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Village Squire, 1976-08, Page 33time and again. Many people told Roy he should bring the production back for a.second season and he was finally convinced to bring it back for a short run of four performances. As of this writing, all of the performances he,ld so far had been completely sold out iri advance and many people ryere turned away. An extra performance was added. The show will also go on tour to Kincardine and Petrolia after the Blyth season. (It will return to Blyth for a special performance in aid of the building fund for the Blyth arena.) The second best box office draw was even more of a surprise than Clover. Roy decided that he wanted to do a stage version of the Alice Munro short story "How I Met my,. Husband". He rounded up a script from the television version of the story and set to work with his actors and actresses to develop the story into a longer play. The result is a show that was long on quiet humour and mood and short on action, not the kind of thing that seems a big crowd-pleaser. Yet the reviews were good, the box-office much better than expected and the audience comment praiseworthy. On the other hand, the disappointment came in the form of the show that was expected to be the big hit of the season: a musical adaptation of Lister Sinclair's play The Blood is Strong. The play seemed a natural fort the area: telling the story of a pioneer Scottish 'family in an area where pioneer life if still revered and there are many Scottish people. The production was excellent, one of the best all-round shows seen in this area and the best of the season at The Festival. The critics gave it rave reviews, even the normally hard -to -please Gina Mallett of the Toronto Star. The audiences that were there (and they were respectable if not as large as hoped) loved the show. Yet People didn't flock to the box office and Festival people are still trying to figure out why. More serious, however, was the final production of the season. When you walk the tightrope producing new material so often, sooner of later you're to slip and fall and the Festival's Shape was that fall. It was the first completely new script the Festival had done, compared to adaptations. The play was commissioned from actor, writer J im Schaefer to celebrate Olympic year and concentrating on the story of a small town athlete who goes to the 1936 Berlin Olympics. Schaefer quickly learned that its easier to act in a play than write it. He rewrote and rewrote' but still the final script had many flaws. Some faulty staging, particularly lighting didn't help the show either. The Festival actors performed well and the music of Ann Lindsay stood up well but in general, the critics hated the show and apparently so did the audiences since Shape produced the poorest box office of all the shows. The Blyth Festival proves that Canadian theatre can be both excellent and mediocre, both popular and not popular but with the. overall success there (75 per cent isn't a bad average) and the big success at Stratford and Grand Bend, it seems likely we'll be seeing more Canadian productions in the coming years. -tc :tel i:;0 .4/ (,e.W FLOOR COVERINGS WALL TO WALL CARPET, RUGS & CUSHION FLOOR CaII us at: 527-0902 AND WE WILL GIVE YOU AN ESTIMATE ON YOUR ROOM. We Show Samples In Your Home. G. A. WHITNEY FURNITt1RF 4 4 • MAIN SI SPAFORTK ''• PHONF. 527-0902 For over forty years Welcome Wagon hostesses have been making calls on newcomers - whether they be within our own nation or in a foreign country. If you are a newcomer, know of one, or are a businessman desiring representation in the newcomer's home, call your local representative listed below for WELCOME WAGON LIMITED. 94-r gig 504 LTD Call your Welcome Wagon Hostess now. WINGHAM 357-3275 EXETER 235-2870 MITCHELL 348-8925 GODERICH 524-6654 SEAFORTH 527-0923 STRATFORD 271-5856 VILLAGE SQUIRE/AUGUST 1976, 31