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tlc CreativeThree gentlemen, writing with one voiceWriters of Pantomime scripts |
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| Damian Trasler (left, pictured with an award, the nature of which
has vanished in the editing process) Damian has been a freelance writer for several years has written two award winning plays and several that have yet to win awards! His fiction has been published on both sides of the Atlantic and non-fiction articles have been used by national magazines in the UK and an American E-zine. In addition to the tlc Creative pantomime scripts, some of Damian's sketches and ten-minute plays and one-act plays are published by Lazy Bee Scripts. Damian is hoping to fight off offers of Hollywood fame and fortune long enough to add to the success of the tlc-creative collaboration! |
| David Lovesy (second left, pictured with stuffed toy) David has been writing and performing his own material for over eight years. A stand-up comedian by evening, technomonkey by day, David has considerable experience in writing for both performance and the corporate sector, from business presentation speeches to pantomime. He now spends his stage time with improvisational comedy and performing in Murder Mystery evenings. Anything to get away from learning lines. |
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Steve Clark (right, with a background in blue-sky thinking) Steve thought that the picture with hat and moustache was too silly to appear as part of a serious biography...
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| Together these three writers form tlc-creative (www.tlc-creative.co.uk)
and have written a wide range of successful pantomimes, plays and sketches. Their versions of "Jack
and the Beanstalk", "Babes in the
Wood", 1001 Arabian Nights (and a matinee),
Aladdin, and many more, have been published by Lazy Bee Scripts. Lazy Bee Scripts also publishes the Murder Mystery Scripts written by David and Steve (as part of "Really Horrid Productions"). Strictly speaking, they are not scripts, since there is no fixed text! Instead they are Murder Mystery Scenarios, which contain a plot and lots of character information which allows the cast of a Murder Mystery to improvise dialogue and interact with the audience whilst staying in character (at least up to the point where "character" becomes "corpse"). |
| Geoff Bamber | |||
| Georgina Cawood | |||
| Julie Cordingley | |||
| Jon Dwyer | |||
| Gerald P. Murphy | |||
| Sue Gordon | |||