staging, is where Pinocchio is supposedly drowning in the ocean, with an inflatable shark 🦈 predator pursuing him. The water is theatrically expressed by a blue horizontal cloth, spread out across the stage, to which Pinocchio and dancers stick out various bodily limbs and perform funny ‘drowning’ poses behind the cloth 💙💙
Tik-Tok turned out good in the end, Pinocchio saves the baddie, proving his worth and therefore becoming a ‘real boy’ and well, you could say, all is perfect in panto land..
One element I was somewhat disappointed with however was the matter of Pinocchio’s nose. The norm being, everytime Pinocchio tells a lie, the nose is supposed to grow 🤔 The extending nose prop was only used in one scene, maybe two which I recall, yet (and as I am sure many would agree) it is integral and an important aspect of the original story…
Despite this, I thought the production was exemplary, our bellies hurt from laughing so much, and I cannot wait for the next panto! 😁😁
All information obtained from the official Anton Benson Productions (ABP) ‘Pinocchio’ programme
Thank you ever so much for reading / viewing, I appreciate the support 🥰🥰
My next blog post will possibly be a Leeds travel blog, as I am visiting Leeds over the Easter weekend to support my lovely sister who is doing a charity run for Alzheimer’s Society, in memory of our beautiful mum. I am so proud of her! 😁😁
I am also still on with my ‘Alice in Wonderland’ diamond art 💎 🎨
On the Saturday 22nd March, 2025, my boyfriend Aaron treated me to an early birthday present, a ticket to Steve Steinman’s ‘Vampires Rock: Eternal Love’, at Cast Theatre, Doncaster. There was me, Aaron and our friend Lou. It was absolutely amazing!
Steve Steinman is an extremely successful writer, director and producer, a number one recording artist. In ‘Eternal Love’, 20 original songs are taken from Steinman’s epic ‘Heaven’s Gate’ and ‘Take a Leap of Faith’ number one albums. It is the third in his ‘Vampires Rock’ trilogy and has proved immensely popular. A rock musical like no other, with a mix of musical theatre, vampire seduction, electrifying rock anthems performed by extremely talented musicians, sexy dancing and Steinman’s aka Vampire Baron’s tongue in cheek hilarity 🤣🤣
Alongside his co-star, John Evans as Bosley, Reg Enderby, for the Nottingham show and gig guide reportedly said:
“Steve and John’s comedy timing brought back memories of watching the great Morecambe and Wise” (Eternal Love official programme)
The band was absolutely mint and I was not surprised to read that the dancer playing Ursula, Victoria Farley, was also the choreographer as she really stood out as being sensational. All the dancers put in great effort nonetheless
SPOILER ALERT: The storyline of the production in a sense was unrequited love. Medusa (one of the dancers played by Tanyth Roberts), is madly in love with Baron Von Rockula (Steinman), an old flame. However, he has just wed his new vampire bride, Xena Rock-Heart (Claire Zamore)… yet, all is not what it seems…
Me and some friends have already seen Steinman’s ‘Anything For Love: The Meatloaf Story’ a few months back, showcasing all Meatloaf’s iconic songs. You can definitely tell Meatloaf was a huge inspiration for Steinman’s music and style. It was actually how his career began back in 1994 when he appeared as Meatloaf on the very popular at the time, ‘Stars in Their Eyes’
We haven’t got our tickets yet, however, we are very much looking forward to his upcoming ‘Love Hurts: Power Ballads and Anthems’, featuring songs from the likes of rock legends Whitesnake, Aerosmith, Heart, Fleetwood Mac, Tina Turner, Foreigner, Van Halen, etc. It is going to be wicked!
‘Eternal Love’ was such a joyous feel good production. The vocals were absolutely incredible (especially Tanyth Roberts as Medusa), she is a superstar in the making!
The whole atmosphere, the ace songs, the impressive choreography, the props, scenes, comedy element…fantastic! It was very funny and ever so sexy 😜😜
Vampires Rock!
On Wednesday 2nd April, 2025, myself, Aaron and our two friends Joe and Lou went to see an adapted stage play of Bram Stoker’s ‘Dracula’ at Cast, Doncaster.
This production of ‘Dracula’ marks for the Blackeyed Theatre 20 years as a producing company. Their mission, to tell stories both theatrically and simply, fueling imagination; stripped back and bare. The style is adapted somewhat as the company receives little funding, yet they embrace this situation as an opportunity to push creativity.
True to the novel, the production converses journal entries, letters, telegrams etc
Nick Lane, the director and adapter of this show explains some of his artistic choices in the official programme. Accepting that the character Dracula has been rewritten many times, it is apparent there are many unavoidable associative tropes, yet he wanted to explore the complex side of Dracula as not purely a villain.
The character Mina is liberated as a self-aware, intelligent young woman, far from the norms of Victorian literature. Furthermore, Dr Hennessey and Renfield are played by female actresses instead of male as in the novel. This decision was made to highlight social norms of the time and to add dramatic tension. Nick researched widely “Asylums for Lunatic Women”. In Victorian society women were treated completely atrociously
‘Dracula’, as aforementioned, as an epistolary novel is respected and replicated in this adaptation. There were two key roles for each actor (only six actors in the entire production), and Dracula is played by three male cast members, his de-aging process dramatised by younger actors as the play persists
David Chafer had contrasting roles as both Dracula and Van Helsing, two immensely opposing figures. Richard Keightley, from mega confident Dracula to a timid, anxiety ridden steward. Harry Rundle, a young, physically strong and virile Dracula, dominant and commanding, versus the quieter role of Arthur
With this play, Nick wanted to portray both the familiar and the unexpected.
In cinematic history, Christopher Lee in the 1958 technicolour Hammer Head production of ‘Dracula’, was the first cinematic Dracula to have actual canine ‘fangs’, blood streaming, which became heavily associated until the more recent tendency to highlight the human within the vampire 🧛♂️ The metaphysical soul searching tale, such as with ‘Interview with the Vampire’ Anne Rice (1976)
In Bram Stoker’s novel, 1897, Dracula has a disgusting vile breath, he has fluffy palms, elongated ugly nails, a bulky nose… the overarching theme being the exotic and foreign threat to domesticated England. Invasion. We must remember, Jonathan Harker is a solicitor, travelling to Transylvania to facilitate a move to London. The xenophobic threat, the ‘foreign-ness’ of the count, entwined with the sexual, drinking female English blood (and, gasp, maybe male blood too 😲), penetrative and passionate. Written to horrify, but also to excite thrill and tittilate!
Most Dracula adaptations are inspired by the source, but most deviate from the storyline to fit with issues of their times, i.e. to today’s audience
This production by the marvellous Nick Lane explores the idea of ‘bloodline memory’ in a post pandemic world. The concept is that we all have ‘past lives’, we are reincarnated; our memories are transferred, our souls incarnated multiple times. That, under hypnosis, we can access our ancestor’s memories, feelings, skills, anxieties, phobias etc. This theory is cleverly linked to the vampire myth in the adaptation in the sense that when a vampire penetrates their fangs into an innocent victim, blood is not only drained, but the bloodline virus infects the victim. The vampire’s bloodline, their hundreds and thousands of years of memory dominating the host; supplanting them with centuries of violence; killing, feeding, hunting, until the fever completely overrides the victim’s own personal thoughts, feelings, personality…Eradicating their entire human being to become darkness, seductors of the night, monstrous, abhorrent and Undead.
My personal opinion? It was somewhat sombre, a sophisticated but very serious performance, in complete difference to Steve Steinman’s ‘Eternal Love’! Entirely opposing styles.. and in all honesty, though the Transylvanian accent was most applaudable, I would have appreciated more fangs and drizzling down the neck blood!
(All information obtained from the ‘Steve Steinman’s Vampires Rock: Eternal Love’ and the Blackeyed Theatre’s ‘Dracula’ official programmes)
🧛♂️🧛♂️🧛♂️🧛♂️
For my next blog post, I shall be writing a theatre review of Cast, Doncaster’s Easter pantomime ‘Pinocchio’… so watch this space! 😜😜
Thank you as ever for reading/viewing, much love, Lauren xx
Hi everyone ☺️ My latest UnicornPostbox blog post is progression photos of an amateur Easter themed bunny pub painting..hope you enjoy 💕💕
The first step was to outline the shape of the bunny’s body, and apply a beige block base colour. This sounds simple but it was actually quite difficult, and the most technical part of the whole painting. I struggled with the eyes unfortunately being too far up, so I had to alter the bunny cheeks to make the shape look more in proportion. Before this, she looked a bit like ‘Pikachu, from pokemon’ ha 😆 Likewise, I got the nose/mouth area completely wrong and not in proportion either. I left the paint to dry and then rectified. She looked more feminine with cute black eyelashes 🥰 The most enjoyable step however was building up a multitude of bright colours for the bunny’s fur; working very loose and random to ascertain a very abstract style. Moreover, it was so fun splattering the pale background various vibrant colours, it was so unpredictable and exciting 🩷💚💙💜💛❤️ I accidentally splattered her left eye, but this was easily sorted. I incorporated more yellow in the ears (a lighter colour), and created shade with the colours, different light and dark tones in different places. I also created definition with black paint strokes, black fur, and black whiskers. As a little finishing touch, I painted her nose a gorgeous dark pink.. and here is the finished piece:
I must say this was my favourite of all the pub paintings! It was so enjoyable and suited my personal paint preferences, loose and sort of abstract expressionism, free and spontaneous.. I am so pleased with this Easter bunny 🐰
For my next UnicornPostbox blog post, I am on with a ‘Alice in Wonderland’ themed diamond art 💎🎨 .. so watch this space!
Thank you as always for reading/viewing. Kind regards, Lauren xx
Hi everyone! My latest UnicornPostbox blog post is progression photos of an amateur couple portrait.. Hope you like!
First of all, I used my light box to outline the two subjects (such a cheat! 🤣). I shaded using Derwent professional sketching pencils. The background I incorporated red love hearts ❤️❤️ to fit with the romantic theme, and used a professional colour marker pen to turn the whole background dark purple. I also outlined Robyn and Matty and the love hearts with a black promarker pen. I am a big fan of pop art, and love this sort of style.. and here is the finished piece:
Matty and Robyn are a new couple, and great friends of mine. They paid me £20 to do this portrait of them, to put towards my fundraising for Alzheimer’s Research (I am doing a 5K tough mudder in July in loving memory of my beautiful mum)
Although admittedly I am only amateur and not professional, and I made this clear to them, they were both chuffed with the drawing, and are planning to photocopy it so they both have a copy each. I believe also they are going to get them framed 😁😁
For my next UnicornPostbox blog post, I have started an ‘Alice in Wonderland’ themed diamond art and the Easter pub painting is a bright colourful Easter bunny 🐰 So that will be fun! We also have theatre shows coming up in the next few months 💕💕
Thank you as ever for reading/ viewing. Kind regards, Lauren xx
For this Valentine’s Day me and my wonderful boyfriend Aaron travelled to Sheffield for a romantic weekend away. This blog post is a description of our travels, with accompanying photography, hope you enjoy! ❤️❤️
We travelled by train and arrived at our hotel, Wilson Carlile Centre on Cavendish Street, in central Sheffield, check in 2pm. At first I thought we’d gone to the wrong place, as did not appear much like a hotel, and the accommodation was around the corner in a separate building to the reception. It was a small room, with only a continental basic breakfast in the morning. It didn’t matter so much as we’re both vegetarians anyway. Good location. Cheap and relatively cheerful I’d say…
We exchanged Valentine’s Day gifts at the hotel 🥰
We arrived at 5pm at the El Paso restaurant for a romantic Valentine’s Day meal. It is both an Italian and a Tex Mex. We shared a cheesy garlic bread, Aaron had a veggie Chimichanga and I had veggie enchiladas 😋 The DJ played love songs, and Unchained Melody came on, one of my mum’s favourite songs 😢 (She has passed away). The meal was beautiful 🥰
After El Paso, we went to an adult themed crazy golf ⛳️ called Golf Fang, it was mint 🥰 An 18 hole course, with bespoke art adorning every wall. A massive amount of geeky stuff from films and popular culture etc, amazingly and uniquely designed, each hole; glow in the dark, exotic themes, etc, really cool and immersive. We also drank a lot of the Valentine’s Day special cocktails 🍸😉
Afterwards, we went drinking on West Street, I got very drunk 🤪 We ventured to West Street Live, but mainly we danced like loons in the Irish Bar 😜 The music was fantastic! Grabbed a margarita pizza 🍕 on the way back…
I felt so rough Saturday morning, we’d hardly had any sleep and had to check out at 10am 😭
We had a stroll around the city centre, the Peace Gardens, Millennium gallery, and did a little bit of shopping 🛍
My feet were killing me, my platform doc martens from the night before completely gave me blisters, I kept having to put new plasters on, even got blood on the bed sheets!
😲 So apart from that, it was nice having a little mooch. Aaron bought me a orange/black checked cardigan from Blue Banana 🥰 He bought a pink tie too for our friends upcoming wedding, we wandered around the indoor market, and we also had a McDonald’s and then a MASSIVE pancake each, with creamy lattes… then it was time to pick up our stored luggage, and grab an uber back to Sheffield train station… homeward bound! 🥰🥰
Overall, it was a brilliant little getaway, had so much fun 😍😍
My next blog posts will probably be diamond arts 💎🎨 or amateur portraits (fundraising for Alzheimer’s Research) or an Easter bunny 🐰 pub painting
Thank you so much as ever for reading/viewing.. Lots of love, Lauren xx
Hi everyone! My latest UnicornPostbox blog post is progression photos of an amateur portrait of me and my boyfriend Aaron, as a surprise gift to him for Valentine’s Day.. hope you like! ❤️❤️
I used a light box (cheat lol) to outline me and Aaron. I drew with Derwent professional sketching pencils, mainly HB and 2B. To keep with the Valentines theme, I incorporated red love hearts, made bold with a black promarker pen, I also drew a black line around me and Aaron, to make the images ‘pop’ (I’m a big fan of pop art). To finish, a professional blue colour marker pen coloured the entire background. I also purchased a lovely red frame to display…And here is the end result:
I took me a few days to complete, which isn’t too bad to be fair ❤️❤️
I am advertising if anyone else would like an amateur couple portrait, to put towards my fundraising for Alzheimer’s Research (I am doing a Tough Mudder in the summer in memory of my beautiful mum who sadly lost her long battle with this awful disease) 😢
My next blog post is a travel blog of mine and Aaron’s first Valentine’s weekend in Sheffield 💕💕
There is a new Easter bunny themed pub painting in March, and no doubt I’ll soon be on with another diamond art 💎🎨
Thank you as ever for viewing/reading. Much love, Lauren xx
Hi everyone! My latest UnicornPostbox blog post is progression photos of a Cubist Picasso inspired amateur ‘Paint Your Pal’ pub painting.. hope you like!
One of the most influential styles of the 20th century was Cubism. Pablo Picasso co-founded the cubist movement in 1907-8, Paris, with Georges Braque. Essentially it involves abstract forms which are depicted in many different viewpoints, with multiple perspectives and fragmented angles, like looking through a kaleidoscope.
My amateur Picasso inspired ‘Paint Your Pal’ painting has elements of this I believe, such as within the face. In hindsight however, I believe the background is more reminiscent of Piet Mondrian’s work, which was inspired by Cubism. Mondrian is the pioneer of abstract art, with his grid structures and use of geometric forms.
Nevertheless, this was a very enjoyable exercise 😁😁 Usually in pub painting, we are guided step-by-step by our art teacher Becca. Whereas with this painting, we were encouraged to experiment and use our own imagination. Some people tried a more realistic approach painting their pal/partner, but me and Denise were decisive we were definitely going to go all abstract! With bold colours and bold black lines to distinguish the shapes 🥰
We could use any colours we wanted and design it any way we wanted..so very free, and explorative.. great fun! 😁😁 It does still resemble Denise however I think, with her curly gingery hair, ha! 🤣🤣 Denise’s portait of me is very cubist!
For the next pub painting it is an Easter bunny 🐰 themed one in March… I have so many diamond arts to be getting on with 💎🎨 but I am also on with a pencil portrait drawing…so watch this space!
Many thanks as ever for reading/viewing.. Much love, Lauren xx
Hi everyone! My latest UnicornPostbox blog post is progression photos of a sentimental ‘Those We Love’ diamond art 💎🎨.. hope you enjoy!
This one is really special because I am going to frame it with a pink frame and leave by my mum’s gravestone.. she unfortunately passed away last year after a long battle with early onset Alzheimer’s 🩷🩷
I think it is really pretty, with gorgeous flowers and beautiful butterflies 💐🦋
I have so many diamond arts to do! I was bought loads for Christmas 🎄 A colourful eye one, an ‘Alice in Wonderland’ a unicorn, a moon/night sky, a personalised one of me and my boyfriend, etc..
Next on the agenda however, I am at pub painting tomorrow with my lovely friend Denise. It is a Valentines day special, ‘paint your pal or partner’ 🩷🩷 Obviously we are doing paint your pal lol..
I think it will be really fun as it’s not the normal format with Becca the art teacher guiding us step by step.. it is more of a do what you want go wild exercise 🤣🤣
We are going to go all abstract and have fun with it! I can’t wait! 😁😁
So yes, look out for the next blog post coming very soon…
As ever, thank you for reading/ viewing, all the best, Lauren xx
On 10th January 2025, me and my new boyfriend Aaron travelled to London on a much needed few days city break. While there we went to see an amazing West End show ‘Stranger Things: The First Shadow’, we visited one of my favourite places, Camden Town, had fantastic fun at the Paradox Museum, and we also journeyed to the highly anticipated Warner Bros Studio Tour: The Making of Harry Potter, on the outskirts of London. It was an incredible weekend away, mine and Aaron’s first together.
In this blog post, I shall be writing a theatre review of ‘Stranger Things: The First Shadow’, accompanied by a description/ travel blog of our outings! I hope you enjoy!
We left Doncaster late Friday morning, commuting to London on a NLER train, and arrived early afternoon. As we approached King’s Cross station I was feeling quite nervous, which is understandable I suppose.
On arrival into London, we went for a cheeky nandos round the corner from King’s Cross. It was an absolute nightmare carrying our large holdall luggage bags on the underground. They were so heavy and bulky, hurting our shoulders. Me and Aaron have come to the understanding that for our next getaway we are definitely going to purchase some wheeled suitcases, ha 😄
We eventually made it to our hotel, the Holiday Inn, in Kensington High Street. Although the room was quite small, it was sufficient. The hotel was clean, the staff friendly and it was situated in a great location, very central. No complaints whatsoever, and at a rather reasonable price we reserved on Booking.com. We unpacked and chilled a few hours, before embarking to Phoenix Theatre.
I love the underground. I managed to navigate us around quite smoothly, except for a few tiny hiccups. We got off a stop too early for the theatre, so we jumped into a black cab just to make sure we weren’t rushing about.
Stranger Things (SPOILERS ALERT):
‘Stranger Things: The First Shadow’ was absolutely incredible! 😲 A prequel to the highly rated and much adored Netflix sci-fi phenomenon.
Developed from the imaginations of the Duffer Brothers, Matt and Ross Duffer, the Stranger Things stage play is the origin story of Henry Creel, later to be known as the villain Vecna, the overarching antagonist of the Upside Down dominion (Season 4)
Three time Tony award winning director Stephen Daldry collaborated with Sonia Friedman, a well established theatre producer – and writer, Jack Thorne, multi award winning – plus the shows long time writer, Kate Trefry, together they devised a brilliant plot for the play, a direction which excited them all, which was, as aforementioned, the origin story of Henry Creel.
The television series is rich in mythology and character. The little ordinary town of Hawkins, Indiana, where extraordinary mind-blowing events emerge. Top secret experiments, gateways to another dimension (the Upside Down) telepathic and telekinetic superpowers, sinister entities – demogorgons, the Mind Flayer, and of course Vecna, who transpires to be an evolution of Henry Creel, the Hawkins Laboratory original test subject.
Stranger Things has roots very much from the Gothic genre. Of course, many of us have always been fascinated and interested in ‘monsters’, we may have supernatural favourites, werewolves, vampires, etc. We are just so intent on terrifying ourselves! Why is the horror genre as prevalent as as ever today? Films, TV shows.. Because we have a thirst so insatiable for these hellish creatures, our imaginations are haunted 😱😱
The scientific spin on Stranger Things is it’s parallel universe, the Upside Down – a world recognisable to our own, yet so completely twisted, deformed and horrific.
The Duffer Brothers succeed in forging attributes that are widely identifiable in the Gothic tradition, to new audiences, in new, fresh exciting ways, season by season.
Coming back to The First Shadow, set in 1959, the stage production highlights the ‘legacy of trauma in post-war America’, with Henry Creel’s father Victor evidently suffering from post traumatic stress disorder. Tragically, an alcoholic, prone to bizarre outbursts and obviously entirely shell-shocked.
The actor I was most impressed with in the show was Louis Healy who played Henry Creel himself. He portrays a boy very much disturbed, who practises killing small innocent animals and rodents. So desperate to be ‘normal’ by his peers, yet he is more so depicted socially awkward, and some would say a ‘weirdo’, ‘creep’ or ‘freak’. Healy was sensational in his delivery
It was intriguing to see Dr Brenner (Joshua James) influencing the young Creel, inducting him into his scientific experiments. A scared teenager with ‘special abilities’.
An aspect of the performance I really enjoyed was the actors making full use of the space, Creel in distress running down the audience aisles, men in white laboratory suits surrounding us. It made it more atmospheric. Of course, the set and props were absolutely outstanding, as with all West End productions.
I kept glancing at Aaron to see his reaction during the performance and he was beaming with joy, very much impressed as he has never seen a professional production
As a souvenir I bought the programme, a flask and a fridge magnet. Overall, a fantastic experience
After the performance we went and had a lovely Italian and a couple of Strongbow dark fruit ciders in a nearby Irish bar
Me and Aaron decided not to have breakfast included with our hotel as we are both vegetarians, so it seemed a little pointless. £17 a head when you don’t eat an English fry up is a bit of a waste of money! Instead, we found a lovely little ‘Muffin Man’ cafe where we had pancakes with Nutella spread and bananas 🍌 They were delicious. I wore a bib, ha 🤣 A joke present Aaron got me for Christmas 🎄 because I’m such a messy eater!
Paradox Museum:
Our first port of call of the day on Saturday was the ‘Paradox Museum’, a fully interactive optical illusion Museum situated in Knightsbridge, central London, opposite from the famous Harrod’s department store. It was absolutely brilliant!
There was a ‘Paradox Sofa’ which gave the impression the top half of your body had been swallowed up by the sofa. The ‘Camouflage Room’ where you literally blend into the wallpaper wearing an orange/black checked cloak, the ‘Reversed Room’ defying gravity, upside down in the underground (you use your smartphone to rotate the image, lol), the ‘Paradox Tunnel’ affecting your gravitational direction perception, walking straight but the room spinning, the ‘Infinity Well’ (again posing to then rotate on your smartphone). There was allsorts! My favourite was Aaron’s head on a platter and me hovering over him deviously with enormous cutlery! There were rooms with ‘Charlie and the Chocolates Factory’ esque distortions where the room felt like it was shrinking, or something like from ‘Alice in Wonderland’ where one person looked tiny and the other a huge giant!
It was hilarious because we got stuck in the wall of mirrors, and there’s me trying to navigate through going ‘Oh, it’s only a wall’, ‘Oh no, it’s just a wall’, ‘Aaron, I can’t get out’ 🤣🤣 I purchased a little colouful cube as a souvenir..Such a fab experience
Camden Town:
In the afternoon, we went to one of my favourite places ever, Camden Town. We strolled leisurely around the alternative market, taking photos of all the cool shops, tattoo studios, hippie havens, etc. Aaron bought a customised Harry Styles poster for his sister.
We crossed the beautiful Iron Footbridge over the Regent’s canal. There was a ‘poem busker’ asking for small donations for an original poem, written on their typewriter. The street market was great. I had a Greek halloumi gyro (as I say, I’m vegetarian). We went to a few eccentric shops, including one selling circus equipment, and best of all, CyberDog!
CyberDog sells festival clubwear and rave outfits. It’s immense! Selling futuristic fashion, neon glow in the dark clothing, reflective jackets, body paints, alternative accessories. I bought a punk style spiked collar, ha 🤣 There are live DJ’s playing electronic music, and podium dancers, it’s mint! Absolutely love it 🥰
Late afternoon, we ventured back to the underground station. Luckily, I asked a member of staff directions as we nearly got on the wrong tube! But, as it were, we got to the Visitors Centre in Baker Street well within time to embark on our last London adventure..
Warner Bros Studio Tour: The Making of Harry Potter:
I was so very excited to go to the Warner Bros Tour as I am a huge fan of Harry Potter, having read all the books and watched the films countless times.
We were really lucky to witness ‘Hogwart’s in the Snow’, Christmas 🎄 time in the wizarding world, with various snow features. The huge Christmas tree, even before we entered the main tour was ace… Upon arrival, we had veggie burgers before embarking on the tour.
We were given an ‘activity passport’, in which we were to collect 7 stamps as strolling through the different areas: 1. Gryffindor’s Crest 2. Quidditch 3. Divination 4. Hogwart’s Express 5. Gringott’s Bank 6. Diagon Alley and 7. Hogwart’s Crest
The Great Hall was magnificent and breathtaking, with all it’s suspended candles. We saw the Gryffindor boys dormitory, the enchanted pensieve from Dumbledore’s office, we saw peculiar bottles and jars in the potions section, Hagrid’s hut, the Weasley home, the Divination classroom, artifacts from the Ministry of Magic. We entered the forbidden forest, crept through Gringotts wizarding bank, walked the cobbles of my favourite, Diagon Alley
The Creature Effect Department did amazingly well creating the Basilisk, Buckbeak, Fawkes, etc..
We learnt all about the crucial visual effects throughout all the films – enhancements and created environments, computer generated characters the camera cannot capture – the Chamber of Secrets, Gringotts vault door, the Griffin stairwell to Dumbledore’s office
My favourite of all the Harry Potter films is ‘Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire’ in which three wizarding schools participate in the tri-wizard tournament, so I was overjoyed to see the Yule Ball costumes
I adored seeing the Hogwart’s Express, and taking photographs as though wheeling through Platform 9 and 3/4. I especially liked the exterior sets. The Burrow, and vehicles such as sitting in Hagrid’s bike, and the Ford Anglia (from Chamber of Secrets).
It was brill in Professor Sprout’s herbology greenhouse, pulling up mandrakes, posing at the back of the Knight Bus, wandering through number 4 Privet Drive, discovering the famous cupboard under the stairs. The house displayed two iconic scenes, the mountain of envelopes fluttering in the living room (Philosopher’s Stone) and the scene from Prizoner of Azkaban where Aunt Marge swells up like a balloon!
It was delightful to learn about the makeup and prosthetics. It was very impressive, prosthetic pieces made from foam or silicone, such as for Gringotts goblins. A life size version of Dobby was created. Such models by the Creative designers were known as masquettes, which were then scanned to apply computer generated movements, facial expressions, etc
We were told how the Prop department has accumulated thousands of items, in five giant warehouses, items including: The Time Turner, the Philosopher’s stone, the Golden Snitch, the Deluminator, the Golden Egg etc and of course wands, brooms, and horcruxes. The art, prop, costume and graphic designers all collaborated to develop the wizarding sport of Quidditch. Skull-like death eater masks were constructed from casts of the actors faces. Defence against the dark arts furniture constructed too, such as the Boggart Wardrobe..The treasure in Lestrange’s vault, three months a machine ran just to produce the Hufflepuff cup replication…
It was absolutely outstanding viewing the dragon fire-breathing simulation!
I adored Diagon Alley the most, with Ollivander’s wand shop, Flourish and Blotts, the Leaky Cauldron, Weasley’s Wizard Wheezes and so on. It was truly magical, as was the astonishing and intricately detailed Hogwart’s Castle Model. Every turret, tower and courtyard enhanced digitally, used in all the films
The only thing I was completely disappointed in was the Butterbeer.. it was absolutely disgusting!
I purchased an ‘Official Guide’, a Hedwig Owl teddy which is adorable and a Gryffindor Mascot Wand which was on offer. In hindsight, it might have been worth waiting for the next gift shop at the end of the tour, which had a much larger selection of different wands
We just about made it back to the coach in time. The entire experience was 7 hours long. We embarked from Baker Street at 4pm, and was back there around 11pm. The studio is situated on the outskirts of London you see, Watford area. An unbelievable experience I will never forget, truly magical! 😁😁 A quiet underground journey back to Kensington High Street
The following morning, rather than having to cart our heavy luggage on the underground, we took an uber to King’s Cross station. We had time to enjoy another lovely Italian near King’s Cross before travelling back to Doncaster
I had such a wonderful time. This last year has been so tough losing mum to early onset alzheimers disease 😢 It was lovely to get away for a few days, just what I needed, a fantastic little getaway 😊
Sources:
Stranger Things: The First Shadow official programme
Warner Bros Studio Tour London: The Making of Harry Potter official guide
Websites:
paradoxmuseumlondon.com [Accessed 26th January 2025]
My latest UnicornPostbox blog post is progression photos of an amateur Highland Cow pub painting… hope you enjoy! 😄😄
We started off outlining a circle for the cow’s head on the canvas, and another oval shape within to outline its snout. The horns and neck were next, with then a dark line to distinguish the cow’s body from the background. The entire background was painted dark, with initially only navy stripes. Afterwards, white brushstrokes lightened it. As the acrylic paint was still wet underneath, the white strokes blended to make nice shades of soft blues and some almost greens. The cow was then painted entirely brown. Lighter shades of brown and bright orange started to create swaying strokes for the cow’s furry hair. The snout was then painted completely a dark pink, the snout itself then formed with various black lines. Shades of pink and gold shimmer continued to build up the cow’s beautiful hair, with a sort of emo fringe, lol 😆 For the one visible eye, it was made more feminine with gorgeous lashes, and outlined with white paint to, as many of my paintings, make it ‘pop’. More shading was added and I gave her a little sort of goatie chin 😄😄 Here is the finished result:
The very first pub painting I did was a Highland Cow. Henrietta looks different however, she has more brown tones, and the other does not have a background. I think she is rather cute to be honest 🥰
I never claim to be a professional artist, I am only amateur. However I very much enjoy going to pub painting with my friend Denise 💕 I am very much looking forward to the next one as it is ‘paint your pal’, nothing we have ever done before, painting each other. We have decided to go all abstract, haha! 😄
Last weekend I went to London with my boyfriend Aaron, so please keep a look out for a future travel/theatre blog I am planning on writing soon. I am also on with another diamond art 💎 🎨
Thank you as ever for reading/viewing. Many thanks, Lauren xx
You must be logged in to post a comment.