Secrets of the Stour • River Stour, Wimborne (2022)

Secrets of the Stour – Part 2 of Our Rivers Run Through Us project – July 6-9 2022, was a site-specific community theatre production in a hidden part of Wimborne, along the banks of the River Stour, on land owned by Sir William Hanham.

Sir William Hanham was delighted that the performances are taking place on the estate as he believes that “they will help raise awareness of the value of our rivers for the community and for the wildlife that inhabits them. With both the Allen and the Stour running through the Deans Court Estate, we are starting to regenerate the land to bring it back into balance with nature, and we hope to engage with schools and community organisations to participate in this endeavour. This summer’s riverside theatrical production couldn’t be a better way to start.”

The specially created performance was developed by members of Wimborne Community Theatre, and directed by Tony Horitz, in collaboration with artistic director, Joe Hancock of Burn the Curtain and Millstream Theatre artistic director, Tam Gilbert, with music composed by Karen Wimhurst and sound artist, Adrian Newton.

  • Millstream Theatre is a theatre group of people with learning disabilities, based at MED, Museum for East Dorset, Wimborne, co directed by Tony Horitz and Tam Gilbert. Millstream has collaborated with WCT on several previous shows.
  • Karen Wimhurst created original music for the show and Choir.  Sound track of Video: Pallida Choir, arranged by Karen Wimhurst
  • Children from Rushcombe School, Corfe Mullen, Dorset, took part.
  • Funding from Dorset Community Foundation enabled WCT to recruit roles for emerging theatre practitioners and Access Support.

Poster for Secrets of the Stour • River Stour, Wimborne
About the production

The story:

Two young siblings, Jay and Sam, venture into the landscape to solve and resolve particular fears and grief and the audience travelled the course with them.

The play began with a commemorative event celebrating the life of their recently deceased Granddad, and it was a toast to his memory which audience and cast made, that became the catalyst for the arrival on the riverbank of a mysterious boatman (spirit of Granddad) accompanied by Spirit Guides, protectors of the otter, water crowfoot, caddisfly, eel, salmon and kingfisher, each represented by puppets taking on their forms.

The audience in four groups move from Shrine to Shrine in a quasi-game show format. Discoveries about the creatures’ lives are made along the way. Inside each shrine, an extract from Granddad’s diary is found which an audience member reads aloud to the rest of the group.  Each extract reveals some aspect of Granddad’s knowledge of and concerns for nature. He records signs for concern, low water levels due to dry winters and lack of summer rain, so no flooding occurs on the water meadows and consequently, no nutrients benefit the species that depend on the floods for their ecology.  He wanted his grandchildren to recognise this interdependence, to help find ways to rebuild the river ecosystem.

Once the four diary extracts had been read, the connection between the different shrine creatures become clear – they represent the life cycle connecting species, vulnerable and under threat – and Jay realises he and his sister have a part to play, by learning the names of creatures and plants, by imagining the ancient oak as a mother tree messaging the younger trees, by finding out the mayfly eats the plant, and the frog eats the mayfly.

Funders:
Dorset Community Foundation; Arts Council England; Dorset Council


  A totally new experience – never seen anything like that before, the light was superb, the actors were on point.  
Soundbite taken from an audience member at the end of the production
  I thought it was a brilliant performance and event. It felt like a live-action, immersive studio Ghibli film, with some really brilliant moments where the landscape complimented the play and vice versa. It was great to see a large audience and I enjoyed the play’s physical journey along the Stour.  
Audience member
  I just wanted to say a big thank you for enabling our children to participate in the 'Secrets of the Stour', and to congratulate you and everyone in your team on staging a wonderful performance. I know that all of the children thoroughly enjoyed taking part and would have gained a great deal from the experience. As you know, myself and three of our staff stayed to watch the full performance on Saturday evening, and we were all captivated at each stage, including the highly moving ending. You made the evening educational, participatory and highly engaging for those children who stayed, and it was really wonderful to see them engaging with community theatre so enthusiastically. The way that the performance moved through the landscape was also so well planned, capturing the beauty of the location whilst also reinforcing the need to protect it. On another note, I also thought it was heart-warming to see such an inclusive approach to local theatre, which sent a powerful message about the skills and potential of those with learning disabilities. Once again, a big thank you and well done.  
Gavin White, Headteacher, Rushcombe School

Photos

See photos of the production.
See photos of rehearsals.
See photos of the making workshops run by WCT to create props for the production.

Video

Evaluations

Read the audience evaluations of the production.
Read messages of congratulation received by Wimborne Community Theatre following the production.

Gathering Stories of Wimborne’s Rivers from the Local Community

River Memories by Local People

 

Creative Reflections by Members of WCT

Creative Reflections by WCT Members

Preview of Secrets of the Stour at the Jubilee

On Saturday 4th June 2022, as part of the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee Celebrations, Iris, Queen of the Stour, and some of her acolytes, the Otter, the Caddisfly, the Water Crowfoot and the Kingfisher, took a stroll around Wimborne.  Starting with a short performance in the Square, we took the puppets in procession round the town in honour of Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II.

Film by Chris Brown, Town Crier of Wimborne, who introduced the performance

 

 

Location