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Village Squire, 1978-06, Page 12Last year at the Blyth Summer Festival a small town fought big government in a play by Keith Roulston. This year the playwright returns with a comedy about a businessman who has to fight big problems. Impossible dream Blyth Summer Festival has proven itself against all odds Theatres featuring Canadian plays in the summer are few and ' far between, and they're getting fewer. With the recent demise of the Peterborough Summer Festival the only two Canadian summer theatres left• are the Lennoxville Festival in Quebec and the Blyth Summer Festival. Both are ironic successes, Lennoxville because it's an English language PG. 10. VILLAGE SQUIRE/JUNE 1978. theatre in a French province and Blyth because who'd expect a threatre at all in a village of 900 people that isn't a traditional tourist town, let alone a• theatre doing Canadian plays mostly from original scripts. This latter feature is the one that makes Blyth truly unique. With five original productions planned this summer it is presenting as many premieres as any of the more established theatres in the country. Under Artistic Director James Roy the Festival has grown from two plays its first season in 1975 to five original works this year. Audiences grew from 3000 that first summer to more than 12,000 for the four host productions last year and tickets sales for this year are running well ahead of any previous season. Equally impressive things have been happening at Memorial Hall, the home of the Festival. That first season customers stuck to the old varnish on the seats in the hot, humid weather. By the next season the sticky seats were gone with a complete redecoration of the theatre sponsored by the Festival's parent body Blyth Centre for the Arts. This year if all goes well, the heat problem will be gone too with work beginning son on