Difference between revisions of "Summer Holiday"
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== The original text == | == The original text == | ||
− | Originally a film about a holiday in Europe with a London bus, written by Peter Myers and Ronald Cass and filmed with Cliff Richard and | + | Originally a film about a holiday in Europe with a London bus, written by Peter Myers and Ronald Cass and filmed with Cliff Richard and The Shadows, directed by Peter Yates and produced by Kenneth Harper[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summer_Holiday_(1963_film)]. |
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==Translations and adaptations== | ==Translations and adaptations== |
Revision as of 11:34, 24 March 2019
Summer Holiday is a musical by Michael Gyngell and Mark Haddigan.
Contents
The original text
Originally a film about a holiday in Europe with a London bus, written by Peter Myers and Ronald Cass and filmed with Cliff Richard and The Shadows, directed by Peter Yates and produced by Kenneth Harper[1].
Translations and adaptations
Made famous as a film featuring Cliff Richard and the Shadows in 1963, the musical was adapted for the stage by Michael Gyngell and Mark Haddigan.
Performance history in South Africa
1998: Presented by In-Concert Theatre executive producer Bernard Jay in , directed by Philip Godawa, featuring Steve Hofmeyr as Don, with Tobie Cronjé, Julie Hartley, Denise Stock and Paul Buckby as Mike. Lighting by Denis Hutchinson, musical director Janine Neethling. Bryan Hill assisted as director and re-staged Quinny Sacks's original choreography.
Sources
Wikipedia [2]
Summer Holiday theatre programme, 1998.
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