Separate Tables (1974)
Two Plays
Directed by Leslie Lidyard
Performances: February 1974, Theatre
Contents
Introduction to Table by the Window
The action of the play takes place in the Beauregard Private Hotel, Bournemouth, during the winter.
Scene 1: The dining-room. Dinner time.
Scene 2: The lounge. After dinner.
Scene 3: The dining-room. The following morning
Cast
- Mabel - Doris Emmerton
- Lady Matherson - Daphne Dubery
- Mrs Railton-Bell - Irene Winbourne
- Miss Meacham - Lilian Frith
- Doreen - Christine Wilson
- Mr Fowler - Michael Mattey
- Mrs Shankland - Ruth Shettle
- Mr Malcolm - Victor Shaw
- Miss Cooper - Jean Warboyes
- Mr Stratton - Peter Davies
- Miss Tanner - Judy Carling
Introduction to Table Number Seven
The action of the play takes place in the Beauregard Private Hotel, Bournemouth, during the summer.
Scene 1: The lounge. After tea.
Scene 2: The dining-room. Dinner time.
Cast
- Mrs Stratton - Judy Carling
- Mr Stratton - Peter Davies
- Major Pollock - Victor Shaw
- Mr Fowler - Michael Mattey
- Miss Cooper - Jean Warboyes
- Mrs Railton-Bell - Irene Winbourne
- Miss Railton-Bell - Ruth Shettle
- Lady Matheson - Daphne Dubery
- Miss Meacham - Lilian Frith
- Mabel - Doris Emmerton
- Doreen - Christine Wilson
Crew for both plays
- Stage Director - Bernie Bullbrook
- Stage Manager - Brenda Johnson
- Assistant Stage Manager - Dave Memory
- Set Design - Bernie Bullbrook
- Set Construction - Ray Seaton
- Lighting - Doug McKee
- Lighting Assistant - Tony Rapson
- Box Office & F.O.H. Manager - Frank Howcutt
- Photographs - BIM Harding
- Furniture - Old Times Furnishing Company
Reviews
Time - 20 years of it - has not dealt kindly with "Separate Tables", Terrreance Rattigan's painstakingly constructed pair of plays set in a genteel Bournemouth private hotel.
We can still admire the dramatic device whereby two differnt pairs of principles share the remaining cast of nine, so creating teh same milieu for two contrasting stories.
We can even, after allowing for the great change in social outlook over the past two decades, concede the strengths of these central characters. But the dialogue, once praised for its naturalism, now seems slow and measured, and the denizens of teh Beauregard Hotel are little more than superior stock types.
Gallery
Reminiscences and Anecdotes
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See Also
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References
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External Links
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