Midgley Pace Egg: Difference between revisions

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(New page: Midgley is a village overlooking the Calder Valley in Yorkshire. Its Pace Egg play, performed each Good Friday, attracts visitors from far and wide. Originally performed by the schoolboys...)
 
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Originally performed by the schoolboys of the village, the play is now put on by the lads of Calder High School, who are significantly older.
Originally performed by the schoolboys of the village, the play is now put on by the lads of Calder High School, who are significantly older.


Archival films of the play in the 1950s show that the verse was 'declaimed' or 'recited', whereas now the play is 'acted' and has a vastly different character.
Archival films of the play in the 1960s show that the verse was 'declaimed' or 'recited', whereas now the play is 'acted' and has a vastly different character. [https://www.yfanefa.com/record/2383 Yorkshire Film Archive]
 
No longer confined to Midgley, the play tours the Calder Valley throughout the day, visiting Mytholmroyd, Hebden Bridge and Heptonstall, where it performs in contrast to the [[Heptonstall Pace Egg]], performed by local theatricals.


[[Image:Midgleyall1.JPG]]
[[Image:Midgleyall1.JPG]]


Hebden Bridge Post Office, Good Friday, 2002.
Hebden Bridge Post Office, Good Friday, 2002.
[[Image:Midgleytosspot1.JPG]][[Image:Midgleytosspot2.JPG]]
2002. Tosspot character, seen right carrying the 'Old Tally Wife', abandoned in recent years.
[[Category:Custom]][[Category:Yorkshire]][[Category:Mummers]]

Latest revision as of 17:54, 14 April 2021

Midgley is a village overlooking the Calder Valley in Yorkshire. Its Pace Egg play, performed each Good Friday, attracts visitors from far and wide.

Originally performed by the schoolboys of the village, the play is now put on by the lads of Calder High School, who are significantly older.

Archival films of the play in the 1960s show that the verse was 'declaimed' or 'recited', whereas now the play is 'acted' and has a vastly different character. Yorkshire Film Archive

No longer confined to Midgley, the play tours the Calder Valley throughout the day, visiting Mytholmroyd, Hebden Bridge and Heptonstall, where it performs in contrast to the Heptonstall Pace Egg, performed by local theatricals.

Hebden Bridge Post Office, Good Friday, 2002.


2002. Tosspot character, seen right carrying the 'Old Tally Wife', abandoned in recent years.