The
Cicala Players in The Poltergeist by Frank Harvey
Staged: 18 to 21 April 1956 at the Chanitcleer Theatre
Gloucester Road London
“A very good
production indeed” and “A smooth and slick performance” are amongst the
bouquets offered to the Cicala Players by Martins Bank Magazine in its Summer
1956 Issue, on the occasion of the group’s staging of “The Poltergeist”.
There is new blood amongst the actors, with FOUR new members treading the
boards, and it is also noted that there were hardly any problems, or the need
to prompt any of the players for forgetting lines. Despite the title
conveying something wicked coming our way, the play is very much a comedy,
and the Players’ Tony Garland is singled out for special praise as someone
who can turn his hand to comedic situations with great ease, and also elicit
the maximum laughter from the situation. Anne Brind too, is praised for her
comic talent, apparently requiring only a certain look on her face to bring
the house down. It is now almost ten
years since the Cicala Players staged their first production, and here they
are comfortable in the familiar surroundings of the Chanticleer Theatre in
London’s Gloucester Road. Just for once, Martins Bank Magazine seems happy
with the venue and has no axe to grind regarding attendance, or production
losses. Happy Days!
For their Spring
show the Cicala Players returned to the Chanticleer Theatre, in Clareville
Street, near the Gloucester Road tube Station, a small and intimate theatre
with excellent amenities which proved a popular choice when first the
Players used it. The play they presented was “The Poltergeist”, by Frank
Harvey, and it was staged for four nights, April 18th to 21st. Of the nine
parts, four were taken by new members and it speaks well for the producer,
Maurice Ryder, late of the Southampton Repertory Society, and for the team
work of the company, that the production was well up to the standard of
previous productions, with a refreshing absence of prompts or hitches. It
was a smooth and slick performance.
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Doreen Puddicombe Clive Hamilton Sylvia
Shepherd Tony Garland
John Cross and Jacqueline Benson
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Clive Hamilton Colin Hunt
and Anne Brind
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Clive Hamilton,
as the Vicar in whose house the strange manifestations occur, had a part
which suited his quiet and gentle personality perfectly and he gave the
best interpretation of any of the parts which we have seen him portray
Doreen Puddicombe, as his wife, had the most difficult part of the play. To
her fell the task of warming it up convincingly and she found this task a
hit beyond her emotionally in the first act, but she proved quite equal to
it in the second and third acts. The part of the daughter alleged to be
responsible for the poltergeist was played by Sylvia Shepherd. She looked
“fey” and she managed to inspire a certain quality of mystery into her
acting which was not only convincing hut at times quite alarming. An
excellent portrayal. The other daughter was portrayed by Jacqueline Benson,
naturally and without exaggeration, a fresh and youthful presentation, just
right.
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Clive Hamilton and Jim Flatt
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The comedy character
of the maid, played by Anne Brind, was a riot. She only had to look at the
others to raise a laugh, and there was something about the way her hair was
done and the way she walked, which brought forth appreciative applause from
the audience each time she appeared. It was obvious, of course, that this
girl is a bit of a character at Gracechurch Street, where she works, but
from the point of view of acting ability the dialect she sustained so
admirably was so well done that we had to convince ourselves by hearing her
speak naturally before awarding her full marks. Colin Hunt, in a small part
as the suitor of one of the Vicar's daughters, made an excellent beginning.
His appearance was good, his diction clear, and his manner pleasant and
relaxed. Jim Flatt, as the father of a girl who had been the ringleader in
an assault on the Vicar's “ Poltergeist ” daughter, made the most of his
small part.
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Sylvia Shepherd and Jacqueline Benson
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He struck the note
of deference as between parishioner and priest very convincingly, and his
quiet and respectful performance left nothing to be desired. John Cross, as
the official poltergeist investigator, had to portray a somewhat airy-fairy
far-back character.Although he spoke up well and strongly, we experienced
some difficulty in hearing some of his words because of the mannerism he
was adopting, but otherwise his performance was well up to his usual
standard. Of course, it was Tony Garland, as the insurance assessor, who
kept the merriment bubbling. The company has had good comic actors in the
past, but none to equal Tony He could take a straight part without anyone
realising his potentialities as a comic, but the case with which he slips
into parts of widely-different types, stamps him as one of the best and
most versatile acquisitions the Players have ever had. His performance in
this play had a freshness and vitality which is lacking in some
professionals and to watch him was as good as a tonic. A very good production
indeed.
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