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Day: 5 November 2015

Review: Hairspray

With an explosion of colour and music, Paul Kerryson’s Hairspray opened its doors to Manchester on the 26th of November. With a stellar cast including Tracey Turnblad veteran Freya Sutton and X Factor’s Brenda Edwards, the opening night was a sell-out.

Directed by Paul Kerryson and choreographed by Drew McOnie, the tour will visit a total of 29 venues in the UK across a 40-week span. Cast also include Benidorm’s Tony Maudsley as Edna Turnblad, Jon Tsouras as Corny Collins and Bad Education’s Layton Williams.

For those who don’t know, Hairspray centres on Tracey Turnblad, a “larger than life” optimist in the middle of 60s Baltimore, America. Obsessed with all things dance, Link Larkin, and gravity-defying hair, she’s on a mission to follow her dreams whilst at the same time tackling issues such as racism and body image.

Producer Mark Goucher states, “I believe theatre has an obligation to both educate and entertain.” Although Hairspray itself is marketed as a musical comedy Goucher believes that “the message of striving to break down prejudice in all walks of life shines through.

“We still experience racism. Women are still extremely conscious of body issues and we all need to strive for greater tolerance in every area of life.” Attacking issues such as racism and body image, the show is successful to a certain extent, but they could have done a lot more with it. The plot is more pantomime than hard-hitting musical.

Brenda Edwards stole the show as Motormouth Maybelle with her song ‘I Know Where I’ve Been’, which was easily rewarded with the loudest round of applause of the night.

Providing some light relief to the narrative was Tracey Penn who shouldn’t go without note. Credited as the ‘female authority figure’, Penn gives us the brilliant prison officer and PE teacher whose deep voice and array of facial expressions injected some arguably needed slapstick comedy into the scenes.

Hairspray will remain in Manchester until the 31st, and continue to:

Wimbledon: 2nd – 7th of November
Bradford: 9th – 14th of November
Southampton: 16th – 21st of November
Ipswich: 23rd – 28th of November
Brighton: 30th of November – 12th of December
Birmingham: 14th of December – 2nd of January
Newcastle: 18th – 30th of January
Aberdeen: 1st – 6th of February
Sheffield: 8th – 13th of February
Cambridge: 15th – 20th of February
Edinburgh: 22nd – 27th of February
Oxford: 29th of February – 5th of March
Bristol: 7th – 12th of March
Woking: 14th – 19th of March
Cardiff: 21st – 26th of March
Norwich: 28th of March – 2nd of April
Milton Keynes: 4th – 9th of April
Leeds: 11th – 16th of April
Plymouth: 18th – 23rd of April
Stoke: 25 – 30th of April
Bromley: 2nd – 7th of May
Canterbury: 9th – 14th of May
Southend 16th – 21st of May

Peacekeeping in Palmyra: The latest symbol of self-interest

It was May of this year that IS reached the gates of the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra. Suddenly there was renewed focus on the conflict, with many outraged by the wanton acts of a group prepared to not only destroy a country’s present and future but also its past.

Around the same time, Assad’s regime bombed a school in Aleppo as children sat studying for exams. One month earlier, Yarmouk camp, already the site of clashes and a two-year siege by Assad’s forces that caused 200 to die from starvation, found itself on the defensive against IS militants.

The difference—last weekend 53 UN member states agreed to sending peacekeepers to protect world heritage sites, including Palmyra, from attack. Yarmouk’s residents, meanwhile, joined by Palestinians from other camps, were left to face their new attackers head on. UNRWA still struggles to get much needed supplies into the camp, whilst its Syria crisis appeal has only received 34 per cent of funds needed for 2015.

Which raises the question: Why Palmyra?

I would agree with the argument put forward in The Guardian this summer that “What matters is not just how many people live but how we live.” Yet this is an argument in favour of providing funding to the arts, in favour of not closing down libraries, and in favour of free university education. It is not an argument in favour of sending troops to stand silently around heritage sites whilst thousands die down the road and hospitals and schools join the rubble.

Also, whilst Palmyra may well symbolise Syrian history and culture, this sudden concern seems a little hypocritical considering the US and its allies neglected to protect Iraq’s cultural heritage as it opened the country up to the ruin of museums, libraries and historical sites. UNESCO has described the demolition of a Palmyra temple by IS as a war crime but presented only dubious reports on the destructive building of a US military base on the ancient city of Babylon.

There is therefore something bigger at play that the history and culture argument obscures. We see it not only in the concern over Palmyra, but also in the hysteria surrounding the ‘refugee crisis’ and the focus on IS itself, as Assad continues the indiscriminate shelling that kills up to 1,000 at a time. Self-interest is the missing link and it is all the more dangerous for its invisibility.

The privileged of this world (and that includes the elites that sit around tables in Geneva as well as those of us with enough money to spend on holidays abroad) have grown up to believe in the right of access and in the right of possibility. Many of us would be outraged if we were denied access to one country despite the fact that many live under occupation or in situations that relegate the idea of travel to a pipedream. Similarly, it was also this May that people began lamenting the last remaining male northern white rhino. It wasn’t the idea of death that disturbed us, or else the outrage would have been more widespread before this point; rather it was the idea that a part of the world was disappearing, a part of the world that we believed to belong to us all, that we disliked. And it is these rights of which Palmyra has become the most recent of symbols.

It is a similar self-interest that plagues states and immobilises the UN. Research has found that states provide troops to peacekeeping missions based on a number of factors. These include judgements on potential increases to their global political strength, economic benefits, national security interests and their domestic situation. Only a few states were found to think in normative terms – supporting UN peacekeeping missions because they believed it was ‘the right thing to do’, and even then the belief of countries, such as China, that the UN acts as an alternative power hegemony can be seen simply as an attempt to decrease the power of other world hegemons.

The US, in particular, can be seen to regard UN peacekeeping as a national security issue. This year Obama has been pressuring governments to commit more troops to missions in Somalia, South Sudan, and other areas that it views as hotspots for the growth of Islamist extremism. There is even a push to increase the military force of peacekeepers so that they become peace ‘enforcers’, a move India and China seem to suspect is little more than an attempt to transform peacekeepers into US military pawns.

And so we are left wondering what is left of the UN and its desire to “save succeeding generations from the scourge of war”. If a somewhat utopian idea of world peace has been reduced to putting our ancestors’ past before our children’s future, and to acting not out of concern for the international but in the interest of our own states, it seems the answer is not much.

Let’s talk about money

Actually, let’s not. Talking about money is awkward, and frowned upon.

But money is important to students, so here are three vital methods for managing your money, for making it go further, and for avoiding ugly confrontations about who owes who how much!

Banking Apps

If you haven’t got a banking app on your smartphone then I presume that you either make all your calls from a payphone, or you keep your money under your mattress. Get a smartphone, get a bank account and then, repeat after me, get your bank’s app!

Has your student loan come in? Use the banking app.

Need to extend your overdraft? Use the app.

Once set up, you can access it by entering a passcode which takes five seconds, and voilà. You can access, move, and, if you’re that way inclined, count your money. No matter where you are, regardless of what bizarre night out your friends have suggested, you can find out in two clicks whether you can afford it.

Splittable

Splittable is the gem in the budget-balancing crown. The best app since sliced bananas (see Fruit Ninja). It is designed specifically to help you manage the money you owe, and are owed by your flat mates.

Let’s say that you go to the pub with your flat mates and buy a round for everyone, then you go to dinner and you are £10 short so two flat mates lend you £5 each. One of them also pays the electricity bill, and you pay for the month’s internet. Who owes who how much? Frankly, who has the time or energy to figure it out?

Let Splittable do it for you.

Simply enter who paid how much on each occasion, and Splittable will balance everything out, so you can easily see who owes who at any point in time. Pretty handy. Even the repayments to one another can be done right there in the app, with just a click.

Splittable is completely free and will save you from ever awkwardly asking your housemates for money again. If that isn’t enough, they are also offering Manchester students the chance to win £350 simply by signing up at splittable.co/win/manchester.

Avoiding arguments will save you friends, getting debts paid will save you hassle, and that giveaway could save you from the nightmare of an overdraft.

Discounts

Everybody loves discounts and student discounts are everywhere. Many stores will accept your University ID card, but if you’re serious about searching out savvy deals, get yourself an NUS Extra card for just £12 for a year. Get the app too, and it’ll let you know what discounts are available and where. From Amazon to Ask, Odeon to Alton Towers, you can even use it to get a discounted railcard, saving you a third on all train journeys. You can’t go wrong, really.

 

Money management can be manic. But don’t panic. Get these apps, and then wherever you go, you can take care of your virtual wallet from your phone in the other pocket.