Kingdown Community School, Warminster – The Sound Of Music

Wednesday 17th October 2007

From the programme –

Kingdown Community School
– a Sports and Vocational College –
presents
‘The Sound Of Music’

Wednesday 17th October – Friday 19th October 2007

By arrangement with Josef Weinberger Limited.

Cast

Maria : Anita Sykes
Captain Georg Von Trapp : Kyle Taylor
Baroness Elsa Schraeder : Katheryn Ovenden
Max Detweiler : Matt Graham
Rolf Gruber : Ben Johns
Franz : Carl Hodges
Liesl : Mel Harris
Friedrich : Ashley Holman
Louisa : Louise Vines
Kurt : Luke Byrne
Brigitta : Becky Boyd
Marta : Hannah Muston
Gretl : Jodie Brewer
Mother Abbess : Abbie Johns
Sister Margaretta : Jade Dewey
Sister Sophia : Sophia Achillea-Hughes / Katie Elliott
Sister Berthe : Sarah Welsh
Admiral Von Schreiber : Ben Griffiths
Frau Schmidt : Beth Gray
Baron Elberfeld : Jordan Taylor
Baroness Elberfeld : Eleanor Hewett
Herr Zeller : Adam Holman
Frau Zeller : Fiona Richardson
Nuns :
Hollie Earley
Alex Shobbrook
Alice Weston
Eleanor Hewett
Yasmin Braddell
Hannah Trimby
Sarah Jones
Laura Palmer
Fiona Richardson
Liz Abaya Hamilton
Ensemble :
Connor Good
Ollie Feltham
Henry Sandoe
James Burgoyne

Band

Violins :
Lyndy Bishop
Debbie Mousley
Kate Papworth
Cello : Theresa Dicker
Trumpets :
Mary Kastell
Tabitha Bell
Horn : Lauren Royce-Rogers
Flutes :
Laura Brookes
Georgina Evans
Clarinets :
David Shephard
Matthew Kellow
Emma Papworth
Oboes :
Sarah Todman
Alex Williams
Guitar : Ad Taylor-Weekes
Bass : Alex Keay
Percussion : Tony Stockley
Piano : Clemency Neale

Stage Set :
Mandy Mills
Dave Pallett
Kirsty Moles
Vicky Dix
Ellie-May Masters
Tom Saunders
Holly Southby
Oriana Hunt
Ignacia Hunt

Choreography :
Angela Murphy
Chris Thomas
plus members of the cast who were inspired by
their recent trip to see the West End version of the show.

Technical Director : Tom Sneddon

Backstage :
Sarah Tingey
Ellie-May Masters

Sound / Lighting :
Andrew Robinson
Oliver Trojak
Jamie Grey

Scene Changes :
William Trojak
Chris Redding

Tickets : Angela Murphy

Props Provision :
Sara Edwards
Sue Tenty
Angela Murphy
Karen Herbert

Poster / Ticket / Programme Design :
Pat Wright
Richard Tully

Costumes / Make-up :
Vicky Griffiths
Coral Pickles
Holly Deacon
Maggie Dulake
Sarah Tingey
Naomi Barnes

Site Managers :
Chris Trimby
Nick Trimby
Nigel Warrington

Director : Phil Partington

Musical Director : Anne Thomas

Vocal Rehearsals :
Emma Murray
Clemency Neale
Sarah Todman






Kingdown Community School, Warminster – Years 7 & 8 Swimming Gala 2005: Results

Friday 21st January 2005

Kingdown Community School, Warminster
Years 7 & 8 Swimming Gala
Friday 21st January 2005
Results

Year 7 Girls 25m Butterfly:
1st Penelope Ball,
2nd Francesca Barnard,
3rd Tansy Shingleton.

Year 7 Girls 25m Backstroke:
1st Francesca Barnard –R,
2nd Lauren Angove,
3rd Rhianne Jones.

Year 7 Girls Breaststroke:
1st Lauren Payne,
2nd Francesca Barnard,
3rd Alice Weston.

Year 7 Girls, 25m Freestyle:
1st Emma Ledbury,
2nd Lauren Payne,
3rd Rhianne Jones.

______

Year 7 Boys 25m Butterfly:
1st Adam Cross –R,
2nd Jack Findlay,
3rd Curtis Saunders.

Year 7 Boys 25m Backstroke:
1st Jake Ross,
2nd Jake Stone,
3rd Robin Liquorice.

Year 7 Boys 25m Breaststroke:
1st Will Livesey,
2nd Guy Trimby,
3rd Patrick Willmott.

Year 7 Boys 25m Freestyle:
1st Daniel McIntyre,
2nd Ryan North,
3rd Jake Rose.

_______

Year 8 Girls 25m Butterfly:
1st Beth Hargreaves –R,
2nd Sarah Fuller,
3rd Mikaela Dixon.

Year 8 Girls 25m Backstroke:
1st Beth Hargreaves –R,
2nd Grace Wakefield,
3rd Becky Boyd.

Year 8 Girls 25m Breaststroke:
1st Phoebe Carroll,
2nd Becky Lowe,
3rd Grace Wakefield.

Year 8 Girls 25m Freestyle:
1st Sarah Fuller,
2nd Mikaela Dixon,
3rd Emily Jones.

______

Year 8 Boys 25m Butterfly:
1st Jordan Smith –R,
2nd James Payne,
3rd Sam Smith.

Year 8 Boys 25m Backstroke:
1st James Payne –R,
2nd Ben Colborne,
3rd Jordan Smith.

Year 8 Boys Breaststroke:
1st Lewis Noble,
2nd Carl Hodges,
3rd Dominic Webb.

Year 8 Boys Freestyle:
1st Jordan Smith,
2nd Sam Meale,
3rd Tom Golledge.

= R = record.

________

The records were as follows:

Francesca Barnard (Back’): 19.01;

Adam Cross (B’fly): 17.31;

Beth Hargreaves (B’fly): 17.43;

Beth Hargreaves (Back’): 16.82;

Jordan Smith (B’fly): 17.37;

James Payne (Back’): 18.27;

Wimbledon Year 8 Girls Relay Team: 1.13.64.

____________

Overall House Results:

Loftus, Year 7 Boys 194, Year 7 Girls 199.
Total 393. 1st.

Twickenham, Year 7 Boys 180, Year 7 Girls 204.
Total 384. 2nd.

Wimbledon, Year 7 Boys 181, Year 7 Girls 165.
Total 346. 3rd.

Wembly, Year 7 Boys 155, Year 7 Girls 146.
Total 301. 4th.

______

Wimbledon, Year 8 Boys 134, Year 8 Girls 243.
Total 377. 1st.

Loftus, Year 8 Boys 181, Year 8 Girls 180.
Total 361. 2nd.

Wembly, Year 8 Boys 233, Year 8 Girls 116.
Total 349. 3rd.

Twickenham, Year 8 Boys 162, Year 8 Girls 171.
Total 333. 4th.

Kingdown Community School – Les Miserables – October 2004 -Programme

Programme

Kingdown Community School
– A Sports College –
presents
Les Miserables

pic

13th – 16th October 2004

by Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schonberg
based on the novel by Victor Hugo.

Music by Claude-Michel Schonberg.
Lyrics by Herbert Kretzmer.

Original text by Alain Boublil and Jean-Marc Natel.
Additional material by James Fenton.

School Edition specially adapted and licensed by
Music Theatre International
and
Cameron Mackintosh.

pic

Les Miserables: A synopsis

Act 1

Digne: 1815. The convict Jean Valjean is released from
the chain gang. He steals some of the Bishop’s silver.
The Bishop lies to save him. Valjean starts a new life.

Montreuil-sur Mer: 1823. Valjean, now ‘Monsieur Madelene’
is a respected factory owner and Mayor of the town.
Fantine, one of his workers, has an illegitimate child.
She goes onto the streets with the town whores. She is
arrested by Javert. Valjean demands that she is sent to
hospital. Valjean rescues a man trapped under a cart.
Javert tells him the ex-convict Valjean has been
re-captured. Valjean reveals his true identity. Valjean
promises the dying Fantine that he will find and care for
her daughter, Cosette. He escapes.

Montfermel: 1823. Cosette is living with the Thenardieres
and their daughter Eponine. Cosette is badly treated, so
Valjean pays the Thenardieres to let her go. He takes Cosette
to Paris.

Paris: 1832. There is unrest amongst the students and the
poor. Javert rescues Cosette and Valjean from Thenardiere’s
gang. He does not recognise Valjean. Marius, a student, has
fallen in love with Cosette. Eponine, who is in love with
Marius, agrees to help him find Cosette. Lamarque, a
popular leader, is killed. The students take to the streets.
Eponine brings Marius to Cosette. She prevents an attempt
to rob Valjean’s house by her father’s gang. Valjean tells
Cosette that they must leave the country.

Interval

Act 2
The students build the barricade. Marius sends Eponine with
a letter for Cosette. Valjean intercepts it. Eponine returns to the
barricade. There is a battle. Javert is exposed as a police spy.
Eponine is killed. Valjean arrives looking for Marius; he
refuses to kill Javert. The rebels are killed, and Valjean escapes
into the sewers with Marius. He meets Thenardiere, who is
robbing corpses, and then Javert. Javert agrees to let Valjean
take Marius to hospital. Javert commits suicide. Unaware of
the identity of his rescuer, Marius recovers, nursed by Cosette.
Valjean confesses his past to Marius. Marius and Cosette are
married. Thenardiere tries to blackmail Marius: he produces a
stolen ring, telling him that it belonged to Cosette’s father, a
murderer. Marius recognises his own ring, and realises that it
was Valjean who rescued him. Marius and Cosette go to Valjean.
He tells Cosette about her family history, and dies.

France, 1830
Conditions for the urban poor in nineteenth century France
were unimaginably bad. Working up to 18 hours a day in
appalling conditions for low wages, their plight was ignored.
When the barricades went up in Paris in July 1830, the
monarchy was overthrown. The rising middle class reaped
the benefit: the poor gained nothing. Much needed social
reform to help the urban poor failed to happen. Whenever
the dispossessed under-classes of Paris rebelled they were
crushed by the full force of the state. This is the setting
for Les Miserables.

Victor Hugo, author of the novel on which this musical is
based, was very aware of the plight of the urban poor. He
wrote: ‘People reduced to the extremity of need are driven
to the utmost limits of their resources . . . and darkness
enters their hearts. Within this darkness, they appear
utterly depraved, corrupt, and vile . . . and there comes a
point where the unfortunate and the infamous are grouped
together, merged in a single fateful world. They are
les miserables – the outcasts, the underdogs.’

pic

Liberty Leading The People 1830
102″ x 128″ Louvre, Paris.

This picture was inspired by the July Revolution
of 1830. Delacroix had not taken part in the fighting
and felt that the least he could do was ‘paint for his
country’. The red, white and blue of the French national
flag dominate the composition.

CAST
Jean Valjean : Olly Wright
Javert : Charles Taylor
The Bishop of Digne : Paul Barnes
Factory Foreman : Paul Barnes
Fantine : Philippa Griffiths
Bamatabois : Tom Hiscocks
Pimp : Michael Sides
Young Cosette : Sophie Hall
Thenardier : Michael Sides
Madame Thenardier : Gemma Carroll
Young Eponine : Rebecca Thomas
Gavroche : Alex Williams
Eponine : Lucy Ross
Cosette – Laura Hopkins
Montparnasse : Kyle Taylor
Brujon : Paul Barnes

STUDENTS
Enjolras : Tom Hiscocks
Marius : Craig Rees
Combeferre : Kyle Taylor
Feuilly : David Gale
Courferac : Paul Barnes
Joly : Jack Baker
Grantaire : Kyle Taylor
Lesgles / Fauchelevant /
Claquesous / injured man under cart : Luke Williams
Girl 1 : Hannah Shuttleworth
Girl 2 / Whore 3 / Street Urchin : Emily Davis
Girl 3 / Whore 1 / Woman : Laura Steer
Girl 4 / Girl 5 / Whore 2 : Kayleigh Spyers
Onlooker : Laura Brooks

Chain Gang / Constables / the Poor / Factory Workers /
Sailors / Whores / Drinkers / Wedding Guests
played by
Shaun Hurren, Chris Thomas, Rachel Freeman, Jess McCarthy,
Kim Blair, Alison Kimberley, Annie Jessop, Vicki Syrett,
Hannah Johnson, Jess Herring, Alisha Shah, Lauren Edgar,
Rachel Arthur, and members of the cast.

MUSICIANS
Piano : James Brown
Keyboard : Graham Savage
Reed 1 : Michelle Krawiec
Reed 2 : Peter Rees
Trumpet : Mary Kestell
Horn : Sophie Letheren
Guitar / Bass : Kevin Rowe
Percussion / Drums : Steve Jobbins

Les Miserables is produced and directed by
the Creative Arts Department.

Lighting / Sound :
Ben Griffiths, Andrew Quick,
Simon Quick, Matthew Notley, Jenny Weston.

Backstage:
Jeremy Lane, Lotta Welpton, Jenny Weston,
Natalie Williams, Kelly Wilson, Jess Wright.

Special Thanks to:
Andrew Forbes-Lane, David Thomas, John Roberts,
The Site Managers, The Design Department,
Yvonne Syrett, Coral Pickles.

Acknowledgements:
For the loan of furniture – The Top Shop,
Warminster High Street (behind the Old Bell);
The Gorge Inn, Shrewton.
For costume hire – Zenith Youth Theatre Company.
For additional lighting – Enlightened Lighting.

Closed Circuit Television In Warminster

Monday 1st December 2003

From In Touch, the Newsletter of Warminster Conservative Councillors, Winter 2003 edition

Warminster Town Councillor Colonel Ultan Ryan writes:

“Warminster Town has for a number of years suffered from a disproportionate number of disorder and crime incidents.” This was the basis on which we established our bid to the Home Office for financial support for a closed circuit TV (CCTV) system for the Town Centre. This followed a comprehensive study whereby every household in Warminster was asked whether they would support such a system. We had a 234% response to that letter overwhelming supporting us. A public meeting followed which again supported us apart from the inevitable complainants who feared an invasion of privacy.

A Partnership Trust was formed to include the Army, Police, Councillors, a prominent businessman, a permanent evaluator from Cranfield University and District Council Crime Prevention staff. An enormous amount of work ensued preparing the bid and establishing progress of grants, should the bid prove successful. On 16th June 1998 we were informed that we had been awarded the maximum £74,525 by the Home Office, only one of nine authorities in the UK to be so nominated. This, of course, was only the beginning. We now had to find a further £92,000 but that is another story. Suffice to say, on 6th May 1999 we had nine operational cameras with the control room in Dewey House [at North Row, Warminster] manned almost entirely by volunteers. In other words, from inception to completion, 21 months.

Within 3 months, we had submitted a further bid to cover the remainder of the Town Centre including our Lakeside Park [Lake Pleasure Grounds]. Although we failed with the Town Centre section of the bid, to our delight, we were awarded £67,000 to install 3 cameras in the Park. With judicious use of the allocated resources and the blessing of the Home Office, we were able to install a fourth camera covering the entrance to the Park thus “sealing’ it off. One area of concern remained, viz the old Safeways car park, and the entrance to the Three Horseshoes Walk. Thanks to the Five Towns Initiative, this camera is about to be installed. Westbury and the Trading Estate will go live in the next 2 months, monitored from our control room. The managers of the Walk are about to install 3 cameras with 2 more to follow.

How successful is the scheme? CCTV has made a significant contribution to 3 murder enquiries; it has saved hundreds of hours of Police time producing ready evidence. The Police cannot speak too highly of the system, the operators and the management.

Closure Of Oscars Nightclub At Longleat

Friday 24th January 2003

The Wiltshire Gazette & Herald has reported:

Oscars To Close After 28 Years

EXCLUSIVE: A NIGHTCLUB with a history of drug, alcohol and violence-related crime will close next week.

Mayfield Concessions Ltd has surrendered its lease for Oscars nightclub on the Longleat estate. Revellers only have one weekend left to party because the music stops on Monday.

Longleat will take over the business, which includes a restaurant, but it will not be used as a nightclub.

There have been frequent problems at Oscars during its 28-year history. In September last year, a violent attack outside the club left one man with serious facial injuries. The fight involved a gang of 20 men from London and soldiers from the Green Jackets regiment, based in Warminster. A former bouncer was convicted in March 2001 for savagely beating a man on the dance floor.

Clubbers have been found with drugs such as cannabis and ecstasy and many people were worried that the nightspot was becoming an easy target for suppliers. Helen Meikle, chairman of Parents Against Drugs and Solvent Abuse, said: “You often get drugs where a lot of young people are and dealers seek them out. At least there is now one less outlet they can use.”

Warminster town councillor, John Syme, has spoken out about the club despite assurances from its manager, Keith Widdows, that security measures were as tight as possible. Cllr Syme said: “I have been aware of the problems with drugs and violence for a long time, but now this will end.”

Wiltshire police had tried to get the club’s alcohol and late hours licence revoked in court earlier this month, but the case was adjourned. Officers are now waiting to see what happens to the alcohol licence in February before making a comment.

Oscars has agreed to surrender its Section 77 licence, which allowed it to open until 2am, but no-one has approached West Wiltshire District Council over its public entertainment licence.

Charles Goodbody, of Middleton and Upsall solicitors, is representing Mayfield Concessions Ltd. He said: “The Justices’ licence, which allows the premises to sell alcohol, remains and I will make sure it is transferred to another employee at Longleat in February.”

Brian Mayfield of Mayfield Concessions Ltd and Oscars manager Keith Widdows were unavailable for comment.

Attendance At Schools In Wiltshire, September 2002

A total of 64,793 pupils were attending 260 county-council maintained schools in Wiltshire at September 2002.

> 35,291 children attended 220 primary schools.

> 29,084 students attended 34 middle and secondary schools.

> 418 young people were educated at Wiltshire’s six special schools.

Information from Best Value And Council Tax Summary, How Your Money Will Be Spent 2003/04, published by West Wiltshire District Council.

Ciro Citterio, Men’s Outfitters At 3 High Street, Warminster, Has Closed

March 2001

“Ciro Citterio, the men’s outfitters, at 3 High Street, Warminster, has closed. The company, it seems, has gone into administration.”

~  A note by Danny Howell during March in his 2001 Dairy.