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  • Hebe in HMS Pinafore

    Hebe in HMS Pinafore

    The Name is Bond – Jessie Bond

    By the 1890s, Jessie Charlotte Bond was at the peak of her G&S career. She was the leading mezzo-soprano in all of Gilbert and Sullivan’s most famous Savoy operas. She had starred in shows from HMS Pinafore to The Gondoliers, each time creating new roles with more and more importance. Jessie was a real star.

    As with so many successful stage careers it all began with being in the right place at the right time.

    Back in November 1877, W S Gilbert could have been forgiven for feeling rather pleased. His partnership with composer Arthur Sullivan had produced another success. Their new opera, The Sorcerer was playing to ecstatic audiences at the Opera Comique. The impresario Richard D’Oyly Carte was delighted with full houses for every performance and had agreed very favourable terms for their next venture.

    The established star of the Opera Comique, Mrs Isabella Howard Paul was spellbinding audiences as Lady Sangazure in The Sorcerer.  Celebrated for her clever acting and comic impressions of well know singers of the day, Isabella was at the peak of her glittering 25-year stage career. Gilbert was determined to write a suitable role for her in the new opera, HMS Pinafore.

    The leading mezzo-soprano in the new opera was the role of Cousin Hebe. Gilbert set out to write a part for Hebe that would make the most of Isabella’s talents, with ample opportunity for her to include her own famous songs, impressions and comic turns.

    But there was a bit of a snag. Isabella’s voice had deteriorated over the years and although still only 44, she couldn’t successfully sing the music Sullivan composed for Hebe. He wasn’t prepared to compromise a note and was reluctant to use her. Gilbert agreed that there was indeed a problem with her singing.

    They hit on an ingenious plan to keep all Isabella’s clever business and special dialogue in the show, but to give the actual singing to a newcomer. Jessie Bond was charming and had a lovely voice. She was 25 and pretty. Isabella hated her on sight.

    Isabella as Lady Sangazure

    Jessie Bond

     

    It will be no surprise to you, and it is quite astonishing that it was a surprise to Messrs G&S that, on hearing of their brilliant wheeze to give her songs to Jessie, Isabella upped and left, never to grace the stage of the Opera Comique again.

    Now, excellent singer though she was, Jessie had little or no experience of acting. She had been careful to stipulate that she should have “no talking to do, only singing parts”. Sullivan had been entirely captivated by her audition and she had to be included in the cast. Just for the singing, of course. Hebe’s dialogue was cut to the one or two lines Jessie thought she could manage.

     

    We think that is a bit of a shame and indeed Jessie went on to be a brilliant actor as well as a fine singer.

    For our production of HMS Pinafore our creative team have given Hebe, played by the brilliant singer and actor Cat Lee, rather more to do.

    Our director Paula Fraser has introduced music from other G&S operas for her to sing and to emphasise her role in the production. She has also found some of Sir Jospeh’s dialogue sits perfectly with Hebe’s enhanced role.

    Instead of Hebe being in favour of the marriage of Sir Joseph to Josephine, Paula has changed Hebe’s character to be hopelessly in love with Sir Joseph and unable to leave his side. She is delighted by everything he does, is overly excited about being on ship and steals some of Sir Joseph’s thunder – which does not make him look upon her as favourably as she would like.

    It is no surprise that Hebe encourages Ralph to continue in his pursuit of Josephine so that she can marry Sir Joseph herself, but will her undying devotion be enough?

    Cat Lee in Iolanthe

  • And the latest is…

    News update

    Last show was the brilliant spooky Jack the Ripper. The second time we have performed this wonderful production penned by Ron Pember and Denis de Marne.

    Our next venture is to be part of an enormous choir for the Wolverton Light Orchestra Christmas Concert on Sunday 10th December 2023.

    You can sing with us if you wish…

  • Ring a ring of roses

    Ring a ring of roses

    A plague on your roses?

    Ring a Ring o’ Roses” or “Ring a Ring o’ Rosie” is an English nursery rhyme or folksong and playground singing game. It first appeared in print in 1881, but it is reported that a version was already being sung to the current tune in the 1790s and similar rhymes are known from across Europe

    It is unknown what the earliest version of the rhyme was or when it began. Many incarnations of the game have a group of children form a ring, dance in a circle around a person, and stoop or curtsy with the final line. The slowest child to do so is faced with a penalty and takes their place in the centre of the ring.

    We probably recognise this version:

    Ring-a-ring o’ roses,
    A pocket full of posies,
    A-tishoo! A-tishoo!
    We all fall down

    Since after the Second World War, in the UK the rhyme has often been associated with the Great Plague which happened in England in 1665, or with earlier outbreaks of the Black Death in England. Interpreters of the rhyme before World War II make no mention of this; Peter and Iona Opie, the leading authorities on nursery rhymes, remarked:

    ‘The invariable sneezing and falling down in modern English versions have given would-be origin finders the opportunity to say that the rhyme dates back to the Great Plague. A rosy rash, they allege, was a symptom of the plague, and posies of herbs were carried as protection and to ward off the smell of the disease. Sneezing or coughing was a final fatal symptom, and “all fall down” was exactly what happened’.

    However, folklore scholars regard this explanation of the rhyme as baseless for several reasons: it didn’t appear until the mid-twentieth century, the symptoms described do not fit especially well with the Great Plague, and European and 19th-century versions of the rhyme suggest that the “fall” was not a literal falling down, but a curtsy or other form of bending movement that was common in other dramatic singing games.

    In March 2020, during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, in a letter to Private Eye, the rhyme was jokingly proposed as the “ideal choice” of song to accompany hand-washing in order to ward off infection.

    What do you think?

  • The Goose has Doris Day quiz answers

    The Goose has Doris Day quiz answers

    The Goose has the Answers

    Quiz 7 was all about Doris Day. How did you get on?

    Last time the goose was testing you on Doris Day. How did you score?

    1. Doris Mary Anne Kappelhoff was born in 1922. What was her star sign? Aries the Ram. Which shows what use astrology is…
    2. Doris started her professional career as a dancer. What put that on hold? A car accident in 1937 injured her right leg.
    3. How did Kappelhoff become Day? Barney Rapp suggested it in 1939 after hearing her sing ‘Day After Day’.
    4. OK. Has to be asked. What was Doris’ first film? ‘Romance on the High Seas’ in 1948.
    5. Many more films followed. Who was her co-star in ‘Pillow Talk’? It was the start of her long running friendship with Rock Hudson
    6. And who starred with Doris in ‘That Touch of Mink’ in 1962? Cary Grant.
    7. ‘Move Over Darling’ was a hit movie and an even bigger hit song. Who co-wrote that famous song? Her son Terry Melcher with Joe Lubin and Hal Kanter.
    8. Well the goose had to give one easy one. Who was her co-star in ‘Calamity Jane’? Howard Keel of course!
    9. So when did Doris first get top billing in a movie? Not until 1951 in ‘Starlift’
    10. It wasn’t Doris who sang ‘Happy Birthday Mr President’. What was her first brush with a potential president? In 1952 she starred in ‘The Winning Team’ alongside Ronald Reagan
    11. And, sadly, the last movie. Which movie and when?1968 ‘With Six You Get Eggroll’. Only 65% on Rotten Tomatoes!
    12. Doris famously played Calamity Jane in the 1953 movie. Who played her on screen in 1940? Marin Sais played Calamity in the film series Deadwood Dick in 1940
  • Poem – stuck inside

    Poem – stuck inside

    Stuck inside

    Annie Parker

    Twas the beginning of the year, the decs had been put away

    New diets had been started, to get beach ready for the holiday

    Then Uncle Covid came to visit, and cast our plans awry

    Schools and pubs were closed down and parents began to cry

     

    At G and S we were poised, to go on stage and sing

    But Boris put a stop to that and instead we did……nothing

    The weeks and months crept past, and some they did despair

    Of ever singing on a stage again and dancing without care

     

    A year went by and still we were locked down in our homes

    No audience to perform to except the garden Gnomes

    But then a glorious hope appeared and lit up the whole scene

    You will be able to act again, just go get your vaccine.

     

    So off we went to the docs and got the little scratch

    Then 8 weeks later back we went, to get the 2nd batch.

    So now we sit and hope that all the scientists are right

    And sometime in November we will have an opening night.

     

     

  • The Goose Quiz on quarantine

    The Goose Quiz on quarantine

    The Great Goose Quiz

    Quiz 8 is about quarantine

    We’ve not performed in a while. Dull indoors isn’t it?

    So how much do you know about quarantine?

    1. In which century was the word quarantine first used?
    2. Which colour flags would a ship historically fly to alert that it was in quarantine?
    3. When bringing a dog to the UK from abroad, how long would it have to spend in quarantine before 2000?
    4. The quarantine Act was passed in England in which century?
    5. Typhoid Mary was found to be an asymptomatic carrier of Typhoid, in which country?
    6. The astronauts from Apollo 11, 12, and 14 were quarantined for how long upon their return to earth?
    7. On 28th March 2020, what percentage of the world’s population was in lockdown?
    8. Which methods of drying your hands is better at reducing the amount of bacteria left on your hands – paper towels, jet air dryers or warm air dryers?
    9. What does PPE stand for?
    10. How long should you wash your hands for to reduce the risk of contamination?

    Answers in the next edition of GanderS…

  • Armenian spiced cake

    Armenian spiced cake

    Armenian spice cake (Heather’s cake)

    Driven by dates or data?

    Well, as a responsible organisation we’re sensibly going with the data to decide when we get together again in real life.

    If anything is going to make it worth considering dates instead it’s this delicious Armenian Spiced cake made by a lady called Heather.

    Heather may not have originated the recipe but the results were duly wolfed down anyway.

    Have a go and let us know what you think. It’s got dates in it…..

    Prep 10 min
    Soak Up to 24 hr
    Cook 1 hr 40 min
    Serves 8

    16 dates, pitted
    200ml hot coffee
    180g muscovado sugar
    200g caster sugar
    140g plain flour
    140g self-raising flour
    120g unsalted butter
    , cold and diced
    330ml full-fat milk
    1 whole egg, plus 1 yolk
    , whisked together
    1½ tsp bicarbonate of soda
    ¾ tsp ground cinnamon
    ½ teaspoon grated nutmeg
    50g walnuts
    , toasted

    Heat the oven to 160C (140C fan)/325F/gas 3. Soak the dates in the coffee and leave for at least an hour – if you can do this 24 hours in advance, the dates will really take on the flavour of the coffee.

    Line a 23cm square cake tin. Drain the dates in a colander and set aside.

    Put the sugars, flours and butter in a bowl and rub with your fingertips to form fine breadcrumbs. Take 250g of this mix and press lightly into the base of the tin.

    To the rest of the crumbs, add the milk, whisked egg, bicarb, cinnamon and nutmeg and mix until smooth.

    Arrange the dates over the crumb layer in four rows of four. Pour the batter mix over the top and scatter with the walnuts.

    Bake for an hour, then test with a skewer: you want the mixture to cling to the skewer in a fudgey rather than a runny way. Leave to cool for 15 minutes and serve with a generous blob of creme fraiche.

    This cake is also delicious served cooled – and even better with a strong coffee.

  • The first Frederic – Llewellyn Cadwaladr

    The first Frederic – Llewellyn Cadwaladr

    Piracy in Paignton?

    Allow me to introduce you to Arthur Dendy. No, not the towel-toting galactic traveller. That was Arthur Dent.  Arthur Hyde Dendy was the upright, uptight Birmingham barrister who transformed Paignton from a place famous for little more than growing cabbages into a flourishing seaside resort.  Arthur owned hotels, ran the local paper,  introduced a horse drawn bus service and built Paignton’s pier.

    By 1879, Arthur would have been a contented man as he strolled along the pier he had built. It had opened in June and became an instant hit with tourists, many of whom took advantage of the boat trips Arthur operated or hired bathing machines from one of his other companies. Arthur’s pretty daughter Mary had married the son of a baronet in May, and they were already expecting his first grandchild.

    Back in 1873, Arthur had built the town’s first theatre, the Royal Bijou. The theatre was small, no more than 50 seats but very luxurious and was said to be the venue for high class theatrical and other entertainments. No boisterousness or horseplay though. That was Torquay and Arthur would have none of it. His mantra was ‘Paignton prefers to be select, dignified and discreet’. Little did he know what was coming that December 1879.

    Llewellyn Cadwaladr had little inkling that December either. He was just 22, a trained tenor and had been singing the role of Ralph Rackstraw in Mr. D’Oyly Carte’s Second Pinafore Company since August. They were a touring company and the current run in Torquay’s splendid Lyceum Theatre had been a success with both locals and visitors. It was while he was performing his duties in the second Pinafore company that a shocking message arrived from London. To his amazement, Llewellyn learned that he had been chosen to take the leading tenor role in the world premiere of a brand-new Gilbert and Sullivan production. One can easily imagine his delight at such a plum booking. A young and newly qualified singer getting the leading part in the latest blockbuster from the world’s most famous and successful theatrical writing duo.

    There was, however, a snag. Well, several snags really. The world premiere of The Pirates of Penzance was to be in Paignton, not Torquay. Paignton had just one available theatre, Mr Dendy’s Royal Bijou. It held a mere 50 paying customers. There was to be only one performance. It was for no better reason than to establish the British copyright before the show was performed by the main company in glitzy, glamorous New York.  Poor Llewellyn would create the role of Frederic in front of fewer than 50 people on a December afternoon in the former cabbage town of Paignton. Llewellyn could be forgiven for feeling a bit crestfallen.

    There was another problem. Mr D’Oyly Carte was most anxious that no one should be able to make pirate copies of the new opera. The cast were not to see the score or libretto until the very last minute. They could not rehearse the opera; they would take the scores onstage with them. Those scores would be hastily printed copies wired from London. There would be no scenery and they would wear their HMS Pinafore costumes. The show was set for Monday 29th December at 2pm.  By the morning of the 29th Llewellyn and the rest of the cast still had no word of what they were actually supposed to be performing. The wire service from London apparently finding the transmission of some 9,000 words and accompanying music score something of a challenge. The production was hastily re-scheduled for Tuesday 30th.

     

    And they did it.  Dressed as sailors, sisters, cousins and aunts from HMS Pinafore with no scenery and holding the printed scores in their hands, the gallant crew of the second Pinafore company performed the first ever production of The Pirates of Penzance.  It has to be said that the theatre was not particularly full. That was hardly to be expected in Paignton in December, but those who attended were rather impressed. One unexpected member of the audience was Benjamin Disraeli, the prime minister. He had been in Paignton visiting his long-time mistress who lived conveniently close in Roundham Road. By then “Dizzy” was an energetic 75 year old.

    In those far off days, politicians used to tell parliament what they had been up to in their spare time and Disraeli accordingly reported his attendance – without of course mentioning Roundham Road. A back bencher, having not heard of Paignton, asked Dizzy where it was. There is nothing prime ministers like more than a soft question from a back bencher and Disraeli obliged with a fulsome answer in praise of the resort. In his detailed reply, the prime minister said he had won a penny and a coconut on the pier. He then announced an increase in income tax. An increase bringing the tax to nearly 2%…..

    Arthur Dendy went on to build sports grounds in Paignton for archery, cycling and rugby.  He died in 1886 at the age of 65 leaving behind a splendid pier and much else still to be found in that town.

    In 1880, his Paignton pier-head pavilion hosted a production of HMS Pinafore, re-titled ‘HMS Pinafore on the Water’, performed by the main D’Oyly Carte company.

    Llewellyn never got to create a new role for Gilbert and Sullivan again though he went on to take leading roles in many revivals of their operas over the following 16 years.

    He died in Chelsea in London at the age of 53. He is buried in an unmarked grave in the Actors’ Acre in Brookwood Cemetery.

  • The Goose Quiz on Doris Day

    The Goose Quiz on Doris Day

    The Great Goose Quiz

    Quiz 7 is about Doris Day

    Doris Day was a legend. How much can you remember of her career?

    1. Doris Mary Anne Kappelhoff was born in 1922. What was her star sign?
    2. Doris started her professional career as a dancer. What put that on hold?
    3. How did Kappelhoff become Day?
    4. OK. Has to be asked. What was Doris’ first film?
    5. Many more films followed. Who was her co-star in ‘Pillow Talk’?
    6. And who starred with Doris in ‘That Touch of Mink’ in 1962?
    7. ‘Move Over Darling’ was a hit movie and an even bigger hit song. Who co-wrote that famous song?
    8. Well the goose had to give one easy one. Who was her co-star in ‘Calamity Jane’?
    9. So when did Doris first get top billing in a movie? >
    10. What was her first brush with a potential president?
    11. And, sadly, the last movie. Which movie and when?
    12. Doris famously played Calamity Jane in the 1953 movie. Who played her on screen in 1940?

    Answers in the next edition of GanderS…

  • WLO Christmas Concert 2019

    WLO Christmas Concert 2019

    WLO Christmas Concert 2019

    Wolverton G&S and friends sang with the WLO to welcome in the Christmas Spirit.

    Every year the Wolverton Light Orchestra welcome Christmas with a wonderful concert of festive and not-so-festive music. Last Christmas was no exception and, as usual, Wolverton G&S and singers from Music Maker of Milton Keynes and other local groups joined in heartily in an evening of music from stage and screen, with traditional Christmas favourites & carols.

    This concert always raises money for charity and the WLO charities for this year included?Hospice at Home, Supershoes, The Leon Heart Fund and Air Ambulance.

    I’ve included links to all these wonderful charities above so please follow them to find out about their work and donate what you can.

  • Boston Beans

    Boston Beans

    Boston Baked Beans

    Baked beans and the Wild West

    Baked beans and cowboys are sort of linked in the popular imagination. And we all know who to blame for that…

    In fact beans were a real staple of frontier life in the 19th and early 20th centuries. They were easy to grow, high in protein and “stuck to the ribs”..

    This recipe is for a real old recipe that used the molasses left over from the rum trade in Boston and surrounding districts.

    Deadwood might be nigh on a thousand miles from Boston but we reckon this tasty treat could have made the journey.

     

    Have a go and let us know what you think.

    Ingredients

    600g haricot beans soaked overnight and drained

    salt and pepper

    800g belly pork

    2 tablespoons black treacle or molasses

    2 teaspoons dry mustard

    2 onions. finely chopped

    Method

    Put the beans into a pan with fresh cold water to cover and a little salt and bring to the boil. Cover and simmer gently for I hour.

    Drain and reserve the liquid.

    Score the rind of the pork, and cut the pork into two pieces.

    Place one piece at the bottom of a large casserole. Add the beans and bury the remainder of the pork in the beans so that the rind just shows. Stir the treacle or molasses, mustard, onions and pepper into the reserved liquid from the beans and pour over the beans in the casserole. Add more water if necessary to cover the beans. Cover the casserole and cook in a cool oven (150°C or Gas Mark 2) for 3 hours.

    Check the casserole from time to time to make sure the beans are still quite moist, and if necessary add a little extra boiling water.

    Remove the lid from the casserole, bring the pork to the surface and cook uncovered for I hour to crisp the rind of the pork.

    Serves 4 to 6

  • The Goose has sorcery quiz answers

    The Goose has sorcery quiz answers

    The Goose has the Answers

    Quiz 6 was all about sorcery. How did you get on?

    Last time the goose was testing you on sorcery. How did you score?

    1. The Elixir of Love, like The Sorcerer, features a love potion. Who composed the opera? Gaetano Donizetti
    2. So who, in 1963 sang about a numbered love potion? The Searchers – Love Potion No. 9
    3. Pat Boone refered to the same potion in 1964. What was his song titled? Poetry in Motion – no number 9 love potion could make me love you more
    4. Cyndi Lauper had a go at the love potion too in I’ll Kiss You. What number tipple did she try? Potion number eight but it didn’t work so she went back for nine.
    5. The largest teapot in the world is 13ft high. Where is it? Morocco. There’s a bigger one in the USA but it can’t make tea.
    6. How did Hugo’s sawing a lady in half trick go in Hitchcock’s Sorcerer’s Apprentice? The saw worked excellently, but the magic wand didn’t. Hugo was terribly upset, and Irene was beside herself
    7. Who wrote The Sorcerer’s Apprentice? Johann Wolfgang von Goethe wrote the poem in 1797
    8. What is the skyscraper at 70 St Mary Axe known as? The Can of Ham
    9. The video game We Happy Few features joy pills. Can you guess the name of the fictional town it is set in? It’s called Wellington Wells.
    10. Sangazure is of course blue blood, but what is Pointdextre? The dexter point is the top right quarter of a heraldic coat of arms.
  • Welcome to GanderS Summer 2019

    Welcome to GanderS Summer 2019

    Welcome to GanderS Issue 6

    In this sizzling summer issue

    Get your tickets now!

    How you can be there to see the show..

    The cast is ready for tea

    Working together to bring you a super show….

    Iolanthe – take 2!

    Our friends at Putteridge Bury revive the fairies….

    We go Wild!

    Our exciting new show for next spring…

    A charity on wheels

    Can you help bring hope to MK’s rough sleepers?

    Seriously hard sorcery test

    Tough one this time….

    The goose has the answers

    Find out how you did in our fairy quiz…

    Singing praises to Sally

    Try this recipe for Sally Lunn…

    Cartoon Caper

    Potted principals……

  • Sally Lunn Sorcery

    Sally Lunn Sorcery

    Time to sing the praises of Sally Lunn

    Singing Sally's praises

    What better way to celebrate our new production of “The Sorcerer” than with a tasty slice of Sally Lunn:

    Now to the banquet we press;
    Now for the eggs and the ham;
    Now for the mustard and cress,
    Now for the strawberry jam!
    Now for the tea of our host,
    Now for the rollicking bun,
    Now for the muffin and toast,
    And now for the gay Sally Lunn!
    Now for the muffin and toast,
    And now for the gay Sally Lunn!

    But who or what is Sally Lunn? And how can you make your own?

    Answers below…..

    The Sally Lunn Legend

    There are several stories about how the famous bun got its name.? This is one.

    Solange Luyon, a young Huguenot refugee, came to Bath in the late 17th century after escaping persecution in France.? She found work in a bakers and began to bake a rich brioche bread for them which she sold from a basket in the lanes of Bath.? Her colleagues, unable to pronounce her name, called her Sally Lunn.? Her bun was a huge success and became known as a Sally Lunn.? The Sally Lunn is still made in the Bath bakery and has found worldwide fame.

    Sally Lunn Bun (for a bread machine)

    Ingredients

    350g bread flour

    75ml whole milk

    2 eggs (beaten)

    50g butter

    3 tbls sugar

    ? tsp salt

    1 ? tsp fast action yeast

    1 tbls grated zest of lemon/1tsp vanilla extract (optional)

    Method

    Put all ingredients in bread tin in order suggested by your bread machine instructions.? Set for sweet dough.

    When ready remove dough and punch down.? Fit the dough into a 6″ buttered, loose bottomed cake tin.? Cover loosely and put in a warm spot until doubled in volume.

    Bake in a preheated oven 180C/350F/Gas 4 for 25-30 minutes until golden and a skewer inserted comes out clean.

  • The Goose wants answers sorcery

    The Goose wants answers sorcery

    The Great Goose Quiz

    Quiz 6 is about sorcery

    The Sorcerer is magical. How is your arcane knowledge?

    1. The Elixir of Love, like The Sorcerer, features a love potion. Who composed the opera?
    2. So who, in 1963 sang about a numbered love potion?
    3. Pat Boone referred to the same potion in 1964. What was his song titled?
    4. Cyndi Lauper had a go at the love potion too in I’ll Kiss You. What number tipple did she try?
    5. The largest teapot in the world is 13ft high. Where is it?
    6. How did Hugo’s sawing a lady in half trick go in Hitchcock’s Sorcerer’s Apprentice?
    7. Who wrote The Sorcerer’s Apprentice?
    8. What is the skyscraper at 70 St Mary Axe known as?
    9. The video game We Happy Few features joy pills. Can you guess the name of the fictional town it is set in?
    10. Sangazure is of course blue blood, but what is Pointdextre?

    Answers in the next edition of GanderS…

  • The Bus Shelter MK

    The Bus Shelter MK

    So what’s the new interest in buses?

    We were delighted to welcome The then Mayor of Milton Keynes, Councillor Martin Petchey to our production of “Iolanthe” in March.? He told us about this wonderful local charity giving help in Milton Keynes.

    The Bus Shelter MK is a homeless shelter on wheels to reduce rough sleeping in Milton Keynes. Homelessness can hit anyone – most of us are just three pay packets away from losing our home. With your help they can provide over 5800 safe, warm nights for people forced to sleep on the streets and help them find a positive future.

     

    To read more about this excellent cause and donate to their fine work go to their website.

  • Iolanthe – take 2

    Iolanthe – take 2

    Iolanthe – again?

    If you enjoyed our production of Iolanthe in March go and see the Putteridge Bury G&S production this October.

    Putteridge Bury Gilbert and Sullivan Society are very close to our hearts. Some of us even perform with both societies.? By an amazing co-incidence, they are performing Iolanthe this year too. So, if you loved Iolanthe at Stantonbury and want to see another and different production of this amazing show, you know where to go..

  • The Sorcerer July 2019

    The Sorcerer July 2019

    Our summer show is “The Sorcerer”!

    This glorious tale of magic potions and mis-matched lovers will run for a full four nights.? Our first performance will be on Wednesday 17th July and we will run until Saturday 20th.? This production is set in the 1940s with handsome RAF officers, land girls, and home guards adding an exciting and interesting new look to a familiar favourite show.

    You are cordially invited to wear 1940s costume too if you wish. Let’s see how creative our audience can be!

    The show will be at Stantonbury Theatre and will have orchestral accompaniment under the baton of our Musical Director, Mike Crofts. Mike is joined by Director Graham Breeze to bring their special magic to this super Sorcerer show.

     

    Tickets are now on sale at Stantonbury Theatre box office 01908 324466

  • The Sorcerers are Ready

    The Sorcerers are Ready

    The cast is announced. The die is set. The teapot is coming….

    The Sorcerer cast list is….

    Sir Marmaduke – Alan Bennett
    Alexis – Robert Kendrick
    Dr Daly – Graham Mitchell
    Wellington Wells – Richard Fraser
    Hercules – Stephan Kirk
    Lady Sangazure – Paula Fraser
    Aline – Cat Lee
    Mrs Partlet – Kim Bennett
    Constance – Claire Moore

    … and everyone is working hard to bring you the best and brightest Sorcerer

     

    Tickets for The Sorcerer are on sale at Stantonbury Box Office?Tel?01908 324466?or click the link.

    Stantonbury Box Office are extremely helpful but, if you have any queries they can’t solve, feel free to contact us on tickets@wolvertongands.co.uk

  • The Goose has fairy quiz answers

    The Goose has fairy quiz answers

    The Goose has the Answers

    Quiz 5 tested your fairy lore. How did you get on?

    Last time we posed some questions about Iolanthe’s relatives. How was your fairy lore?

    1. Titania and Oberon are characters from which William Shakespeare play? A Midsummer Night’s Dream
    2. Who published the original Rapunzel fairy tale? The Brothers Grimm
    3. According to Peter Pan author J.M. Barrie, where did fairies come from? A child’s laugh
    4. Which girls’ name means ‘fairy’? Fay or Faye
    5. What did Hansel and Gretel leave as a trail, in order to find their way home on the second time? Breadcrumbs (they left pebbles the first time)
    6. What is a fairy ring? A circle of toadstools or mushrooms
    7. Who wrote The Little Mermaid? Hans Christian Anderson
    8. Who created the Flower Fairies? Cicely Mary Barker
    9. In Jack and the Beanstalk, the giant usually said “Fee! Fie! Foe! Fum! I smell the blood of an Englishman.” when a human was nearby: What is the next line? Be he ?live or be he dead, I?ll grind his bones for my bread.
    10. In the Disney Film, what does the Beast show Belle that allows her to see into the future? (You may need some help from the younger members of the family!) A magic mirror
  • A Queenly Pudding

    A Queenly Pudding

    A Queenly Pudding for the Fairy Queen

    An Elegant Summer Dish for the Queen of the Fairies

    The fairies’ midwife?

    Queen Mab is so described in Midsummer Night’s Dream. but our Queen may not be the one you’d call!
    Get in the mood for Iolanthe with this elegant summer dish.

    Queen Mab’s Pudding

    4 oz of caster sugar
    1 oz of gelatine
    1 pint of milk
    half pint of double cream
    6 egg yolks
    2 oz of glace or dried cherries
    1 oz candied citron peel chopped
    half tsp of vanilla extract or almond extract

    Method

    Soak the gelatine in the milk for 30 minutes. Stir over a low heat until gelatine dissolves.
    Add the sugar and stir until dissolved.
    Take off the heat, let it cool slightly, add the egg yolks and cream.
    Stir over the heat until mixture thickens. Do not let it boil.
    Let it cool. Add the cherries, peel and extract. Stir until it starts to set.
    Pour into a mould previously rinsed with cold water.
    Leave to set.

  • Welcome to GanderS Spring 2019

    Welcome to GanderS Spring 2019

    Welcome to GanderS Issue 5

    In this special springtime issue

    Iolanthe and the Peris

    Working hard to bring you a wonderful show

    The Lord Chancellor

    Our Chancellor gives us a preview…

    The Grandest of Dukes

    Our friends at Putteridge Bury are getting political too..

    Summer Sorcery

    Our super summer show. Details here…

    A charity close to our hearts

    Can you help bring better cancer care to MK?

    A fairy quiz? How delightful?

    Test your fairy credentials….

    The goose has the answers

    Find out how you did in our parliamentary quiz…

    A Queenly Dessert

    Try this recipe for Queen Mab’s Pudding…

    Cartoon Caper

    A limerick. Can you bear it?

  • Iolanthe Roger Chancellor

    Iolanthe Roger Chancellor

    Roger is playing the Lord Chancellor in our Iolanthe this March

    Roger rehearsing

    So Ruth asked Roger about his character….

    What’s your favourite thing about playing this character?

    The challenge of portraying the character in a sympathetic way.? The Nightmare Song has to be the greatest challenge for anyone who aspires to sing patter songs.

     

    Does your character have any hidden talents?

    He aspires to be an art connoisseur and even sometimes dabbles as a painter himself.? Ever since his brief marriage to Iolanthe, he has been strangely attracted by the works of the Pre-Raphaelite movement and especially ?The Mid-Summer?s Eve Circle of Fairies? by Glimmersmith and ?The Fairy Funeral? by John Anster Fitzgerald.? He really cannot understand this, as before he met Iolanthe, he thought them to be dreadful daubs!? There?s no accounting for how the mind can change.? Of late, he has become tormented by the nightmare surrealist scenarios of Salvador Dali.

     

    How do you learn your patter song?

    I start by putting the words and the line onto my phone, and then at any opportunity ? long car journeys are ideal, for some reason ? I play the words over to myself one stanza at a time, repeating them.? Then I go through and put them to the music.? Eventually it sticks and once I have it completely in my mind, I go through it mentally as often as I can ? usually when I?m doing something else, like walking the dog.

     

    ?What is your favourite line or moment in the show??

    The interaction between Tolloller and Mountararat in Act 2 ? one of the greatest moments of Gilbertian comic genius.

     

    Why should people come to see Iolanthe?

    Iolanthe encapsulates all the humour and absurdity of human frailty in an hour and a half of whimsical comic bliss.? The operetta might have been first performed in 1882, and is well over 100 years old, but it still manages to speak directly to matters that are entirely relevant today, from the absurdity of the political party system and the mindlessness of our political leaders, through the intricacies of legal speech to feminism and power of love to cut-through all our most dearly-held principles.? It combines wonderful Gilbertian satire with some of Sullivan?s most wonderful melodies – ?He loves! If in the bygone years?; stirring (but tongue-in cheek) patriotic songs – ?When Britain really ruled the waves? and jaunty dances ?Soon as we may?.? The combination makes this show an unforgettable evening?s entertainment.

     

    What is on your character’s bookshelf?

    Love in a Cold Climate ? Nancy Mitford

    Bleak House – Charles Dickens

    Where is Love ? Barbara Cartland

    Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde ? H.G. Wells

    The Cottingley Fairies ? Lewis Carroll

    Truth and Beauty: The Pre-Raphaelites and their Sources of Inspiration ? Melissa E. Buron

    Dali ? Gilles Neret

     

  • MK Hospital Cancer Unit

    MK Hospital Cancer Unit

    Lynn with Frances, Margaret and Jac in Patience 2014

    Lynn and Graham – The Mikado 1995

    So why are we showing pictures of Lynn?

    Lynn performed with us for more years than a lady cares to remember and she died aged just 60 in June 2017.? Her cancer treatment involved many long and tiring trips to Northampton for chemotherapy. Not that anyone watching her perform in Ruddigore that year would have guessed she was so ill and so tired!

    Milton Keynes Hospital are raising funds for a cancer care unit which will save people like Lynn the long round trip to Northampton for specialist treatment.

    Milton Keynes Hospital Charity

    Milton Keynes Hospital Charity raises money for all wards and departments at Milton Keynes University Hospital helping to improve patient experience and ensure that their stay at the hospital is as comfortable and positive as possible.

     

    Cancer Centre Appeal

    Milton Keynes is one of the fastest growing areas in the country ? our population stands at 300,000 and is forecast to increase by another 19.3% by 2026 ? and at the current locations on site, cancer services at Milton Keynes University Hospital are stretched to capacity.

    Over the past 5 years the cancer team at Milton Keynes University Hospital have worked tirelessly to improve the services in the existing facility. But even with these improvements, patients like Lynn still have to travel to Northampton, Bedford or Oxford to access some treatments. At the heart of all this is the extra pressure placed on the patient and their family during an already anxious and stressful time.

    A new cancer centre means the hospital can better support each and every cancer patient providing most of the services they need in an excellent environment close to home. It will be a dedicated space offering treatment, information and support services to anyone affected by cancer.

    ?

    Get Involved

    None of the work of MK Hospital Charity could be achieved without the fantastic support of people in Milton Keynes and the surrounding areas. Fundraising makes a huge difference and has helped change the lives of thousands of patients and their families.

    Be Seen In Green is a fun and easy idea that anyone can get involved with ? whether that?s a group of friends, your workplace, or your school ? perhaps you?d like to organise a green themed bake sale, hold a plant sale or dress up day, or simply decorate your classroom or office in green! Download fundraising pack here: http://www.mkhcharity.org.uk/be-seen-in-green/

    Visit the MK Hospital Charity website to find out other ways to contribute and get involved: http://www.mkhc harity.org.uk/make-a-difference/