Showing posts with label Chorlton Arts Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chorlton Arts Festival. Show all posts

Saturday, 17 May 2025

When Richard took our Lych Gate to Barlow Hall

  l am a great admirer of the models Richard Griffiths constructs and especially so his latest of the Lych Gate beside Chorlton Green.


The original has long been one of the iconic images of where we live.



So l was pleased to see that it will feature in this year's Chorlton Arts Festival, and will be on display with heaps of other art at Barlow Hall.*

The model has already been exhibited in the Marble on Manchester Road and in the window of Chorlton Book Shop.

But l will drop in to Barlow Hall to see it again along with what promises to be the largest collection of paintings by Chorlton artists.

And that is it.

Location; Barlow Hall

Picture; Model of the Lych Gate courtesy of Richard Griffiths, 2025

*Chorlton Arts Festival, https://chorltonartsfestival.org/  

Songs of Protest and Struggle .... tonight

 One to do






During Chorlton Arts Festival, https://chorltonartsfestival.org/


Friday, 16 May 2025

Chorlton Arts Festival is back …..

That festival of all things Chorlton Arts is back, running from May 16th for ten days, across heaps of venues and showcasing art, the performing arts and lots more.*


And last Thursday over 90 people attended the launch, including many of the participants, sponsors and of course the volunteers who are vital to the success of the Festival


The new Lord Mayor of Manchester Councillor Carmine Grimshaw opened the evening and included one of his own poems.  

It was clear he enjoyed the event staying almost till the end taking time out to talk to the organizers and the young performers from Chorlton High school.

And that is it.













Location; Chorlton







Pictures; Chorlton Arts Festival 2025 is launched, from the collection of Andrew Simpson

*Chorlton Arts Festival, chorltonartsfestival.org























Friday, 17 May 2024

Chorlton Arts Festival is back …… May 17th to May 26

 Yep, Chorlton Arts Festival is back, with another exciting mix of cultural events, spanning art, literature, drama, and music.*


Along with our annual book festival it is one of the things that marks Chorlton out as something a bit special.

And last night the week was launched in the presence of the Lord Mayor, civic dignitaries, patrons of the festival and friends.

Four young musicians from Chorlton High school performed a selection of songs and there was a tribute to Ed Wylie one of the founders of the festival.

Leaving me just to point you in the direction of the link to Festival’s site, and in preparation for all that is to come suggest you read up on the history of the event and look at pictures a stories spanning the full 24 years of its existence at Chorlton Arts Festival ...... the history.**


Location; Chorlton










Pictures; Chorlton Arts Festival, 2024, from the collection of Andrew Simpson

*Chorlton Arts Festival, 2024, https://chorltonartsfestival.org/ 

**Chorlton Arts Festival, https://chorltonhistory.blogspot.com/search/label/Chorlton%20Arts%20Festival


Friday, 19 May 2023

OK Chorlton ….. our Arts Festival is back

So last night Chorlton Arts Festival was officially launched with its annual opening night at the South West Manchester Cricket Club on Ellesmere Road.

The Lord Mayor, Cllr Cllr Yasmine Dar, 2023

On hand to celebrate the event was the newly elected Lord Mayor, Cllr Yasmine Dar,  the city’s first female Asian Lord Mayor, who grew up in Whalley Range.

Jeff Smith MP Manchester Withington, 2023
In her opening remarks she said that she had hoped this would have been her first official invitation since becoming Lord Mayor the day before, but while something else had sneaked in it was still  the second event.

The night had begun with a session from Chorlton Park Steel Band, and was followed by the welcoming address from Carolyn Kagan, chair of Chorlton Voice.

As ever there was a fine selection of refreshments which added to a night where “friends”, invited guests and contributors mingled and swapped the shows they fancied.

And the full list of events can be found by following the link.*

Location, Chorlton

Pictures; Chorlton Arts Festival, 2023, from the collection of Andrew Simpson

Watching the Steel Band, 2023


Listening and watching, 2023

Carolyn's welcoming words interrupted by events off stage, 2023



*Chorlton Arts Festival, 2023, https://chorltonartsfestival.org/2023-festival-programme/


Monday, 23 January 2023

One hundred years of one house in Chorlton ....... part 143 …….. poster corner

The continuing story of the house Joe and Mary Ann Scott lived in for over 50 years and the families that have lived here since. *

Poster Corner, 2023
Now I wonder what Joe and Mary Ann would have made of poster corner which is the set of railings directly opposite their house.

The railings make up the south east corner of the Rec and have become the go to site for heaps of different posters.

That said I don’t remember the spot being used much before the turn of this century, and even then the posters tended to be appeals for missing pets, and the announcement of the return of the travelling circus.

Which means Joe and Mary Ann would not have had an opinion.

But then nor do I, particularly as the organization which has made this corner its own is Chorlton Arts Festival, and what a good thing that is.

At which point I could go into detail on this annual Chorlton Arts event, but then I regularly write about it so I shall just leave the link sitting here.**

Poster Corner, 2021
And it would be a tad hypercritical of me to voice much opposition given that for a brief few years I gave permission for a local builder to fasten his sign on one of our walls.

It directed the interested to their workshop which was directly behind us and had once been the office and yard of Joe Scott who was also a builder and was responsible for many of the properties off Beech Road. 

His successor were known as Fairbarts and over the course of the 1980s did a lot of work for us, including restoring a fire place picture rails and an old cast iron bath and lavatory with its wooden cistern which we had sourced from a shop in north Manchester.

Their sign was quite modest and lasted only until they moved on, and was nothing like those that can still be seen on gable ends advertising all sorts of products, two of which adorn buildings on Beech Road.

A different poster, 1986
And here I have to confess that for a few years the side of our hose advertised a huge Labour Party poster which I suspect Mr. Mrs. Scott would not have approved of.

Leaving me just to look through my collection of images of poster corner and reflect on a form of advertising and promotion which stretches back into history, and includes political appeals for votes found on the walls of Pompeii and more recent ghost signs which have long outlasted the products and the businesses they advertised.

Location; Chorlton

Pictures; poster corner, 2023 & 2021 and the wall of Joe and Mary’s house 1986, from  the collection of Andrew Simpson, and Chorlton Wholefoods, 2015, from the collection of Peter Topping

Beech Road, 2015

*The story of a house, https://chorltonhistory.blogspot.com/search/label/The%20story%20of%20a%20house

**Chorlton Arts Festival, https://chorltonhistory.blogspot.com/search/label/Chorlton%20Arts%20Festival


Monday, 16 May 2022

Always have a bit of fun with your history walk ………

So yesterday a gallant gang assembled outside the Lych Gate by the Green to walk our new book.

Doris the Dinosaur endorses nothing to do in Chorlton
The walk was the second we have done celebrating “nothing to do in chorlton" which Peter and I published back in November.

It has proved very successful, and our first print run has almost sold out, which is not surprising given that the book offers the reader the chance to explore six spots around Chorlton Green, discovering some interesting, occasionally sinister and mysterious events along with more than a few silly ones.

Moreover, we suggest places to sit, and enjoy the views while we tell stories of bull baiting, slaying the odd dragon, as well as the right way to play pooh sticks and of course some serious history from the Great Burial Scandal and the even greater Chorlton Church Schism to the building of Chorltonville, a lost stream and the man that stole our village green.

Our first walk the book attracted over 20 people, but then on the day it snowed, and if you remember Sunday November 28th it didn’t just snow, but came down in great lumps added to which the wind gave it an even more menacing character.

So, the 20 became ten and along the way we lost one, but the remaining 9 bravely walked the past, leaving Peter to mutter, “never perform with animals, children and snow”.

Yesterday was very different ………. the sun shone, and the two dogs that accompanied us were well behaved, and as so often happens we picked up an extra few interested listeners, including the family with the orange toy plane, which under Peter’s expert guidance, flew high in the sky, looped the loop and then humiliatingly took off in an odd direction much to everyone’s amusement.

So that was it, leaving me to thank those who came along and enjoyed the stories, Chorlton Voice who helped with the publicity and remind everyone that the walk was part of Chorlton Arts Festival which is on till the end of the month with heaps of arty things on offer.*

The book, nothing to do in chorlton by Andrew Simpson & Peter Topping, costs £5, is available from www.pubbooks.co.uk and Chorlton bookshop.


Location; Chorlton Green


Pictures; Doris the Dinosaur endorses nothing to do in chorlton, 2022, from the collection of Andrew Simpson

* Chorlton Arts Festival; https://chorltonartsfestival.org/


Sunday, 15 May 2022

Two old duffers ... an Arts Festival .....and a walk across Chorlton's past .... today

 Now it is not too late to join Peter and I as we celebrate our new publication, “nothing to do in chorlton”*, and walk the book with us today.

Starting at the lych gate opposite Chorlton Green we will touch on the history of the meadows and Chorltonville, before exploring some dark stories in the old parish church yard, and then by degree take in some silly tales on the village green including the Narnia lamp post, the origins of the Horse and Jockey, finishing by Scotch Hill.

So, without giving too much away, you can join in the speculation of what happened to the missing skull in the graveyard, the reason for the popular practice of “lifting” at Easter, and a missing stream.


The walk will cost £5, and for all those that buy a copy, the book will act as a free ticket to the walk.

It starts at 2 pm on Sunday today and will last for an hour …… or maybe a bit more …. after all there is lots to be revealed.

And yes the walk is a piece of outrageous self promotion but is also another in that acclaimed and popular series of events where we bring the the past out for you to enjoy.

And is also part of this year's Chorlton Arts Festival which through May with heaps of events, covering all the arts from music, theatre, and art in a series of venues across Chorlton with many of the performances free.**

You couldn't ask for more.


Location; Chorlton Green at 2pm

Painting; me and Peter doing nothing on the village Green by the Narnia Lamp, 2021, Peter Topping 

*“nothing to do in chorlton” by Andrew Simpson & Peter Topping, is available from www.pubbooks.co.uk and Chorlton bookshop

**Chorlton Arts Festival; https://chorltonartsfestival.org/

Saturday, 7 May 2022

The fascinating story of William and Will Mellor …… the talk today

Now I am looking forward to Barry Clark's free talk on William and Will Mellor, who lived in Chorlton, were active in Manchester’s labour movement and were bookbinders by profession.


Both men rather fell out of history, but Barry has brought them back, having written about their contribution to both trade union and Labour history as well as being outstanding artists and professional bookbinders

Barry’s talk at Chorlton Library on May 7th at 7pm in the Community Room at Chorlton Library, which will be followed on May 13th by a free bookbinding demonstration at St Werburgh’s Church Hall on Wilbraham Road between 1 and 4 pm.

Both events are part of Chorlton Arts Festival which runs from April 29th to May 30th.*

*Chorlton Arts Festival, https://chorltonartsfestival.org/


Saturday, 30 April 2022

OK everyone ….. the Arts Festival is open ....

 Last night opened the 20th Chorlton Arts Festival, and on hand was a Lord, an MP, a former National Poet of Scotland a heap of artists, writers and Chorlton residents.

And yes, it is twenty years ago almost to the day that a teacher, city councillor and a vicar sat down with a bottle of wine and explored the possibilities of an annual festival of the arts here in Chorlton.

Since then the festival has welcomed hundreds of artists, musicians, and writers who have performed in a varied set of  venues, and encompassed the famous, not so famous and lots of local talent.

So it was fitting that Lord Bradley of Withington who was one of the first patrons, was there last night, along with the present MP, Jeff Smith and Jackie Kay who was the National Poet of Scotland from 2016 till 2021, and lives locally.

But above all the night was about all of us who will at some point over the next month, dip into an “Arts” event or try to pack in as many as is possible.


It was a smashing evening, and one that will be remembered as a fitting launch to the 20th festival, leaving me just to thank the organisers and volunteers who made the evening such a success, and who will be there throughout the month of activities, ensuring all goes well.

You can access the full programme of events online, or pick up a paper copy from Chorlton Library, as well as a host of shops, bars and restaurants.

And looking at the list of things to watch, listen to and participate in, it has to be the best festival yet.

At which point the very observant will spot the error in one of the photographs, and no it wasn't deliberate, I wish it had been ...... which confirms that simple truth that I ain't no artist.

Location; Chorlton


Pictures; launch night of the 20th Chorlton Arts Festival, 2022, from the collection of Andrew Simpson

*Chorlton Arts Festival, https://chorltonartsfestival.org/

Wednesday, 27 April 2022

It’s back ……. that local arts festival in Chorlton ……

Now it’s twenty years ago almost to the day when a teacher, a city councillor, and a vicar sat down with a bottle of wine and explored the possibilities of an annual festival of the arts here in Chorlton.


And the rest has been heaps of performances by the famous, not so famous as well as lots of local artists, writers, and musicians across Chorlton in venues as varied as pubs, parks, church halls and the odd garden.

Many of the events are free, and stretch out over the month of May, happening in the day, in the evening and some for the whole of the festival.

All of which brings me to the programme, which is available online and in shops, bars, restaurants and Chorlton Library.

This year the organizers have excelled themselves with the breath and variety of what is on offer, with the added bonus of a short history of the festival over the  last twenty years.

And the emphasis remains one of show casing local talent with a few old favourites.

To these can be added the patrons, which include Lip Service,  Jackie Kay, who was the National Poet of Scotland, Badly Drawn Boy, the comedian Jason Manford and Stephen Raw “the artist from London who told all his friends he would be back in just six months, and over 40 years later is still in Chorlton”.


So lots to look forward to from April 29th to May 29th, with events to fit everyone’s interest, and that added extra of a bit of history.







Location; Chorlton

Pictures; from the Programme of the 20th Jubilee Festival of the Chorlton Arts Festival

*Chorlton Arts Festival, https://chorltonartsfestival.org/



Tuesday, 22 February 2022

It was 20 years ago today ……. an Arts festival … a bottle of wine …and a heap of good memories later

Now, it’s that time of year again when Chorlton prepares for its own arts festival.


It began when a teacher, a city councillor, and a vicar sat down with a bottle of wine and explored the possibilities of an annual festival of the arts here in Chorlton.


Fundamental to the concept was that it should be fun, and open to all and embrace all the arts.

And the rest is history, and that history is soon to be written.

So, with that in mind, this is the appeal for memories and memorabilia, from anyone, who took part, organized an event or just went along and enjoyed a performance.

You can leave a message, or an offer of something interesting at https://chorltonartsfestival.org/contact/

And the rest will be part of your contribution to our own Arts Festival.




Location; Chorlton

Pictures; first Chorlton Arts Festival programme, 2002,courtesy of the Chorlton Arts Festival, and the opening night of the Chorlton Arts Festival, 2021, from the collection of Andrew Simpson


Friday, 8 October 2021

The Arts in Chorlton-cum-Hardy ...... another story from Tony Goulding

As a celebration of the recent Chorlton-cum-Hardy's Arts festival, I decided to investigate some of the area’s past artistic connections. 


As I have previously written here (1) of Thomas Mostyn’s art school (now the Buddhist’s World Peace Café) and the three Knowles siblings, artists who lived in the house which is now Our Lady and St. John’s Parish Centre on the corner of High Lane and Chequers Road.

 I have also written of The Oaks Music School on Wilbraham Road run by the Haigh family (who, coincidentally were related by marriage to the Knowles’s) (2) 

Knowles's residence on High Lane

This time I have decided to look into the area’s theatrical heritage.

Picolo Theatre 

"Chorlton-cum-Hardy" Con Club

The Picolo Theatre was a short-lived theatre company which, aided by a grant from the Arts Council, performed a number of plays at Chorlton-cum-Hardy's repertory theatre (3) based in the public hall on the upper floor of the Conservative Club on Wilbraham Road in 1954

This was a serious professional company as is indicated by the plays they put on that season. 

They opened with “Mistress of the Inn” a comedy by the 18th century Italian playwright Carlo Goldoni. 

Their repertoire also included J. M. Synge’s “Playboy of the Western World”, “The Barber of Seville” by Beaumarchais, Shakespeare’s “Twelfth Night” as well as two somewhat lighter offerings, “Treasure Island” and “Dial “M” for Murder”.

The personnel involved, both acting and off stage included many who became well-known names later in their careers. One of the actors was Patrick Wymark, who played in a starring rôle in two popular T.V. shows of the mid-1960s, “The Plane Makers” and “The Power Game”.  Another was Eric Thompson who found fame as the voice of “The Magic Roundabout” for which he also provided the English commentary. His two daughters also became accomplished actors, the multiple Academy Award winner, Emma, and her younger sister Sophie, also an award winner (Olivier). (4) A third cast member, Mike Morgan, had just had his big break into films, playing alongside Sir Alec Guinness, when near the completion of his second film he was taken ill with meningitis and died tragically young, aged 29.

Design sketch of Manchester Royal Exchange Theatre 1976

The leading female actor was Avril Elgar who was newly-married to fellow member of the company James Maxwell. Avril has been prolific in her appearances on Television over nearly half a century. She passed away, sadly only a few days ago on the 17th September, 2021. Her husband, James, acted too on television and in films but it is his Theatre work which is most well-known particularly in this area. Initially with his work, as both actor and artistic director, with the 69 theatre company based at the Manchester University Theatre and, following the success of that venture, the development of Manchester’s Royal Exchange Theatre, for which he was a co-founding art-director

Another of the co-founding art directors and the designer of the theatre itself was also a former Picolo Theatre member, Richard Negri. All of the company had been trained at the Old Vic Theatre School in London founded by George Devine who was the director of the Picolo Theatre’s first production. A director of some of its later shows was the company’s founder Frank Dunlop; now 94-years-old he has directed in London’s West End, on New York’s Broadway, the opera, Carmen, at the Royal Albert Hall, and for eight years (1984-91) ran the Edinburgh Festival.

 Hon. Secretary of the Chorlton-cum-Hardy theatre club at this time was Cecil Walkley Lloyd of 32, Cavendish Road, Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester. Cecil was born on the 12th February, 1907. However, there is something of a mystery concerning his place of birth, the birth was registered in Hulme, Manchester but the 1911 census shows him as born in the Maida Vale area of London. His family were then living at Ashton Barracks, Ashton-under-Lyne, Lancashire where his father having completed 21 years' service in the army was working as the canteen manager. The family’s residence on the 11th March, 1908 recorded, on his discharge, in his father’s army records was 46, Beresford Road, Moss Side, Manchester

Cecil Walkley, trained to become a teacher at Chester teacher Training College, qualifying in 1927, when he started working, as an assistant master, at Christ Church Boy’s School. He later moved on to Heald Place Boy’s School, then Ladybarn Senior Boy’s School, Withington, Manchester. In the June quarter of 1936, at St Ann’s Church, Tottington Nr. Bury, Lancashire he married Mabel Lois Mary Peachment, the daughter of George Henry, a hairdresser and newsagent and Mary (née Barnes), an elementary school teacher. The couple had two children a son born in Stretford in the March quarter of 1937 and a daughter born in Manchester in the March quarter of 1943. 

On the 21st June, 1949, Cecil Walkley Lloyd applied to Manchester City Council to be registered as a Stage Manager as required by the Theatrical Employers Act of 1925 and its subsequent amendment of 1928. (5) 

Walter Stott – Film maker and Theatre Propriet

Walter Stott was both the manager and one of the directors of Chorlton-cum-Hardy's first cinema. He was also a producer of commercial films for a wide variety of organisations. These ranged from The Mersey Docks and Harbour Board, Henry Bannerman & Sons Ltd. Cotton Spinners and Manufacturers Ltd. to a propaganda film for The Hospital Saturday Fund and even a film of a local football match shown at the Trocadero, Rusholme in October, 1919.

I was having a good deal of trouble tying together various strands of information I had on him until I read Andrew Simpson’s pieces on The Chorlton Pavillion and Winter Garden, one of which provided me with Walter’s address in 1910. Armed with this vital item of data I am now able to tell his story.

Walter was born in Chorlton-on-Medlock, Manchester on the 14th December, 1877. He was the 4th child of Charles Stott, a pawnbroker, and his wife Elizabeth (née Longmore). His mother died, aged just 29, before he had celebrated his second birthday. The 1881 census shows his widowed father at 12, Milton Street, Chorlton-on-Medlock as the lone parent of 4 children all under 10. (Edith (9), Charles (7), William Longmore (5), and Walter (3)). He was aided by a general servant in the household 27-Years-old Elizabeth Eccleston, from Market Drayton, Shropshire. Before the next census was taken, in 1891, Walter had lost his remaining parent too; he had died, aged 39, on the 4th October 1889. Under the provisions of their father’s will Walter and his siblings were placed under the guardianship of their “Auntie” Elizabeth Jennett and her husband, Walter Broadhead Jennett, (6) a fellow pawnbroker, of 37, Union Street, Ardwick, Manchester. However, the 1891 census shows all 4 Stott siblings living with another “Auntie and Uncle”, William, a silk finisher, and Caroline Pearce, both of whom were born in London. They were at 19, Lincoln Street, Rusholme, Manchester together with Mr. & Mrs. Jennett, 4 of their grown-up children and a servant.

Walter’s tragic early life continued as, having already been bereaved of both his parents his step-father William Pearce died in the March quarter of 1894, Walter having just turned 16. 

 He married first Louisa Bell Selby, the eldest daughter of James Selby, the publican of The George Hotel, 67, Clowes Street, West Gorton, Manchester, and his wife Isabella Barlow (née Mills). In the March quarter of 1905, Louisa Bell died very likely due to complications arising from the birth of the couple first child, Nora Louise. Walter and his baby daughter went to live in The George Hotel, where they were when the 1911 census was taken. Also in the household was James and Isabella’s youngest daughter, Edith, an elementary school teacher, who Walter was to make his second wife in the December quarter of 1915

Chorlton Pavilion and Winter Gardens

Walter Stott’s connection to Chorlton-cum-Hardy in the records is in 1910 when he is described as both the manager and a director of the newly opened Chorlton Theatre and Winter Garden in various issues of “The Stage” and “The Era” of that year. This was only one of a number of cinemas he operated as he became a leading figure in the embryonic film industry. Although initially a great success the Chorlton Theatre---- did not prosper long term. The original owners put it up for auction in December 1911, and it was sold again in 1916 by which time it was being “upstaged” by The Palais de Luxe, a purpose-built cinema on Barlow Moor Road, Chorlton-cum-Hardy opened in April, 1914.

Walter Stott’s enterprises were divided between two companies. His cinemas and film distribution business, The National Film Agency, was carried out with his partner, and an old schoolfriend, Frederick White. His partner in his film production company, Manchester Producing Company, was Jerry Somers, a gifted film cameraman.

 As befits an entrepreneur engaged in the highly fashionable and lucrative if sometimes volatile business of the early growth of the film industry, Walter was apparently a “larger than life” character who held positions on several committees and could be relied on to be the life and soul of any gathering. On one particular occasion, in April, 1921, he issued a challenge to his fellows in the cinema industry to consume 12 Eccles cakes at one sitting, a challenge he completed himself the following day. His unconventional behavior did however on one occasion became unacceptable. In September, 1913 he appeared in court in Huddersfield charged with making unwanted sexual advances towards a 16-year-old programme seller in his employ. After a three-day hearing the magistrate dismissed the case through insufficient evidence but in doing so admonished Walter and his fellow defendant saying their behaviour “---- had been disgraceful and reprehensible as regards to their position----”    

Pictures; Knowles's house on High Lane and Conservative club from collection of Tony Goulding , Plans of Royal Exchange Theatre m 06619 Courtesy of Manchester Libraries, Information, and Archives, Manchester City Council, http://images.manchester.gov.uk/index.php?session=pass, Chorlton Pavilion and Winter Gardens from the Lloyd Collection.

Notes: -

1) “The Art Heritage of Chorlton-cum-Hardy" (15th August 2017).

2) “The Haigh Family of Chorlton-cum-Hardy" (23rd January, 2017).

3) Joan Sims one of the stars of the “Carry On” films made her stage debut in this venue in 1950.

4)  Sophie Thompson has been nominated 6 times for an Olivier award but only won it the once in, 1999, for “Best Actress in a Musical” in “Into the Woods”.

5) These acts were introduced to tackle the problem of bogus managers who would “hire” a troupe of performers only to disappear with the theatre’s takings leaving them stranded.

6) The ties between the two families were further strengthened when Charles Stott’s eldest son, Charles Henry, married Walter Broadhead Jennett’s first-born daughter, Amy, on the 4th September, 1901 at St. Thomas’s Church, Ardwick, Manchester.