Cat Taylor's Mewsings

Balancing left and right brain madness…

Tag Archives: dickens christmas fair

Entertainment Proposals for the 2015 Great Dickens Christmas Fair due May 31st

DF15logo-longarch-200RGBJust a quick reminder that entertainment proposals for the 2015 Great Dickens Christmas Fair are due by the end of May. This year we are especially looking for variety performers and one more children’s show. If you have a new show or group that you’d like to propose, please visit this webpage to find out more about performing at the fair.
http://dickensfair.com/involved/vendors-performers/performerinfo

Please keep the following in mind if you are proposing a show:

  • No fire performances
  • No prerecorded music/audio, video/animation
  • Costumes, language, sets and props must be appropriate for mid-19th century London (not Renaissance)
  • No modern performance styles (no aerial silks, etc.) or obvious modern (vs. Victorian) technology
  • Able to fit on available stage sizes

Please consult all of the information on the performer’s web page before proposing a show.
Proposals may be sent to entertainment director Cat Taylor at dickensfair@cattaylor.com

(Some items on the website may have last year’s information, we are in the process of updating. Please note new email address.)

36th Great Dickens Christmas Fair Tickets Onsale Now!

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Tickets onsale now! Step into a Victorian wonderland of waltzing, feasting, laughing and singing!

Purchase “Print at Home” tickets now through October 15th and save $5 off the box office price of $25 Adult tickets (good weekends 1 thru 3). Children’s tickets are only $10 online!

Discover new ways to amaze and delight your senses around every corner… Applaud, marvel, carouse, dance, and mingle with old friends and new, at the 36th annual Great Dickens Christmas Fair! Purchase your tickets early and save!

A Tale of Two Scrooges (Three, Actually)

The face of London’s favourite curmudgeon will look both different and familiar at the Great Dickens Christmas Fair this year. Don Hardy, who stepped into Martin’s large and well-loved shoes for Dickens 2012, will be snarling his way through the streets again this year! Other commitments drew him away from last year’s show, and Dennis Parks, who made a striking impression in his maiden voyage at Dickens Fair as the deliciously loathsome Wackford Squeers (from Nicholas Nickelby) stepped in to give a bravura turn in 2013. He is returning to his first love, improvisational interactive theatre, as Squeers and promises other delights as well.

Please welcome Don back to the family, and support both of these actors as they settle into their roles.

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Dickens Fair Character Auditions Tomorrow Evening (including Scrooge)

A quick reminder that the Great Dickens Christmas Fair will be having auditions tomorrow evening, September 18th for Ebenezer Scrooge and Other Dickens characters. The pivotal role of Ebeneezer Scrooge will be a paid position. More information can be found at http://www.cattaylor.com/2012CharacterAuditions2.html

 

From the Great Dickens Christmas Fair Missive: Charles Dickens Bicentennial Celebrations

As well as being the entertainment director, I write the participant missive (newsletter) for the Great Dickens Christmas Fair, most of which is usually in-house things about stages and parades and such, but this is a special one regarding the bicentennial celebrations for the birth of Charles Dickens, so I thought I’d share. The formatting didn’t turn out perfectly, but after days of churning out 1099’s I hope you’ll forgive me.

Please visit the website of the Great Dickens Christmas Fair at dickensfair.com

The Great Dickens Christmas Fair Missive
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Dickens Christmas Fair 2012
Charles Dickens Bicentennial Celebrations

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Notes from your Missive Maven:

We are rapidly approaching the 200th anniversary of the birth of our progenitor, the illustrious Charles Dickens, on February 7th. There are celebrations and exhibits planned all over the world, including a very special event this Saturday by our friends at PEERS.

We are busy planning celebrations that will take place at this years Great Dickens Christmas Fair and will keep you informed. We invite your creative input! Please email your ideas suggestions to office@redbarnproductions.org.

We also have a page on the Dickens 2012 website:
http://www.dickens2012.org/event/34th-annual-great-dickens-christmas-fair-and-victorian-holiday-party

Many thanks to Rickie Bolin, Therese Porter, Cathleen Myers and Heidi B for their contributions to this missive.

Cat Taylor

Entertainment Director and Missive Maven

In This Missive

PEERS: The Charles Dickens Bicentennial Ball – This Saturday
A Biography
A Wreathlaying Ceremony in Westminster Abbey
Exhibitions Around the World
New Books
Recent Print Articles
Online Articles & Resources

PEERS: The Charles Dickens Bicentennial Ball
(A Celebration of Mr Charles Dickens’ 200th Birthday)

Saturday, February 4, 2012
The Masonic Lodge of San Mateo

Doors Open: 6:45 pm
Dance Lesson: 7:00 pm
Theatrical Performance by Charles Dickens: 8:00 pm

Formal Dancing Begins: 9:00 pm

Celebrate the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens’ birth at a formal Victorian Ball and theatrical performance hosted by Prime Minister Lord Palmerston for Her Majesty Queen Victoria and His Royal Highness Prince Albert.

Dance beautiful rotary waltzes, polkas, mazurka waltzes, schottisches, quadrilles, and other set dances popular during the time of Charles Dickens, beautifully arranged by Bangers & Mash, the finest band in Dickens’ London. All set dances will be briefly taught or called at the ball.

Mr. Dickens himself (Robert Young) will open the ball with a dramatic reading of one of his most exciting scenes, “Sykes and Nancy,” adapted from Oliver Twist. This is a thrilling theatrical re-creation not to be missed! Also performing are Miss Fanny Price and Mr. Daniel Boozer of the Peerless Music Hall and the celebrated “Swedish Nightingale,” Miss Jenny Lind.

The nominal year of our event is 1855, but suggested costume is evening dress from the time of Mr. Dickens’ active literary career (1837-1871) or modern evening dress. Given the talent of our San Francisco Bay Area costumers, this should be an extremely beautiful costume evening, but, as always, costumes are admired but not required.

Punch and a light Olde English snack will be served (Your potluck contributions to Lady Palmerston’s kitchen are most appreciated).

Red Barn Productions and Foolish Tree Films will be creating a YouTube piece of the evening to co-promote PEERS and the Dickens Fair for the Bicentennial.  It will be posted on his actual birthday February 7th!

For more information, please see: http://www.peers.org/Dickens.html

PEERS will also be hosting the
Charles Dickens Picnic Dance

in Alameda’s beautiful Lincoln Park
Saturday, August 4, 2012
http://www.peers.org/dickenspicnic.html

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A Biography
(from Therese Porter)

Charles John Huffam Dickens was born on 7 February 1812 in Landport, Portsea. The second of the eight children of John and Elizabeth Dickens – charming but impecunious members of the struggling genteel class – he grew grew up to become one of the greatest and most loved writers of the 19th century.
From Charles Dickens at the V&A
From Charles Dickens at the V&
His family moved almost constantly throughout his childhood, eventually confining their peregrinations to London and its immediate environs; Dickens came to know – and describe – the city so well that is forever associated with him. He received little formal education, and at the age of twelve was sent to work in a shoeblacking factory after his father was consigned to debtors prison. The sprectre of poverty, debt, and the hardships of children would forever haunt his prose.
After a passionate but thwarted love affair with Maria Beandnell, a banker’s daughter, he married Catherine Hogarth, the daughter of a Scots family prominent in the arts. He and Catherine had ten children, and although the marriage was initially happy it eventually ended in a scandalous legal separation, in part due to his involvement with Ellen Ternan, a young actress.
Throughout his life he pursued multiple careers as a journalist, critic, amateur actor and stage manager, playwright and philanthropist. Although his quick mind, lively intelligence, penetrating curiosity and prodigious energy would have allowed him to succeed in any of these professions, the world is blessed by his turning in his young manhood to writing for his living. He went on to create some of the most enduring characters in literature, rivaling even Shakepeare. Oliver Twist, Samuel Pickwick, Sam Weller, Miss Havisham, Mrs Gamp, Nicholas Nickleby, and so many more – these uniquely realised characters live as vividly today as they did to his earliest readers. His deep interest in the problems of his time generated real change and controversy in his lifetime, and the term “Dickensian” still has the power to invoke certain conditions. His life was as intriguing and filled with wonder as any of his novels, and many of the situations and people he encountered found their ways into his works.

He virtually invented the modern Christmas with a series of Yuletide themed books and stories, the most popular of which was “A Christmas Carol,” published in 1843. Renowned for his lively and lavish entertaining, he was himself a great celebrator and promoter of Christmas for most of his life.In many ways Dickens was the harbinger of the modern celebrity author and in his time he was universally known, loved and celebrated. He traveled extensively on the Continent and visited America twice. The last several years of his life were spent giving wildly popular dramatic readings of his written works. He died of a stroke at the age of 58 in 1870, at his country home of Gads Hill and was buried in Westminster Abbey.

His works are still read, taught and adapted to the stage and screen, and none of his works has gone out of print.

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 A Wreathlaying Ceremony in Westminster Abbey

Charles Dickens Bicentenary Commemoration at Westminster Abbey

A wreathlaying ceremony will take place in Poets’ Corner, Westminster Abbey, at 11am on Tuesday 7 February 2012. The ceremony will include readings from the Dickens’s novels and his other writings by actor and director Ralph Fiennes, author Claire Tomalin and two of Dickens’s descendants.

 The Dean of Westminster, the Very Reverend Dr John Hall, said: ‘Dickens’  humanity and compassion made an extraordinary impact on Victorian England through his writings, which remain immensely popular. This bicentenary should help renew our commitment to improving the lot of the disadvantaged of our own day.’

All tickets for this event have now been allocated.

Click on the photo to visit the Dickens 200 website.

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Exhibitions Around the World

Dickens 2012:
http://www.dickens2012.org/section/exhibitions

– a master list of sorts that compiles major events, exhibitions, performances and other resources from around the world.

The Dickens Project at University of California at Santa Cruz
http://dickens.ucsc.edu/

The Museum of London:
http://www.museumoflondon.org.uk/London-Wall/Whats-on/Exhibitions-Displays/Dickens-London/Default.htm

– information on the exhibit that will be at the Museum of London until June 10th.

Charles Dickens’ London: Death, Duplicity And Opium Dens Revealed
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2011/12/08/dickens-london-death-christmas-carol-opium-oliver-twist_n_1135890.html

– an article on the exhibit; from the Huffington Post.

A Tale of one man and his city…
http://www.victorianamagazine.com/archives/14101

– another article on the exhibit; from Victorian Magazine

British Library:

A Hankering after Ghosts: Charles Dickens and the Supernatural
http://www.bl.uk/whatson/exhibitions/cdickens/index.html
– an exhibit on Dickens’ fascination with the supernatural.

http://www.bl.uk/learning/tarea/secondaryfehe/dickenslecture
/dickenslectureseries.html

– an online lecture series to accompany the exhibit on Dickens’ interest in supernatural phenomena.

http://www.bl.uk/learning/langlit/dickens/dickenshome.html
– “Dickens in Context” – resources to investigate the key themes of Dickens’s novels.

University of Delaware: Dickens at 200
http://www.lib.udel.edu//ud/spec/exhibits/dickens/index.html

– a virtual version of the exhibition that will be in the University of Delaware library until June 8th.

A Virtual Exhibition: The Extraordinary Life of Charles Dickens
http://www.charlesdickensonline.com/
– a Dickens enthusiast’s virtual collection of portraits, plays, manuscripts, etc.


New Books

(the Amazon links are informational, please support your local independent booksellers when possible)

Charles Dickens: A Life
by Claire Tomalin
http://www.amazon.com/Charles-Dickens-Life-Claire-Tomalin/dp/1594203091/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1328039042&sr=1-2

Charles Dickens: The Dickens Bicentenary 1812-2012
by Lucinda Dickens Hawksley
http://www.amazon.com/Charles-Dickens-Bicentenary-1812-2012/dp/1608870529/ref=sr_1_6?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1328039354&sr=1-6

Charles Dickens
by Michael Slater
http://www.amazon.com/Charles-Dickens-Michael-Slater/dp/0300112076/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1328039042&sr=1-1

Becoming Dickens: The Invention of a Novelist
by Robert Douglas-Fairhurst
http://www.amazon.com/Becoming-Dickens-Invention-Robert-Douglas-Fairhurst/dp/0674050037/ref=sr_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1328039042&sr=1-3

The World of Charles Dickens: The Life, Times and Works of the Great Victorian Novelist
by Martin Fido
http://www.amazon.com/World-Charles-Dickens-Victorian-Novelist/dp/1847329438/ref=sr_1_14?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1328039282&sr=1-14

The Life of Charles Dickens: The Illustrated Edition
by John Forster
http://www.amazon.com/Life-Charles-Dickens-Illustrated/dp/1402772858/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1328032752&sr=8-1

Dickens’s Victorian London
by Alex Werner and Tony William
http://www.museumoflondonshop.co.uk/dickenss-victorian-london-by-alex-werner-and-tony-william.htm


Recent Print Articles

The Smithsonian
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/Going-Mad-for-Charles-Dickens.html

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/The-Essentials-Charles-Dickens.html

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/Dickens-Secret-Affair.html

Vanity Fair
http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2012/02/hitchens-201202

The Wallstreet Journal
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204409004577156272439727192.html

The Telegraph
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/charles-dickens/8994380/Novelists-pick-their-favourite-Dickens.html

Time
http://www.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,2104835,00.html

Online Articles & Resources

Dickens’s London in Pictures
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/charles-dickens/9018185/Dickenss-London-in-pictures.html  

Charles Dickens in Pictures
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/charles-dickens/8954312/Charles-Dickens-in-pictures.html

The Dickens Project’s Mini-Documentary
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJgV87yGBSs

Time Magazine
http://entertainment.time.com/tag/top-10-charles-dickens-novels/
-Building up to Charles Dickens’ birthday, TIME will be posting commentary on novel a day in a countdown to the top Dickens novel of all time. 

The New Yorker
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/08/29/110829fa_fact_lepore

A.Word.A.Day Contest for Original “Wellerisms” 
http://wordsmith.org/words/wellerism.html
 

Pop Matters
http://www.popmatters.com/pm/post/153712-the-curious-case-of-the-closure-of-the-charles-dickens-museum/

David Perdue’s Charles Dickens Page
http://charlesdickenspage.com/

DickensBlog
http://dickensblog.typepad.com/dickensblog/ 
– A blog for all things Dickens: quotes, reflections, adaptations, references and tributes from other authors, and more.

The Victorian Web
http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/dickens/index.html

– a comprehensive list of resources, printed and on the web. Includes information on historical context, scholarly writing on themes/characterization/etc and other commentary and imagery.


Quick Links…

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The Great Dickens Fair Website

Dickens Fair Performer Page
Cat’s Missive Page
The Great Dickens Fair Facebook page
Dickens Fair Twitter
Save the Cow Palace
Join the Public Email List

Contact Information
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For specific questions regarding performing at the Fair, please email Cat Taylor
If your group would like to perform at the Fair for just one day (school caroling groups, etc.) please email Robert Young
For specific questions regarding vending at the Fair please email Vendors
For specific questions the beverage department please email Beverage
For questions regarding costumes, please email Costumes
To join the public email list, please click here http://www.dickensfair.com/informed