| 
  The
  Cicala Players in Queen Elizabeth Slept Here by Talbot Rothwell
 Staged: 29 and 30 May 1953 at the Fortune Theatre London  When looking
  back to the days of the Cicala Players, there will always be an element of
  the “unknown”, as we can only guess how these people fitted in a busy
  forty-five hour working week with home lives and the time and dedication to
  their amateur dramatic group.  In the
  write-up below, from Martins Bank Magazine’s Autumn 1953 issue, we were a
  little shocked to read the following comments regarding the performance of
  Yvonne Lovelock -  “How this naturally attractive girl was
  made up to look a half-witted slut is a secret between her and the maker-up,
  but the credit for the performance which matched her appearance is entirely
  hers”.  Perhaps this is not the most
  subtle way to praise someone who is a newcomer to the Cicala Players?  In fact, due to what is termed “resting”
  among the acting profession, it was not just Miss Lovelock who made a notable
  debut on the stage of the Fortune Theatre that night, and there is also
  praise for the performance of John Peters, whose schoolboy character was
  extremely well observed…
 
 
   
    |  For their Spring
    Show the Cicala Players chose the recent West End success “Queen Elizabeth
    Slept Here” by Talbot Rothwell, presenting it just before the Coronation,
    on the nights of Friday and Saturday, May 29th and 30th. Following the good
    example set by the North Eastern Players (or because things just worked out
    that way) a number of the stars were rested and several keen and able young
    boys and girls were given their first opportunity, one or two appearing for
    the first time on any stage. The weight of this play is borne on the backs
    of the two principals who play the part of the young married couple who
    acquire a ruinous cottage
    and make a home out of it.
 |  
    | 
 
 Eric Prentice Arthur Odell Margaret
    O’Neill  Ernest Yates and Mary Howse 
 | If they fail in
    their parts the whole play fails. The choice of Mary Howse and Ernest Yates
    was ideal and they both sustained their roles admirably. The honours of the
    performance belong primarily to Mary for the most finished and appealing
    characterisation of the show. Ernest Yates is to be specially commended for
    restraining his natural tendency to burlesque a comic part. To have done so
    would have ruined this part, which, as he did it, gave just the right
    amount of comic relief to Mary's transports of blissful rapture. Equally
    good was Eric Prentice as the ubiquitous gardener whose appearance invariably
    heralded some fresh disaster or additional expense. His stance and
    postures, especially, were most natural. | 
 
 John Peters  and John Howard |   |  
    | John Howard,
    excellently made up as the peppery retired Colonel, gave us the polished
    performance we have come to expect from him in such roles. Of the newcomers
    we hand the palm to Yvonne Lovelock for her portrayal of Hester, the maid.
    How this naturally attractive girl was made up to look a half-witted slut
    is a secret between her and the maker-up, but the credit for the
    performance which matched her appearance is entirely hers. Well done!
    Congratulations, too, to John Peters as the precocious horror of a
    schoolboy. 
 |   |  
    | 
 Yvonne Lovelock 
 | His performance was
    convincing to the point where we could cheerfully have laid hands on him
    ourselves on more than one occasion. Sylvia Shepherd played the
    part of the daughter, whose head is turned by the visiting actor, most
    attractively and within the scope of the part George Kent gave an adequate
    presentation of the forsaken lover. The actor was portrayed by John Ivey.
    If the make-up and dress had been more “arty” and the portrayal more
    theatrical the result would have been more convincing. As it was, the
    contrast between the lover forsaken and the interloper was not sharp
    enough. | 
 Sylvia Shepherd John Ivey George Kent and
    Margaret O’Neill |   |  
    | Winifred Hill's
    portrayal of the visiting neighbour seemed a little indecisive as though
    she was not confident of her cues. Rosemary Wilson
    has only one fleeting appearance to make as the cook, but this was quite up
    to the standard required. 
 |   |  
    | 
 Margaret O’Neill Arthur Odell Mary Howse
    and Ernest Yates | Margaret O'Neill played
    the part of the touring actress with the right amount of disillusionment
    and “blaséness” and Arthur Odell scored another success as the fraudulent
    rich uncle. There were rather more prompts on the first night than we are
    accustomed to expect from the Cicala Players and those, where they
    occurred, spoilt the essential speed of the production but probably if we
    had attended on the second night, this comment would not have been called
    for. The play was produced by Charles Hawkins. Although
    a considerable number of new members have joined the company these last few
    months, owing to the peculiar circumstances in which production took place,
    just before Coronation Week when London theatre attendances were falling
    due to outside attractions, it is not yet possible to tell what effect this
    new support will have on the finances. There was, again, a loss on this
    production but the next show will provide the crucial test as to the
    feasibility of being able to break even on a West End performance.  |   |  
    |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
 
   
  M
 Sep3M x |