Difference between revisions of "Bermondsey (1987)"

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[[Director|Directed]] by [[Malcolm Woodman|W. Malcolm Woodman]]  
 
[[Director|Directed]] by [[Malcolm Woodman|W. Malcolm Woodman]]  
  
Performances: Fri 11th – Sun 13th February [[1987]], [[Prompt Corner]]
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Performances: Fri 11th – Sun 13th December [[1987]], [[Prompt Corner]]
  
  
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Set in the back room of the Cricketers pub on Christmas Eve, Pip arrives, as always, to spend Christmas with Bob and Iris only to find that Bob is all set to run off with Rosemary, the barmaid.
 
Set in the back room of the Cricketers pub on Christmas Eve, Pip arrives, as always, to spend Christmas with Bob and Iris only to find that Bob is all set to run off with Rosemary, the barmaid.
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Half of a double bill with "The Romance".
  
 
== Cast ==
 
== Cast ==
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*Pip - [[Ian Glencross]]
 
*Pip - [[Ian Glencross]]
*Bob - [[Kate Feeney]]
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*Bob - [[Derek Staples]]
*Iris - [[Derek Staples]]
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*Iris - [[Kait Feeney]]
*Barmaid - [[Vanessa Kelsey]]
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*Rosemary - [[Vanessa Kelsey]]
  
 
== Crew ==
 
== Crew ==
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== Reviews ==
 
== Reviews ==
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John Mortimer's BERMONDSEY is a wry little play about a pub landlord who plans to leave his wife and set up in a classier establishment with a sexy younger woman.
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 +
But there are two triangles here, for he has long been embroiled in a homosexual liaison with an old army chum.
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 +
W. Malcolm Woodman, who directs, invests this with a wistful delicacy but not much sense of angst.
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It was held together by Kate Feeney, who played the landlord's wife with reak urgency and some passion. As her husband, Derek Staples presented a rather weak and indecisive figure, while Ian Glencross as his long-term boyfriend was a mere study in well-bred amiability.
  
Some review quotes go here
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Vanessa Kelsey, as the young woman, was all surface glitter, a companion one might back in a canter but not as a stayer.
  
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Donald Madgwick, The Croydon Advertiser, Dec 18th - As re-printed (with permission) in SCENE.
  
 
== Gallery ==
 
== Gallery ==

Latest revision as of 18:55, 7 June 2016

Poster by Poster Designer

by John Mortimer

Directed by W. Malcolm Woodman

Performances: Fri 11th – Sun 13th December 1987, Prompt Corner


Introduction

Set in the back room of the Cricketers pub on Christmas Eve, Pip arrives, as always, to spend Christmas with Bob and Iris only to find that Bob is all set to run off with Rosemary, the barmaid.

Half of a double bill with "The Romance".

Cast

Crew

Reviews

John Mortimer's BERMONDSEY is a wry little play about a pub landlord who plans to leave his wife and set up in a classier establishment with a sexy younger woman.

But there are two triangles here, for he has long been embroiled in a homosexual liaison with an old army chum.

W. Malcolm Woodman, who directs, invests this with a wistful delicacy but not much sense of angst.

It was held together by Kate Feeney, who played the landlord's wife with reak urgency and some passion. As her husband, Derek Staples presented a rather weak and indecisive figure, while Ian Glencross as his long-term boyfriend was a mere study in well-bred amiability.

Vanessa Kelsey, as the young woman, was all surface glitter, a companion one might back in a canter but not as a stayer.

Donald Madgwick, The Croydon Advertiser, Dec 18th - As re-printed (with permission) in SCENE.

Gallery

Reminiscences and Anecdotes

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See Also

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References

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External Links