SHACKLETON`S CAT - English Touring Opera

Transcription

SHACKLETON`S CAT - English Touring Opera
Teacher’s Pack
SHACKLETON’S
CAT
A new opera
for children aged 7-11
This pack was written and compiled by Talia Lash at English Touring Opera with Tim Yealland (ETO) and
Naomi Chapman, Heather Lane and Naomi Boneham (Scott Polar Research Institute, University of
Cambridge). Cover image by Jude Munden.
We would like to thank Roderic Dunnett and the James Caird Society, Joseph Spence, Calista Lucy, Peter
Jolly, Richard Mayo and Simon Yiend at Dulwich College, John Blackborow, Sir James Perowne, Alexandra
Shackleton, Angela Montfort Bebb, Jim Mayer, Briony Gimson, Jim Mayer, Rebecca Moffatt, Steve
Hawkins and Tom Spickett.
Shackleton’s Cat Creative Team:
Composer
Russell Hepplewhite
Writer and Director
Tim Yealland
Designer
Jude Munden
ETO’s production of Shackleton’s Cat has been made possible thanks to the generous support of:
through the Strategic Touring Fund
Austin and Hope Pilkington Trust
D’Oyly Carte Charitable Trust
Joyce Fletcher Charitable Trust
Lord and Lady Lurgan Trust
The Sackler Trust
And the 53 generous supporters who donated to this project through the Big Give Christmas
Challenge 2014
©
All rights reserved 2015
Shackleton’s Cat
Teacher’s Pack
Introduction Shackleton’s voyage Key characters in the opera Dogs on the Endurance Antarctic facts Interview with Tim Yealland A note from the composer Classroom activity ideas Artists Song words Sheet music Further information 4
5 7 10 11 14 15 16 26 31 32 43 Photo licensed with the permission of the Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge
Introduction Each year, English Touring Opera commissions and produces a brand new opera for children, which tours around the UK, performing in school halls and intimate venues. Shackleton’s Cat is the latest in a line of operas especially created for children in primary schools, as well as for family audiences. This strand of ETO’s work is intended very much to stimulate the learning of young people we work with, and to engage with them on many different levels. We see these pieces as a real opportunity to partner with schools, and to encourage an expansive view of the interest of both the arts and, in this case, history and geography. We are thrilled that the Scott Polar Research Institute have contributed their expertise and resources to this project, and hope that teachers and children will find the historical information and classroom activities in this pack both informative and inspiring. ETO has now created quite a number of operas on this scale (including Borka: the goose with no feathers and the award‐winning Laika the Spacedog) so it is fair to say that we have developed a house style for them. This is a style which uses music, dialogue, movement, puppets, design, and even film in quite a free way. A key element is interaction: the audience always has a part in the story‐telling and some of the singing. We hope the pieces we make are quite the opposite from opera’s awful and stuffy reputation, because for us it can be liberating, fun and supremely expressive. Images from Laika the Spacedog, 2013, and Borka, 2014 Audience participation is integral to the show, so we encourage teachers to prepare three songs with your children, so that they can sing them with us during the performance. The words and music are supplied in this pack, along with a CD to help you learn. The opera itself lasts about an hour, and is suitable for children aged 7–11 years. The piece and this pack are covered by copyright and all rights are reserved. We look forward to bringing Shackleton’s Cat to you and hope you enjoy the show! 4 Ernest Shackleton’s Imperial Trans‐Antarctic (Endurance) Expedition left London in the summer of 1914. His plan was to cross Antarctica from the Weddell Sea to the South Pole then on to the Ross Sea. This route across Antarctica is 1,800 miles. Shackleton named his ship Endurance after his family motto ‘Fortitudine Vincimus’: by endurance we conquer. On board were all the supplies that they would need for their expedition. When they arrived in Antarctica, winter was approaching and ice was beginning to form on top of the sea. Shackleton tried to find a safe place to drop anchor but it was too late, the Endurance became trapped in the sea ice. The ice was moving and it was taking the Endurance with it, pushing and pulling her further and further from land. The crew unpacked as much of the equipment as they could before the Endurance was crushed by ice. They then watched as the ship slowly sank to the bottom of the sea. Shackleton’s
voyage
Photo: Frank Hurley. Licensed with the permission of the Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge
Pulling three lifeboats full of equipment, the men walked across the ice looking for a safe place to set up
camp. After four months camping on the ice, the ice began to break up, so the men got in to the
lifeboats and headed towards the nearest land, Elephant Island. Everyone was overjoyed to have found
land, fresh water and plenty of Elephant Seal meat to eat; many of the men were in a desperate state.
The problem was that they were still hundreds of miles from people who could help them. One of the
lifeboats would need to go and get help.
Shackleton’s new plan was to sail 800
miles to South Georgia across some of the
stormiest seas on the planet. For six men
to make this journey in a small boat
would be extremely dangerous, but as
long as the sea was clear of ice and they
had the wind behind them they stood a
chance. They chose the largest lifeboat,
the James Caird. McNish, the carpenter,
spent the days before leaving making her
more seaworthy. He made a cover for
the boat from canvas sail material so that
she wouldn’t fill up with water in the
stormy seas. They packed rations for one
month, raised the sail and rowed away
from Elephant Island in the direction of
South Georgia.
South Georgia is an island only 100 miles
long and 23 miles wide and it is 800 miles
away from Elephant Island. If they missed South Georgia they would be lost in the vast Atlantic Ocean.
Shackleton’s Captain, Frank Worsley, was a brilliant navigator so he was in charge of sailing the James
Caird.
Meanwhile on Elephant Island the remaining men waited anxiously – would Shackleton ever return?
On board the James Caird, the next two weeks were ‘a daily struggle to keep (them)selves alive’ in gale
force winds and huge waves. One man held the rudder and another the sail while a third baled water
out of the little boat. Meanwhile the other three crawled into their soaking sleeping bags at the bottom
of the boat among the rocks and sandbags. The men were so thirsty that their tongues swelled up.
Eventually South Georgia came into sight – stormy weather had carried them around the island to rocky
shores. It took two days for them to land. It was now early winter and a range of mountains separated
them from the whaling station on the south side of the island.
The journey had been extremely difficult and the men were now very weak. Three men were too ill to
climb the mountains so camped in a cave on the beach. At 2 o’clock in the morning of Friday 19th May
1916 Shackleton, Worsley and Crean began the first ever crossing of South Georgia. By the light of a full
moon they saw snow-slopes, high peaks and cliffs. A day later they staggered in to the whaling station,
and could now start to save the other men stuck on Elephant Island. Again and again the stormy seas of
the Southern Ocean stopped Shackleton from reaching Elephant Island. It was only on his fourth
attempt that he was finally able to rescue the men on August 30th 1916. Amazingly, all 28 men survived.
6
Key characters in the opera
There were 28 men in Shackleton’s Endurance crew. Unfortunately we couldn’t include them all in
our opera. The following key characters appear in Shackleton’s Cat to tell the story of what
happened. The children in the audience play the rest of the crew.
Frank Worsley (1872–1943) was a sailor from New Zealand who served as the captain of the
Endurance under Shackleton. Famously he dreamt one night of
icebergs floating down Burlington Street in London, and when he
went to the street the next morning saw the sign for Shackleton’s
expedition, and promptly signed up as ship’s captain. His
navigational skills, particularly his use of the sextant, were
incredible, and saved the men from certain death. On the James
Caird lifeboat he managed to find the island of South Georgia in
the middle of the vast ocean, and with very few glimpses of the
sun and the stars, the essential navigational aids. He served in
the navy in the First World War, sinking a German submarine in
1917. He was known as Wuzzles.
Sir Ernest Shackleton (1874–1922) was an Irishman, brought up
largely in south London, educated at Dulwich College, and
known today as perhaps the greatest of all the polar explorers.
Known as The Boss, he led three British expeditions to the
Antarctic, and was knighted for his feats, which included
reaching a point just 100 miles short of the pole, the furthest
anyone had been in 1909. His greatest achievement was the
rescue of all 28 men on the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition,
against all the odds. It is thought of as one of the greatest
examples of leadership in history. He had problems with money
at home, and never settled when he was not in the middle of an
adventure. He died on South Georgia in 1922, at the beginning
of a new expedition, and is buried there.
Frank Wild (1873–1939) was a Yorkshireman who went on five south
polar expeditions and served with Captain Scott as well as with
Shackleton. Known as Frankie, he was second-in-command on the
Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition. He was left in charge of the men
on Elephant Island when Shackleton took Worsley, McNish and a few
others to get rescue from South Georgia. He had an exceptionally cool
head and is remembered today as one of the greatest of the polar
explorers, alongside Shackleton and Scott. He was with Shackleton in
South Georgia in 1922 when The Boss died. He served for the British in
Russia in the last years of the First World War, and subsequently
became a farmer in Africa, where he died.
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Harry McNish (1874 –1930), sometimes spelt McNeish, and known as Chippy, was the carpenter on the Imperial Trans‐Antarctic Expedition. His skills became essential after the Endurance broke up in the ice, and he was responsible for fitting out the lifeboats that would save the men on their journey to Elephant Island, and then on the final astonishing journey to South Georgia, a trip he was part of along with only five others. He had a cat called Mrs Chippy, who turned out to be a boy cat. McNish could be opinionated, and he and Shackleton never quite got on, a fact that is perhaps reflected in the refusal to award him a Polar Medal. He died in New Zealand, penniless. A statue of the cat was recently added to his grave. McNish's grandson Tom, who lives in England, was delighted about this and felt his grandfather would have been pleased. He said: “I think the cat was more important to him than the Polar Medal.” Perce Blackborow (1896–1949) was from Wales. He was shipwrecked as a very young man – along with his friend William Bakewell – on the coast of Uruguay, and they subsequently travelled to Buenos Aires looking for a job. The Endurance was in the port and they both tried to find employment as members of the crew. Bakewell was successful, but Perce was too young. Perce took matters into his own hands by climbing onboard as a stowaway, to be discovered a few days later when the boat was already at sea. He was put to work in the kitchen, and was good enough to be signed on as a member of the crew, becoming ship’s steward. Well‐liked and with an easy‐going manner he suffered from terrible frostbite and gangrene, and had some of his toes amputated on Elephant Island, an operation which undoubtedly saved his life. Another crew member described his reaction to the operation: “The poor beggar behaved splendidly and it went without a hitch… When Blackborow came to, he was cheerful as anything and started joking directly.” Photo licensed with permission of Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge Mrs Chippy was the tabby cat taken on board the Endurance by the carpenter Harry McNish. Carpenters are often called Chippy, hence the name given to the cat. It was a month into the voyage when Mrs Chippy was discovered to be a boy cat. The crew loved Mrs Chippy for his friendliness and his character (he was unafraid of the dogs on deck) and for his ability to walk along the ship's inch‐wide rails in even the roughest seas. After the ship was destroyed, Shackleton ordered that Mrs Chippy along with some of the dogs be shot. Shackleton felt that it was impossible to feed the animals. It seems that McNish felt the loss so badly he never forgave Shackleton, and that this event led to some friction between the two men. In 2004 a bronze statue of the cat was placed on McNish's grave in New Zealand. 8 In our production, Mrs Chippy is played by a puppet, handmade by our designer, Jude Munden. Here are some pictures of her creation process. 9
Dogs on the Endurance Although they do not feature prominently in our opera, the 69 dogs that accompanied the men on the Endurance mission were essential to the expedition. Shackleton had originally planned to bring over 100 dogs, and these were shipped over from Canada and arrived at Millwall docks in London on 14 July 1914. They were mostly mongrels bred with huskies. Their job on the expedition was to pull the sledges carrying all of the equipment across the ice to the South Pole. When the Endurance got trapped in the ice and started to drift, and the mission couldn’t continue, the dogs helped keep the men occupied and entertained. Shackleton organised six sledging teams, and the men and their dogs would race each other. After some time drifting, it became clear that the expedition was not going to reach the South Pole, and Shackleton had to think about what to do next. The dogs were eating more food than the crew, and saving the men became the priority. Between January and March 1916 all the dogs were shot, in order to preserve rations for the men. Some of the dogs were eaten in order to survive. While it was necessary to do this, the men were sad that they had been forced to end the dogs’ lives in this way. Frank Hurley wrote: “I have known many men who I would rather have shot, than these dogs”. Some of the dogs. Photo courtesy of the James Caird Society Names of 66 of the dogs: Alti Amundsen Blackie Bob Bo’sun Bristol Brownie Buller Bummer Caruso Chips 10 Dismal Elliott Fluff Gruss Hackenschmidt Hercules Jamie Jasper Jerry Judge Luke Lupoid Mack Martin Mercury Noel Paddy Peter Roger Roy Rufus Rugby Sadie Sailor Saint Sally Sammy Samson Sandy Satan Shakespeare Side Lights Simian Slippery Neck Slobbers Snapper Snowball Soldier Songster Sooty Spider Split Lip Spotty Steamer Steward Stumps Sub Sue Surly Swanker Sweep Tim Upton Wallaby Wolf Antarctic facts 7 Antarctica is at the bottom of our planet and the Arctic is at the top. They are the polar areas that are covered in snow and ice. 7 In the polar regions, the sun never rises for half of the year and for the next half year it never sets. Even in the summer, the sun’s rays are so weak that it never warms up and in Antarctica it is too cold for trees or grass to grow. Summer in the Antarctic is during the winter in the UK, and the Antarctic winter is during our summer. 7 Antarctica is the coldest place on the planet and temperatures often get down to ‐60°C. At ‐25°C steel becomes brittle and at ‐40°C skin that’s unprotected freezes. 7 Antarctica is a huge continent much bigger than the USA and thousands of miles from the UK. The seas that surround Antarctica freeze in the winter but in summer, penguins, gulls, whales and seals live around the coast diving for food among the ice floes. Near the coast are huge mountains, and beyond the mountains is a high polar plateau (large flat space). On the plateau it is so cold and bleak that wild animals cannot survive there. In about the middle of the plateau is an area called the South Pole and these days a few people, doing scientific work, live there. In 1914 very little was known about this incredibly harsh yet incredibly beautiful continent. Only a few people get to visit Antarctica and most of them want to go back. 7 About 99% of Antarctica is covered with a huge ice sheet. It is the largest single mass of ice on Earth and is bigger than the whole of Europe. The ice sheet averages 2,450 metres deep and holds about 70% of the world’s fresh water. 7 In winter, much of the surrounding ocean freezes over. With this extra winter sea‐ice, Antarctica almost doubles in size. 11
7 Antarctica is so dazzlingly white because of the snow, it is possible to get ice blindness from looking at the whiteness. If you took a picture with flash on Antarctica without protecting your eyes, you would be blind for 5‐6 minutes, which is long enough to freeze! Shackleton’s men and modern explorers in Antarctica have to make sure they wear goggles to protect their eyes. The goggles the men on Shackleton’s expedition wore. Photo courtesy of Scott Polar Research Institute. 7 Although it is one of the coldest regions in the world, there is an abundance of wildlife in the Antarctic coastal regions. It was this abundance that allowed Shackleton’s men to survive for so many months on the ice, eating a diet of penguins, and when they could catch them, seals. They also used the skins as fuel for their stove.
Seals
Penguins
Leopard Seal
Emperor Penguin
Crabeater Seal
Chinstrap Penguin
Fur Seal
Adélie Penguin
Elephant Seal
Gentoo Penguin
Whales
Other birds
Killer Whale
Petrels
Humpback
Whale
Albatrosses
Finner Whale
Skuas
Blue Whale
12 7 When it is really cold, penguins stand on their heels holding their toes up. They use their tails to support themselves so they don’t fall over backwards. Their stiff tail feathers lose no heat, so the penguins have as little of their bodies touching the freezing ice as possible. 7 Penguins hunt for food by diving underwater and swallowing their prey. They can hold their breath underwater for almost 20 minutes! 7 Penguin poo can be pink or orange (as they mainly eat krill, a kind of shrimp, which is pink), and you can see it from space! 7 Pack‐ice is the sea ice in the Arctic and Antarctic regions. Antarctica is a solid land mass surrounded by sea which freezes into pack‐ice near the coast. During the Antarctic summer months of December, January and February (our winter months) the pack‐ice is thin enough to get through with the right ship. Sometimes there are gaps in the pack‐ice called ‘leads’ and in Shackleton’s day someone would climb the rigging (a net made from rope) to the crow’s nest (a kind of balcony high on the ship’s mast) and look for these gaps. It was like looking over a vast jigsaw. Where there were no gaps ships would ram the pack to break through. If the pack was too thick to get through, ships became trapped. They then drifted in the pack which slowly moves due to wind and currents in the sea beneath. The floes (huge slabs of floating ice) grind against each other and the wooden ships of Shackleton’s day could easily be crushed between them. This was always a danger in the dreaded Weddell Sea which is in a bay bigger than France. The pack gets trapped in the bay and so the Weddell Sea fills with billions of tonnes of ice, always on the move and under massive pressure. The moving pack makes weird, scary noises. 13
Interview with Tim Yealland, writer and director of Shackleton’s Cat Why did you want to write an opera about this story? It is now 100 years since the famous expedition. If Shackleton’s journey had gone according to plan, and if he and his men had succeeded in crossing the continent from sea to sea, the story would probably be forgotten today. It is the fact that the journey turned into a series of disasters and escapes that makes it so compelling. In some ways it is the most remarkable tale of survival in modern history. There is also a wealth of historical detail to draw on, and some great characters. I think the story is great to write about because it is like something from science fiction, with the humans marooned on a distant planet, without communication, and cut off from planet Earth. You could try writing your own story about characters who are lost and who have to find their way back home. What’s happened to them? Where do they go? How do they get home? Who is your favourite character in this opera? I like Harry McNish (also known as McNeish), one of the oldest in the crew, the ship's carpenter, and the owner of Mrs Chippy the cat. He was in no way a hero, and he didn't get on that well with Shackleton. But it was McNish who made the little dinghies seaworthy, and he prepared the James Caird lifeboat for the final journey. He was one of the few men Shackleton trusted enough to take with him on this last and scariest leg of the voyage. If there was a leak Harry would fix it. It seems cruel and unjust that he was not awarded the Polar Medal. How is an opera written? What do you start with? How long does it take? . You have to begin with a really good idea. It might be an idea that seems impossible to achieve, but you need something that is strong and thrilling. Then the librettist (writer), the composer and the designer have to agree that the idea itself is a strong one. The next stage is for the librettist to map out the structure of the story. In this case it was hard because we needed to cram a story lasting 2 years into an opera lasting 60 minutes. Then the librettist has to write the words of the opera, bearing in mind that the words will be sung. Generally there are about 5 drafts of the libretto or script, and each draft is sent to the composer to look at. Finally the composer starts to write the music. Depending on the number of instruments in the orchestra or ensemble the composition of the music can take a very long time. Meanwhile the production of the opera (the work of the director and designer) starts to develop. In all it takes about 6 months to write an opera. Designs for the set of Shacketon’s Cat, by Jude Munden
14 Before composing the music for Shackleton's Cat I imagined how
Antarctica would have looked and felt for Shackleton and his men. I
pictured the terrifying seas, the endless sheets of ice, and I thought
about the howling wind and bitter cold. I then tried to create these
images in the music I composed so that the audience feel like they are
in the Antarctic.
You can try this too. Find a picture of Antarctica and compose a piece
of music to describe what you see. Which instruments will be most
effective and how should they be played? Can you create contrast in
the music as it goes along - perhaps adding different instruments?
Don't forget you can always use your voices as well - you could even
make up some words to sing as part of your piece. Can you help the
listener imagine the picture you have been looking at?
Russell Hepplewhite, composer
Photos: Rebecca Moffatt
Classroom activity ideas Are we nearly there yet? Fact The planned route for the expedition was: Weddell Sea to South Pole, South Pole to Ross Island. Tasks Draw the planned route on a map: What do you think the main potential problems could be? Draw the actual route on a world map: London, Chile, South Georgia, Weddell Sea, Elephant Island, South Georgia. Compare the two. Curriculum Geography: location and place links Maths: measurement, addition and subtraction 16 How do I get there? Fact Shackleton, Worsley and Crean were the first men to cross the mountains of South Georgia. Afterwards they recorded their route. Task Think about a journey you have made. Draw a map to explain to others how you got there. It can be a journey you made to go on holiday, your route from home to school, or even from your classroom to somewhere else in the school. Curriculum Geography: mapping, location, place links The map of me Fact Many geographical features on Antarctica were named after the explorers who went there – not just from Shackleton’s expedition, but also from Scott’s and Amundsen’s, explorers who also visited the region. Tasks Look at a map of Antarctica and find the places named after explorers. Can you think of any other places named after people? Looking at a map of your local area, can you find any streets or places named after people? Draw a map of your local area, an area you know well, or an island of your imagination. Rename or name geographical features after people who are important to you. Why have you named each place as you have? Curriculum Art: making art links Geography: reading and creating maps Sing‐a‐long‐a‐sea‐shanty Fact “Some of us had presents from home to open. Later there was a really splendid dinner…Christmas pudding, mince‐pies, dates, figs, and crystallized fruits...In the evening everybody joined in sing‐song. Hussey had made a one‐stringed violin.” – quote from Shackleton’s account of the voyage. Tasks Sailors frequently made up their own words to be sung with well known tunes. Write your own sea shanty using this method. Write it out with the tune. Have a class sing‐along. Make a musical instrument using an everyday object then use it to accompany a song. Curriculum Music: composition, understanding how music is put together, singing, playing an links instrument Science: sound Design Technology: design and make an instrument using an everyday object 17 Icy Sounds Fact Shackleton describes the sound of the ice as it freezes around the ship and begins to crush the wooden frame. “We heard tapping as from a hammer, grunts, groans and squeaks, and electric trams running, birds singing, kettles boiling noisily, and the occasional swish… I could hear the creaking and groaning of her timbers.” Task Compose your own piece of music to describe the crushing of Shackleton’s ship, the Endurance. You can use instruments you have made, objects around the room, your voices, or any instruments the school might have. What does the world sound like in your everyday life? Can you create a musical composition based on this? Curriculum Music: composition links Snappy Snaps Fact Frank Hurley, from Australia, was the expedition photographer. He photographed daily life. Hurley was always ready with his camera, even in the toughest conditions. Without Hurley’s photos, this story wouldn’t have been believed. In those days photos were developed on heavy glass plates. Hurley realised that he couldn’t take all his wonderful photos with him as they were too heavy to carry. He picked out the best ones and smashed the others – it was the only way he could leave them. Task Record everyday life with a series of photographs. Edit your photos; if you could only keep three, which would be the best ones to save? Curriculum Art: recording experiences, becoming proficient in art techniques links Flat Pack Conundrum Fact Shackleton had taken a large wooden hut to Antarctica in pieces to put together there – like flat pack furniture. This is where some of the men would spend the winter. Time was beginning to run out and soon the winter would be upon them. Tasks As a group, follow some instructions to build something flat packed, or from lego. How easy were the instructions to follow? Write some instructions for a friend to follow. Curriculum English: Spoken word, instructional text links Design and Technology: evaluation of product 18 Volunteers Please! Fact When Shackleton was looking for men to go on the expedition he put an advert in a newspaper in 1912 (this picture is a reproduction): Would you have wanted to go on the expedition, based on this advert? Thousands of men and several women came forward and they must have been amazing people to be willing to face such a challenge. The final crew of 28 included men that had been on Captain Scott’s last expedition a few years before. There were scientists, doctors, engineers, and of course sailors. Tasks Advert: you need people to go on an expedition, decide what sort of people you are looking for then write and illustrate an advert to recruit people. Respond, by letter to somebody else’s advert, or to Shackleton’s. Why should you be taken on the expedition? See an example of a real letter on the next page. Sift: read someone else’s letter, would you interview this person? Interview: write questions, then interview candidates for the expedition. Curriculum English: Vocabulary, handwriting, spoken word, persuasive text, advertising, letter writing, links questioning, use of formal language 19 Extract from letter to Shackleton, photo courtesy of Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge. Full transcript reads: Dear Sir Ernest,
We “three sporty girls” have decided to write and beg of you to take us with you on your expedition to the
South Pole. We are three strong, healthy girls, and also gay and bright, and willing to undergo any
hardships that you yourselves undergo.
If our feminine garb is inconvenient, we should just love to don masculine attire. We have been reading
all books and articles that have been written on dangerous expeditions by brave men to the Polar regions,
and we do not see why men should have all the glory, and women none, especially when there are women
just as brave and capable as there are men.
Trusting you will think over our suggestion, we are Peggy Pegrine, Valerie Davey, Betty Webster.
P.S. We have not given any further particulars, in case you should not have time to read this, but if you are
at all interested, we will write and tell you more about our greatest wish.
20 Honour Fact After the men returned from the expedition, most of them were awarded the Polar Medal –
but not Harry McNish. It is said that this might have been because of Shackleton’s personal dislike for him, even though no one could deny his skills in shipbuilding. He was never seen to take measurements, producing perfect work by eye. “I was disheartened to learn that McNish… had been denied the Polar Medal...of all the men in the party no‐one more deserved recognition than the old carpenter....I would regard the withholding of the Polar Medal from McNish as a grave injustice.” – Alexander Macklin, one of the other men in the crew Task Do you think it is right that McNish did not receive a medal? Why/why not? Write a letter to the Queen to explain your opinions, either to persuade her to award McNish the medal posthumously (after death), or in support that he did not receive it. Curriculum English: Vocabulary, handwriting, spoken word, persuasive text, letter writing, use of formal links language Regret Fact 10 months earlier, Shackleton had missed the chance of sheltering the Endurance in Glacier Bay safely away from the sea ice. He knew this was a mistake, and later regretted it. Task Discussion: What have you regretted? Why? What would you have changed? Curriculum English: spoken word links Emergency! Fact Shackleton had been preparing for this disaster through the winter, as it became clear that the ship would be destroyed. The crew had taken everything needed to camp on the ice floes off the ship before she was crushed. Task What would you take off the ship? Why? If you had to put together a survival kit from the things in your home, what would you take and why? Make a poster of your survival kit, with drawings or a collage, and explanations for each item. Curriculum Art, Design: Making and evaluating links English: justifying decisions, critical thinking 21 Dear Diary Fact Lots of Shackleton’s men wrote diaries. Shackleton’s diary, photo courtesy of Scott Polar Research Institute Tasks Keep a diary to record your life over the next week. Imagine that you are one of Shackleton’s men, record what’s happening and how you feel Curriculum English: recount, diary writing, composition, handwriting links Waterproof Fact McNish, the carpenter, spent the days before leaving making the James Caird lifeboat more seaworthy. He made a cover for the boat from canvas sail material so that she wouldn’t fill up with water in the stormy seas. Tasks Experiment: use everyday objects to test for waterproofness: plastic bags, fat, different fabrics, etc. Record and share your results. What is the most waterproof material? Experiment: using a takeaway container punched with holes, can you keep it floating on water by waterproofing it? (Clue: in 1915, McNish used seal blubber and oil paint) Curriculum Science: properties and changes of materials, working scientifically, uses of everyday links objects 22 Morale Boosting Fact Shackleton understood the importance of good morale (feeling contented, happy and cheerful). He allowed each man to keep about 2 pounds in weight (about 1kg) of their own belongings, rather than just keeping essential items. Tasks Discussion: what cheers you up? Why? Plan: make up a bag of personal belongings that cheer you up, weigh it to make sure that it is less than 1kg. Curriculum Maths: measurement, addition, subtraction links English: spoken word, discussion Brrrr, I’m cold! Fact Antarctica is the coldest and windiest place on the planet. Explorers frequently tested out new clothing to keep them warm, including string vests! They also adapted the clothing they had to maximise the retention of heat, to stop them from getting cold. Tasks Experiment: test different pieces of clothing to find out which is warmest, e.g. mittens or gloves Experiment: test multiple thin layers, thick layer, different types of fabric etc. Task: how would you adapt your school uniform to make it as warm as possible? Describe and draw your Antarctic school uniform. Curriculum Science: properties and changes of materials, working scientifically, animals including links humans, uses of everyday objects Portrait of Sir Ernest Shackleton (photo courtesy of Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge). Look at what he is wearing and discuss how his clothing has been designed to keep him warm. 23 Goal! Fact The men played hockey and football on the ice floes and in the evenings they had rowdy concerts. Endurance was like an island of cheerfulness in strange contrast with the cold, silent world that lay outside. Tasks Plan some group games so that everybody takes part. The aim is to have fun, keep warm and keep morale high. Did you have to change the way you played the game in order to keep everybody happy? Why would this have been important? Curriculum Physical Education: keeping fit, teamwork links Penguin power Fact Male Emperor penguins protect their egg by balancing it on their feet. The penguins have to keep moving in order to keep themselves, and the egg, warm. Tasks Invent a game: using bean bags as eggs, balance the egg on your feet, keep moving and don’t let the egg fall off. Now work as a team and turn this activity into a game with rules. Curriculum Physical Education: team work, keeping fit, balancing, game rules links English: instructional text P is for… Fact Shackleton’s men saved the Encyclopaedia Britannica from the Endurance before it sank. They used to read it, test their general knowledge and also tear out pages to use as toilet paper! Tasks We mostly use items for one purpose, but in a survival situation, a small number of items would have to be used for many things. Choose an everyday object (brick, pencil, paperclip, bucket), list as many different ways to use it as you can think of. Who can think of the most uses? Curriculum Design Technology: planning, design, lateral thinking links 24 Come dine with me on ice
Fact
Shackleton knew that sooner or later the ice would melt and they would have to make a
boat journey. This is when they would eat the sledging rations that were going to be used
when crossing Antarctica. Meanwhile they would eat hooch - a stew made from a mixture
of dried meat, fat and cereal, together with ground biscuit and any fresh meat that could be
found, along with water (from melted snow). This was the standard fare of the Shackleton
expedition when they lived on the ice. Later on their food was even more basic and
consisted of penguin and sometimes seal meat. The men would eat almost every part of the
animals they killed, wasting nothing, and using the rest as fuel.
One man wrote: “The dried vegetables…all go into the same pot as the meat, and every
dish is a sort of hash or stew, be it ham or seal-meat or half and half…The milk-powder and
sugar…boiled with the tea or cocoa.”
Food provisions on the Endurance
Photo Talia Lash, taken at the Polar Museum at Scott Polar Research Institute
Task
In a small group, with adult supervision, use a primus or camping stove to heat water and
make a hot drink or soup.
Using a selection of foods, decide what you could take to the Antarctic and what couldn’t be
taken (you could experiment by freezing different foods).
Plan a polar meal.
Curriculum Design Technology: cooking
links
Science: plants, living things, temperature, states
That’s my motto
Fact
Shackleton named his ship Endurance after his family motto ‘Fortitudine Vincimus’, which is
Latin for ‘by endurance we conquer’. A motto is a short phrase that sums up the aims or
beliefs of a group or individual.
Discussion: What would your family motto be? Does your school have a motto? What
would be the motto of your class? In groups, decide on the best motto for your class, and
write the reasons why you have chosen this.
Present your motto and reasons to the class. You could have a vote to decide on the class’s
new motto.
Draw a poster or coat of arms to illustrate your motto
Curriculum English: Vocabulary, handwriting, spoken word, persuasive text
links
Tasks
25
Artists
Creative Team
Russell Hepplewhite – Composer
Russell studied at Chetham’s School of Music in Manchester and
subsequently at the Royal College of Music, where he was awarded
a scholarship to study piano with Head of Keyboards Andrew Ball
and composition with Timothy Salter.
Russell's music has been performed by distinguished musicians at
major venues including the Wigmore Hall, the Library Theatre
Luton, the Purcell Room and the Queen Elizabeth Hall. Russell has
also had musicals developed at the National Theatre Studio and performed in the Sheffield Crucible
Theatre. Recent performances have included a number of UK and overseas performances and
premieres of Russell's work, with venues including Glyndebourne, Snape Maltings and Kings Place
London. Laika the Spacedog, commissioned by English Touring Opera, was awarded the David
Bedford Award and was featured on the BBC before receiving its premiere at London’s Science
Museum in 2013 and embarking on a nationwide tour of the UK. It was also performed at the
Armel Opera Festival in Hungary and in Avignon, France.
In addition to his composition and performing schedule as a pianist, Russell is an examiner for the
Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music and teaches Musicianship and Composition at the
Royal College of Music Junior Department.
Tim Yealland – Writer, Director and Head of Education at English Touring Opera
Tim read English at Cambridge University, and then studied singing
at the Guildhall School of Music in London, and at the Hochschule
für Musik in Munich. As a singer and actor he performed roles for
English Touring Opera (including the title role in Don Giovanni),
Opera Factory, Opera 80, Opera North, English National Opera and
the Chichester Festival.
For many years he has been active as a director working
particularly in the community. He has created projects for all the
leading opera companies and many orchestras, including the Royal
Opera House, Glyndebourne, English National Opera, Opera North,
and the London Symphony Orchestra. Tim also directs ETO’s outreach programme. He directed
Fantastic Mr Fox for ETO in 2011, and also created a book called Foxtales. Large community
projects with ETO have included One Breath in Sheffield, A House on the Moon in Wolverhampton,
and the award-winning One Day Two Dawns in Cornwall. He works regularly at the Casa da Música
in Portugal, most recently devising Spirit Level, a large-scale piece with actors, dancers and
musicians. As a writer he has created the words for and directed many operas for young people
and families including recently In the Belly of the Horse, Voithia, The Feathered Ogre, Laika the
Spacedog, Borka and Spin. Last year he helped create two new community operas: Zeppelin
Dreams in Wolverhampton and Curado in Porto. Apart from Shackleton's Cat he is currently
working on a new opera called Waxwings for young people with special needs.
26
Jude Munden – Designer
A Fine Art graduate from Falmouth College of Art, Jude was a teacher
before becoming a full time maker/designer. She makes costumes, props,
puppets, scenic art and models for film, theatre and exhibition, working
from a barge on the Penryn River that she shares with her set builder
husband, Alan.
She has been working with ETO since One Day Two Dawns in 2009 on
projects including Under the Hill, Severn Stories, In the Belly of the Horse,
Spirit Level, The Fox and the Moon, La Clemenza di Tito, Laika the
Spacedog and Borka. Jude also works with Miracle Theatre in Cornwall
and is a founder member of Pipeline Theatre.
Jude has three children and lives in Falmouth, Cornwall.
Cast
Matt Ward – McNish
This year for English Touring Opera Matt will perform Giacomo L’Assedio
di Calais. Last year for ETO Western Union Boy in the Olivier Award
Winning production of Paul Bunyan, Cpt McAllister Borka, Young Guard
(cover) King Priam and Monostatos (cover) Magic Flute. Matt studied at
the Royal College of Music supported by the RCM Yvonne Wells Award.
Roles at RCM: Arnalta in L’Incoronazione di Poppea, Frick in La Vie
Parisienne and Don Curzio in Le Nozze di Figaro. For the West Australian
Opera Company Matt performed Mercury Orpheus in the Underworld
and The Rector (cover) Peter Grimes.
Andrew Glover – McNish
New Zealander Andrew Glover made his operatic début with New Zealand
Opera, where he performed Beppe I Pagliacci and Vasek The Bartered Bride,
and Sellem The Rake’s Progress with the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra.
He has sung a number of roles with English Touring Opera - Monsieur Triquet
Eugene Onegin, Gherardo Gianni Schicchi, Giovanni L’Assedio di Calais, and
Tinca Il tabarro. He has also performed Lysander A Midsummer Night’s
Dream for Opera North, and Remendado Carmen, Don Curzio/Don Basilio The
Marriage of Figaro and Beppe I pagliacci for Opera Holland Park. He has sung
concerts with the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra, New Zealand Symphony
Orchestra, Auckland Chamber Orchestra, Christchurch Symphony Orchestra
and the Perth Orchestra.
Dominic Walsh – Wild
Dominic’s professional debut at the age of 26 was as Ferrando in Così fan Tutte
for Opera Queensland in 2011. The following year, he played Nanki-poo in The
Mikado. He is a Guildhall Artist Masters Graduate from the Guildhall School of
Music and Drama and completed a BMus(Perf) at the Queensland
Conservatorium.
Dominic’s awards include the Chairman’s Prize and the Concert Recital
Diploma from the Guildhall School and scholarships from the Guildhall School
Trust, the Ian Potter Cultural Trust, the Australia Council, and the Australia
Music Foundation’s Guy Parsons Award. In 2014, Dominic covered the
Schoolmaster in Cunning Little Vixen for Garsington Opera.
27
Michael Butchard – Wild
Michael grew up in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney, Australia.
Born into a musical family, he learned piano, saxophone and oboe, but his
favourite thing was singing. He studied at the University of Sydney, and the
Sydney Conservatorium of Music, and in 2011 he moved to London, with his
wife Bonnie, to study at the Royal College of Music. Since then, he has sung with
many choirs and opera companies in the UK and hopes to work in Germany in
the future. Besides his passion for opera, in his free time Michael bakes bread,
brews beer, roasts coffee and loves to potter in his veggie garden.
Jan Capinski – Worsley
Jan was born in Kraków, Poland, where he studied before moving to the UK in
2009. He trained at the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama and ENO Opera
Works, and has sung roles with Mid Wales Opera, Garsington Opera, Scottish
Opera, British Youth Opera, and several smaller companies. Outside singing he is
a keen blogger, stand-up-paddleboarder, as well as a freelance recording
engineer. To find out more about Jan, feel free to visit www.capinski.com
Jamie Rock – Worsley
Irish baritone Jamie is equally at home in opera, concert and recital
repertoire. In 2015, Jamie is making his debut with ETO, performing in
the chorus of all three evening operas and Shackleton’s Cat as well as
covering principal roles in La Bohème and L'Assedio di Calais. Recent
performances include Masetto in Don Giovanni for Regent’s Opera and
covering Filip Burgrave in Dvorak’s Jacobin for Buxton Festival Opera. In
concert, Jamie has performed the Requiems of Mozart, Brahms, Duruflé
and Fauré; Haydn’s Creation and Handel’s Messiah at venues such as the
Usher Hall (Edinburgh), National Concert Hall (Dublin), and Salzburg
Cathedral. He’s also a member of the vocal ensemble Quartet, who explore a wide range of music
and look for new ways of presenting the vocal repertoire.
Gareth Brynmor John – Shackleton
Winner of the 2013 Kathleen Ferrier Award, baritone Gareth held a
choral scholarship at St John’s College, Cambridge, before studying at
the Royal Academy of Music. He won the RAM Patrons' Award and
was awarded the WCoM Silver Medal and an Independent Opera
Postgraduate Voice Fellowship. His operatic roles include Eugene
Onegin and Claudio (with Sir Colin Davis), and he recently
understudied several roles for WNO. Recent recitals have included King's Place, King's Lynn
Festival, and Leeds Lieder. He performs in the London English Song Festival, recently giving a
programme of Great War composers at St George's Hanover Square. He recorded Mahler Lieder
eines fahrenden gesellen with Trevor Pinnock and the RAM Soloists Ensemble for release with Linn
Records.
28
Ashley Mercer – Shackleton
Born and raised in Essex, Ashley's interest in singing began at school where he
was a member of the school choir, and later as a member of the National Youth
Choir. At university he performed in, directed and conducted a number of
musicals and operettas, and afterwards continued performing with amateur
groups in London. He recently decided to study singing more formally and last
year completed a Masters at the Trinity Laban Conservatoire where he was a
TCM Trust Scholar and a Kathleen Roberts Scholar, and was awarded the Paul
Simm opera prize. Recent work includes Silent Night (European premiere) for
Wexford Festival Opera, and Il barbiere di Siviglia for Opera Holland Park,
where he was a Christine Collins Young Artist.
Dafydd Hall Williams – Staff Director, Blackborow
Dafydd is from a small town in North Wales called Llangollen. Since finishing
his training at Aberystwyth University, Dafydd has worked as an assistant
director for companies like Buxton Opera Festival, Mid Wales Opera, The
Royal Academy of Music, Wexford Festival Opera and English Touring Opera.
One of the most fun things Dafydd has ever done was play the part of Archie
the Goose in the ETO Spring 2014 tour of Borka, the Goose with no Feathers.
After this tour, Dafydd will be directing a set of Opera Scenes at Guildhall
School of Music and Drama.
Kate Jones – Stage Manager
Kate recently graduated from the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts,
where she studied Theatre and Performance Technology. Her love of
opera stems from a placement with Norwegian company Opera Ostfold,
and a background in musical theatre. Her past opera credits include
Lighting Designer for For Lenge, Lenge, Lenge Siden, performed at the
Festival of Music for Winds and Percussion in Fredrikstad, Assistant Stage
Manager for Liverpool Philharmonic’s Tosca and Assistant Production
Manager for Opera Ostfold’s production of Nabucco. This summer she
will return to Opera Ostfold for their production of Tosca.
Players
James Henshaw – Conductor, Keyboard
James Henshaw is a promising young conductor. He studied Music
at Clare College, Cambridge where he was a choral scholar and
award-winner as both conductor and pianist. Having graduated
with a Distinction in Repetiteuring from the Guildhall School of
Music and Drama, he recently assisted on Owen Wingrave at the
Aldeburgh Music Festival and then at the Edinburgh Festival as
well as recently working at the Proms with
Photo: Clare Park
the BBC National Orchestra of Wales.
Recent concerts have included Brahms and Mozart Requiems and
performances ranging from John Adams to Mozart. Over the coming year he
will continue to work with his orchestra based in Notting Hill and Ashtead
Choral Society.
29
Jonathan Hassan – French Horn
Jonathan was born in Reading a long time ago. He started the horn aged ten
and, after studying at The Royal College of Music, has worked as a freelance
player and teacher, a brilliant job that has taken him all over the world, from
South America to Europe and Asia. He has also played in many West End
shows including Shrek and West Side Story.
With his teaching hat on he loves helping children
achieve their musical potential on the horn and
trumpet. He also regularly visits schools to perform
Jurassic to Jazz, an interactive show tracing the history of brass
instruments.
Jonathan Raper – Percussion
Having developed a passion for all things percussion at school, Jonny went on to
study music at Trinity College of Music in London. He has played in a wide variety
of musical genres from rock to baroque, and has been required to play all
manner of instruments from tubular bells to coconut shells. Jonny is passionate
about bringing classical music into schools, and hopes that it will enrich the lives
of young learners as it has done his own. He has performed in school education
projects for such institutions as the English National Ballet, Philharmonia
Orchestra and O Duo as well as having been with English Touring Opera for a
number of years.
As well as some of the instruments above, you will also see and hear a
theremin being played in the show. The theremin is an electronic
instrument invented by Leon Theremin in 1928. It is played by moving your
hands in the space near the metal rod. One hand controls pitch and the
other controls volume. It is one of the only instruments you play without
touching it! The theremin’s eerie sound has made it popular in science
fiction soundtracks, though it is also heard in other types of music,
especially in psychedelic rock. You will also hear our specially made wind
machine!
30
Song words Please learn these songs in advance of our performance and join in during the show. The singers might not prompt the children, so please join in as soon as you recognise the music! The tracks are all on the CD sent with the pack, or on ETO’s website. Children should learn the melody sung by the female voice, not the male voice. Larsen’s Boat (Standing on the deck)
Standing on the deck of a boat heading south Paulet Isle (46 Miles) Leaning on the rails Forty‐six miles takes only a while As we make for the sea. then three hundred more to Paulet Isle Waiting to meet the pack made of ice that’s Let’s travel in style white and blue. To Paulet Isle! x 3
Trying not to think about What will happen when we do. Larsen’s boat, last of its kind. Looking for the land beyond the sea Waiting for the sight Of the far polar shore. Praying you don’t fall in, in two minutes you’ll be dead. Trying not to think about What will happen in the end. Larsen’s boat, last of its kind. Stuck Fast
Stuck fast, stuck in the ice Stuck in the sea, we’ll never get free of the ice. Icebergs and humpbacks, finners and blues, The killer whales, kings and long tailed gentoos. Stuck fast, stuck in the ice Stuck in the sea, we’ll never get free of the ice. Stuck fast, stuck in the ice Stuck in the sea, we’ll never get free of the ice. Crabeaters, furs and elephant seals, the emperors, chinstraps and adelies. 31
Larsen's Boat
Lyrics by
Tim Yealland
Music by
Russell Hepplewhite
q = 100
           
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11
Children
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17
Pno.
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15
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Wait - ing

  
 


    
 

 
  
13
Children
3
   
 









 
  
 

last
of
its
kind..

3










         


 ff
     
    
20
Pno.
3
 








 


22
Children
 
 
Pno.
 


 

 
 






   
   
ff
 
 
Children



  

 

for
the land
be - yond
Look- ing











Pno.


f




  







 

 


Pno.









 

the Sea
    

    
  











of
the
far
Po








    
    


 

    
  
mf








26
Children





3





Wait - ing








 

 
 





24


 
 
3
-




the
for

lar
shore
sight





 
 



 








    
28
Children
Pray -ing
you

 
don't
fall
  

     




Pno.
 




 

 

in,
in
min - utes
two
 
  
     






 
 
3
    



you'll
be
dead

 
     


       
       
30
Children
        
to think a - bout
Try - ing not
Pno.
       
  
  





 




         
Lar - sen's boat

Pno.

last
of
its
   

 
What
will ha - ppen
in
the end.


   
   






    
   
32
Children

kind.
         


  





  
  

            
f
         
            
Lyrics by
Tim Yealland
Music by
Russell Hepplewhite
Stuck Fast
McNISH (not children)









  

3
Fif - ty days
at
3


sea
and
now
we're
stuck.

     
  
 
Fro - zen
 
like
an



al - mond


mf
in
a





cho - colate bar.

Pno.









 



Piano


 



f

 








q = 110
5


Forceful

 






 3
  

 
3
   
 Stuck in


Pno.


Stuck
f
8


 



  

3
Pno.
 
+ CHILDREN


the
sea
 



3


we'll
   


nev -






  
 
3

er
  
stuck in the ice
fast





3
 
    




 


3




 
get
free
of
the
ice








 







 


10




 
Pno.
12
Pno.
3
-

 




er
whales,
kings


 



and
long


finn - ers
and



blues,




the




3
-
3


tailed
gen

 
-
toos.




Gap here as scene continues here.





 3
 
 

 

Pno.






3





14





13
Pno.
3


3



and hump - backs
 





3
Ice - bergs
 
  
 


 
 kill

 

 

 3
  

  

Stuck




  

fast
   


  
 
 
stuck
3
  


in the ice



 
    

 


 






  
 Stuck
17


Pno.


 
3



in
the
sea
 





we'll


nev - er





3

 

get
free
of
the
ice






 


 




Gap here as scene continues here.










20
 


 3


   

Pno.
3




19
Pno.
3
 3
  


 

Stuck






  
fast
  


  

  3 



stuck in the ice




 
    


 

 
 


3
23
  
 Stuck

in
the
sea
 
 

  





Pno.


24
  
 ice




Pno.




 

 
27

 
Pno.
 



3

-
pe

-
rors,



3

we'll
nev

-
er



3

get
free
of
the








3

   



 
 em


3
3


3

   
Crab - eat - ers, furs and el-

 







  

 

 














chin - straps






and
ad




3
-
e
-
lies.




3


e - phant seals, the
 

3


Paulet Isle
Lyrics by
Tim Yealland
Full of macho
power.
 
   
Piano




f


 

 

 
  
  

Music by
Russell Hepplewhite

   
  
 


5
Children




For - ty - six

Pno.




miles
takes




a

while


then






three hun - dred more
to
 

 
 

 
 

  

on - ly



8
Children


 
 
 


Pau - let

Pno.
    

Isle. Let's tra - vel in


style
   
      4:3
4:3
      


4:3
4:3





   
    
4:3
4:3

12
Children

to Pau - let
Isle.


Pno.


 

 

 

   
4:3
 
          

  
4:3



 
  
 
  
    
  
    

17
Children
For - ty - six
 
Pno.



miles
takes

  


 
 
f
  
on - ly
  
a
while
then
 


 





 
three
hun - dred


more
to
 


  




20
Children
Pno.




 
Pau - let

 


Isle.


Let's
 

tra - vel
in



style

 

4:3
  
      
4:3
 

     
4:3
4:3

23
Children
 

 


to Pau


Pno.

let
Isle.
4:3
   
    
4:3

       
-



 
  


f
  

4:3
4:3

 
  
 
  

27
Children

Pno.




 








   
  






miles
takes

For - ty - six

f
4:3
   






4:3
30
Children

 
on - ly
a
while

then

 
three
hun - dred


Pno.


  



more
to

Pau
-

4:3



 
let
Isle.
Let's

4:3
4:3
   
   
   
      
      
      
4:3
4:3
4:3

33
Children

 
 


tra - vel
Pno.

in

style
4:3

   
4:3
    

4:3
  
      
4:3
4:3
  
      
4:3

36
Children
Pno.






to
Pau




-


rit.
let
Isle.




mp
  

  

Further information Links Scott Polar Research Institute photo archive to see pictures from the voyage: http://www.spri.cam.ac.uk/library/pictures/catalogue/itae1914‐
16/gallery/ Facts, interactive games, activities, clips: http://www.discoveringantarctica.org.uk/ Stop‐motion animation made by children in Ireland about Tom Crean: http://vimeo.com/45032707 Snowlab, where you can contribute to national statistics about snow: http://www.spri.cam.ac.uk/research/projects/snowlab/ Wordpress blog “Shackleton In Schools” activities created by a teacher: https://emmalkerr.wordpress.com/ Skip‐count maths worksheets with polar animals: http://www.atozkidsstuff.com/images/penguins/skipcountpenguin2.pdf http://www.atozkidsstuff.com/images/penguins/skipcountpenguin5.pdf Books to read Mrs Chippy's Last Expedition: The Remarkable Journal of Shackleton's Polar‐Bound Cat by Caroline Alexander Ice Trap! Shackleton’s Incredible Expedition by Meredith Hooper & MP Robertson Places to visit You can see the navigational equipment used on the voyage of the James Caird, some of Shackleton’s belongings and a replica of the lifeboat at: Polar Museum Scott Polar Research Institute Lensfield Road Cambridge CB2 1ER 01223 336540 www.spri.cam.ac.uk Discovery Point Discovery Quay Dundee, DD1 4XA 01382 309060 www.rrsdiscovery.com You can see the James Caird lifeboat at: Dulwich College Dulwich Common London SE21 7LD 020 8693 3601 www.dulwich.org.uk You can see some artefacts from Shackleton’s voyage at: National Maritime Museum Park Row London SE10 9NF www.rmg.co.uk
43
© rd
3 floor, 63 Charterhouse Street, London, EC1M 6HJ 020 7833 2555 www.englishtouringopera.org.uk