





Production Officials |
|
Director |
Derek Taylor |
Musical Director |
J. Arnold Thornton |
Choreographer |
Mary Unsworth |
Cast |
|
Edward Moulton-Barrett |
Alan Lee |
Henrietta |
Irene Taylor |
Arabel |
Lyndene Brown |
George |
Glyn Neary |
Alfred |
Gordon Bustard |
Henry |
Ian Dixon |
Charles |
Ernest Pollitt |
Septimus |
Robin Foster |
Octavius |
Alan Roberts |
Bella Hedley |
Barbara Ainsworth |
Henry Bevan |
Jeff Taylor |
Captain Surtees Cook |
Arnold Knowles |
A Fellow Officer |
Denis Hamer |
Wilson |
Audrey Raistrick |
Flush (the dog) |
Penny |
Doctor Chambers |
Alec Greaves |
Elizabeth |
Ann Barton |
Mr Macready |
Sturgess Mills |
Mr Harrison |
David Sutcliffe |
Stage Manager |
Colin Duckworth |
Mrs Butler |
Nora Holder |
Evans |
Harry Lee |
Robert Browning |
Don Howcroft |
Lady Mary |
Joyce Knowles |
Sandwich-Board Man |
Alan Brockbank |
Dancers |
|
Glenys Collinson, Janet Ennion, Dorothy Holt, Lorraine Parker, Denise Potts, Lyn Longworth, Colin Duckworth, Geoff Howarth |
|
Chorus |
|
Sheila Bassett, Susan Briggs, Rene Barlow, Brenda Dixon, Sylvia Fishwick, Diane Gee, Nora Holder, Millie Hackett, Edith Horrocks, Bronwen Lee, Joyce Knowles, Brenda Orrell, Joyce Richardson, Lyn Rotheray, Alex Schofield, Lyn Vernon, Elizabeth Williams, Anne Wrennall, Alan Brockbank, Roy Haslam, Harry Lee, William A. Livesey, David Sutcliffe, Geoff Sutcliffe, Joseph P. Waites, Maurice Windsor, H. Sturgess Mills |
|

Bolton Evening News
There is now hardly a musician of the romantic school who hasn’t been made the subject of a musical, so we are turning to the poets. Two who eloped and married, as Robert Browning and Elizabeth Moulton-Barrett did, had it coming to them. The wonder is that Ron Grainer (music) and Ronald Millar (book and lyrics) were so slow off the mark with “Robert and Elizabeth”, especially with Rudolf Besier’s play “The Barretts of Wimpole Street” to point the way to them. Contrasting “Robert and Elizabeth” as I saw it on its try-out way to the West End with what it has become now that Walmsley Church AODS present it (all this week), I feel that in some ways a better job has been made of it. The high jinks in old man Barrett’s back garden have lost nothing in grace while gaining a great deal in seemliness, so that one no longer assumes, until the stern old patriarch’s appearance, that the revellers had got in over his dead body. The figure of J. Arnold Thornton’s musical direction and Derek Taylor’s production project the fiction and such fact as there is entertainingly. Some of the music is difficult to sing and play and a good deal of it is difficult to listen to, but attention seems keen. Alan Lee comes very near to credibility as Edward Moulton-Barrett. Don Howcroft’s Browning, needing more fullness of voice for the dialogue, nevertheless conveys the right feeling of masterful optimism. As the hypochondriac Elizabeth, Ann Barton manages her difficult vocal numbers with skill and responds convincingly to the Browning therapy. Irene Taylor is an appealing Henrietta and Barbara Ainsworth a demurely sexy Bella. Arnold Knowles makes the gorgeous but simple Captain Surtees-Cook the favourite he ought to be. Once again the society’s staging is effectively enterprising. A tiny period train runs over the proscenium arch on a panoramic journey to Italy and an almost life-size puffing-billy floods Florence station with steam in the 1840s. J.W.
Manchester Evening News
This was primarily a triumph for Walmsley Church Operatic and Dramatic Society’s do-it-yourself stage staff. They designed, painted and built the scenery for all nine scenes and showed even greater expertise in handling it on their school hall stage at Egerton, Bolton. The hall of No.59 Wimpole Street was switched to the garden scene in five seconds flat. It was like a conjuring trick. There was also the diverting gimmickry of the train belching steam. Out of this at the finale stepped Don Howcroft, for whom it must have been a far journey from his Artful Dodger of the opera cup-winning “Oliver” to the role of the romantic poet Browning. But he gave a performance of great sincerity. With him was Ann Barton, a rather young and inexperienced Elizabeth, who sang with marked fervour. Alan Lee had enough authority as Moulton-Barrett to have resisted the temptation to shout. Arnold Knowles gave a gem of comic characterisation as the amorous guardsman, and Lyndene Brown (Arabel) and Barbara Ainsworth (Bella) were the best of the other principals. Tom Wildern
