Difference between revisions of "Canterbury Tales (musical)"

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== Performance history in South Africa ==
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==
1970: Staged by the [[JODS]] in the [[Johannesburg Civic Theatre]], directed by [[Daniel Thorndike]], with [[Phillip Boucher]] (Host), [[Rigby Foster]] (Knight), [[Ian Hamilton]] (Squire), [[Joey van Rooyen]] (Prioress), [[Sheila Ferguson]] (Nun), [[Hugh Rouse]] (Priest), [[David Chrichton]] (Cook), [[Ian Kemm]] (Friar), [[Marjorie Gordon]] (Wife of Bath), [[Kerry Jordan]] (Miller), [[George Korelin]] (Steward), [[Billy Boyle]] (Clerk of Oxford), [[Gabriel Bayman]] (Merchant), [[Louis Ife]] (Chaucer) and others.
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1970: Staged by the [[JODS]] in the [[Johannesburg Civic Theatre]], directed by [[Daniel Thorndike]], with [[Phillip Boucher]] (Host), [[Rigby Foster]] (Knight), [[Ian Hamilton]] (Squire), [[Joey van Rooyen]] (Prioress), [[Sheila Ferguson]] (Nun), [[Hugh Rouse]] (Priest), [[David Chrichton]] (Cook), [[Ian Kemm]] (Friar), [[Marjorie Gordon]] (Wife of Bath), [[Kerry Jordan]] (Miller), [[George Korelin]] (Steward), [[Billy Boyle]] (Clerk of Oxford), [[Gabriel Bayman]] (Merchant), [[Louis Ife]] (Chaucer) and others. Musical direction by [[Thomas Erskine]] and choreography by [[Geoffrey Sutherland]].
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==

Revision as of 06:04, 17 January 2016

Canterbury Tales is a 1964 British musical, with the music written by Richard Hill [1] and John Hawkins, and the lyrics by Nevill Coghill [2]. It was originally presented at the Oxford Playhouse in 1964, conceived and directed by Martin Starkie [3] and written by Nevill Coghill and Martin Starkie. It was expanded into a full length musical and presented at the Phoenix Theatre, London on 21 March 1968 and ran for 2,080 performances. (Wikipedia [4])

The original text

The musical took five tales from Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales and told them with song and humour. These were: The Miller's Tale; The Nun's Priest's Tale; The Steward's Tale; The Merchant's Tale; and The Wife of Bath's Tale. In addition, Chaucer's Prologue and Epilogue were spoken.

Translations and adaptations

Performance history in South Africa

1970: Staged by the JODS in the Johannesburg Civic Theatre, directed by Daniel Thorndike, with Phillip Boucher (Host), Rigby Foster (Knight), Ian Hamilton (Squire), Joey van Rooyen (Prioress), Sheila Ferguson (Nun), Hugh Rouse (Priest), David Chrichton (Cook), Ian Kemm (Friar), Marjorie Gordon (Wife of Bath), Kerry Jordan (Miller), George Korelin (Steward), Billy Boyle (Clerk of Oxford), Gabriel Bayman (Merchant), Louis Ife (Chaucer) and others. Musical direction by Thomas Erskine and choreography by Geoffrey Sutherland.

Sources

Wikipedia [5]

JODS theatre programme, 1970.

Go to ESAT Bibliography

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