|
The Actorsingers Great live musical theater in Nashua, New Hampshire since 1955
|
|
|
Chimes of Normandy
[Past Shows]
[Prev]
[Next]
|
Good Shepherd Parish House Auditorium
November 11-13, 1957
Music by Robert Planquette
English Libretto by Farnie & Reece
(Produced by special arrangement with Tams-Witmark of New York)
|
DRAMATIS PERSONAE
(In order of appearance)
Village peasants
GERTRUDE
Frances Peterson
JEANNE
Beth Tebbetts
MANETTE
Theresa Hauser
SUZANNE
Arlene Annis
SERPOLETTE
Mary Strickland
NOTARY
Gerald Stevenson
CLERKS
Karl Henry and James Jones
THE BAILLI
Leonard Rule
GASPARD, A Miser
Lionel Boucher
GRENICHEUX, A Fisherman
Edgar Simoneau
GERMAINE
Barbara Monroe
HENRI, Marquis of Corneville
Bill Morgan
A SAILOR
James Jones
PEASANT MAIDENS
Arlene Annis,
Ethel Shenton Jones,
Marcelle Houle,
Virginia Smith,
Nancy Laquerre,
Beth Tebbetts,
Therese Houle,
Joan Lenz,
Helen Kiratsos,
Louise Stulgis,
Frances Peterson,
Kathryn Wiggin,
Connie Wood,
Theresa Hauser,
Jean Lenz
VILLAGERS, SAILORS, AND SERVANTS
Ralph B. Gould,
Roger Lovejoy,
Donald Hurd,
Gerald Stevenson,
Harold Annis,
James Burns,
Albin Tamulonis,
Robert Goss,
Terrence Fairbanks
Credits
We wish to thank our many friends for the kindness and generosity
for helping make this production possible; especially are we grateful to
our ever growing list of guarantors for their continued support, and also:
the Rector, Wardens and Vestry, George Hambleton, Bruce Spaulding,
Lionel Boucher, Beth Tebbetts, Johnson's Electric, John Hess
|
STAFF
Producer and Director
James A. Wood
Assistant to the Producer and Business Administrator
Ethel Shenton Jones
Accompanists
Jo Millett and Corinne Conlon
Chimes
Joanne Millett
Stage Manager
Ralph Wright
Stage Assistants
Roert Hoitt,
Carroll Leone,
Maurice Buckley,
Ralph Cudhea,
Thomas W. Butt,
Albert Bedard,
William J. Baybutt,
George Niles
Decor and Painting
Geoffrey Smith,
Dee Bradley,
Julie Carter,
Mrs. Parker Bradley
Scene Construction
Bob Goss,
George Hambleton,
Eileen Hoitt,
William J. Baybutt
Costumes
Beth Tebbetts, Chairman and Designer,
Pearl Stevenson,
Margaret Tamulonis,
Flora Cross,
Pearl Ware and
Hooker-Howe Costume Company, Haverhill
Properties and Set Decor
Betty DerManoogian,
Ora Travis,
Zoya Shlakis
Make-Up
Pearl Ware, Betty Badeau
Wardrobe Administrator
Phyllis Hjelm
House Manager and Seating
Marietta Vore
Ushers
Monday:
Flora Cross,
Pearl Stevenson,
Vera Buckley, and
Margaret Tamulonis;
Tuesday:
Betty Niles,
Flora Cross,
Sally Morgan and Dorothy Boucher;
Wednesday:
Rachael Simoneau,
Claire Joyal,
Lili Boyatsis and
Anne Olshewsky
Tickets
Clifford Monroe, Chairman,
Ethel Shenton Jones,
Helen Kiratsos,
Ora Travis,
Marcelle Houle
Publicity
Ralph Wright,
Marcelle Houle,
Bob Goss and
Ethel Jones
Photograph for Actorsingers
Ralph Wright
Refreshments
Monday & Tuesday: Unit VI
Wednesday: Litchfield PTA
|
Refreshments will be sold during intermissions
in the lounge, where smoking is permitted
NO SMOKING IN THE AUDITORIUM PLEASE
SYNOPSIS
Act I Scene 1: On the way to the Fair, near Corneville
Scene 2: The Hiring Fair, Corneville
(Intermission of ten minutes between acts)
Act II A room in the chateau of Corneville, the following night
(Intermission of ten minutes between acts)
Act III A park, near the chateau of Corneville
TIME -- 17th Century
"THE CHIMES OF NORMANDY"
At the opening curtain, villagers and peasants are on
their way to the hiring fair, and the ladies become
engaged in a bit of gossip with Serpolette, a village
good-for-nothing. Gaspard, a miser, who wishes to
have his niece, Germaine, marry the magistrate Bailli,
cames upon the scene and disperses the crowd. (Germaine
meanwhile is being sought by a young fisherman,
Grenicheux, who pretends he has saved her from drowning).
To escape from having to follow old Gaspard's power
Germaine takes advantage of the fair, and is hired by
Henri (who appears disguised as a Mexican). Both
Grenicheux and Serpolette follow her example, and
thus enjoy protection of their employer, Henri, the
Marquis of Corneville.
In the second act, within the chateau, the Marquis,
Germaine and his followers are determined to find
out who the supposed "ghosts" are who have given the
chateau its "haunted" name. Henri discovers it is
Gaspard, the miser, who has been hiding his gold and
treasures in the closed chateau. The discovery of
his hiding place drives Gaspard crazy when he hears
the chimes ringing out for the first time.
In the concluding act, a fete is in progress to honor
the return of the Marquis. Serpolette arrives as the
Marchioness, as papers found in the chateau seem to
convince her she is the lost heiress. Gaspard, however,
recovers his senses and proves the Germaine is
the true Marcioness, Henri and Germaine are at last
united (the reunion of two old Corneville familes-
the Lucenays and the name family of the village-
Corneville) Thus the right ones are united happily.
|