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 1 
 on: February 09, 2010, 08:31:35 PM 
Started by Andy Smith - Last post by Andy Smith
The cast is as follows;
 
Mr Ames                         Mike Dunn
Fay Hubbard                    Lynne Hurst
Ian Hubbard                     John Ward
Dafydd ap Llewellyn           Alex Kemp
Hannah Llewellyn              Annie Townsend
Crispin Usher                   Colin Povey       
Jarvis Huntley Pike            Bob Whytock
Rebecca Huntley Pike       Judith Hutchison
Bridget Baines                 Sammy Jo Dodds
Guy Jones                       Ross Bain
Linda Wahbrook              Lesley Ward
Enid Washbrook              Sue Rankin
Ted Washbrook              to be announced 
 
Chorus   
 
Karen Walker, Mary Grundison, Catherine Brown, Carol Collier, Pam Murray, Francis Wells,
Diane Jarvie, Fiona Bartlett, Ulano Rankin, Kate Halliday, David Hastie, John Tulloch

 2 
 on: January 31, 2010, 01:40:43 PM 
Started by David Hastie - Last post by David Hastie
I had the pleasure of coming to see these two shows on Friday night, and it was the best laugh I have had in a long long time. Incredibly funny, credit has to go to the two wonderful casts.  A barrel of laughs, you all done the club proud.  Thank you very much for a good night.

 3 
 on: January 31, 2010, 01:37:16 PM 
Started by Andy Smith - Last post by David Hastie
Where do I start?  Had many a good night out Smiley after seeing the play on Friday, I went out last night and it was absolutely hillarious, seeing how much truth the play spoke. Was brilliant.

 4 
 on: January 24, 2010, 03:48:58 PM 
Started by Andy Smith - Last post by Andy Smith
Mr. Ames
Mr. Ames is PALOS’s shy piano-player. His personality is in direct contrast to Dafydd’s. He only has a few lines of spoken dialogue.

Bridget Baines
Bridget is the daughter of the local publican. Bridget’s official position at PALOS is stage manager and script prompt. In A Chorus of Disapproval she also parallels the character of Lucy, the publican’s daughter in The Beggar’s Opera. She is a rather ill-tempered young woman who manages to intimidate friends and foes alike with her physical aggression. Bridget’s appearances usually centre on her affair with Crispin and her hostility towards her rival, Linda. Her big scene comes in Act II, when she provokes Linda to tears.

Fay Hubbard
Fay is an attractive, sophisticated thirty-something woman. Ayckbourn describes her as “one of the local younger married jet-set.” Fay calmly embarks upon an affair with Guy and lands him the part of Filch, assuming that he will then provide her with financially lucrative information about the supposed BLM land scam. She perceives their relationship as a “deal” and threatens Guy when he appears to renege on his side of it.

Ian Hubbard
Ian is an ambitious thirty-something man, married to the very attractive Fay. The couple are determined to advance in the world. Ian owns a building firm, which is his excuse for wanting to buy Jarvis’s land, but it is more probable that he and the Huntley-Pikes hope to inflate the land’s price and then sell it at a profit. He resigns his role as Filch in order to secure Guy’s help in the scam, and reluctantly agrees to Fay’s partner-swapping arrangement. When Guy misunderstands the arrangement and brings along an elderly woman friend to the Hubbard household, Ian is humiliated. He has his revenge when he reveals Guy and Hannah’s affair to Dafydd in Act II.

Jarvis Huntley-Pike
“Mad” but “harmless,” Jarvis owns the land that is the subject of so much wheeling and dealing in A Chorus of Disapproval. In his late- fifties, he is a British Northerner, prone to making bad jokes and enamored with the sound of his own voice. Jarvis’s misreading of Guy — his belief that Guy is a Scotsman, based solely on the fact that when he first sees him Guy is holding a beer in one hand and a whiskey in the other — generates a good deal of humour throughout the play. Jarvis’s longest appearance is in Act II, when he tells Guy a story about his philanthropic, religious grandfather, the first owner of the land, who built a cricket pitch for his workers on the land but destroyed it after he saw them playing cricket on a Sunday.

Rebecca Huntley-Pike
Rebecca is the wife of the jovial Jarvis. Younger than her husband, she shares his predilection for alcohol. Her major appearances are in the rehearsal sequence in Act I and the conversation she has with Guy in her garden in Act II. In all probability, Rebecca is the source of the rumours about BLM expanding. Just as Fay procures Guy a better part in the play, Rebecca procures him the part of Macheath. Just as Fay expects Guy to do her a favour in return, so too does Rebecca. She and her husband are nonetheless disappointed in their schemes.

Guy Jones
Guy Jones is the protagonist of A Chorus of Disapproval, yet he is a curiously faceless character. His chief characteristic is his passivity; in fact it is his passive acceptance of other peoples’ plans for him that propels him to center stage. Guy has recently been widowed. He decides a change is in order and joins the local musical society.
Guy works for the multi-national firm BLM in “a rather small local branch in a rather obscure department called Alternative Forward Costing.” Although he is clearly not a mover or a shaker, Guy’s insider position within BLM makes him the focus of interest for greedy cast members.
Initially allocated a one-line part as Crook-Fingered Jack in John Gay’s eighteenth-century musical The Beggar’s Opera, Guy soon advances through the ranks, aided by recalcitrant actors and scheming actresses, until he wins the lead role of Macheath. He has a somewhat superficial affair with one of the cast members, Fay, and also embarks upon a more serious affair with his co-star, Hannah, who plays Polly. This relationship has dramatic consequences for Guy, Hannah, and her husband, Llewellyn; as the curtain falls, Guy has not only lost his job at BLM, he has also managed to alienate all of the cast members.

Dafydd Ap Llewellyn
The energetic Dafydd is on-stage almost as often as Guy Jones, and although Guy is the focus of the play, Dafydd’s role is in many ways far more interesting. Dafydd is a lawyer whose real passion is the theater. He longs to work with better actors than those that the local musical society PALOS provides, but he makes up for their lack of talent with his own enthusiasm.
Dafydd’s passion for the theatre — and his pride in all things Welsh — contrasts with his passionless marriage. Although he loves his wife Hannah, he neglects her, and their relationship is not satisfying physically. The revelation that Hannah and Guy have been having an affair is devastating to him; nonetheless, at the curtain call, he graciously thanks Guy for playing Macheath at such short notice.

Hannah Llewellyn
Hannah is married to Dafydd. A generous and loving woman and the mother of twin girls, she feels neglected and occasionally patronized by her husband. Everything in the Llewellyn household is Welsh, Hannah tells Guy in Act I, “except me.”
Hannah even goes so far as to wonder if she would be missed if she died. It is these feelings of neglect that propel her into an affair with Guy, whose politeness and attentiveness are a pleasant change for her.
Hannah plays Polly Peachum in the PALOS production of The Beggar’s Opera, and her role, as well as her marital problems, make her something of a tragi-comic figure.
At the end of the play, Hannah gambles all on Guy’s love, offering to leave her marriage and her children for him, but he rejects her. It is unclear how her relationship with Dafydd will develop, but it is clear that Guy’s presence in her life has changed her irrevocably.

Crispin Usher
Crispin is a tough, hostile young man who originally lands the part of Macheath in the PALOS production. Like Macheath, Crispin “runs” two women at the same time: Bridget and Linda. His big scene occurs in Act II, when he comes to blows with Dafydd, then cheerfully throws the towel in, thus leaving the company without its lead actor.

Enid Washbrook
Enid is a timid, unobtrusive, older woman, Linda’s beleaguered mother.
Ted Washbrook
Older man, the timid husband of Enid. Is reduced to the verge of tears by Dafydd in one of his rants. 

Linda Washbrook
Linda is the daughter of Ted and Enid and has only a smidgen more character than her washed-out parents. She plays Lucy in The Beggar’s Opera and acts out the part in real life by competing with Bridget for Crispin’s affection. Unlike Bridget, who manages to match Crispin in the toughness stakes, Linda is not really up to the part nor to battles with her rival. In Act II she is flummoxed by Bridget’s provocative behaviour and collapses in tears.

 5 
 on: January 24, 2010, 03:44:01 PM 
Started by Andy Smith - Last post by Andy Smith
Audition pieces

Ted / Enid       page 16-17
Guy / Dafydd      page 19-20
Hannah / Guy / Dafydd   page 21-22
Guy / Hannah      page 23-24
Ian / Guy      page 30-31
Jarvis / Guy      page 31-32 & 51-52
Fay / Guy      page 34-35
Fay / Hannah / Guy   page 42-43
Linda / Bridget      page 46-47
Rebecca / Guy      page 55-56
Crispin / Bridget / Linda   page 14

What is the director looking for at the auditions?

Character, clear speech, filling the room with voice, teamwork, energy, attempt at Yorkshire accent. ( Dafydd Welsh, Hannah Cockney.)
I will not need to audition the singing of cast or chorus if you auditioned for Anything Goes.  Anyone else who needs to do singing auditions will have time on the night to be beside the piano for 5 minutes. Chorus interested must be at auditions on Thursday 4th February to be selected for this show.
I hope to announce the cast on the night so be prepared to be there for the whole evening.

To discuss any of the above or characters phone Colin on 0131.554.2621 in the evening.

Above all, enjoy and relax.

 6 
 on: January 07, 2010, 08:32:42 PM 
Started by Andy Smith - Last post by Andy Smith
We had hoped that a number of the regular guys would have come back for such a big show. However, once auditions had taken place we realised that not only were we short but others had decided to take time off. There was a long meeting with Colin to discuss the posibilities of women playing male parts, however, we would still have required more than the current crop of men. Keep watching as we are looking at alternative shows for another one of our slots and a play/show will be announced soon for May 2010.

 7 
 on: January 05, 2010, 09:36:50 PM 
Started by Andy Smith - Last post by Andy Smith
Due to a lack of men auditioning for this show Livingston Players Committee has taken the difficult decision to postpone a musical for May 2010. The show would have required a minimum of 10 male chorus members - something we need to build on. If you have any concerns or wish to discuss this please post your comments.

 8 
 on: December 15, 2009, 09:06:24 PM 
Started by prologus - Last post by prologus
Our annual Christmas Carol Singing in aid of Cystic Fibrosis takes place on Sunday 20 December. We meet at 17:15 outside the Purple Sage restaurant and proceed from there. Once we are all sung-out we will proceed to John and Judith's for soup and mince pies. These will not necessarily be in the same plate at the same time! Please do come along, lend your voice, and have a bit of fun. Positive replies on this forum thread would be ideal.

Due to there being a half chance of a white Christmas, we have had to cancel the Carol Singing. After careful consideration your Committee has decided that in future, to avoid the possibility of cancellation due to overly-Christmas weather, the carol singing will take place on the final Sunday in July.   

 9 
 on: December 15, 2009, 08:51:46 PM 
Started by Andy Smith - Last post by Andy Smith
What have you been in or see that has made you laugh?

 10 
 on: December 15, 2009, 07:59:24 PM 
Started by Andy Smith - Last post by Andy Smith
Just another Saturday night at the local nightspot ... does anyone have any stories to share on their nights out?

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