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Village Squire, 1981-04, Page 14THEATRE Maggie and Pierre "together " in Blyth If actress Linda Griffiths sometimes feels she's suffering from a split personality. who can blame her? Griffiths is the actress who's been winning rave reviews as both the Trudeaus in the long-running hit Maggie and Pierre. Now, after taking the play to most of Canada's major cities. the actress is bringing it to the Blyth Memorial Hall on April 10. 11, 12. It will be one of the show's only appearances outside an urban centre. Maggie and Pierre, mounted by Listowel native Paul Thompson and the Theatre Passe Muraille company, probes the personal lives of our cool, intellectual prime minister and the young flower child -woman who married him. Griffiths researched the play for seven months in Ottawa, interviewing friends of the couple, talking to veteran Ottawa journalists who covered the story of the marriage breakup and VILLAGE SQUIRE is available at: Bayfield: The Village Market Nip N' Tuck Blyth- Snell's Food Mart The Blyth Theatre Blyth Standard Blyth Saga Brussels: The Brussels Post Clinton: C & E Variety Exeter: G & G Discount Goderich: Fincher's Ltd. Triangle Discount Grand Bend: Carole's Craft Cupboard Listowel: Smith's Red & White London: Say Cheese Multi -Mag The News Depot Lucknow: Sepoy Stationery Milverton: Curiosity Shoppe Mitchell: Scott's Dept. Store Seatorth: Larone's Dept. Store The Huron Expositor St. Marys: Marshall's of St. Marys Wildwood Inn Stratford: Fanfare Books J.S. Amusements Wingham: Harris Stationery Zurich: Tasty -Nu Bakery VILLAGE SQUIRE Box 10 Blyth, Ont. NOM 1140 PG. 12 VILLAGE SQUIRE/APRIL 1981 watching film clips of Pierre Trudeau's years in office. The actress has not only played both Trudeaus on stage, but also takes the role of Henry, a journalist -voyeur following the Trudeau story, who becomes a kind of Canadian everyman - as confused as others about the marriage and the country's disillusionment with the man they once considered a hero. When the play was first launched in Toronto, many theatregoers expected a bitter satire poking fun at the country's first couple. Instead, they found a moving play dealing with real people who suddenly found their lives public property - a fact partly responsible for dooming the marriage. Actress Griffiths did meet the prime minister at a government ball during the course of her research, but after chatting with him briefly, her nerve failed her, and she didn't tell him he was to be one of the leading characters in her upcoming play. Griffiths has never met Margaret, but still feels close to the prime minister's former wife who chose the jet set and. the Rolling Stones over life on Sussex Drive. The creation of Maggie and Pierre proved a challenge - and playing the three roles for several months has been both a physical and mental strain. Looking back on /he play. Griffiths says, "I think Canadian people fell in love with Pierre Trudeau. It was greater than Trudeaumania. Then there was a sense of betrayal among people who think Trudeau took their generosity and twisted it. And there was the parallel relationship of a highly -emotional marriage. The falling apart of their marriage wouldn't have been so unusual if they weren't so much in the public light." Griffiths calls the play "an allegory. for., our• time'J - and describes it as "a love story with significance beyond 'the personal story. . . " Performances. of Maggie and Pierre at the Blyth theatre will be at 8 p.m. on Friday and Saturday evenings. with a matinee performance on Sunday, April 12, at 2:30 p.m. Also, Saturday night, theatregoers can sit down to a special country supper, served by the theatre's board of directors in the hall basement, before the 8 p.m. performance begins.