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Informative Articles

Dysfunctional Family Christmas?
The articles are starting to appear in print and on the Internet about how to cope with the holiday family get-togethers and the word "dysfunctional" will be bandied about. This article is about another way of looking at things I hope will be...

How to Beat the After-Christmas Blues
Christmas is an emotional storm, and next comes Valentine’s, so take a break. Move from emotion to thinking and action. 1.Start planning a Valentine’s Party, or Martin Luther King Party. If you were running a day late and a dollar behind for...

How to Save Money at Christmas
Do you know how to save money at Christmas and still have fun? Sounds impossible but it can be done. Everyone assumes that in order to enjoy the festive season one has to throw money at it when in fact the opposite can be true. Research has...

Sot Suppe (Norwegian Sweet Soup) for Christmas
My mother was the daughter of Norwegian immigrants who homesteaded our small Wisconsin dairy farm in the late 1800s. When my mother was a child, sweet soup was a traditional part of Christmas Eve, served cold with julekake, lefse, Christmas bread,...

Top 10 Don'ts for Christmas
10. Don't steal the Santa from your neighbor’s yard 9. Don't blow up the little baby Jesus and try to replace it with your childhood G.I. Joe 8. Don't smoke the mistletoe 7. Remember that not everyone is like you. Don't buy them that (insert your...

 
It Wouldn't Be Christmas Without A Pantomime

A visit to the Pantomime is a longstanding Christmas tradition. Children and grown-ups alike love it, this peculiarly British way to celebrate the festive season. When else would you take the kids to see a woman playing a man, a man playing a woman and the most blatantly fake animal ever seen on a stage?
There are several elements that must be included in a traditional Panto; the show should be based on a well-known fairytale; there must be singing and dancing; topical jokes as well as old chestnuts; shameless double entendre; lots of audience participation; familiar stock characters must appear, and of course there must be a transformation scene where the put-upon hero or heroine finally achieves their destiny.
The word pantomime originally meant the person performing in a dumb show - a play without words that today we would call a mime. Later it began to refer to the show itself. The form of the modern pantomime is thought to be based on the Italian Commedia dell'arte, a humorous play which would combine music, acrobatics, and slapstick and include familiar characters, stock storylines and topical jokes.
In the late 19th century the trend for casting a well-known actor in the pantomime began at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, and continues to this day. You may


be fortunate enough to see a great performance from a comedy legend, although nowadays the roles are more likely to go to soap stars, ex-members of short-lived pop bands and TV reality show survivors.
So why do we love it so much? Firstly there is little on at the theatre that the whole family can enjoy together. Secondly it is all so familiar; you know the stories and the characters, it is just like putting up the Christmas tree with the decorations you use each year, a long-remembered ritual. Ultimately however, the charm is its utter irresistibility. However down you feel when you go into the theatre, you cannot help but groan at the appalling jokes, cannot help but join in with 'it's behind you!' and cannot help but sing along with everyone else in the finale.
Most importantly it is the best way to introduce your children to the magic of live theatre. There is nothing like the excitement of a live performance, with its unpredictability, its tension and most of all, its atmosphere. A pantomime is the perfect way to let your children experience that magic.
About the Author
Visit Big Panto Guide http://www.bigpantoguide.co.uk to find a pantomime near you in the UK.