ABOUT
GANG SHOW
The
inspiration for Gang Shows comes from Ralph Reader who started
Gang Show in London in 1932. Ralph Reader once said, "...
every night of the year, somewhere in the world a Gang Show is
playing." What a staggering thought! Heston and Isleworth
Gang Show is proud to be a successful part of this worldwide phenomenon
and also provide Scouts and Guides with the opportunity to take
part in the performing arts. Gang Show is only part of a wide
range of training activities available to members of the Scout
and Guide movements, but it is perhaps the one single activity
that brings together so many friends and supporters.
Gang Show began back in London in 1932 under the title "The
Gang's all Here". At that time Ralph Reader was one of the
most sought after of all professional choreographers, yet he undertook
to mix his professional and amateur activities, and he decided
to write and direct the entire show. That decision, to put on
a production to raise funds, was a move which would affect his
career and which would change his life forever.
Two of Reader's earliest and best loved Gang Show hits were "Song
in my Heart" and the London Gang Show theme "Crest of
a Wave".
Soon
after the Gang Show began the war years came along. The 1939 Gang
Show was stopped in mid rehearsals as the nation mobilised, Reader's
future seemed set in a new direction. His counter intelligence duties
for the RAF in France saw him posing as an entainment officer, and
he organised a Gang Show with ex-scouts who had been drafted in
to the RAF. The RAF Gang Shows, as they came to be known, grew to
25 different units consisting of RAF recruits considered unsuitable
for combat duites. Many of these unknowns - Peter Sellers, Dick
Emery, Tony Hancock, Norie Paramor - went on to become well-known
entertainers.
The
RAF Gang Shows played all over the world - wherever the troops went,
the Gang Show's followed.
The
1950's saw the resurrection of the Scout Gang Shows. The concept
spread throughout the world - Ireland, Hong Kong, Chicago and Australia
to name a few. They were based on the London Gang Show in both concept
and material.
The
Gang Shows were like any other theatrical presentation for that
time except the stars were unpaid and the girls were boys! Up until
the 1960's Gang Show was a male domain.
The
18th of May 1982 was a day that marked the passing of a great man
- one whose contribution to Scouting throughout the world is exceeded
only that by Baden-Powell.
Ralph
Reader is a theatre legend. In his lifetime he produced 19 shows
on Broadway, 34 in London's West End and 50 shows in the Royal Albert
Hall. He also wrote 15 books of plays, played in 5 films and composed
over 400 songs.
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