Wednesday, 8 February 2012

Well things are steaming ahead with The Chocolate Plant after a brief hiatus for Christmas and Bea's play, And Then Come The Nightjars at the Bristol Old Vic (more details on her blog)

We're kicking off 2012 with our own session on the bill of the International Challenging History Conference on the 25th February, a  It's a great line up and we're looking forward to bringing chocolate to the discussion (perhaps literally but definitely metaphorically) and seeing what comes out.

The next stop after that will be a work in progress showing at the wonderful Tobacco Factory's Prototype season on March 4th. We'll see if we can get a flavour of all this chocolate research into our 15 minutes but I must admit, the more you delve the more fantastically rich detail emerges.

We are also delighted to be welcoming a new addition to our team, Beshley Bwye Turner. Currently studying for an MA in musicology at the University of Bristol, Beshley is a specialist in West Country music and has kindly volunteered her services in helping us dig out some authentic music for the show. I can't wait to see or rather hear what she retrieves from the archives.

Talk of which neatly brings us on to a very special mention; you may have read in the news that Elsie Griffin was commemorated with a blue plaque at St. Michael's On The Mount Primary School where she was a student in the early 1900s. If the name is unfamiliar you are sure to recognise her as "the voice of World War One"; Elsie was a Fry's Angel, an ordinary Bristolian factory girl who became an international opera singer and one of the greatest stars of her day. The beautiful soprano who made "Danny Boy" and "The Roses of Picardy" world famous is finally being recognised in her home city, not least due to the efforts of her cousin, Anne Colley, who has been kind enough to get in touch and tell us all about her family's remarkable story.

See, I told you there were fascinating stories in chocolate.