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Pantomime Forever: A Grand Old British Christmas Tradition


Article # : 12026 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 12 / 1987  2,582 Words
Author : Edward Pearce
Edward Pearce currently writes for The Sunday Times (London), and is former parliamentary sketch writer for The Daily Telegraph.

       January 1752, early in the evening at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden: 1,300 people are crowded into the pit, the boxes, and the galleries. Stage and auditorium alike are brightly lit; clothes seem to shimmer in the heat. The audience applauds loudly as Lun, otherwise the theater's manager, John Rich, takes center stage.
       
        January 1898, late in the evening at the Britannia Theatre, Hoxton: Outside, the streets terrorized a mere decade before by Jack the Ripper hide their grime and dilapidation under a sheet of snow. Inside, the pit and single gallery are crammed with four thousand East Enders, all forgetting their miseries as George Liupino raises his broadsword against a stage demon.
       
        December 1987, in the afternoon: The Churchill Theatre in Bomley, Kent, stands in the middle of a modern shopping complex, thronged with folks buying last minute Christmas gifts. Inside, the ten-year-old hall holds its full capacity of 750. The ratio of children to adults is about three to one. The doyen of drag artists, Danny La Rue, comes down to the footlights as a roll of handclaps bounces from stalls to circle.
       
        Three very different theaters in three periods of history so divided by the undertow of time that their audiences would scarcely understand a syllable spoken were they miraculously transported from one building to the others. Yet the shows in all three theaters are defined by one word. What was--and is--on stage is pantomime.
       
        Not Marceau's Whiteface
       
        My ... (1996 of 15316 Characters)
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