Hamish Patrick

Pilton has just lost a leading light.  Hamish Patrick, a founding member of the Pilton Green Man Festival and a staunch supporter of local charities, died suddenly on 7th December.  With a background in the theatre, he moved to North Devon 30 years ago and was a huge influence in the Pilton community.  His dream was to turn the tide of communities becoming fractured when children grew up and went away to find work.  He believed that if we created a strong bond within a community, the children would come back at least to visit and to keep those ties.  25 years later our children have grown up but few can stay away on Green Man Day in July; some are even on the committee and making it happen today.

Hamish worked tirelessly to get over 20 pantomimes onto the stage, and on creating and developing the Festival – in particular directing the Green Man Pageant.  In recent years he laboured long and hard with his team of supporters to organize the lovely family friendly haven that just seemed to magically spring up in Rotary Gardens on Green Man Day.  The photograph below shows him as the Prior in the Pageant.

Hamish Patrick was the Prior in the 2010 Pilton Green Man Pageant as well as Director

On 22nd December, a crowd of over 500 people lined Pilton Street to say ‘Goodbye’ to Hamish in a spontaneous gesture, demonstrating the warm regard in which he was held.  He will be sorely missed.

Thanks to Bev Neighbour for her contribution to this memory.

 

Lord Basil Rides Again!

The Lord Basil’s Reformers are at it again and this time raising money for Pilton Church Hall and the North Devon Theatres’ Friends.  Their previous productions have included ‘Communicating Doors‘, ‘The Canterbury Tales’, ‘Farndale Avenue’s Macbeth’ and ‘Farndale Avenue’s Christmas Carol’. The group started in 2003 at The Reform Inn (hence the Reformers) and of course The Reform is the home of Barum Brewery whose logo is ‘Lord Basil’ (hence the Lord Basil bit). Pilton Church Hall has been the home to many a play over the years and several photos can be seen to prove this on The Pilton Story Archive.

The production at the end of October is ‘Blithe Spirit’ by Noel Coward.  It’s a comic play which takes its title from a Shelley poem and is about a man who is haunted by the ghost of his annoying and temperamental first wife who tries to disrupt his second marriage.  It’s on Thursday 30th October and Saturday 1st November at 7.30pm.  Tickets – only £5 – will be available from Pip Cartmell (01271 378168) and probably from The Reform Inn.