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An ex-miner turned poet is appointed writer-in-residence at
Eastwood branch library. Ellen, senior librarian, soon realizes the
feckless but charming Geordie is no poet. Despite this she finds
him highly entertaining, much to the disgust of Nutley, an earnest
young man who covets the writer-in-residence role. These three find
themselves an unlikely but united strike group when the Libraries
sub-committee proposes demolishing the library.-2 women, 3 men
Anyone familiar with the cartoon characters of Bill Tidy's 'Fosdyke
Saga' from the Daily Mirror will know these loveable characters.
The time is 1902 and the Fosdyke tripe business is failing, so they
decide to move to greener pastures in Manchester - the land of meat
pies and perhaps fortune? We follow their progress through to the
First World War.6 women, 10 men
Close the Coalhouse Door is a living pageant of the North-East's
mining communities, and also a key work in the development of
British political drama. Triumphantly revived by Live Theatre, this
gritty musical is regularly staged by all kinds of theatre
companies, from professional to school and amateur. The original
version was published by Samuel French. This new edition, using the
updated script, was published in response to demand from the
numerous theatre groups which want to perform it. Alan Plater
wrote: 'Some plays refuse to lie down. Others surrender on the
first night and disappear into a mysterious other country - the
land of lost plays. Nobody can explain this phenomenon. Shakespeare
himself had no idea how many people would turn up on the night.
Close the Coalhouse Door was written, with the wise and loving
inspiration of Sid Chaplin and adorned by the songs of Alex
Glasgow, in 1968. It has been revived at regular intervals ever
since. Initially we updated it, to accommodate Edward Heath and the
miners' strikes; but eventually time took its revenges. In 1968 we
had a cast of ten plus walk-ons, five musicians and a full brass
band on special occasions. The new version is written for a cast of
eight, who made their own music, again with a brass band on special
occasions. Theatrical resources have shrunk, though not as
drastically as the coal industry. The soul of the piece is
unchanging. We originally described it as "a hymn of unqualified
praise to the miners - who created a revolutionary weapon without
having a revolutionary intent". If, today, the hymn is more in the
nature of an elegy, it is a strain that haunts the dreams of
everyone with roots in the North-East.'
Joan Hickson stars as the deceptively frail and elderly detective
in these BBC television adaptations of the Agatha Christie novels,
uncovering murder and foul play in rural England in the 1930s. The
mysteries included in the collection are: 'The Body in the
Library', 'The Moving Finger', 'A Murder Is Announced', 'A
Pocketful of Rye', 'The Murder at the Vicarage', 'Sleeping Murder',
'At Bertram's Hotel', 'Nemesis', '4.50 from Paddington', 'A
Caribbean Mystery', 'They Do It With Mirrors' and 'The Mirror
Crack'd from Side to Side'.
A new comic drama, starring Maureen Lipman, about the life of the
famous play agent, Peggy Ramsay, who helped transform post-war
British drama Alan Plater's play for the Hampstead Theatre in
London is a witty and poignant portrait of Margaret 'Peggy' Ramsay,
the larger-than-life play agent who nurtured several generations of
British playwrights (John Arden, Alan Ayckbourn, Robert Bolt,
Edward Bond, David Hare, Caryl Churchill, David Hare, Christopher
Hampton, Joe Orton, and others) from the late 1950s to the early
1980s. Peggy was one of the most influential behind-the-scenes
figures in post-war British theatre. Focusing on one fateful day of
her life, when old clients are exiting and new ones are entering,
Plater's play is a meditation on the creative spirit. The play
premiered at the Hampstead Theatre, London, 23 November 1999."Alan
Plater's hilarious celebration of the late literary agent Peggy
Ramsay" (The Times)
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