Mary Poppins - the Complete Collection
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Оглавление
P.L. Travers. Mary Poppins - the Complete Collection
Copyright
Why You’ll Love This Book by Cameron Mackintosh
Cameron Mackintosh
Contents
Contents
Chapter One. EAST WIND
Chapter Two. THE DAY OUT
Chapter Three. LAUGHING GAS
Chapter Four. MISS LARK’S ANDREW
Chapter Five. THE DANCING COW
Chapter Six. BAD TUESDAY
Chapter Seven. THE BIRD WOMAN
Chapter Eight. MRS CORRY
Chapter Nine. JOHN AND BARBARA’S STORY
Chapter Ten. FULL MOON
Chapter Eleven. CHRISTMAS SHOPPING
Chapter Twelve. WEST WIND
Contents
Chapter One. THE KITE
Chapter Two. MISS ANDREW’S LARK
Chapter Three. BAD WEDNESDAY
Chapter Four. TOPSY TURVY
Chapter Five. THE NEW ONE
Chapter Six. ROBERTSON AY’S STORY
Chapter Seven. THE EVENING OUT
Chapter Eight. BALLOONS AND BALLOONS
Chapter Nine. NELLIE-RUBINA
Chapter Ten. MERRY-GO-ROUND
Contents
Chapter One. THE FIFTH OF NOVEMBER
Chapter Two. MR TWIGLEY’S WISHES
Chapter Three. THE CAT THAT LOOKED AT A KING
Chapter Four. THE MARBLE BOY
Chapter Five. PEPPERMINT HORSES
Chapter Six. HIGH TIDE
Chapter Seven. HAPPY EVER AFTER
Chapter Eight. THE OTHER DOOR
Contents
Chapter One. EVERY GOOSE A SWAN
Chapter Two. THE FAITHFUL FRIENDS
Chapter Three. LUCKY THURSDAY
Chapter Four. THE CHILDREN IN THE STORY
Chapter Five. THE PARK IN THE PARK
Chapter Six. HALLOWE’EN
Postscript by Brian Sibley
About the Author
About the Publishers
Отрывок из книги
I fell in love with Mary Poppins and Julie Andrews in 1964, just after I left school, when I went to see Walt Disney’s magical film. On reading the credits, I realised the film was based on books by P.L. Travers which I then read avidly, discovering that there were many more stories and characters than those in the film. Her forthright, quirkily funny dialogue stayed with me, brought to life in my head by Julie’s brilliant, no-nonsense delivery in the film. In the late 1970’s I tried, like many other producers, to see if I could get the stage rights to Mary Poppins – but to no avail. Over the years, I often used to think of Mary but it wasn’t until 1993 when I was introduced to her creator, the formidable Pamela Travers, that I found that she wouldn’t explain anything to me either. By then Pamela was a frail, but extremely sharp, 93 year old lady, living in her Chelsea house, in a street looking remarkably like Cherry Tree Lane, eyeing me up and down, asking me lots of questions as she batted away my own. I felt like Michael and Jane Banks, waiting to be told “you’ll do”.
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He was just about to get into bed and, indeed, had one foot already in it, when he noticed the compass lying on top of the chest of drawers.
Very slowly he withdrew his foot and tiptoed across the room. He knew now what he would do. He would take the compass and spin it and go round the world. And they’d never find him again. And it would serve them right. Without making a sound he lifted a chair and put it against the chest of drawers. Then he climbed up on it and took the compass in his hand.
.....