Sep 1.jpg

HOME

 

WELCOME

 

NEWS

 

BRANCHES

 

GRASSHOPPERS

 

LEWIS’S BANK

 

CONTACT US

 

SITE MENU

 

<

MARTINS BANK PLAYERS (NORTH EASTERN)

Martins Bank Players (North Eastern) The Secret Tent by Elizabeth Addyman

Staged: 17 to 19 November 1966 at The little theatre Gateshead

1965 On Stage with the North Eastern Players.jpgMartins Bank’s North Eastern Players stage a production of of Elizabeth Addyman’s “The Secret Tent”  over three nights in November 1966 at Gateshead’s Little Theatre. This play was previously staged in London by Martins Bank’s Cicala Players in 1962.  Despite what are described as “reasonable” audience figures by Martins Bank Magazine, disappointment is expressed that the house was not packed on all three nights, as the performances were felt to have been extremely good, with the interest of the audience held at every moment. 

Sep 1.jpg

Particular mention is given to North Eastern Players stalwart Ayleen Read, whose performance gripped those watching and brought tears to the eyes of some with its sincerity and realism.  This is another production directed by Nora Wilkie who by now has many successes under her belt.

 

elizabeth addyman's The Secret Tent is a three-act play with a cast of seven. There are several hundred such plays but few which present such a tremendous challenge to a producer and, in this case, her cast. Nora Wilkie achieved a triumph with this pro­duction by the North Eastern Players at the Little Theatre, Gateshead, from November 17 to 19. Those who failed to attend must have felt frustrated when colleagues having seen it reported on the following morning 'Well you missed something good'. Support these days for amateur produc­tions is often uncertain and, while atten­dances at this production were reasonable, we must admit to a feeling of surprise that an on-target District like this managed only to score an 'outer' on ticket sales. But there it is. We all make mistakes. The Secret Tent is high drama and there are no prosy interchanges of talk. Momen­tum must be kept up and, in addition, it is a busy play with something happening all the time. The timing of words and actions must have involved the cast in exhausting hours of toil imposed by their task-mistress. It paid off handsomely.

1966 The Secret Tent (1) MBM-Sp67P26

 Jim Lindsay and Ayleen Read

The play opens with such a typical domestic scene—a husband and wife having got the children to bed—that one has no inkling of the things to come. Only as the play develops do doubts unfold about the past life of the attractive young wife and mother, Ruth Martyn, played with feeling and sincerity by Ayleen Read.  Apart from the major role of the husband there were two minor male parts: the rustic innocent (Alf Grummett), loyal to Ruth Martyn and arriving on the scene primarily in the hope of getting his beer ration—a traditional village idiot part—was played with the right touch of genuinely troubled befuddlement.

 

The other role, that of Inspector Thornton, brought from David Herriott a nice blend of compassion and determination in finding the truth behind some highly misleading facts. Jim Lindsay coped admirably as the ex-service chicken-farmer husband, five years married to a woman he thinks the world of but of whose earlier life he knows next to nothing. The part taxed his resourcefulness to the full yet he maintained the feeling of nervous tension and mental strain for the necessary three-quarters of the play.

1966 The Secret Tent (3) MBM-Sp67P26

Nancy Watson and

Margaret Crump

That he succeeded so well is doubly praiseworthy since the women ruled this play. From the start Nancy Watson as his mother never for one moment gave the impression she was acting: in diction and changes of mood and pace she was faultless. Her bete noir, the mild, gossiping Miss Mitchum-Browne—a genuine 'our dear vicar' type dropping innuendoes like mothballs—was effectively and realistically brought to life by Margaret Crump.

Sep 1.jpg

As the headmistress of an approved school, intro­duced by the Inspector to convince a dis­believing husband and mother-in-law of the wife's seamy past, Gwen Surtees showed sympathy blended with a kindly yet matter-of-fact determination to make them face reality.  

1966 The Secret Tent (2) MBM-Sp67P26

Alf Grummett and

David Herriott

To return for a moment to Ayleen Read, whose loyalty to her black-sheep brother was behind all her misfortunes, her finest contribution came in the last moments of the play with the realisation that her past was known and that her husband's love and respect for her had apparently been killed. Such was the effect of her acting that some of the older generation in the audience actually reached for their handkerchiefs. This production won the praises of all who saw it and were able to appreciate the hard work involved and the exhausting task of maintaining peak interest for nearly three hours. Behind the scenes Bob Wilkie and Derek Bates did their bit in ensuring that interest never flagged for a moment.

M