Site Search

Editor Login

For Editors only





Lost Password?
For Editors only

Henley Amateur Operatic and Dramatic Society


Affiliated to the National Operatic & Dramatic Association.  Registered Charity 259404. 

President: Simon Williams.

simon williams our PresidentHAODS was formed in 1922 and each year mikado3.jpgusually puts on two musicals and a play at Henley's Kenton Theatre and, every other year at an open-air venue.  Our major shows are the musicals, usually one around April and again in November.  Productions of plays varies, but we always have an entry into the Kenton Drama Festival.

We are fortunate to own the well-equipped Green Room, behind the Kenton, which is where we hold our rehearsals and social events; our extensive wardrobe is also stored there, in a recently built extension.  Rehearsals usually take place three nights a week for large productions, which increase to Sunday rehearsals closer to the production date.  Readings and our auditions are generally open to all.  If you are a non-member and are fortunate enough to be cast in a show, you will be required to join as a performing member.

theatre-interior.jpg

The Kenton Theatre is a Regency gem, opened in 1805, set in the heart of Henley-on-Thames.  The fourth oldest working theatre in the country, the Kenton’s two hundred and thirty four seat auditorium has a warm, friendly and cosy intimacy that makes it a perfect performance space for both HAODS's large scale musicals and intimate plays.  Kate Winslet and the West End's Oliver, Harry Stott are just two of the many stars who trod the Kenton stage at an early age, Harry having appeared in our production of Singin' in the Rain in 2004.

 

 

New members are always welcome – whether as budding actors, or to help backstage with set building, costumes or props – or maybe just as a supporter to enjoy the social functions.  Drop into one of our Coffee Mornings, Club Room Lunches or come and see a production.  You will have the warmest of welcomes and the best of times if you stay!  Click here to Join Us.

Vice Presidents
Mr M Chalcroft His Worship the Mayor of Henley Mr J Luker
Mr R Hardy CBE His Worship the Mayor of Falaise Mr J A R Yeates
Mr Simon Langton Mr J Yeates Mrs A Luker

Life Members
Nansi Diamond Mary Reece

NODA Long Service Awards
1977 Mrs V Barter 1983 Mr JAR & Mrs J Yeates
1976 Mr J & Mrs A Luker 1990 Mrs J Taylor
 
Click here to view our past glories

 

 

Celebrities who performed at the Kenton No.5 John Inman PDF Print E-mail
Written by Bill Port   

inman.jpgJohn Inman  Actor (1935 - 2007)  was just 13 when he made his first appearance on stage at the South Pier Blackpool. He was born John Frederick Inman in Preston on June 28th 1935, but always looked upon Blackpool as his home town. At the age of 21 he joined a touring repertory company and it was during this time that he played at the Kenton Theatre. He made his West End debut in the musical Ann Veronica at the Cambridge Theatre and followed that with a seventeen month stint at the Windmill. He immediately followed that in Charley's Aunt at the Adelphi playing Lord Fancourt Babberley.

He will be best remembered, however, for his portrayal of Mr Humphries (I'm free!) in the BBC series Are You Being Served, which ran to ten series and was broadcast from 1972 until 1985. Inman's name and his catchphrase became a household word in Britain and throughout the world. Are You Being Served was shown coast to coast on American television with huge success and in 1980 a version was made for Australian television. John Inman was a truly international star.  

He has always been well regarded by his fellow variety artists. He was elected King Rat by the Grand Order of Water Rats and in 2002 he became the President of the Heritage Foundation. The Variety Club of Great Britain honoured him by naming him the BBC personality of the year and in 1976 he was voted the funniest man on television by the readers of the TV Times. Summer seasons in piers and seaside theatres throughout the land have always been one of the important parts of his career but his real love was pantomime. No matter where in the world he was travelling he always returned at Christmas to do a pantomime usually as the dame. Because live theatre was his first love he appeared in only three films Are You Being Served - The Movie 1977, The Tall Guy 1989 and The Phantom Millenium 1999 ( with French and Saunders)

When he performed at the Kenton, from May 29th until June 3rd 1967, in the play Job for the Boy, he was accompanied by his then partner Barry Howard. In 2005 he entered a civil partnership with his partner of 33 years, Ron Lynch. He died on Friday 9th March 2007.

Bill Port

The receding article was written Bill Port - The following is an excerpt from Wikipedia

 Inman was born in 1935 in Preston, Lancashire, and was a cousin of actress Josephine Tewson. At the age of 12, Inman moved with his parents to Blackpool where his mother ran a boarding house, while his father owned a hairdressing business. As a child, he enjoyed dressmaking. He was educated at Claridge House in Preston, and then a secondary modern. Inman always wanted to be an actor, and his parents paid for him to have elocution lessons at the local church hall. At the age of 13 he made his stage debut in the Pavilion on Blackpool's South Pier, in a melodrama entitled Freda. Aged 15, he took a job at the pier, making tea, clearing up, and playing parts in plays. After leaving school, Inman worked for two years at Fox's, a gentlemen's outfitters in Blackpool, specialising in window dressing. Aged 17, he moved to London to join Austin Reed in Regent Street. Four years later, he left Austin Reed to become a scenic artist with Kenneth Kendall's touring company at a theatre in Crewe, so that he could earn his Equity Card, required at the time for professional actors. Inman made his West End debut in the 1960s when he appeared in Ann Veronica at the Cambridge Theatre. He also played in Salad Days at the Windmill Theatre in 1975, and as Lord Fancourt Babberley in Charley's Aunt at the Adelphi Theatre in 1979. He also played in many summer shows, and established himself as a dame in pantomime, appearing regularly as one of the two ugly sisters alongside comedian Barry Howard. His other stage appearances included his own show Fancy Free and Pyjama Tops, My Fat Friend and Bedside Manners.

Inman made his television debut in the sitcom Two In Clover in 1970. In 1972, he was asked by David Croft to play a part in a Comedy Playhouse pilot called Are You Being Served?. This was a sitcom set in a department store, written by scriptwriters David Croft and Jeremy Lloyd, and based on the latter's experiences working at Simpson's in Piccadilly Circus. Playing a minor role with only a few lines, he was soon asked to "camp it up"., despite initial reluctance from the BBC to include such a camp character. The pilot was broadcast in September 1972. The broadcast was followed by the five episodes of the first series in early 1973. The first series showing opposite Coronation Street on ITV attracted little attention, but repeats later that year were very successful. Inman played the camp Mr. Wilberforce Claybourne Humphries and his earlier career in the clothes retail business was good preparation for this role in a menswear department. Inman developed a characteristic limp-wristed mincing walk, and a high-pitched catch phrase, "I'm free!", which soon entered popular culture. Inman reported that four or five members of the group Campaign for Homosexual Equality picketed one of his shows in protest as they believed his persona did not help their cause. Inman said that "they thought I was over exaggerating the gay character. But I don't think I do. In fact there are people far more camp than Mr. Humphries walking around this country. Anyway, I know for a fact that an enormous number of viewers like Mr. Humphries and don't really care whether he's camp or not. So far from doing harm to the homosexual image, I feel I might be doing some good." Both Inman and David Croft stated that the character was "just a mother's boy", and that his sexual orientation was never explicitly stated. Inman continued to play in live shows after his success as Mr. Humphries, and began to incorporate camp mannerisms to those performances too, once saying "Even when I'm not playing Mr Humphries, say at a summer season, I camp it up a bit. If I don't the audience are disappointed." Are You Being Served? ran for 10 series until it finished in 1985. At its height, in the late 1970s, it regularly attracted British audiences of up to 20 million viewers. Inman's portrayal of Mr Humphries won him the BBC TV Personality of the Year in 1976 and he was voted the funniest man on television by TV Times readers. The series also became popular in the United States, where Inman became a gay cultural icon. Once, in San Francisco, a passing cyclist spotted Inman and fell off his bicycle in surprise, crying "Mr Humphries, I love you!" From 1980 to 1981, Inman also played Mr Humphries in the Australian version of Are You Being Served?, the only cast member of the original Are You Being Served? series to do so. During the 69-episode, 13-year run of Are You Being Served?, Inman also appeared in the 1977 film of the series, in which the characters visited the fictional Spanish holiday resort of "Costa Plonka"; Odd Man Out, his own sitcom in 1977, playing the owner of a fish-and-chip shop who inherits half of a rock factory; and Take a Letter, Mr. Jones, a 1981 sitcom where Inman played Graham Jones, who is secretary to Rula Lenska's character Joan Warner. Inman also toured with his own shows, and he released several records, including Are You Being Served, Sir?, which reached number 39 in the UK singles charts. This came from an LP of the same name, and was followed by two further albums: I'm Free in 1977 and With a Bit of Brass in 1978. He made a cameo appearance in the film The Tall Guy in 1989, and was one of five of the Are You Being Served? cast to be reunited in character for the sitcom Grace & Favour (titled Are You Being Served? Again! in the United States), which ran for twelve episodes from 1992 and 1993. In 1999, he appeared in a French & Saunders Christmas special. He appeared as Father Chinwag in the 2000 film The Mumbo Jumbo.

After the end of Are You Being Served?, Inman became one of the nation's best known pantomime dames and appeared in over 40 pantomimes across the United Kingdom. He also toured to Australia to star in a number of productions including Bedside Manners (2003) and a revival of Are You Being Served? (2001) as a stage show at Twelfth Night Theatre, Brisbane. In 2004, Inman made additional television appearances in Doctors and Revolver. He lived in a mews house in Little Venice for 30 years. On 23 December 2005, Inman entered into a civil partnership at Westminster Register Office with his partner of 33 years (at the time), Ron Lynch. Wikinews has related news: British actor John Inman dies at 71 Inman suffered from poor health in his later years. He was hospitalised with bronchitis in 1993, and collapsed on the stage in 1995. He was admitted to Paddington's St Mary's Hospital in 2001 after suffering breathing difficulties and spent three days in intensive care. In December 2004, Inman was forced to cancel an appearance in a pantomime as he was suffering from a hepatitis A infection, which he had contracted from contaminated food. Following this, he never worked again and he suffered complications from the infection for the rest of his life. Inman died early in the morning of 8 March 2007, aged 71, in St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London. He was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium after a funeral on 23 March 2007. It was reported in July 2007 that Inman left his entire estate, including more than £2.8m, to his partner Ron Lynch. The only other portion of his estate given to someone else was a £5,000 bequest to the Entertainment Artistes Benevolent Fund. The Daily Mail newspaper said at the time that Inman's "estate is believed to be the highest profile will of a gay man in a civil partnership since the ceremonies became legal in 2005" 

 

 

Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment

busy
 

Bookmark & Share

Add to: Linkarena Add to: Digg Add to: Del.icoi.us Add to: Reddit Add to: StumbleUpon Add to: Slashdot Add to: Yahoo Add to: Diigo Add to: Technorati Add to: Newsvine Add to: Folkd Information
Joomla Templates by JoomlaShack
Generated in 0.42148 Seconds