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Good morning
It's BAFTA time and the DVD's of
some of the top unreleased films
are arriving through members doors,
with lots of invites to screenings
in the West End. There's a few that
are already looking worthy of
awards. I enjoyed the new Coen
Brothers film, A Serious Man, but
it was The Road that stunned me
this week. A raw, gruelling and
very real
post-apocalyptic experience.
Viggo Mortensen will undoubtedly
receive a nomination for his
powerful performance and Nick Cave
is worthy of recognition for the
atmospheric soundtrack. Look
out for the release in the new
year.
In the meantime, check out some
Tremayne's interviews and reviews
at the recent BFI London Festival
http://www.ukfilm.tv
In the world of theatre, the West
End continues to add big names to
their cast to draw audiences in.
Mickey Dolenz, from the Monkees,
has come out of retirement to work
in Hairspray. Griff Rhys
Jones will be playing Fagin in
Oliver, and Kim
Cattrall continues in Private
Lives. Not to be outdone, the
Broadway musical Hair, is coming to
London and bringing it's entire
cast with them. It's all happening
in the West End.
For tickets for these and more,
visit http://www.uktheatre.net and
click on 'tickets'.
Have a great week in the world of
film and theatre where you
are.
Douglas McFarlane
editor@uktheatre.net
http://www.uktheatre.net
FRI 27th
Falstaff

Falstaff
Reviewed on Wednesday 25th November
2009
Richard Jones’ staging of Verdi's
comic opera is a lot less
controversial than his 2008
production of Macbeth. However, there
were some murmurings in the
audience in reaction to some of the
scenery, particularly when the garden
at Ford’s house was revealed with its
rows of cabbages, skipping brownies,
young Etonian rowers moving backwards
and forwards and plenty of men in
uniform. The men get the best
costumes; poor Alice, Meg and
Nannetta spend much of their time in
really dull attire. Even in the last
scene Meg and Alice are ‘disguised’
under tent-like cloaks made from
curtain material. Good for
a giggle were the cats that came
dangerously close to scene stealing a
number of times. So, some imaginative
and effective design by Ultz but this
did not transpire in the last scene
which was too predictable. This was a
let down compared to the imaginative
and tight staging of the previous
scenes. Too many people crowded onto
the stage wandering randomly about in
seemingly undirected chaos. This
climax, where Falstaff is taunted,
seemed neither frightening nor
funny but merely a bit bewildering.
So, to the performances. Jonathan
Veira's Falstaff, who according to
the programme has played this
part over 80 times in 4 or 5
different versions played this purely
for laughs and although an immensely
powerful performance and highly
amusing there was a lack of any
subtlety or sensitivity in this
particular performance. It was
at full throttle throughout and we
were in the realm of caricature by
the end. I wonder if Viera over-eggs
the pudding like this every time or
was pushed by revival director Sarah
Fahie to drive every pun, play on
words, and innuendo home as hard as
this. The Glyndebourne audience is an
intelligent one; they don't need
everything spelled out for them.
Veira is a brilliant singer though
and where he was superb was in his
vocal performance, so clearly at ease
with the music and words that you did
feel totally confident of him as the
pivotal point for almost all the
musical interaction.
The other males were good,
particularly Bardolph (Harry Nichol)
and Pistol, (Sion Goronwy) who
were such a bizarre misfit
couple physically that much of the
comedy was in the visual interplay
between them. Ford (Guido Loconsolo)
was very understated and played the
respectable husband quietly and
convincingly.
All the women were superb, Meg
(Rachel Lloyd), Alice (Jessica
Muirhead), Nannetta (Elena
Tsallagova), who incidentally has the
sweetest crystal clear voice, and
Mistress Quickly (Kathleen Wilkinson)
balanced each other well and
portrayed the relationships between
them believably. The performances of
all these characters were discrete
and sophisticated and that was
perhaps why Viera seemed to be
otherwise.
Thomas Blunt’s direction of the
orchestra was expert and gave the
audience time in each scene to enjoy
the layers of the music and
experience the full richness of the
score.
This was a very funny evening but the
opera as a whole suffered from
unevenness of staging and imbalance
between the performance of the main
characters.
Falstaff plays Milton Keynes
Theatre Saturday
28th November
(0870 060 6652 Booking
Fee) and the Plymouth, Theatre Royal
Wednesday 2nd, Saturday
5th December (01752
267222)
FRI 27th

Jenůfa
An Opera in Two Acts
performed by the Glyndebourne’s
Touring Opera
Composed by
Leoš Janáček
Directed by Nikolaus
Lehnhoff
Jenůfa is an
opera based on a story by Gabriela
Preissová, sung in Czech with
English subtitles. Tension
started as soon as the curtain
opened and didn’t cease until the
very end.
An extremely dramatic opera
which betrays well the deep love a
mother has for her child, and the
lengths she will go to protect that
child.
As always the cast was
superb, both in the singing and
also the dramatic atmosphere they
created. Giselle Allen in the title
role was magnificent and her
beautiful voice was shown to its
best in the aria sung in the second
act. But praise must go indeed to
Anne Mason who played her mother, a
vocal and acting performance of
extraordinary ability which clearly
moved the whole audience.
The sets and lighting
contributed well to the atmosphere,
especially in the last scene when
the shutters were opened and light
poured in to portray a happier
scene.
Robin Ticciati conducted the
beautiful and stirring music with
sensitivity, portraying well the
silent pauses that added to the
tension. The
audience was clearly appreciative
and one came away with a lot to
think about.
The Glyndebourne Touring
Opera is at Milton Keynes Theatre
until Saturday
28th November. Milton
Keynes Box Office 0870 060 6652
(bkg fee)
www.miltonkynestheatre.com For
future dates please
see www.glyndebourne.com
Reviewed by Yvonne
Penne-Stuart at the Milton Keynes
Theatre on Thursday
26thNovember
2009
WED 25th
Dial M For
Murder
Tuesday
3rd November
2009 at Richmond
Theatre
In the opening scene Sheila Wendice
(Aislin McGuchin) says: “I burnt
all the letters, except one”, to
American writer Max Halliday (Nick
Fletcher), with whom she has been
having an
affair. It
turns out it was stolen and a
blackmail note followed.
I particularly
liked the set with its rotating
stage. Deceptive
at
first. My
eyes had to focus hard to make sure
the furniture was not simply being
moved.
The curtains,
almost scarlet in colour, would
change position as the stage
did.
The ransom money
was not collected from the address
it was sent
to. Max
quizzes her: “Are you ever going to
tell Tony ( Richard
Lintern) about
us?”
She hesitates and
tries to condone what she has done,
feeling a year ago her husband
became a changed
man.
The interior pays
particular attention to its
objects, which are all in various
tones of red.
Before the
husband enters they make a toast: “
Let’s drink to the way things turn
out.” Continuing with the red
theme, we notice the colour of
Sheila Wendice’s handbag and coat,
also red.
The back-drop,
see-through, is so much that we may
see the
staircase. While
the husband is alone with old
school acquaintance, Captain
Lesgate (Daniel Hill) whom he tells
he had always wanted to marry for
money,
He continues
saying “Would you like to hear how
my wife nearly left
me?”
After long
absences he has discovered
something had been going
on.
Tony: “I’d make
it look like a
burglary. I
tried to force her hand by
blackmailing
her. Funny to
think I might have murdered
her,..”
“..if I hadn’t
seen something to help me change my
mind.”
The thing to help
change his mail being ‘the
letter.’
The Captain, who
resembles the main lead in ‘To The
Manor Born’, realizes he is being
blackmailed. Reluctant
to carry out the task demanded, he
is swayed by offer of
£1,000.
To create an
almost filmic-type atmosphere, the
furniture, centrally positioned,
starts to judder
slightly. As
the see-through red curtain
gradually moves round, the phone
starts to ring; the captain exits
from the scene, the lights change
to blue and we hear the sound of
teardrops.
The attempted
murder scene is most effective,
with its echoey sound
effects. All-in-all
a well put together piece of
theatre, capturing the spirit of
Hitchcock.
WED 25th

Christmas with the Rat
Pack
Darlington
Civic
Theatre
‘Tis the season to be
jolly . . . and to be surrounded by
wall-to-wall panto! But, before all
that begins in
earnest, Christmas with
The Rat Pack is a very
welcome deviation on the festive
theme.
As the title suggests,
the show treats audiences to an
evening of the music of Frank
Sinatra, Dean Martin and Sammy
Davis Jr. Now in its tenth year,
the appeal of this production is
obvious – it’s slick, stylish and
sensational.
Stephen Rashbrook, Mark
Halliday and Matt Henry perform as
Frank, Dean and Sammy,
respectively, and they are joined
by Robyn Currell, Nikki Stokes and
Rachel Parrott as the Burrelli
Sisters.
After beginning with a
string of swing hits
including Almost Like
Being In Love, I’ve Got You Under
My Skin and That
Old Black Magic Called Love,
the tone takes a seasonal turn and
classic Christmas songs are
integrated into the
proceedings.
The performances are
top-notch; each of the guys looks
and sounds like the legend they are
portraying, and there is a
wonderful rapport between them.
Some scripted ‘comedy patter’
entertains the audience between
numbers and it is executed in a way
that looks completely
spontaneous.
The auditorium was
pretty much full on press night,
which bodes well for the rest of
the week, proving that it is
possible to present a seasonal show
without having to have the audience
shout out: ‘It’s behind
you!’
Steve
Burbridge.
‘Christmas with
The Rat Pack runs at Darlington
until Saturday 28 November
2009.
WED 25th
Published by: Louise
Winter on Wednesday 25th
November 2009 09:11am
Cosi Fan
Tutte
Reviewed Tuesday
24th November
2009
Nicholas Hytner's
production of Così Fan Tutte has
been reworked since its 2006 debut
and this revivial is most
definitely a Glyndebourne crowd
pleaser. The loyal audience at
Milton Keynes signalled their
approval long and loud at the end
of last night's
performance. This
opera about deception,
self-deception, morals and
fidelity, labelled 'immoral' by
Beethoven and considered
misogynistic by others is now
considered to be one of Mozart's
finest works. Although the title
translates as 'Typical women'
neither sex comes out of this
narrative particularly well!
This production has received very
favourable reviews elsewhere and
Hytner’s revivial is an elegant one
aided by Ashley Dean’s
sophisticated staging. Outstanding
as ever is the orchestra, this time
under Patrick Lange’s perfect
control; this is the
highlight.
The
strongest performances come from
Riccardo Novaro (Alfonso) and
Simona Mihai (Despina). These two,
and their dark plottings, pin the
production together. Novaro plays
Alfonso with an air of menace and
does not overplay the humour; he
clearly enjoys causing disharmony
and distress. Nevertheless, he is
charismatic and that coupled with
his rich and powerful voice makes
Alfonso an attractive
character.
Mihai, as
Despina, has a pure, fresh quality
to her voice, and is a perfect
match for her co-conspirator. She
is superb in portraying the
cynical, no nonsense side of her
character and contrasts well with
the two sisters, played by Gillian
Ramm (Fiodiligi) and Lucia Cirillo
(Dorabella).
These two are also excellent, both
in voice and as performers, and
play their parts with a mix of
naivete and gentle sexiness at the
beginning. Their character
development as the story progresses
is well managed and they are
faultless in their vocals.Cirillo
expresses herself very well in the
comedic role, with Ramm taking the
role of the seemingly more
'sensible' sister. They both are
superb in their scenes with their
lovers, Andrew Tortise (Ferrando)
and Jacques Imbralio
(Guglielmo).
First to
Tortise who is not as strong as the
others on stage. His voice does not
seem quite a match and his acting
is so awkward at times that his
character is not consistently
believeable, upsetting the balance
and force of the drama on stage. I
found my eye drawn to him in the
scenes with Guglielmo and their
lovers but not for the right
reasons. As he is not convincing as
the lovestruck Ferrando, the scene
in which his lover’s infidielity is
exposed – a scene which should be
painful to watch as his anguish,
despair and anguish is revealed –
is rather weak when it should be a
pivotal point.
Imbralio, on the other hand, is
utterly convincing throughout.
Beautiful in voice, perfect in his
performance, convicing as both a
bit of a cad
and a persuasive lover.
Overall this a solid and strong
revival; superb orchestra as ever,
elegant staging, and overall
perfomances which are convincing
and engaging.
Playing MK Theatre Friday 27th Nov
then Plymouth, THeatre Royal on
Tuesday 1st and Friday 4th
Dec
Reviewed by Louise
Winter on behalf of Catherine
Brian
TUE 24th
Published by: Cameron
Lowe on Tuesday 24th
November 2009 12:11pm
Glaswegians will
find a second use for their
Hallow'een costumes this week as
Richard O' Brien's Rocky Horror
Show makes a welcome return to the
King's Theatre.
It’s been 2 years since Rocky
Horror visited Glasgow and, at 36
years young, this show doesn’t seem
to be showing any signs of age yet!
The openly sexual nature of the
characters and the storyline were
so far ahead of their time when the
show opened to a tiny London
audience in 1973 that today they
still appear fresh and
relevant. Director,
Christopher Luscombe, and set
designer, Janet Bird, added fresh
elements to the show a few years
back and this latest cast bring
their own energy and life to the
well loved
characters. The
tradition of audience interaction
with the cast ensures that no two
performances are the same!!
David Bedella simply owns the
role of Frank 'N'
Furter. He
brought all of his experience of a
US national tour (with Meatloaf, no
less) to bear in his portrayal of
musical theatre's most recognisable
character. He
had an astonishing rapport with the
audience. Christopher
Biggins embraced his role as the
Narrator, comfortably staying one
step ahead of an audience who were,
at times, a little over
excited! “It
was over, but what was over?” asked
Mr.
Biggins. “Your
career”, answered the
audience. “You
must be mistaking me for Katie
Price”, he
retorted. Mark
Evans (Brad) and Haley Flaherty
(Janet) were vocally accomplished
and carried the story well.
This is a great production of
an excellent show and Glasgow
audiences have been given another
chance to catch
it. Don’t
miss out!
LISTINGS INFORMATION
Richard O'Brien's Rocky
Horror Show
King's Theatre: Monday 23 -
Saturday 28 November 2009
Mon -
Thu eves 7.30pm
Fri & Sat 5pm &
8.30pm
Tickets: £12.50 -
£30.50
Box Office: 08448 717648 (bkg
fee)
www.ambassadortickets.com/glasgow
MON 23rd

Jump!
Live
Theatre, Newcastle upon
Tyne
To market a play as
being ‘played out like a Tarantino
movie’ seems a tad egotistical and
a rather tall order to fulfil. A
quote like that should be used when
it can be attributed to a rave
review rather than little more than
speculative wishful
thinking.
That said, Live Theatre
is synonymous with producing
high-quality drama laced with
strong local connections and I was
looking forward to a tense,
psychological black
comedy.
Assembling a cast of
extremely talented local actors,
including Vicky Elliott, Laura
Norton and James Baxter, the
‘English premiere’
of Jump! follows
the lives of seven desperate
characters during New Year’s Eve on
Tyneside.
Good time girls Marie
(Vicky Elliott), Dara (Laura
Norton) and Hannah (Bronagh
Taggart, making her professional
debut) knock back the bevvies and
bitch while waiting for another
girl friend to
arrive.
Johhny (James Baxter)
and Ross (Harry Hepple) are a
couple of guys who have got
themselves in too deep with a local
heavy and now have to carry out a
contract killing to write-off a
gambling debt that they cannot
repay.
Two strangers, Pearce
(Neil Grainger) and Greta (Frances
McNamee) are both intent on leaping
from Newcastle’s High Level Bridge
but, after accidentally discovering
each other, they proceed to try to
talk one another out of
it.
As the story unfolds it
becomes apparent that the lives of
these seven characters are already
intertwined and that each of their
lives are about to change
forever.
Writer Lisa McGee seems
to have ‘borrowed’ some of her
ideas – didn’t Helena Bonham Carter
and Sam Neill have a similar
encounter on a bridge in Alan
Ayckbourn’s 1998
movie, The Revengers’
Comedies?
The storyline has a
strictly ‘thriller-by-numbers’ feel
to it and the twists and turns are
easy to anticipate. The script is
littered with gratuitous bad
language that adds nothing to the
development of the narrative and
the dialogue is rather
clichéd.
There are also some
glaringly obvious geographical
gaffes that must have been the
result of the decision to change
the setting of the play from
Belfast to Newcastle. These should
have been picked up by the
production team from the outset –
or at the very least during the
rehearsal process.
Performers of the
calibre of Vicky Elliott and Laura
Norton are worthy of a better
vehicle to demonstrate their
abilities than this. If I were to
offer Miss Elliott a cautionary
word of advice, it would be: ‘Watch
out! Be careful that you don’t
become typecast as the slightly
cynical tart with a heart and the
witty one-liners.’
James Baxter’s attempt
to instil a degree of believability
into the one-dimensional role of
Johnny, combined with his stature,
hairstyle and facial expressions,
resulted in a performance that made
him seem like Sonic the Hedgehog
with a severe case of
haemorrhoids.
The audience on press
night, aside from theatre critics,
seemed to comprise of family and
friends of the writer and
performers, plus a sprinkling of
invited local celebrities, and
there was a fair amount of
over-enthusiastic, sycophantic
laughter which smacked of
desperation more than anything
else.
When the only line in
the play that I could really engage
with was ‘I just want to get home
and pretend tonight never even
happened’, it leaves little more to
say.
Steve
Burbridge.
‘Jump!’ runs at
Live Theatre, Newcastle until
Saturday
5th December
2009.
0 Comments
SUN 22nd

The Adventures of Mr
Brouček
Opera
North at Theatre Royal,
Newcastle
Unconventional is
probably a fair way to
describe The Adventures of
Mr Brouček.
This co-production
between Opera North and Scottish
Opera is the first major British
production since the 1990’s. It’s
based upon two novels by Svatopluk
Čech – The Excursion of Mr
Brouček to the
Moon and The
Excursion of Mr Brouček to the
15th Century.
Generally, his
adventures begin and end in a beer
barrel and Brouček is, essentially,
a sort of drunken, operatic Mr
Benn.
Firstly, after a
quarrel in the local pub about the
existence of life on the Moon, he
falls and is transported to a
surreal, clinical environment
populated by a civilisation
obsessed with art, poetry and all
things aesthetic. There are some
zany moments in the scenes that
follow, which are most certainly to
be taken with a large pinch of
salt.
Brouček’s pompous
opinions and lack of lunar
etiquette soon land him in trouble,
however, and he is forced to leave
abruptly.
The second half sees
him transported back in time to
1420 and slap-bang into the midst
of a Czech battle. There is a
distinct air of patriotism present
throughout these scenes – all
stirring battle songs and calls to
arms. Brouček’s cowardice results
in him faring no better in the past
than he did in the future, and he
is placed in a barrel to be
burnt.
This vivid musical
journey through space and time is a
true ensemble piece, incorporating
a strong cast of singers who each
play multiple roles.
John Graham-Hall puts
in a star-turn as the bumbling
Brouček and almost succeeds in
making the loathsome, lecherous
loser likeable. Anne Sophie Duprels
deserves a mention on two counts;
firstly, for her wonderfully
uninhibited performance as
Málinka/Etherea/Kunka and,
secondly, for doing it with a
badly-sprained ankle. A real
trouper, indeed.
Fun and eccentric, this
was an enjoyable – yet rather
bizarre – opera.
Steve
Burbridge.
The Adventures
of Mr Brouček was performed at
Theatre Royal, Newcastle on
Thursday
19th November
2009.
SUN 22nd
SECRETS COCK TAVERN
THEATRE
With the enticing title of Secrets
and publicity that promised
‘explosive drama,’ I was all set for
an exciting night out at the latest
play at the Cock Tavern Theatre.
However this rather tame and
unfocused contribution offers little
in the way of startling confessions
or dramatic originality.
Created by Flexible Productions,
eight actors reveal their own,
true-life secrets through devised
enactments. Amongst those unravelling
their inner-most shames are a
traumatised woman revisiting her
sadistic relationship with a
boyfriend, a closet queen, a
supposedly reformed bully and a
questionable victim of sexual abuse.
Apart from Helen Briscoe’s disturbing
revelations it’s all a bit timid,
confused and ultimately shallow. In
fact there are the secrets which are
so vaguely wafted about that’s it
hard to actually pin-point what they
actually are.
This awkward effort lets down the
usual high standard of work that the
Cock has consistently produced in the
past. The writing is all over the
place, contrived and clumsily
structured with some scenes adding
little to the storyline or
development of the characters. Indeed
the only revelation this play really
offers is the ability of the
exceptionally skilled cast to create
engaging, truthful performances
despite being in a production that
under Danielle Coleman’s messy
direction, looks like a drama school
creation. This further is emphasised
by a bricolage of victim headlines
glued onto a cheap looking backdrop
as the centre piece for the
set.
Helen Briscoe is exceptional in all
her roles, James Dutton convincing as
the bully and a suspected victim,
Andrew Cleave very watchable as the
put-upon psychologist and Shireen
Walton adds some equally comic and
moving moments to the play.
The telling of secrets have been the
basis for many a successful drama.
This is not one of them.
OLIVER
VALENTINE
www.cocktaverntheatre.com
SUN 22nd
“Sailor
Beware!” by
Philip King & Falkland Cary at
Baron’s Court Theatre on Sunday
15thNovember
2009
Published
by: Tremayne
(Potter)
Before the curtains went up
at The Curtains Up pub I had been
led to believe that “Sailor
Beware!” was a farcical play, not
worthy of a revival but by the end
of Act I, the person had to take
back what had been said and admit,
how much they liked
Nadine’s Window’s
take on
it. A
non-farcical play.Bumper packed,
full of joyous Northern-style
humour.
“It’s the uniform she’s
fallen for”, says Emma Hornett
(Jean Christie), speaking
disapprovingly of her daughter’s
choice in
men. The
man, in question, is Albert Tufnell
(Michael Aucott), who bears a
slight resemblance to singer Robbie
Williams. His
character, played out in a very
natural, cheeky boy way, makes it
difficult for the
audience not to be
endeared by
him. Albert
is a Marine and on greeting his
mother-in-law-to-be he throws his
arms
open. She
seems less than
impressed. Then,
cousin Daphne Pink (Chloe Fontaine)
arrives, and Albert introduces
himself to her as ‘The Human
Sacrifice!’
The tea time scene is painful
to watch. I
could relate to it immensely, with
its tedious arguments bubbling at
the surface and the bossy mother
figure, who says: “we can’t all
have baths in the morning”,
suggesting that some people might
choose to bath the night before The
Wedding, i.e. Pop( Kevin
Halliwell)!Their quibbling
continues and Pop says: “anyone
would think he were on his way to
prison the way you talk”, seeing no
reason why Albert should not
experience one last night of
freedom on the town before the big
day, managing to start-up an
argument between Albert and his
fiancée, Shirley (Jacquelyn Kent
).
When the lights fade for the
first time, the actors use the time
effectively, clearing the dinner
table and carrying away any
unwanted running props.
In the next scene we are
introduced to annoyingly funny
neighbour Mrs Lack (Jeryl Burgess),
whom all of us can relate to as we
all would have come across someone
like her at one time or another. A
kind of Dot from EasterEnders type,
who brings with her the news that
her daughter cannot carry out her
bridesmaid duties but her take on
it is that why shouldn’t a Wedding
start to go wrong before the
marriage has had a chance to
begin.
Pa comes in after a big night
on the town, not convincing me with
his drunken
behaviour. That
is, until he starts to rearrange
the household ornaments and then I
believe him!
I like the reference made to
‘scotch broth’ as Daphne puckers
her lips up ready for a goodnight
kiss from Carnoustie
( Andrew Glen),
who is a marine friend of the
groom.
Act II reminded me greatly of
Last of the Summer Wine, in its
heyday with all the same
cast.
“Oh my God, get rid of her
before I come back”, says Ma
suspecting Mrs Lack is coming round
again, blatantly relishing in the
fact of poking her nose in where it
is not welcome.
Albert finds himself getting
pre-Wedding jitters and does not
turn up to the
ceremony. Ma’s
answer to everything is a nice,
warm brew, even when Shirley tells
her she wants to die! “Well, you’ve
got to have a tea first”, she
responds, completely managing to
capture that Northern
spirit.
Whilst everything is up in
the air, Albert walks in, to
everyone’s dismay and reassures
Shirley that he did want to marry
her. ‘Did’ being the operative
word!
The priest arrives shortly
after and insists on seeing the
bride and groom on their
own. During
the discussion we learn that
Shirley had allowed her mother to
put down a deposit on a house, just
3 doors
down. Carnoustie
had apparently let it slip out the
night before, otherwise Albert
would have been none the
wiser. Both
are still dead set on marrying one
another but Albert stipulates that
it must be on his terms and not on
Shirley’s
mother’s. Shirley
agrees and all ends happily.
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