Just A Spoonful Of Sugar
Country Life UK|November 27, 2019
’Tis the season for a treat. The musical is vying with the pantomime as the traditional Christmas outing, but the main thing is that hearts are warmed and spirits cheered
Just A Spoonful Of Sugar

CHRISTMAS is coming and the theatre, like the goose, is getting fat. Up and down the land, theatres seek to swell their coffers by putting on lavish shows that will provide some kind of insurance against possible hard times ahead, but, although pantomime is still popular, I am struck by the changing nature of Yuletide entertainment.

When I was a child in the postwar Midlands, panto, Peter Pan and Toad of Toad Hall were the seasonal staples. I can vividly recall seeing a young Norman Wisdom in Robinson Crusoe, Phyllis Calvert as J. M. Barrie’s boy-who-wouldn’t-grow-up and Patrick Wymark as A. A. Milne’s bombastic hero. I’m sure you can still find their equivalents today, but what is immediately apparent, as you scan the brochures, is how many of the big regional theatres rely on classic American musicals to draw the crowds.

At the Sheffield Crucible, Robert Hastie is directing Frank Loesser’s 1950 landmark show Guys and Dolls, with Kadiff Kirwan, lately seen on TV in Fleabag and This Way Up, as Sky Masterson, who wins a bet by luring a Salvation Army lass to Havana. At the Curve, Leicester, Nikolai Foster recreates the gang warfare of the Jets and the Sharks with a revival of West Side Story. And at the Royal Exchange, Manchester, Jo Davies is directing a revival of Gypsy which, as West Side Story does, has lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and a book by Arthur Laurents.

This is by no means an exhaustive list. You can catch a stage version of The Wizard of Oz at Leeds Playhouse and, although it’s not an American show, expectations are running high at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre for a musical version of David Walliams’s The Boy in the Dress with songs by Robbie Williams and Guy Chambers. One of the most joyous shows in London right now is the revival of Mary Poppins at the Prince Edward, with Zizi Strallen giving a terrific performance as P. L. Travers’s unearthly nanny.

This story is from the November 27, 2019 edition of Country Life UK.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the November 27, 2019 edition of Country Life UK.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM COUNTRY LIFE UKView All
A Nose for Nature -With an uncanny ability to detect elusive species in the wild, dogs are poised to play a vital role in conservation and biosecurity.
Country Life UK

A Nose for Nature -With an uncanny ability to detect elusive species in the wild, dogs are poised to play a vital role in conservation and biosecurity.

Ꮓiba seems to be the perfect colleague: hard-working, efficient and fun to be around. However, Ziba isn't a person; she's a conservation detection dog, especially trained to sniff out the presence of rare bats and birds. The sixyear-old German shorthaired pointer is one of an increasing number of dogs helping to conserve wildlife. Similar to sniffer dogs employed to detect drugs or explosives, these detection dogs are using their extraordinary sense of smell to identify anything from great crested newts to pine martens.

time-read
5 mins  |
October 16, 2024
Duck and Cover - With a comical and heart-warming call, the eider or 'cuddy duck' is a convivial bird that was highly favoured and protected by Northumberland's patron saint, says
Country Life UK

Duck and Cover - With a comical and heart-warming call, the eider or 'cuddy duck' is a convivial bird that was highly favoured and protected by Northumberland's patron saint, says

Anyone who has spent time on the rugged, castle-fringed coast of Northumberland will be familiar with the call of the eider duck. The male emits a fluty 'ahoooh' that sounds amazed and a little censorious. The female responds with a throaty cackle-Dame Barbara Windsor to the drake's Kenneth Williams, if you like. There's something good humoured, fond and comforting in the eiders' calling. It evokes feelings of nostalgia even in those hearing it for the first time.

time-read
4 mins  |
October 16, 2024
Not to be sneezed at
Country Life UK

Not to be sneezed at

The ritual and performance of snuff, the 'titillating dust' that has fuelled creativity and enhanced social situations since the 16th century, is still popular today, discovers

time-read
6 mins  |
October 16, 2024
Where her tears fell, asters grew
Country Life UK

Where her tears fell, asters grew

Small-flowered asters, with their quiet beauty and clouds of starry blooms, are the final shout of autumn, advises

time-read
3 mins  |
October 16, 2024
You had me at Merlot
Country Life UK

You had me at Merlot

The British wine industry is growing at a rate of Nebuchadnezzars, altering the palate of the countryside market, finds

time-read
3 mins  |
October 16, 2024
And they're off!
Country Life UK

And they're off!

Four historic country houses with long-standing racing credentials come to the market in prime sporting areas of Berkshire and Oxfordshire

time-read
5 mins  |
October 16, 2024
Hooked on classics
Country Life UK

Hooked on classics

A new generation of designers is learning the language of Greek and Roman architecture, finds

time-read
3 mins  |
October 16, 2024
England at its best
Country Life UK

England at its best

The Exmoor National Park Authority is celebrating its 70th birthday. Kate Green recounts what makes this 'high country of the winds', of deer, dark skies, tough ponies and resilient farmers, so special

time-read
6 mins  |
October 16, 2024
Once upon a time in the west
Country Life UK

Once upon a time in the west

Having returned to the fabled Grimersta lochs and streams of Lewis for the first time in 40 years, our correspondent finds himself reliving the glory

time-read
5 mins  |
October 16, 2024
Meet the tusk force
Country Life UK

Meet the tusk force

The Chinese water deer, with its distinctive tusks and delicious venison, has thrived here since escaping from deer parks in the 19th century. Paula Lester stalks one for her supper

time-read
5 mins  |
October 16, 2024