The objects of a pagaent
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Hawtrey's forty-four page manuscript treatise on how to stage a Pageant contains numerous references to the Gloucestershire Pageant at Cheltenham; therefore the treatise was written after 1908, and possibly before October 1909, when Hawtrey served as pageantmaster of the National Pageant of Wales at Cardiff. He writes: "If your Committee should see fit to appoint me as Master to your Pageant, I should be prepared to undertake the entire management. (I have drawn up these notes with a view of showing you that I understand how a Pageant should be organized.)" The manuscript is divided into sections which address all aspects of historical pageantry, among them: The Object of a Pageant -- "...a Pageant should be produced for its own sake, and not for the sake of profit." The Master -- "...the Master must be able to choose his assistants wisely, and he must know enough to make sure that the work is being efficiently done." The Site -- "The ground must not be overlooked; or if it is, it should be possible without great expense to mask out those places from which a view can be obtained gratis." Dresses -- "...I do not think that the Pageant should endeavour to make money out of the performers. Those who are able to provide their own costumes and who wish to do so are to be encouraged and thanked. But no performer, either rich or poor, ought to be pressed to pay." The Performers -- "...it is never very easy to obtain all the men that are required. Mr. Louis Parker, the inventor of Pageants, has succeeded in persuading the inhabitants to close the shops during the afternoons when the performances were taking place." Prices of Admission -- "All Pageants hitherto have made the most astounding mistake in the matter of prices charged for seats ...In my opinion there should be accomodation [sic] for large numbers at one shilling ... It is instructive to remember what took place at the Olympic Games last summer, where high prices were originally charged in the Stadium, with the result that thousands of seats were empty every day." Advertising -- "After the Welsh, the most likely fish to angle for are American and Colonial visitors." Telephones -- "...when matters are fairly advanced the Master directs operations from a small box perched on the top of the Grand Stand. From this point he communicates by telephone with the various positions where the performers are drawn up and gives them the order to make their entrance." Incidental Profits -- "A great mistake was made at Cheltenham in this matter of refreshments. The contractor ...was allowed to sell refreshments while the performance was going on, and the tramping backwards and forwards of waiters soliciting orders was intolerable."
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