Tag Archives: Horley Footlights

To see or not to see, that is the question?

Alice 4

Alice, 2013

Did you know that you can now see collage pictures of nearly all of the Horley Footlights productions going back over a decade, starting with Mother Goose Rocks (2003) up to last years Alice.

Still to post are some of the programmes and photos of “Puss in Boots”, if you have any to share please email me Debra on horleyviews@outlook.com

MGR

Mother Goose Rocks, 2003

Hope you enjoy them as much as I have putting them together, especially seeing how our early “toe-lighters” have grown, such fun!

Merry Christmas Debra

Horley Footlights  is listed under the Horley Groups page at the top of thehorleyviews.com

Horley lad plays at NEC

BG 23.10.14 Will HomewoodWell done Will !

Just in case you missed it Will Homewood was in this week’s Banbury Guardian for playing at the NEC. Will was in the regional heats for Open Mic UK and went through to perform in London. 

Brenda played many parts in Horley


all the worlds a stage

Tessa Howell gave this eulogy at Brenda’s service on 3rd September:

“All the world’s a stage. And all the men and women merely players; They have their exits and their entrances; And one man in his time plays many parts,”

Bob has asked me to talk about Brenda in connection with her time in Horley and the part she played in village life. I shall try my best to do her justice.

On the day Brenda died, I went to see Vanessa and the girls, who were in the field above Horley, getting ready for their week-end music festival, the proceeds of which, went to church funds. Bryony, on hearing the very sad news, said, with tears running down her cheeks, “But, she was the queen of the village!” And I thought, “That’s right, she was the queen of the village” but she wasn’t just the queen, she was a worker as well. In fact, Brenda played many roles in village life.

Bob and Brenda moved to Horley in 1999.  “We want to live in the centre of a village, to be part of the community”, they said. Well, you can’t get more in the centre of the village than the Old Post Office, (handy for the pub too, where they made and met many friends) and you can’t be more part of the community than Bob and Brenda.

Early on, Brenda became the Parish Clerk – dealing with all parish correspondence, taking minutes at meetings, using her considerable secretarial skills in making it all run smoothly. Glenys and David tell me, that soon after they bought their beautiful home in Horley, they happened to be abroad, when there was some planning business to settle, concerning trees. Should they cut short their holiday? Brenda emailed them to say, not to worry, she would deal with the planners, which she did, with a satisfactory outcome. A small example of how she functioned – nothing was too much trouble. And she performed this role of parish clerk, until only a couple of weeks before she died.

She took an active part at her golf-club, serving on the committee, working tirelessly organising charity events, ironically, for Katharine House. She was a keen member of the Horley Ladies’ Guild, – running stalls at the Summer Fete and Christmas Bazaar and doing her regular stint of flowers, church cleaning and brass polishing.

And she was a formidable cook – her dinner parties were legendary. She often hosted the Progressive Dinner and she and Bob were part of a group which we euphemistically called “The Dining Club” We would talk about Brenda’s twelve-course meals or her roasts with sixteen vegetables. It was exaggeration, of course, but only just. At Christmas, hungry and thirsty carol singers always stop off half-way round the village, (at The Old Post Office, of course) where they would get the warmest of receptions and treated by Bob and Brenda, to mince pies, and, I am told, mulled wine to  knock you sideways. I am not sure the singing benefited, but the Christmas cheer certainly did.

More importantly, perhaps, and on a personal level, I know there was a deep and reciprocal relationship between the Keene family and Brenda, where she took on the role of mother to Vanessa and grandmother to Sophie, Bryony and Marnie. She not only lived in the centre of the village, she was the centre of the village – everyoneOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA knew her, to a greater or lesser extent.

Brenda loved everything to do with the theatre and was there from the beginning of Horley Footlights, helping to produce a number of shows with Andrew Hickling as director. This was before my time in Horley, but in 2005, soon after we had moved here, she asked me to direct the next pantomime- we called it “Snow White and Several Dwarfs”, because we never knew how many children would turn up.

This was to be the start of a 9 year relationship, OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAwhich so sadly came to an end nearly three weeks ago. We produced many shows together and as many Nativity Plays. Brenda was always a tower of strength and performed roles behind the scenes that would normally need six people. She organised the costumes, props, programmes; she stage managed and prompted and stood in for absent cast at rehearsals. During the run-up to a show, her dining room became a cutting and sewing room, overflowing with yards of sparkly net or mountains of yellow fluffy stuff, ready to transform small children into snow-flakes or ducklings. She would meet the school bus and entice children into her house (with parental consent of course). Her spare bedroom resembled nothing so much as a jumble sale, with props and costumes of all descriptions strewn about – over flowing onto OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAthe landing and even into the main bedroom (poor Bob, I used to think), but which would eventually be sorted, washed, ironed, neatly labelled and put in boxes or hung on rails. Whenever I popped in to see how it was progressing, I would stare in amazement and beat a hasty retreat, thinking,” It’s not going to be all right on the night” But it always was. Brenda seemed to be able to create order out of chaos.

I think we can safely say that Brenda played many parts, and she played them jolly well, too. All the rest of us can do now, is to thank her for everything and work out, how on earth, are we going to fill the gap, because she left no understudy.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

“All the world’s a stage. And all the men and women merely players; They have their exits and their entrances; And one man in his time plays many parts,”

See the Autumn edition of Horley Views for more tributes

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Horley Footlights Tribute for our Bren

—————–Brenda and Tessa Backstage——————-

“Brenda was like the Queen of Horley”! said a teenager who had known Brenda all her life

Brenda played an active role in our village life, she was one of the founding members of Horley Footlights, the Parish Council Clerk, a regular (if not resident) host of the Progressive Dinner and so much much more.

This tribute is for her role since 2002 as stage manager for Horley Footlights, from the first ever production of “Mother Goose Rocks” in 2003 to the latest in 2013 of “Alice”. Brenda has been there back stage, front and centre, managing and curating props, costumes, publicity you name it Brenda was doing it. Over the years Brenda has supported the various directors, actors and crews of over 12 productions.

Brenda just got things done, she was what I call a “do-er”, nothing was too much trouble, she always found a way. Brenda loved to be in the thick of it, at rehearsals, finding props and costumes, backstage and of course socialising, she enjoyed using all her talents, of which she had many.

As the saying goes “the show must go on”, so it is a fitting tribute to pay Brenda on her final curtain call, to say thank you Brenda from all of us “Footlighters”, we will miss you Debra X