Far from the Madding Crowd

by

Thomas Hardy and directed by Ken Spencer

 

The Maskers Theatre Company presented Far From the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy at the Nuffield Theatre, Southampton from 20th January to the 24th January 1998. The Story was adapted by Ken Spencer and this presentation was directed by Ken Spencer


 

Thomas Hardy was born in Higher Bockhampton near Dorchester in 1840. At the age of 16 he became articled to a local architect before moving to London. Hardy returned to Dorchester in 1867 to continue his architectural work, and became married to Emma Gifford in 1874 - the year in which Far From the Madding Crowd was published.

 

His first published novel, Desperate Remedies, appeared in 1871 but it was the success of Far From the Madding Crowd which enabled him to abandon his career as an architect and concentrate on writing.

 

Hardy was to become one of the greatest English novelists and poets of the nineteenth century. Although Hardy’s marriage to Emma Gifford was not a particularly happy one, following her death in 1912 he produced some of his most moving and memorable poems.

 

His evocations of the Wessex landscape, and particularly Dorset, are unsurpassed. But it is not simply a landscape which is picturesque or sentimentalised, but a real world within which his characters live, and often struggle to survive. One of the underlying themes in Hardy’s work is man’s struggle against an indifferent force which rules the world, reflecting on the sufferings and ironies of life and love.

 

Hardy explored what he described as ‘an ample theme: the intense interests, passions, and strategy that throb through the commonest lives.’

 

He died in Dorchester in 1928. His ashes are buried in Poet’s Corner, Westminster Abbey, but his heart is in Emma’s grave in Stinsford churchyard in Dorset.

 

Far from the madding crowd’s ignoble strife,

Their sober wishes never learn’d to stray;

Along the cool sequester’d vale of life

They kept the noiseless tenor of their way.’

[from Gray’s Elegy]

 

Far From the Madding Crowd, published in 1874, is one of Hardy’s most successful and popular novels. He was asked to write a novel for serialisation in the Cornhill Magazine by Leslie Stephen, the editor (and father of Virginia Woolf). When Hardy submitted the manuscript Stephen requested that he modify some of the scenes which he felt might shock its Victorian readers. The first episode appeared anonymously, and was generally well received by readers and critics alike.

 

Far From the Madding Crowd is a pastoral tale set in the Dorset landscape which Hardy knew so well and he drew on his local knowledge and feeling for rural dialect and custom. Hardy’s sense of the humorous and absurd is reflected in his portrayal of the rustic characters in the novel. The characters of Bathsheba and Sergeant Troy were based on Hardy’s aunt, Martha Hand, and her husband John Sharpe.

 

The novel has been described as Hardy’s great novel about marriage, despite his own sense of disillusionment in the institution later in life. But as with much of Hardy’s work the novel is also about change, and the conflict between the old and the new. Into the rural community of Wetherby come Bathsheba and Troy, both disrupting the sense of harmony and permanence symbolised by Gabriel Oak and Boldwood. Hardy also illustrates, in his portrayal of  Bathsheba, his understanding of the complexities of the female character which is a central theme in Hardy’s work and which was to be developed further in his later novels, particularly Jude the Obscure. Despite the tragic events in the novel, Far From the Madding Crowd has a sense of optimism which his later, and darker, novels do not possess.


 

The Cast

 

Gabriel Oak 

Steve Clark

Bathsheba Everdene 

Sarah Humphrey

Mrs. Hurst

Mollie Manns J

Joseph Poorgrass

Graham Buchanan

Jan Coggan

Alan Watson

Liddy Smallbury

Hazel Burrows

Henry Fray

David Cradduck

Cainy Ball

Paul Taylor

Maryann Money 

Brenda Atkinson

Fanny Robin

Sarah O’Leary

The Maltster 

Albie Minns

Jacob Smallbury 

David Pike

Billy Smallbury 

Bruce Atkinson

Laban Tall

Paul Baker

William Boldwood 

Brian Stansbridge

Mrs Coggan 

Christine Baker

Mrs Tall 

Belinda Drew

Andrew Randle 

Alee Walters

Temperance Miller

Shirley Wallis

Soberness Miller

Jennifer East

Francis Troy 

John Carrington Jnr

Reverend Halliwell 

Derek Leslie

 

For the Maskers

 

Production Direction and adaptation

Ken Spencer

Adaptation assisted by

Sandy White

Stage Manager

Val Barwell

Set Design 

Ken Spencer

Set Construction

Bryan Langford, Douglas Shiell, Geoff Cook

Lighting Design

Ron Tillyer

Sound

Lawrie Gee

Properties

Ella Lockett, Irene Shiell

Wardrobe

Sheana Carrington, Gill Buchanan, ChristineBaker

Marketing and Publicity 

Harry Tuffill, Pam Cook , Jan Gee, Geoff Wharam

Programme Production

Sandy White

Music

Mike Bailey of ‘The Madding Crowd’