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Standard Life Aberdeen stuns social media with radical name change

The great reopening | The Week UK

Dan Kitwood/Getty Images Forget the start of grouse shooting in August; for Britain’s small businesses, the “Glorious Twelfth” arrived early on 12 April with the long-anticipated reopening of pubs, shops, salons and restaurants, said Jayna Rana on ThisIsMoney.co.uk. The mood was upbeat. The Federation of Small Businesses reported that confidence is at its highest level since 2014, thanks to the perceived “certainty” provided by the Government’s roadmap. After three months of “being deprived of a retail fix”, shoppers were out in force, said Larry Elliott in The Guardian. Economists say it’s “unwise to read too much into one month’s data”, let alone “one day’s footfall”, but the first signs were encouraging. Nonetheless, footfall was still down on the same day two years ago – “a long-lost time of innocence when pandemics, mass vaccination programmes and needing face masks to enter shops were the stuff of sci-fi movies”. 

Josh O Connor trades his Crown for a night with Juliet: PATRICK MARMION reviews Romeo & Juliet

Verdict: Puppets enchant Zoom   Prince Charles playing Romeo? Well, not quite, but it was a little disconcerting this week to see the features of the heir apparent in the face of Shakespeare s most famous lover in Romeo & Juliet. This uncertain pleasure is thanks to the role going to Josh O Connor probably best known to readers as the young Charles Windsor in Netflix hit The Crown. Jessie Buckley twinkles opposite him as Juliet, in a galaxy of theatre stars including Tamsin Greig, Adrian Lester and Lucian Msamati.  Love s young dream? Jessie Buckley twinkles as Juliet opposite Josh O Connor, who plays Romeo (both pictured)

An Elephant in the Garden based on the book by Michael Morpurgo

An Elephant in the Garden based on the book by Michael Morpurgo April 5, 2021 Last updated: April 5, 2021 I do wonder whether the German accent was strictly necessary. Elizabeth (Alison Reid), or Lizzie, as she was invariably called, is excited at the news of the fall of the Berlin Wall, and sets about reminiscing about the Second World War. A resident of Dresden, she just about managed to escape with her mother: 13 February 1945 marked her sixteenth birthday, which seems more than a little contrived for anyone who knows the significance of that date – the beginning of a sustained aerial bombing attack by the British Royal Air Force and United States Army Air Forces on the city of Dresden that went on for three days.

At the Barn in Cirencester, Morpurgo goes back to war, plus the best of April s live theatre

At the Barn in Cirencester, Morpurgo goes back to war, plus the best of April s live theatre
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