SAVE £25.00 BUY TICKETS
SAVE £20.00 BUY TICKETS
SAVE £28.00 BUY TICKETS
SAVE £27.00 BUY TICKETS
SAVE £26.00 BUY TICKETS
MORE INFOBUY TICKETS
Whether you're after a bit of musical madness, or it's a play you'd prefer, we have something for everyone with our great selection of tickets.
Access our Ticket Central for all our London tickets as well as our ticket offers, discounts, meal deals and corporate hospitality.
Venue: The LowryWhere: SalfordBy re-telling Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s epic poem as a sequence of songs, composer and pianist Geoff Page has certainly chosen an ambitious project.Coleridge’s Rime of the Ancient Mariner is the tale of a sailor who sets off on a voyage with fellow crew members in good weather, only for them to fall into difficulties. The mariner then shoots an albatross that was leading them out of the mist thereby bringing a curse upon the crew.Unfortunately, instead of bringing the poem to life Page’s composition and bass singer Tim Hardy’s complete lack of emotion sucks the life right out of one of greatest poetic works in the English language.This is described as a musical drama, and indeed in the programme Page insists (somewhat delusionally) that he thinks his Ancient Mariner can be every bit as dramatic and mesmerising as a West End show with a £10 million budget. Of course, low budget productions can far exceed the brassy big ones, but they do this with excellent acting and direction. Having a man stand on a badly lit stage singing, often quite slowly, a piece of eighteenth century poetry with little emotion and all the wrong inflections can hardly be described as dramatic.While some of Geoff Page’s piano playing is quite enjoyable to listen to, Coleridge’s poetry, though left largely unchanged is smothered by the music and Hardy’s dull deliverance. - Joanna Ing
- by Glenn Meads
Buy Tickets
Click here to visit the Whatsonstage.com Ticket Central
The best availability & the best prices for London theatre.
Free Newsletter
Subscribe to our free newsletter
Featured Video
Twitter
Featured Editor's Picks
Follow Us