More musings about my fab new job at the theatre. This was from back in September...
It was a pleasure having the cast of Handbagged
around over the last few weeks of September. In the final week of the production and
it was been getting great reviews – not only from people who’ve been in to see
it and told us – but also from the press. I’ve had customers on the phone who
say that they’ve rung up for tickets because The Guardian review was so great.
Plus, another who came in to get more tickets – so he could see it again
himself and bring his mother-in-law this time!
It will be
sad to see the massive gold crown over the stage disappear. – but No Man’s
Land by Harold Pinter starts on October 1st.
Things are really hotting up in the box office as
more and more schools are calling trying to get their pupils and staff into The
Prince and the Pauper – our Christmas production. It’s a great deal and for
every 10 kids they get to bring a teacher for free! I know just from reading
previous blogs on the theatre website that so many people working in our
theatre were inspired to do so by being brought to a theatre production when
they were at school. It is such a magical place to bring them.
I was so lucky to be able to see An Evening with
Brian Blessed -as it was completely sold out. I managed to get a ticket when a few more were released. He was only doing
10 live shows this year. Kudos to our producer Martin, who managed to get him
to come here!
He absolutely loved our theatre in the round! When
he first came on stage, he prowled around it, in his pyjama bottoms and tweed
jacket, marvelling at how it was like “Greek theatre” and saying how much his friend
Kenneth Branagh would love it. He had a chair in the middle of the stage and he
was constantly moving it around so that he could address the whole
audience.
What stories he had to tell! He veered between
tales of classic actors such as Katharine Hepburn and Sir John Gielgud, to
current ones such as Kenneth Branagh. He says that he and Ken have a father/son
relationship – except that he’s the son and Ken is the father! His hilarious
first ever voiceover – who remembers Cyril Lord Carpets - and how they went
bust the week after!
He also told us of his expeditions to Mount Everest
and the North Pole and was proud of the fact that at 83 years old he’s just
qualified as an astronaut after training in Russia and with NASA. His memory
was amazing as he recited whole scenes from some of his films, the moving poem
he read to a dying Patrick Moore and even treated us to a rerun of his turn on
Stars in their Eyes as Pavarotti.
Oh yes – and guess what music he came on to? Of
course – the theme from Flash Gordon! What a legend.