Notes from the Stage Manager's Box

Business & Finance, Industries & Professions, Industries, Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Notes from the Stage Manager's Box by John Barber, John Barber
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: John Barber ISBN: 9781476427713
Publisher: John Barber Publication: July 5, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: John Barber
ISBN: 9781476427713
Publisher: John Barber
Publication: July 5, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

This book is the story of my time with the National Westminster Theatre Club. It is a progress from unwilling volunteer in a One Act Play to novice stage hand and Stage Manager ending with a successful stint as producer for Grease.

This is not intended nor conceived as a manual for would-be Stage Managers or for those interested in stage craft. I hope though that this will help anyone who is looking for a career or involvement in the theatre and can learn something from my experience. You learn more from your mistakes than your successes and that is a truism which will become self-evident.

There are tales of production disasters, memorable performances and the funny side of staging a show from the auditions to first night mishaps. The book concentrates mainly on the eccentrics and the things that can and usually do go wrong on stage seen from the viewpoint of a Stage Manager.

It is also a personal account looking at ten years of the Theatre Club’s history from 1978 to 1987. Now renamed the RBS Theatre Company it is the oldest active Club of its kind since being formed in 1876.

I have drawn on my own career in the Bank to explain my involvement. You will not find stories of corporate take-overs of covert city deals. My professional life in the City of London is there to illustrate the background against which amateur dramatic companies and performers operate whilst being members of a large organisation. You will meet a lot of warm, talented people who worked for the Bank and became a close group of actors, singers and stage crew.

There are accounts of the staging of shows such as Oklahoma, South Pacific, Calamity Jane, Fiddler on the Roof, Grease and other less well known shows such as No, No Nanette. There are also a few black and white illustrations.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

This book is the story of my time with the National Westminster Theatre Club. It is a progress from unwilling volunteer in a One Act Play to novice stage hand and Stage Manager ending with a successful stint as producer for Grease.

This is not intended nor conceived as a manual for would-be Stage Managers or for those interested in stage craft. I hope though that this will help anyone who is looking for a career or involvement in the theatre and can learn something from my experience. You learn more from your mistakes than your successes and that is a truism which will become self-evident.

There are tales of production disasters, memorable performances and the funny side of staging a show from the auditions to first night mishaps. The book concentrates mainly on the eccentrics and the things that can and usually do go wrong on stage seen from the viewpoint of a Stage Manager.

It is also a personal account looking at ten years of the Theatre Club’s history from 1978 to 1987. Now renamed the RBS Theatre Company it is the oldest active Club of its kind since being formed in 1876.

I have drawn on my own career in the Bank to explain my involvement. You will not find stories of corporate take-overs of covert city deals. My professional life in the City of London is there to illustrate the background against which amateur dramatic companies and performers operate whilst being members of a large organisation. You will meet a lot of warm, talented people who worked for the Bank and became a close group of actors, singers and stage crew.

There are accounts of the staging of shows such as Oklahoma, South Pacific, Calamity Jane, Fiddler on the Roof, Grease and other less well known shows such as No, No Nanette. There are also a few black and white illustrations.

More books from John Barber

Cover of the book Christopher Marlowe: The Man Who Wrote Shakespeare by John Barber
Cover of the book Childhood Eczema by John Barber
Cover of the book The Wicked Lady by John Barber
Cover of the book The Lost Traveller by John Barber
Cover of the book An Echo from the Green Fields by John Barber
Cover of the book The Last Resort by John Barber
Cover of the book The Naked Cellist by John Barber
Cover of the book The Mysterious Death of Sarah Stout by John Barber
Cover of the book The Russian Doll by John Barber
Cover of the book The Tunnels Of Hertford by John Barber
Cover of the book Quote Sport Unquote by John Barber
Cover of the book Insults: Old, New, Borrowed, Blue by John Barber
Cover of the book The Fordhamton Trilogy by John Barber
Cover of the book Seven Days in May by John Barber
Cover of the book Death, Dying and Disappearing During the 1980's by John Barber
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy