A NEW take on Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales is coming to Dorchester Corn Exchange at 8pm on Friday October 14.

Blast from the Past have delighted Dorchester audiences in recent years with their unique musical Christmas shows and now return with a new version of this timeless classic.

In this evening of medieval music, merrymaking and bawdy humour they present six of the best-loved tales, told in a variety of styles.

Taking visual inspiration from medieval mystery plays and complete with a touring set which has been specially constructed to resemble a medieval travelling theatre, the three-man cast use drama, verse, physical theatre and song to bring Chaucer's characters to riotous life, telling tales packed with colourful characters and strange situations.

This is definitely not a dry academic take on English literature – the show is fast, furious, occasionally filthy and invariably funny!

Although Chaucer wrote his masterwork more than 600 years ago, it still feels contemporary, fresh and vital – and wholly accessible to modern audiences. Written in the late 14th century, The Canterbury Tales is the high-water mark of medieval English literature.

Based around the concept of a disparate group of pilgrims to the shrine of Thomas à Becket at Canterbury Cathedral who tell each other stories to while away the journey, it paints a rich and vibrant portrait of life in medieval England.

All human life is present – from the dark and brooding Pardoner’s Tale to the bawdy Miller’s Tale, via the proto-feminism of the Wife of Bath’s Tale and the simple whimsy of the Nun’s Priest’s Tale.

True to the spirit of the original, the tales are occasionally bawdy and blue, so the show is unsuitable for under 12s - and possibly not for serious scholars of the late medieval ages!

Contact Dorchester Arts for tickets.

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