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A Christmas Carol - Rehearsal Diary

11/8/2019

1 Comment

 

A Christmas Carol About Scrooge and His friends
My Rehearsal Diary by William James McCauley-Tinniswood

I am doing A Christmas Carol. My name is William and I am 5 and a half years old. We rehearse on Sundays and I like doing the show. This is my rehearsal diary.

Sunday October 10th
On Sunday we did two warm ups. We played a game called splat. In splat I had to lead the game. I said splat and they had to duck down. If they go last they lose the game and have to sit down.  This is a fun game.
We sung Ding Dong Merrily On High and we tried to sing loud and clearly. We had to listen and watch what Emma was doing. Her job is to train us how to be good singers and actors. She is the director. She helps us and is nice.
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We sung a song called The Shepherds Carol. I work with Amelia and Jess. They help me. Jess lets me draw in her book in breaktime and I took the picture home with me.

I like doing songs and doing the scenes. I like doing pat a cake with Amelia and Jess in one of the scenes. They help me a lot on stage so I know where I am and what I am doing.

We practiced the start of the show. At the beginning of the show I run on all by myself and I say, come on everybody and then they run on. We play and then we sing  Still, Still, Still Can You Hear The Falling Snow. We have to hold candles and lanterns as it’s Christmas and cold. The best bit about rehearsals is singing. I like singing

November 3rd rehearsal
On Sunday I spoke to my friends and had fun.  At lunch I told everyone about lots of history things. I love history.  In rehearsal we did Ding Dong Merrily On high to make it perfect and so its good for the show.  We also had my mum, Emma who is the director playing the piano. I had to sing Away In A Manger with Florence at the very front of the stage.  It’s a bit scary but I keep my scared in my tummy and my brave in my head.
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In the party scene, on the 12 days of Christmas song I sang the first verse all by myself with nobody helping me. That me feel very happy.  I remembered to be brave in my head like my mummy had told me.  I loved singing on my own. 
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My Painting

This drawing is of Scrooge’s house and the Christmas tree. Scrooge is not allowed presents because he is mean and naughty. The presents are for the good people. But because Scrooge was not nice and cruel and he only cared about money and had to work every day with a quill people didn't like him very much. When people come into his office he yells at them about Christmas, he says we should not have Christmas, that's why he only cares about money.
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The ghosties were not being nice when they were telling him Marley was dead. Marley was Scrooge’s helper. The thing was, the ghosts were telling him to stop being bad and he had to be nice to everyone and say hello, Merry Christmas.

I hope you enjoy the show.
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1 Comment

A VERY VICTORIAN CHRISTMAS

11/2/2019

1 Comment

 

Victorian Christmas traditions by Joshua Shearer and Nils Collins

Did you know that before Queen Victoria‘s reign started in 1837 nobody in Britain had heard of Santa Claus or Christmas Crackers? No Christmas cards were sent and most people did not have holidays from work. By the end of the Victorian era it was considered to be the biggest and most important annual celebration in the Victorian calendar. Many of the Victorian Christmas traditions are still in use now. In fact, Charles Dickens is credited with spreading many of the Christmas traditions in Victorian times. His book, A Christmas Carol, was very popular and it influenced how Victorian families approached the celebration of Christmas.
 
The Christmas Tree
Many people think that Prince Albert (Queen Victoria’s husband) was responsible for shaping how Christmas was celebrated by British Victorian families. He was born in Germany. In Germany evergreen trees were traditionally brought into the home at Christmas time and decorated (with candles, sweets and fruit). In 1848 the royal family were pictured celebrating Christmas around such a decorated tree, and the fashion for Christmas trees spread very quickly from this point on
                                                  
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Christmas Cards
In 1843 Henry Cole, the first director of the Victoria and Albert Museum, asked an artist to make a card for him to send out at Christmas. It featured a family sitting around a dinner table and a Christmas message. The idea seemed to catch on and soon many wealthy Victorian families were sending out their own cards.
 
Victorian children were encouraged to make their own cards and there is even evidence that Queen Victoria had her own children do this. The first cards usually had pictures of the Nativity scene on them. In late Victorian era, robins and snow-scenes became popular. In those times the postmen were nicknamed 'Robin Postmen' because of the red uniforms they wore. This is why Christmas cards often show a robin delivering cards.
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​Victorian Christmas Crackers
In 1848 a British sweet maker, Tom Smith, came up with the idea for the Christmas cracker. The idea came to him when he saw sugared almonds sold in twists of paper in Paris. He used this as inspiration for his Christmas crackers – sweets wrapped in a paper package that snapped apart when you pulled the ends.
 
His idea was adapted and improved. The sweets were often replaced with Christmas paper hats and small gifts were added. The Christmas crackers of the later Victorian era were quite similar to the crackers placed on today’s Christmas dinner tables.

Victorian Christmas Presents and Gifts
At the beginning of the Victorian period families often gave and received presents to celebrate the New Year. But, as the importance of Christmas as a family celebration grew, the gift-giving was moved to Christmas.
 
The first Christmas presents were fairly small – like fruits, nuts, sweets and handmade items.  These would be hung from the branches of the Christmas tree.
 
The size and expense of the gifts steadily increased. Victorians started to buy gifts from shops and they were often too big to hang from the tree. By the end of the Victorian era, many families had taken to leaving Christmas gifts under the tree.
Victorian Christmas Dinner
In northern England roast beef was the traditional fayre for Christmas dinner while in London and the south, goose was favourite. Many poor people made do with rabbit. On the other hand, the Christmas Day menu for Queen Victoria and family in 1840 included both beef and of course a royal roast swan or two.
The first Victorian mince pies were made of meat (a recipe that dates from Tudor times), but the mince pies made later in the nineteenth century didn’t contain meat and were pretty much like the ones we enjoy today.
 
Although some Victorian families celebrated Christmas with roast goose or beef, it was in Victorian times that roast turkey became the main part of the Christmas dinner. By the end of the Victorian period, most families would roast a turkey for Christmas.        
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​Christmas Carols
Christmas carols became popular in Victorian times, with singers going from house to house singing new popular carols, such as “O come all ye Faithful”, “Once in Royal David’s City”, and “Away in a Manger”, which are still seen as important symbols of Christmas today.

Holidays
As the Industrial Revolution brought prosperity, the idea of official holidays was established for the first time. Middle class workers were able to take Christmas Day and Boxing Day off, to spend with their families. Charity to the poor also became a tradition. The term “Boxing Day” was invented by the Victorians, inspired by the boxes of gifts that were given to servants and poor people on the day after Christmas Day.
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Other Facts About Christmas in Victorian Times
The family was very important to the Victorians. Christmas was seen as a time to focus on family, and most of the Victorian Christmas traditions (such as gift giving, eating a Christmas dinner, decorating the Christmas tree) were shared by all of the family members.
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1 Comment

    Author

    Emma is a freelance theatre practitioner, director, actor, writer and facilitator. Founder and Artistic Director of Step On Stage.  

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