Updated
Wednesday, 4th August 2021, 9:18 am
The cast of the musical which is on at the YMCA in Scarborough until August 14
The young cast of YMCA Productions put pizzazz into their staging of the musical made famous by the film starring John Travolta and Olivia Newton John in 1978.
It is a high school romance set in the 1950s complete with cheerleaders, fast cars, burger bars and coffee houses – populated by teenagers with attitude and obsessed by the opposite sex.
Goody-two-shoes Sandy has a summer romance with bad-boy Danny – only to find he ignores her when they start back at school for the autumn semester.
× BARNSLEY is now one of the worst-hit places in Yorkshire when it comes to people going hungry, shock new research has revealed.
A study from the University of Sheffield - using data from the Food Foundation - has highlighted where in the country most people struggle to access or afford food.
In the Barnsley local authority area,almost 11 per cent of the population - equivalent to more than 26,000 people - described themselves as ‘hungry’.
Residents in the ‘hungry’ category are people who indicated that they were hungry but were unable to eat food because they could not afford it, or were unable to access food in the previous month.
Bromley: Top ten UK local authority where people suffer hunger newsshopper.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newsshopper.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Study identifies food insecurity at a local authority scale across the UK
In one out of every six local authorities, rates of hunger are more than 150 per cent (one and a half times) the national average. Shockingly, in one in 10 local authorities, the rate is almost double, according to new research by the University of Sheffield.
Researchers at the University of Sheffield Institute for Sustainable Food modelled data from the Food Foundation, who surveyed people across the UK, and for the first time were able to identify food insecurity at a local authority scale. Local authority percentages show the marked variation in levels of food insecurity between local areas and, whereas national and even regional averages, hide this difference.