Welcome to Kids Confidential
Reset Password

You are here: Kids ConfidentialOut & About.

Manchester Weekender: 28 Hours, 70 Events

Family-friendly films, performances, readings and activities

Published on August 23rd 2011.


Manchester Weekender: 28 Hours, 70 Events

THE Manchester Weekender is 70 events for all ages across a neatly packaged autumn weekend in October.

The events include exhibitions, talks, workshops, performances, walking tours, boat trips, cycle rides and screenings.

Forty-eight hours of art, culture, music, film, food, literature, walks, politics, poetry, photography, theatre, spectacle and games all wrapped up into a single weekend.

The Manchester Weekender 2011 launches with a lush evening of cabaret and cocktails at the opening of Adolphe Valette: A Pioneer of Impressionism in Manchester at The Lowry with music from the divine Swing out Sister. Corinne Drewery and Andy Connell will serenade the city with a selection of songs from Mancunian bands including Joy Division, The Smiths, and New Order, all performed with a glamorous French influence.  

Speaking of The Smiths, erstwhile drummer Mike Joyce is curating an intimate night of indie music talent at Ruby Lounge. Performances take place under a pavilion of light, the first of a series of installations that will be produced in collaboration between CUBE gallery and the Manchester School of Architecture. 
 
Closing The Manchester Weekender this year is an in-conversation of epic proportions. Framed by the glorious backdrop of Manchester's Great Hall and its stunning Ford Madox Brown murals, and marking the publication of a book of his song lyrics, Jarvis Cocker will discuss with Dave Haslam, DJ and writer, what it means to be a man-of-ideas-and-artistry, and a cultural-provocateur.
 
There’s a literature-music mash-up of the highest order with Manchester Literature Festival’s Portrait of Music and Words at the RNCM. Acclaimed poet Michael Symmons Roberts has been commissioned to write new poems responding to the evening’s Manchester Camerata programme which includes Mozart arias and his Symphony No 40 and Benjamin Britten’s Les Illuminations – hear both the poems and the music that inspired them live on the same evening.

Finally, the ever-popular Whitworth After Hours has invited photographic collective BlackLab to respond to its Dark Matters exhibition. Watch as images collide and collude with film, soundscapes, slogans and texts. 

This year’s Weekender offers a programme of performances in unusual spaces, such as The Portico Library -  an 1806 gem on Mosley Street. Instead of checking out books, visitors can check out the homespun folk and grassroots jazz performed by local chanteuse Liz Green (and enjoy retro high tea at the same time).

From the intimate and acoustic to the grander in scale: Manchester Cathedral will echo to the voices of cloistered nuns, as Sarah Dunant and early music group Musica Secreta present a semi-dramatised version of Dunant’s novel Sacred Hearts for Manchester Literature Festival. Set in the convent of Santa Caterina, it tells the story of two spirited young women who struggle to adapt to the rigid life of the nunnery, in an atmospheric event that will transport the audience to 16th century Italy. 

Meanwhile The Beating Wing Orchestra, the Manchester-based international music collective including musicians from refugee and migrant backgrounds, will stage a one-off performance within the unique surroundings of an alternative VISA application and training centre installed at Castlefield Gallery, part of an ambitious multi-platform exhibition by international artists Osman Bozkurt and Didem Özbek (PiST) for Asia Triennial Manchester. 
 
On Saturday, cult theatre company and award-winning comedy duo LipService are guides on The Hysterical Historical Tour, a live promenade theatre piece commissioned for The Weekender. The redoubtable Audrey and Olivia, famous from the Bronte satire ‘Withering Looks’, will take to the streets in passionate tribute to Manchester women, from notorious gossip Elizabeth Gaskell to the Pankhursts – nothing is sacred! 

Elsewhere, Weekender walking tours are designed to show the city in a new light. Visitors can retrace the steps of painter Adolphe Valette, explore secret tunnels, revisit the literary past or get lost under Bridgewater Hall, where they just might hear an eerie musical performance. Confidential's editor Jonathan Schofield will be leading two tours on Friday 14 October at 4pm and 6pm, walking in the footsteps of French artist Adolphe Valette a century ago, and then with alchemist and mathematician John Dee four hundred years ago. Book on www.jonathanschofieldtours.com

Valette, Oxford Road, Manchester, 1910Valette, Oxford Road, Manchester, 1910

At Debenhams and the Royal Exchange, Primitive Streak will be shown, a provocative collection that tells the story of the first 1000 hours of human life. Blending art and science, this is a collaboration between developmental biologist Kate Storey and her sister, fashion designer Helen Storey, who will give a talk about the project during Manchester Science Festival. 

Or there’s a chance to drift lazily down the Irwell on A Taste of Modern History’s foodie boat cruises with chef Robert Owen Brown as part of the Manchester Food & Drink Festival. There’s a family day cruise from the museums of Castlefield to The Quays, and an evening cruise with a three-course meal. 
 
The Weekender has plenty on offer for kids, with family-friendly workshops, performances and readings galore. Children’s author Tom Palmer will be reading from his new novel Scrum! at MediaCityUK on Sunday, with support from Rugby League team Sale Sharks and the BBC Sports broadcasting team. There’s also a rugby-themed quiz and drop-kick contest.

The Weekender has also teamed up with the Family Friendly Film Club for a special screening of Studio Ghibli’s anime classic Howl’s Moving Castle (Cert. U) in the spooky gothic surroundings of John Rylands Library. Kids can get busy with an animation workshop and special activities before the film. Meanwhile, under 7s can help search for missing stories and experiment with role-play and movement in the Royal Exhange’s Theatre Explorers workshop.

And there’s something for all ages at the Manchester Museum’s Urban Harvest, part of Manchester Food & Drink Festival. Kids can get their hands dirty helping dig up veg from the museum’s allotment and enjoy performances from The Vegetable Nannies and a veggie-playing symphony orchestra; parents can discuss the ethics of food production and learn about urban foraging; and everyone can sample food prepared by local chefs. 
 
Photographer and author Len Grant has been documenting Manchester and Salford’s regeneration for 20 years. There’s a chance to learn with him at An Exhibition in a Day, an amateur photographer’s workshop on Saturday in which participants will follow a professional brief to produce a pop-up exhibition screened on site in a surprise location.

For a more analogue than digital experience, families can over learn how to develop images the old-fashioned way in pop-up darkroom Photography POD at Imperial War Museum North on Saturday. Or learn how to create art by mapping environmental data in a talk and workshop at Cornerhouse led by artist Daksha Patel, whose work is on show as part of Asia Triennial. People’s History Museum is inviting all craftivists to gear up for party conference season at Subversive Stitching, a mass stitch-in. Experienced crafters and enthusiastic beginners can make small banners with big messages using cross stitch and embroidery, while enjoying coffee, cake and conversation. 
 
For a full schedule complete with booking information and ideas about where to eat, sleep and chill in Manchester, log on to www.creativetourist.com/weekender 

Thanks to Phil Sharp on Flickr for the Jarvis Cocker image. Click here to see more of his work.

Like what you see? Enter your email to sign up for our newsletters which are chock-a-block with more great videos, food reviews, news, deals and savings.

To post this comment, you need to login.Please complete your login information.
OR CREATE AN ACCOUNT HERE..
Or you can login using Facebook.

Latest Rants

Anonymous

Madison rocks!

 Read more
Nilson

It's really a great summer holiday fun. I am also planning to go to somewhere with family during…

 Read more
SG

I can tolerate it being cold, I can (just) about tolerate some of the moody staff, but I really…

 Read more
Alistair Mackay

Pretty much same as last years, but still better than Lincoln's!

 Read more

Explore The Site

© Confidential Publishing 2012

Privacy | Careers | Website by: Planet Code