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A Busy Day
by Fanny Burney
An heiress returns from
India, her fiance following. She is about to tell her nouveau
riche family the good news but the family of her fiance has other
ideas. Mayhem and mistaken identities cause a hugely busy day
of comedy and romance in the gaming houses, parks and salons
of Regency London.
Fanny Burney wrote A Busy Day
while in exile during the Napoleonic Wars but never saw it performed
in London. The first production was by Show of Strength in the
mid-1990s, but this was its first large house run. I was cast
as Lord John Dervis, a lord a lounging who found everything terribly
dull (a deuced bore, in fact). I had a fabulous outfit, topped
off with a terrific walking stick for bashing servants and other
various dullards. I would slouch around the stage and collapse
in boredom on various items of furniture. Marvellous!
The production started off
in Bristol at the Theatre Royal at the Old Vic there, and played
to very good houses in the spring of 2000. It transferred into
the West End to the Lyric Theatre and opened on 19th June 2000.
Reviews were generally pretty good (apart from The Guardian)
including a super mention in the New York Times, and we had excellent
audience response throughout the Summer. The show closed on 2nd
September 2000, having notched up just over 100 performances
between both the runs.
I had a terrific time doing
the show. It was great for me to work with such an amazing group
of actors and a fine director and crew and I learned tons from
all of them. The cast were all brilliant, especially the wonderful
Sara Crowe, and they made me feel that what I was doing was good
and worthwhile. This was so important as I missed Edinburgh for
the first time in five years, but the chance to do a big show,
and work with 13 brilliant actors was too much to pass up on.
There are lots of Fanny Burney
sites out there on the web especially here,
here and
here.
You can read The Observer's review of the show here.
. The New York Times review has been taken down but there are
a couple of other internet mentions here
and here.
Enjoy.
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