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THE ARGOSY PLAYERS - LIVERPOOL

Argosy Players in: The Return

Staged: 16-18 November 1967 at Crane Theatre Hanover Street  Liverpool

We have now reached the final Argosy Players production to be staged, before all efforts are channelled into the Merger with barclays, out of which will come a renamed group “Martins Operatic Society” (minus the word “Bank”) which will continue to stage a major operatic production annually until 1980. Having covered all of their dramatic shoes on this site, it is astonishing to see just how versatile the Argosy Players are. In this final production – “The Return”, the subject matter is too difficult for some in the audience to handle.  The acting prowess of the cast is shown by their presentation of a three hour play that has only six characters, and requires each of them to remember huge set pieces. We are delighted to have found a review (albeit a very short article) of “The Return” from the Liverpool Echo’s amateur dramatics critic, and this appears further down the page after the following write up from Martins Bank Magazine, which in its Winter 1967 issue, heaps justifiable praise on the Argosy Players, and their staging of the play at Liverpool’s Crane Theatre…

1953 01.jpgWe believe that some people were embar­rassed; we know of one whose susceptibi­lities were affected and who left during the interval, and of others who, like us, felt that the Argosy Players deliberately tested themselves in putting on the serious, sometimes emotional, and often very moving play The Return by Bridget Boland at the Crane Theatre on November 16, 17 and 18. The story is of a nun who after 38 years in a convent decides she no longer has a vocation and re-enters the outside world.  Her first steps beyond the enclosed walls are faltering ones and within a few minutes she returns, shocked by the noise, the traffic and ‘all those people’.

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Maud Melville, Valerie Parish, Phil Brayshaw

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Hilary Gray

She tries again, accompanied by her nephew and his wife, who have their own problems and, though told by the chaplain that in helping auntie they may help themselves, their future does not look rosy. Recovering from the sight of short skirts (the year was 1949 and they were a decorous four inches below the knee) and from the discovery that all the women with painted faces were not harlots, auntie even­tually plans to give away her annuity either to nephew Peter or to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, having discovered that the welfare state has taken over her self-elected role of ministering angel to the poor.  Finally she decides to work in a factory making radio parts to help the export drive, while Peter and Angela resolve to start a new life together.

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Brian Shaw

The transition from elderly but innocent nun to a determined yet kindly woman gave Maud Melville a long and exacting part in which her acting ability was fully tested.

Although Bridget Boland’s ‘The Return’ may not have a box-office appeal, it gave the Argosy Players (from Martins Bank) an opportunity to show they can present a play which calls for acting ability not always available to small societies. This story of a nun who after over 30 years in a convent returns to a world, she has known nothing of since 1913 requires good casting and producer Keith Naylor was well served. Maud Melville as the nun, Valerie A. Parish (Prioress) and Philip Brayshaw (Chaplain) sustained the characters with distinction. As the young couple who accepted the task of introducing their relative to a new world, Hilary Gray and Brian Shaw, gave the play life and action after a slow first act, and John Milne also contributed a good performance.

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