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Taking a tour through Darlington s theatre history | Darlington and Stockton Times

Taking a tour through Darlington s theatre history | Darlington and Stockton Times
darlingtonandstocktontimes.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from darlingtonandstocktontimes.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Taking a tour through Darlington s theatre history

Taking a tour through Darlington s theatre history
thenorthernecho.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thenorthernecho.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Taking a tour through Darlington s theatre history

NEXT weekend, there is the chance to walk quite literally in the footsteps of a showbiz giant. Because, at his most corpulent, actor and theatre impresario Stephen Kemble weighed 30 stone, and he was famed the length and indeed width of the country for being able to play Shakespeare’s most rotund character, Sir John Falstaff, without any padding. He made his name in London, but came north to manage a circuit of theatres based around Durham and Newcastle, but stretching as far north as Aberdeen, and including for a season the tent theatre in Darlington. Indeed, after that season, he was tempted back to Drury Lane in London to reprise his most famous, and gargantuan role. A poem on the poster advertising his return explained:

Cudmore: Settler in the town of Charleston was Revolutionary War hero

Cudmore: Settler in the town of Charleston was Revolutionary War hero | The Daily Gazette SECTIONS By |   Researchers agree that Thomas Machin was the engineer who had two metal chains forged and strung across the Hudson River near West Point to prevent British warships from traveling from New York City up the Hudson to Albany to thwart the American Revolution. There is also agreement that after the war Machin settled in Charleston in Montgomery County, south of the Mohawk River. But Bevis Longstreth, in his recent historical novel “Chains Across the River,” disputes an account that Machin had supported the cause of liberty as far back as 1773 when he supposedly was one of the men who threw tea into Boston Harbor.

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