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An
original sparkling comedy - with live music - that really goes with
a swing!
“The
Octagon is still setting the standards for north west theatre… Forget
the weather and the World Cup - the Octagon has a hot-shot winner
you simply must see”
Manchester
Evening News (5 star review)
“‘It
Ain’t What You Do It’s The Way That You Do It’ and the Octagon and
the Hampstead Theatre have got the results with this five star crowd
pleaser”
What’s
On Stage (5 star review)
'Hurry
to buy tickets... There are so many laughs in the superbly written
script but best of all is the sense of real enjoyment from the multi
talented cast"
Clitheroe
Advertiser
"Combines
dry Northern humour with the impressive recreation of 1940s swing
band classics from a musically gifted cast"
Metro
(4 star review)
“A
major achievement… The music is fantastic, with all instruments
and vocals provided by the multi-talented cast”
Bolton
Evening News
Inside every respectable woman, there’s
a Blonde Bombshell screaming to get out...
Wartime bandleader Betty is in a predicament.
Every time the Blonde Bombshells, the most glamorous swing band
in the North, play a GI camp, they lose members. Four of her
girls have gone AWOL, and with an important BBC radio engagement
in the offing, Betty needs to find new musicians - fast.
Among those who turn up to the hastily organised
auditions are naïve schoolgirl Liz, who plays a mean clarinet;
Miranda, an upper-crust saxophonist; singing nun Lily, and Patrick,
a male drummer prepared to don a frock in order to avoid a drafting.
With her motley line-up complete, Betty and the band prepare to
dodge Hitler’s bombs and make the dangerous journey to far-flung
Hull - and potential fame and fortune.
Alan Plater’s warm and witty musical
play is filled with northern deadpan humour and glorious, live swing
band performances of 1940s classics by Fats Waller, the Andrews
Sisters, Flanagan and Allen, George Formby and Glenn Miller.
Alan Plater is a prolific and revered writer, whose body of work
includes Close The Coalhouse Door, The Beiderbecke
Affair, The Barchester Chronicles and Fortunes
Of War. Blonde Bombshells Of 1943 is based on
Alan’s hugely successful TV drama The Last Of The Blonde
Bombshells, which won BAFTAs, a Golden Globe and a brace of
Emmy nominations.
Take a sentimental
journey with the Blonde Bombshells!
Following
its Octagon run, this production will transfer to the Hampstead
Theatre (www.hampsteadtheatre.com).
A previous
version of this play was performed at the West Yorkshire Playhouse
in 2004.
| Cast |
|
Creative Team |
|
| Ruth Alexander Rubin |
May |
Mark Babych |
Director |
| Chris Grahamson |
Patrick |
Howard Gray |
Musical Director |
| Sarah Groarke |
Vera |
Libby Watson |
Designer |
| Barbara Hockaday |
Grace |
Andy Smith |
Sound Designer |
| Rosie Jenkins |
Miranda |
Elizabeth Marsh |
Musical Staging |
| Elizabeth Marsh |
Betty |
Caroline Burnett |
DSM on the Book |
| Karen Paullada |
Liz / Elizabeth |
| Claire Storey |
Lily |
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