One of her employees had to carry samples in her luggage on a passenger flight to Spain for a meeting to make sure the food wasn't held up at the border, she says.
Mr Davies, who has previously campaigned for the jail to be saved for artistic purposes, said the change of venue for the show was "frustrating"."But you just get to a point where the challenges and the costs that we would have to pass onto our audience are so outrageous that it's just quite a simple straightforward decision," he said,
"We can't justify this for a one day event."If we were there for longer it would be different, but not this time."He added that the new venue, St Laurence's Church, was "amazing".
"[It] was founded in 1121 and we're doing a play about William the Conqueror, so the history is amazing there," he said.Mr Bi said
s, and a portrait by celebrated street artist Banksy, that appeared on the prison wall in 2021, would "of course" stay.
In January, an augmented-reality exhibition allowed members of the public to view artwork hung on the walls via a smartphone app, without entering the building.Mrs Jackson said it could be "very traumatic" to spend five hours in an airport because of her sight loss.
"Luckily, my husband was with me or else it would have been really bad because I can't see anything in bright light," she said.Mrs Jackson said she was "dreading" her next flight to the UK for another medical appointment in eight weeks' time.
The Jersey Consumer Council (JCC) said situations like this were "the tip of the iceberg" when it came to the way flight cancellations could impact people.Chairman Carl Walker said there had been growing problems in recent months, with increasing flight cancellations and postponements.