|  | 
 | 
| 
 | 
| Roger 
		Clarke writes: For some time I have run The Other RSC 
		Pub Theatre at The Station Pub in Sutton Coldfield but it seemed 
		sensible now to being it under the Behind The Arras banner so now we 
		have our own theatre . . . and as anyone who has been to a pub theatre 
		knows they are intimate spaces where the barrier between actor and 
		audience, seating and stage  becomes very blurred . . . 
		 Ex-German soldier Wolfgang Meissler, played by 
		Gerry Hinks, (left)  has a secret to reveal to Cpl Frederick 
		Salisbury VC, played by Keith Minshull. BEHIND The Arras's own theatre has pulled 
		off a little coup of its own by booking not only a West End play but 
		also the majority of the West End cast – a dream production you might 
		say. And you would be right.
		Confessions of Honour, 
		a military drama which is both moving and funny, came about as the 
		result of . . . a dream. Rugeley writer and actor Gerry Hinks, who runs 
		the Opus Theatre Company, said: “It just came to me one night. I could 
		see an empty room with no windows just a door and a single light bulb in 
		the middle. There was an old man in the middle of the room 
		and a German opened the door and walked in and said ‘You didn't win 
		that!' Then I woke up in a cold sweat with my wife Teresa asking what 
		was wrong.” The dream had made its mark though and Gerry knew 
		there was a play in there somewhere. He carried out research with the 
		help of Willie Turner at the Staffordshire Regiment Museum at 
		Whittington Barracks and 18 months later the first draft arrived. The play eventually had its premiere in Stafford 
		in 2007 and went on a successful Midland tour collecting excellent 
		reviews – I
		 The reviews must have been noted.
		Gerry, who has appeared in plays at the Suffolk 
		Summer Theatre at Southwold for the past 17 years, had just finished a 
		production there when he was approached to take the play to the West End
		and it was booked in for a successful run in at the Jermyn Street 
		Theatre. Cpl Frederick Salisbury VC, played 
		by Keith Minshull (left), hears the secret  ex-German soldier 
		Wolfgang Meissler has carried with him since the Second World War. It meant a return to the West 
		End for Gerry who had previously appeared in Lady Windermere's Fan 
		for Bill Kenwright at the Haymarket and a first time for fellow actor 
		Keith Minshull. The play is set in recent 
		times and all takes place in an ante-room at 
		Whittington Barracks where Second World War veteran Cpl Frederick 
		Salisbury (Minshull) is waiting to hand over his Victoria Cross in a 
		special ceremony to his former regiment. Gerry, who also plays 
		the Rev Graham Broadbent in Coronation Street,
		 had no military experience himself in writing 
		the play, just missing out in the final selection for National Service 
		when only one in 10 of  even those passed A1 were selected. “I had schoolmates who got in 
		but I didn't. I had wanted to go into the Royal Army Medical Corps. I 
		didn't have any ambitions of being a doctor but I was in the St John's 
		Ambulance so it seemed a logical idea – plus I didn't want to be in a 
		tank or on the front line in case of war!” The play has evolved from its 
		first production when it had a cast of four with Regimental 
		Sergeant Major Willie Turner's part vanishing which means a promotion 
		from Sgt Karen Baker gets a promotion to RSM in what is now a three 
		hander. Confessions of Honour is on at The Other 
		RSC, upstairs at The Station Pub, Station Street, Sutton Coldfield (next 
		to the station not surprisingly) on Wednesday and Thursday, October 19 
		and 20, at 7.45. Price £6. Further details 0788 682 0535 or
		
		roger.clarke@behindthearras.com. 
		 On a technical note the play has been 
		available to amateur companies through Gerry for some time but it has 
		now been published by New Theatre Publications where, according to 
		Gerry, the rights, at £35, are little more than a third of those charged 
		by more traditional publishers. It requires minimal scenery and a cast of two older males and one female with all the action taking place in an ante-room at Whittington Barracks. 
 | |
| 
 |