Robin Hood by Richard Lloyd, adapted from a recent American script
Performed during 1993

Cast & Crew

Photo Gallery

Cast Details:

Robin Hood, the merry bandit of Sherwood
Will Gamwell, later Will Scarlet
John Little, of Hathersage
Reynold Greenlefe, a tanner
Meg Scathelocke, an outlaw
Friar Tuck, a curtal friar
Alan a'Dale, a wandering minstrel
Much, the miller's son
John of Mortain, King of England
The Bishop of Hereford
The Sheriff of Nottingham
Dickon Hazel, Captain of the Sheriff's Guard
Guy of Gisbourne, an outlaw and murderer
Hilton, the Sheriff's Chamberlain
Egbert, Squire to the Sheriff
Men-at-arms
Men-at-arms
Men-at-arms
Men-at-arms
Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine, mother to King John
The Lady Marian, Lady-In-Waiting to Queen Eleanor
Ellen Deirwold, a young and lovely maiden
The Prioress of Kirklees, cousin to Robin Hood
Eadom, an Innkeeper
Catherine, wife to Eadom the Innkeeper
Villagers;
Villagers;
Villagers;
Villagers;
Village children;
Village children;
Village children;

Technical Crew Details:

Director
Technical Co-ordinator
Lighting Director
Front of House
Front of House
Front of House
Wardrobe Co-ordinators
Wardrobe Co-ordinators
Wardrobe Co-ordinators
Castle set by
Horse's skull by
Armourer/Fight arranger
Box Office
Ground cleared by

Reviewed by Donald Madgwick for The Croydon Advertiser

The gardens of The Woodman pub at Woodmansterne might have been expressly designed for open air theatre in general and Robin Hood in particular.

Here, this week, we may quaff our beer and observe the magical forest clearing in which the Merry Men conduct their operations while, on a constructed set at the side, the Sheriff of Nottingham fiendishly plots their downfall.

Theatre Workshop Coulsdon's gamble on the weather has been well justified in this, their first ever open air production. The guiding spirit is director and leading actor Richard Lloyd, who has also slangily adapted an American script for the purpose

This text treats the legend with a pinch of salt, Neil Grew's Robin Hood is a jokey wisecracker, a swashbuckling swordsman whose archery we have to take on trust; which Richard Lloyd's wicked Sheriff makes Basil Fawlty seem sweetly reasonable by comparison.

'Be careful, I'm very holy' squeaks Paul M Ford, as the cowardly Bishop of Hereford, to his captors. Sometimes the exciting deeds of derring-do sit uneasily with such Monty Pythonish humour, but on the whole the disparate elements blend in a kind of crazy harmony. Richard Lloyd's is the dominant personality, but he has a strong cast in support.

Tatiana Allison is a rollickingly butch Marian, splendidly puncturing the macho ethos that reigns in Sherwood Forest. On the royal side, with Mark Taylor's blustering King John, it is no contest for Rebecca Ford's imperious Queen Mother.

Special mentions to Nathan Moughtin, a sweet-voiced Alan a'Dale, and Lesley Argles as his plucky lady love; to Mike Brown's bear of a Little John and Tim Young's gluttinous Friar Tuck; and especially to young Martin Reay, the chirpy miller's son.

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