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Walmsley Church AODS
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The King and I
Anna, The King & Sir Edward
Lady Thiang, Anna, Louis & children
Princess Ying, Louis, Anna, The Kralahome & The King

Production Officials

Director

Audrey H. McL. Raistrick

Musical Director

Jessie Whittaker

Choreographer

Wendy Duckworth

Cast

The King

David Holmes

Anna Leonowens

Rene Cave

Louis Leonowens

Alistair Morrell

Lun Tha

Michael Taylor

Tuptim

Joyce Foster

Captain Orton

Jack Sutcliffe

Lady Thiang

Dorothy Hilton

Prince Chululongkorn

Robin Jones

The Interpreter

Stanley Collinson

The Kralahome

Gordon Eckersley

Phra Alack

Andrew Turton

Sir Edward Ramsey

Ernest Pollitt

Princess Ying Yaowlak

Michelle Foster/Rachel Griffiths

Ballet

Narrator

Joyce Foster

Uncle Tom

Janet Welsby

Little Eva

Christine Mason

Topsy

Joanne Richardson

Eliza

Barbara Martin

Simon of Legree

Glenys Collinson

Angel

Susan Tucker

Buddha

Adrian Pollitt

Dancers

Claire Blackburn, Carol Dunsbee, Belinda Hamer, Gillian Kirby, April Marland, Dorothy Pitfield, Fiona Steel, Dorothy Yardley, Catherine Wilkinson, Ruth Wilcock, Barbara Tidy, Bronwen Lee

The Royal Wives, Amazons & Ballet Chorus

Pauline Entwistle, Mina Kirkbright, Ruth Myers, Glenys M. Poole, Norma Pollitt, Mary Pycroft, Joe Ring, Margaret Steel, Susan Thistlethwaite, Jean Thornley, Betty Towler, Janice Warburton

Slaves, Priests & Guards

Peter Collinson, Ashley Deacon, Bill Dixon, Robin Foster, Denis Hamer, Fred Myers, Adrian Pollitt, Daniel Robins, Graham Yardley

Royal Princes and Princesses

Ann Entwistle, Louise Gibson, Sarah Griffiths, Sarah Hill, Alison Lee, Katherine Morgan, Alex McGrath, Nigel McGurk, Emma Steel, Alison Warburton, Zoe Dalton, Suzanne Ashton, Jean Blundell, Meredith Collinson, Beverley Foster, Michelle Foster, Helen Poole, Kimberley Watts, Emma Tickle, Timothy Collinson, Paul Kirkbright, Andrew Rostron

Bolton Evening News

The Rodgers and Hammerstein musical “The King And I” is as popular now as when it was launched nearly 30 years ago. It’s based on the actual adventures of an English governess who taught the King of Siam’s 67 children, plus his numerous wives. But it’s mainly a marvellous evening of good tunes, such as “Getting To Know You”, “Shall We Dance” and “Hello Young Lovers”. There is also a good supply of Gilbertian-style wit and paradox such as the ladies chorus, dressed in Western-style crinolines, singing: “To prove we are not savages, she has dressed us as barbarians.” Walmsley Church AODS are playing to packed houses with it this week for their week’s run at the Egerton school hall. It’s a production which moves swiftly under the skilled direction of Audrey Raistrick and abounds in bright and colourful Eastern costumes and sets. Rene Cave plays the governess and has most of the singing to do. She tells her pupils: “enunciate the beginning and the end of every word.” Miss Cave does just that and projects her music with charm. The impulsive, intellectual King is memorably acted and sung by David Holmes and there are good performances from Dorothy Hilton (Lady Thiang), Joyce Foster (Tuptim), Gordon Eckersley (Prime Minister), Alistair Morrell (Louis) and Robin Jones (Prince). One of the highlights of the evening is the presentation of the tale of Uncle Tom’s Cabin. It’s imaginatively choreographed by Wendy Duckworth and Simon is danced by Glenys Collinson. Walmsley have mustered 24 children, aged from five upwards, for the Royal Children and their entry in the famous March had us all going “Ah”. Musical direction is by Jessie Whittaker.

Photographs by John Tustin