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Tag Archives: tinker bell
Peter Pan, Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre
“All children, except one, grow up.” So begins J. M. Barrie’s iconic tale of arrested development, given new power and poignancy in this high-flying production. A century after one of Barrie’s youthful collaborators, George Llewelyn Davies, was killed at Ypres, … Continue reading →
Posted in Journalism, Theatre
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Tagged battle, bedtime story, book, boy, captain hook, child, childhood, children, clock, crocodile, fairy tale, fight, first world war, flies, fly, flying, great war, hospital, i do believe in fairies, j m barrie, jolly roger, lost boys, mermaid, mother, mum, music, never grow up, never land, nurse, open air theatre, park, peter pan, pirate, puppet, read, regents park, sing, smee, soldier, song, story, the front, timothy sheader, tinker bell, to die would be an awfully big adventure, war, wendy, world war one, youth, ypres
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