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Walmsley Church AODS
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Naughty Marietta
Captain Warrington & Marietta
Felice, Silas Slick, Nanette & Fanchon
Etienne & Adah

Production Officials

Director

Audrey H. McL. Raistrick

Musical Director

Jessie Whittaker

Choreographer

Sonia Joy Talbot

Cast

Marietta

Joyce Foster

Captain Dick Warrington

Bill Dixon

Lieut. Gov. Grandet

Alec Greaves

Etienne Grandet

Graham R. Edgington

Silas Slick

Harry Lee

Lizette

Aileen Bramwell

Rudolfo

Bert Rothwell

Adah

Sue Daley

Sir Harry Blake

Bill White

Florenz

Philip Lloyd

Fanchon

Claire Clarkson

Nanette

Anne Lloyd

Felice

Diane Tustin

Graziella

Glenys Collinson

Chorus

Helen Bennett, Nicola Baldwin, A. Bamber, Claire Blackburn, Renee Cave, Carole Dunsbee, Thelma Durrans, Brenda Dixon, Sylvia Fishwick, Mary Eckersley, Doreen Griffin, Mary Greaves, Celia Harris, Julie Hoggarth, Millie Hackett, Dorothy Hilton, Mina Hall, Heather Kirby, Christine Kilner, Gillian Kirby, Adele Lawton, C. Lister, Katherine Loughran, Jill Laybourne, L. McGarry, Dorothy Pitfield, Joanne Richardson, Carol Staton, Barbara Smith, Jane Topping, Mary Topping, Barbara Tidy, Jeanne Thornley, Betty Towler, Mavis Trainor, Cathryn Unsworth, Janice Warburton, S. Watson, Dorothy Yardley, John Bellis, Derek Bramwell, Stanley Collinson, John Dixon, David Fairclough, Nicholas Gee, Roy Haslam, Ernest Pollitt, Matthew Raistrick, Keith Richardson, Geoff Sutcliffe, Michael Topping, Ivor Tavener, Michael Taylor, Tom Topping, W. Williams, Graham Yardley

Florenz, Lieut Gov Grandet & Etienne

Bolton Evening News

Walmsley Operatic Society is noted for prodigious feats with scenery. In the current production of “Naughty Marietta”, an old Victor Herbert musical, the standard is well maintained. Given the limitations of a small stage and a great many people, the world of New Orleans at the end of last century is well created. Even in 1910, when the operetta took the New York stage by storm, Marietta’s behaviour could hardly have been thought all that naughty. Loopy perhaps, for she concealed herself in a fountain where she continually sings a snatch of song in the belief that the man who completes the phrase would be her true love. This seems a somewhat slender foundation on which to base a marriage and strains the credibility a bit. But Joyce Foster plays her as a pert, provocative Miss (although of course she is really a Countess in disguise) an with a very flexible, true soprano, sings the Herbert music just as it ought to be sung. Her musically gifted lover (at long last) rejoices in the name of Dick Warrington, which in these parts takes a bit of the romance out of it. However, Bill Dixon is sufficiently heroic to overcome this initial setback and outwits the mild villainy of Etienne Grandet, played by Graham R. Edgington. If you can forget the plot long enough to listen to the music you are assured of an entertaining evening. The singing, under the direction of Jessie Whittaker, is of unusually high standard. Production is by Audrey Raistrick – her first full-length effort, and very creditable too – and the choreography has been devised by Sonia Joy Talbot. Charles Petry

Company
Company
Photographs by John Tustin