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Village Squire, 1978-11, Page 42druM .103 I3rm N 11 crafts E herbs Spinning Wheels Spindles Carders Lazy Kates and Niddy-noddies Nature Dyed Yarns Canadian and British Fleece, Wool, Mohair, Camel, Alpaca, Yak and Goat hair Tops BOOKS ON SPINNING AND DYEING ALL FIBRES NOW 20% OFF INQUIRE ABOUT LESSONS IN SPINNING AND NATURE DYEING. WRITE FOR OUR FREE PRICE LIST. SAMPLE SHEET $1.00 RR 5, BRUSSELS, ONT. NOG 1H0 ANNENIr • just out of universities and drama schools but without professional experience. The Young Company is to be a place where the actors can have security to learn and develop for about three years before going on to other theatres. The Young Company began last year when Mr. Hutt auditioned 300 anxious applicants before coming up with his company. They have produced such shows as Shakespeare's Twelfth Night which played to sold out audiences night after night. Mr. Wellan says he'd never have thought he'd have seen the day when Londoners would be lining up for tickets to see a Shakespearean play but they were for that show. Mr. Wellan says the theatre hopes to extend the same kind of intensive on-the-job training programs to writers, directors and technicians in the future. The Studio theatre is scheduled to open Dec. 27 with the world premiere of The Marvellous, Magical Circus of Paddington Bear commissioned by Theatre London by Blaine Parker a well-known musical writer. Mr. Parker wrote book, music and lyrics and will direct the show. It's designed as a delightful Christmas treat for children that will continue until Jan. 20. The Studio will host Oscar Remembered with Maxim Mazumbar in January and Theatre Beyond Words in February. Also on view in the Studio in February will be five performances of Rogues and Vaga- bonds with Marti Maraden and Nicholos Pennell. For the majority of people, of course, the focal point of theatre in London is the Grand stage. Mr. Hutt has chosen Kiss Me Kate as the first production in the new theatre and promises the best production the theatre can muster as Theatre London's way of saying thank you to the city in its support of the campaign to build the new building. There will be 33 in the company on stage as well as 18 musicians. Mr. Wellan says he's never heard so many excellent voices as those being shown in rehearsals for the production and the young cast is full of enthusiasm. The production will have eight sets and nearly 100 costumes. Mr. Wellan says Mr. Hutt is very conscientious about what is seen on the stage of Theatre London, one of the top rated regional theatres in the country. His philosophy is to provide diversified theatre with as much quality as possible. The Hutt profile will be high indeed at Theatre London when it comes time for the official opening of the new building on Jan. 28. Mr. Hutt will return to a familiar role, that of Canada's first Prime Minister in John A. Himself! The play which is described as not a history lesson but about the,man himself, reunites Mr. Hutt with wrier Timothy Findley. The two worked together when C.B.C. was putting together its production of The National Dream and Mr. Hutt was impressed enough to promise that if he ever got his own theatre, 140 The Village Squire November 1978 he would hire Findley to write a play about Sir John A. MacDonald. That's how the play comes about. The show was originally scheduled for February but has been moved up because of the official opening of the theatre. Othet plays to be presented at the Grand include Rope, by Patrick Hamilton a thriller about the perfect crime and Otherwise Engaged, the comedy by Simon Gray which was awarded Best Play of the Year in both London's West End and New York's Broadway. Bernard Slade's hit play Same Time, Next Year, will be performed by Dawn Greenhalgh and Ted Follows in April. In May the production of Little Mary Sunshine will be performed, featuring music and poking fun at old time musicals like Rose Marie and Naughty Marietta. When the theatre opens Nov. 22 it will be finished in public parts of the building but far from complete. That it opens at all however is something of a miracle since work was badly delayed by a lengthy carpenters strike that hit London. Many people felt the theatre as a highly visible project, was being used as a symbol and a pawn by the union in its negotiations. There was doubt that even if the strike was settled, the lost time could be made up by November. Even during an October tour it appeared there was an immense amount of work to do but the theatre was assured that everything would be ready. The seats were sitting in boxes waiting to be installed. A woman sat in the hall with a sewing machine putting together the main stage curtain and carpenters and workmen were everywhere. Elsewhere in the city the rehearsals went on, the sets were being built and the costumes sewn. One gets the feeling that when the subscribers relax in their seats Nov. 22, the construction crews, stage crews and the whole backstage portion of the theatre's staff will collapse with exhaustion. Operation Life/tile Lifestyle is having the ca- pacity to react against the cigarette habit, stimulants and tranquilizers, pot and alcohol. It's avoiding drug abuse and rejecting illegal drugs. Wedding Bells... and Flowers So, your wedding date has been set, and now you are making the arrangements. Your flower order is important. It can help to make the day, and also provide many pleasant memories. We would count it a privilege to serve you on this glad occasion. Listowel Florist Ltd. Ed V.. Gant LISTOWFL, ON7*110 170 Wallace N. 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