Anyone go to a panto when they were little? I never went to one with anyone famous, there used to be one at the old 'ABC' Theatre in Didsbury which the Manchester Poly's drama students used to put on, so my mum would take me to that as the tickets were cheap. I didn't mind, I had fun booing the villain and especially at the end, they used to throw Pic N Mix into the audience, which was all gathered in a little cluster near the stage. Maybe one of them went on to become a huge star and I never even realised?
Proper pantos at the Davenport in Stockport or the Palace in Manchester, they used to cost a bomb, never went to them. The star of the panto at the Davvy would always be the one to switch on the local Christmas lights. One year it was Stu 'I Could Crush a Grape' Francis, the really big news was when it was Lewis Collins just after the Professionals had finished: I think he was Baron Hardup or something. By the late 80s, though, it was all rubbishy Neighbours rejects, and I never knew who they were.
In Manchester in 1983, I vividly remember posters for the Palace panto starring the stars of Game for a Laugh, which had just finished on TV. I must admit, I was tempted to go, as I was going through my weird Sarah Kennedy phase, lol, but I'd just turned 14 and it would have been like social death to go to a panto! I soon got over it.
Anyway, I'm trying to persuade others at the radio station to take part in a short panto I've written for radio, called 'Discorella'. It's like Cindarella, only set in 1979, and about going to the disco rather than the ball. It's just totally daft stuff which amuses me, whether it'll amuse the people I want to take part in it for my Christmas show, who knows?!
Proper pantos at the Davenport in Stockport or the Palace in Manchester, they used to cost a bomb, never went to them. The star of the panto at the Davvy would always be the one to switch on the local Christmas lights. One year it was Stu 'I Could Crush a Grape' Francis, the really big news was when it was Lewis Collins just after the Professionals had finished: I think he was Baron Hardup or something. By the late 80s, though, it was all rubbishy Neighbours rejects, and I never knew who they were.
In Manchester in 1983, I vividly remember posters for the Palace panto starring the stars of Game for a Laugh, which had just finished on TV. I must admit, I was tempted to go, as I was going through my weird Sarah Kennedy phase, lol, but I'd just turned 14 and it would have been like social death to go to a panto! I soon got over it.
Anyway, I'm trying to persuade others at the radio station to take part in a short panto I've written for radio, called 'Discorella'. It's like Cindarella, only set in 1979, and about going to the disco rather than the ball. It's just totally daft stuff which amuses me, whether it'll amuse the people I want to take part in it for my Christmas show, who knows?!
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