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Programme Name: EastEnders - TX: n/a - Episode: Bobby Beale portraits (No. Bobby Beale portraits) - Embargoed for publication until: n/a - Picture Shows: Bobby Beale Bobby Beale (RORY STROUD) - (C) BBC - Photographer: Kieron McCarron
David Gardner
Cotton, recycled e-waste, pearls, plastic
Lagos Space Programme is a non-binary fashion design project exploring traditions of Nigeria's Yoruba culture. Àdìrẹ, a resist-dyed indigo cloth historically made by the Yoruba, is a staple of Thompson's work. Their Post-Àdìrẹ project explores the future of this textile, and it role in storytelling. Working with creative Alexandra Weigand and a community of women dyers in southwestern Nigeria, Thompson seeks to reanimate traditional crafts, using them to speak to the concerns of the present, and the future.
[V&A]
Taken in the Exhibition
Africa Fashion
(July 2022 to April 2023)
The irresistible creativity, ingenuity and unstoppable global impact of contemporary African fashions are celebrated in an extensive display of garments, textiles, personal testimonies, photographs, sketches, film and catwalk footage in this exhibition. Many of the garments on show hail from the archives of iconic mid-twentieth century African designers – Shade Thomas-Fahm, Chris Seydou, Kofi Ansah and Alphadi. Alongside these are personal insights from influential contemporary African fashion creatives, including Imane Ayissi, IAMISIGO, Moshions, Thebe Magugu and Sindiso Khumalo, as well as highlights from fashion trends of the day, which are on display for the first time.
Foregrounding individual African voices and perspectives, the exhibition presents African fashions as a self-defining art form that reveals the richness and diversity of African histories and cultures. Africa Fashion celebrates the vitality and innovation of a selection of fashion creatives from over 20 countries, exploring the work of the vanguard in the twentieth century and the creatives at the heart of this eclectic and cosmopolitan scene today.
Across contemporary couture, ready-to-wear, made-to-order and adornment, the exhibition seeks to offer a close-up look at the new generation of ground-breaking designers, collectives, stylists and fashion photographers working in Africa today. It explores how the digital world accelerated the expansion of the industry, irreversibly transforming global fashions as we know them.
[V&A]
Visit to All Saints' church, Mullingar, with the Provost of All Saints' Cathedral Nairobi and Louise Githire, the Co-ordinator of the Urban Development Programme. It was a wonderful service and such a warm welcome for us.
An energy efficient block of flats in the city of Bălți, Republic of Moldova.
The MoREEFF programme, which was developed by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and was supported by the EU, has helped improving the energy efficiency in the residential sector in Moldova. The programme is part of the EU4Energy Initiative.
Find out more about how the EU promotes energy efficiency in Ukraine and stay informed at: www.eu4energy.eu
Induction programme for the 9th batch students of NCN was conducted on 03.03.2021 at NCN AUDITORIUM. The programme was enlightened by the presence of our beloved chairman & managing trustee Adv. Dr. P KRISHN DAS . The chief guest of the programme was Capt. Dr. USHA BANERJEE, (Group director Nursing, APPOLO Hospital group) A special addressing to the gathering was done by Dr. P KRISHNA KUMAR , (CEO & SECRETARY NGI ) & Dr. R C KRISHNA KUMAR , (director operations PKDIMS ) The felicitation was done by Dr. M MANOHARAN ( Principal PKDIMS ) , Dr. S P RAJAN ( Medical Supdt PKDIMS ) , Mrs. SUMITHA KRISHNADAS , ( Management Representative NGI ) , & Mr. SREENIVAS , ( Principal Co ordinator ( SW ) NGIK )
After the official function, prize distribution was done for “SANSKRITHI” ( arts fest ) & ENERGIO sports meet conducted in the year 2020
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Government of Azerbaijan opened two new regional resource centres in an effort to enhance entrepreneurship and employment in the North-Western part of Azerbaijan in Zaqatala.
The new Women’s Resource Centre and Youth Employment and Training (Syslab) Centre will support key development priorities for Azerbaijan in the area of women empowerment and youth employment. The Centres will offer employment opportunities and learning platforms on a range of diverse topics helping women and youth prepare for the labour market.
For more information: urlzs.com/fvFGn
Induction Programme held for Jawaharlal College of Engineering & Technology in the blessed presence:-
Chief Guest - Shri P B Nooh IAS(Sub Collector, Ottapalam)
Trustee - Adv.Dr.P.Krishnadas - Nehru Group of Institutions
Ceo & Secretary - Dr P Krishnakumar - Nehru Group of Institutions
Front cover from the theatre programme for a production of "The Duchess of Dantzic" at the Hippodrome Theatre, Keighley, staged by Keighley Amateur Operatic and Dramatic Society in March 1928.
Keighley Amateur Operatic and Dramatic Society's production of "The Duchess of Dantzic" played at the Hippodrome Theatre in Keighley for six nights (with a Saturday matinee) from Monday 26th to Saturday 31st March 1928. The musical comedy had book by Henry Hamilton, with music by Ivan Caryll. The KAODS production was produced and directed by R. Walford Lomax, with musical director Joseph Harker. Sadly, Lomax died suddenly just a handful of days before the production was due to open, and A. Farrant was drafted in from London with just two days to add the finishing touches.
Act I is set in revolutionary Paris in 1792. At the laundry of Catherine Upscher (played by Mrs. Percy Taylor, formerly Gladys Broster), a young Lieutenant Napoleon Bonaparte (Arthur B. Hird) is boasting of his long-term plans while still owing the business seventeen francs. Moments after Bonaparte has left, a nobleman, Phillipe (Eric Broster), who is fleeing from the mob, takes refuge in the laundry, and ends up leaving his infant son with Catherine for safekeeping. The act ends with the return of Catherine's fiance, Sergeant Francois Lefebvre (Harold Barnes) of the National Guard, who receives a promotion to Lieutenant, and Catherine is made vivandière (supplier of goods and victuals) to the regiment.
Acts II and III take place fifteen years later in 1807. Bonaparte is now Emperor of France and Act II is staged in the gardens of the Imperial Palace at Fontainebleau. Bonaparte's old colleagues have been rewarded with titles and places at court. Lefebvre is now a Marshal of France, but his free-minded wife, Catherine, despite her new title of Duchess of Dantzic, not to mention her adopted son Adhèmar (Eric Broster again), does not fit in with court etiquette, and Napoleon indicates to Lefebvre that he should divorce her and marry Mademoiselle Renée (Edith Robson), whom the emperor considers more suitable. As Adhèmar is in love with Renée, he rebels against the emperor's cruel command and is arrested.
Act III takes place in the throne room of Napoleon's palace. Adhèmar is due to be executed for rebellion, with his pardon dependent on his adopted parents obeying Napoleon's order to divorce. Catherine confronts the emperor with the unpaid laundry bill from the days of his youthful poverty, and, reminded of her unselfish kindness to him, he relents, allows Catherine and Lefebvre to stay together, and blesses the marriage of Adhèmar and Renée.
Other people in the cast included Peggy Eaton, Mrs. Paget Shackleton, Emilie Chapman, Annie Dickinson, Mrs. Reilly, Jack Steele, Verney Shuttleworth, John Crabtree, Ernest Marsden, Mrs. John Judson, Elsie Pickles, Claire Mitchell, and Peggy Eaton.
The 52-page programme was printed by The Keighley Printers Ltd. of High Street, Keighley. It measures approximately 185mm by 245mm. The programme was part of an anonymous donation made in 2022.
An NGO, Sebeccly Cancer Care, has urged the Lagos State Government to incorporate breast and cervical cancer screening into its Maternal and Primary Healthcare programme. Dr Okeke Awela, the care Team Lead, made the call on the sidelines of a training for primary healthcare medical personnel in Lagos. Awela said research had found cancer to […]
nnn.com.ng/incorporate-breastcervical-cancer-screening-in...
Front cover from the theatre programme for a production of "No! No! Nanette!" at the Hippodrome Theatre, Keighley, staged by Keighley Amateur Operatic and Dramatic Society in October 1950.
Keighley Amateur Operatic and Dramatic Society's production of "No! No! Nanette!" played at the Hippodrome Theatre in Keighley for six nights (with a Saturday matinee) from Monday 16th to Saturday 21st October 1950. The musical comedy had book and lyrics by Frank Mandel, Otto Harbach and Irving Caesar, with music by Vincent Youmans. The KAODS production was produced and directed by Edward Royce, with musical director R. Lewis Scargill.
Unusually, it was the company's second full-scale musical of the year, following "The Maid of the Mountains" in May.
According to the programme: "The story centres around the married life of Jimmy Smith [played by Frank Hopkinson], who has made good in business and has a lot of money to spend. His wife, Sue [Pamela Fitzjohn], however, does not expand in like manner, and retains her singularly economical turn of mind. Jimmy gets tired of seeing his wealth accumulate without benefit to anyone, and so seeks to make others happy by unburdening it in secret to people he regards as fit objects for his generosity. Then come the complications out of his past. And what complications they are! They come from Harrogate, Bath and Nice, and, of course, there is Nanette [Elsie Greenwell] herself also fitting into the story. It becomes one glorious mix-up. As Jimmy had not visited his lady friends, they decide to visit him at his little nest at Sunnycliffe. There Jimmy, with the help of his lawyer friend, Billy Earle [Keith Marsden], endeavours to extricate himself from the complications and to hide them from his very unsophisticated wife. Billy's extravagant wife, Lucille [Margaret Best], comes into the plot... In the end, aided by Lucille, the unsophisticated Sue becomes sophisticated, the economical housewife becomes wildly extravagant. As far as Nanette is concerned, her romance is wrapped up with her youthful lover, Tom [Frederick W. Pye]... And so all through the play there is a grand flow of comedy, matched in quality only by the music."
Other people in the cast included Mollie Spavin, Marjorie Riley, Marjorie J. Riley and Dorothy Smith.
The 40-page programme was printed by The Keighley Printers Ltd. of High Street, Keighley. It measures approximately 180mm by 245mm. This unique copy of the programme belonged to KAODS performer Arthur Day and is signed by many of his fellow cast and production members. The programme was part of an anonymous donation made in 2022.