I don't know about the 70s, but she definitely played Peter Pan there in the 80s. We only moved to Aberdeen in 1987, so it was that at the earliest. I was 11 that year, and I know this version of Peter Pan was the last panto I went to see as I got a bit old for it, so I'm guessing 1987 was the very year... George Cole was playing Mr Darling/Captain Hook in that version.
She played Peter Pan at the Palace Theatre in Manchester with Anthony Sharp as Captain Hook in 1973. The promotion poster appeared in the 'Life on Mars' series a few years ago.
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It is my belief that Brooks talks about Holy Theatre as a way of getting practitioners, and patrons, to understand that true, Holy Theatre gets at truth. By this I do not mean, necessarily, universal truths, like fire is hot or ice is cold, but truths we hold inside. When we discover these truths, through theatre (and by this I mean doing or experiencing, not merely reading), we have the opportunity to be raised to a new level of understanding, a place, similar to our faith as we discover our spiritual truths, where we cannot really explain our discovery but we know it is real. Theatre, like religion, has had, and will continue to have, its false prophets, proclaiming that we must have or do something in order to please the gods/Gods. Yet, in discovering our truths, our holiness in understanding, we, ourselves fulfill that journey.
Peter Assinder has: Played Blair in "ITV Play of the Week" in 1955. Played Captain Kendall in "Lilli Palmer Theatre" in 1955. Played Happy Thief in "The Adventures of Sir Lancelot" in 1956. Played Sgt. Thompson in "Murder Bag" in 1957. Played Bit Part in "Solo for Canary" in 1958. Played Mike in "Mario" in 1959.
Peter Hochmuth's birth name is Peter Brake.
Peter Tharos's birth name is Peter Panopoulos.
The birth name of Peter Graves was Peter Aurness.