The Old Pocklingtonian | Page 34

The Old Pocklingtonian Personalia and has performed twice a year ever since either at the Oxford Playhouse or The Oxford New Theatre in various productions ranging from Carmen through Gilbert and Sullivan to Grease; with a whole variety in between! John E Richardson (34-39) remembers playing Fives at School with his brother, the late Bill D L Richardson (29-35).They only had one pair of Fives gloves and had to share until Bill left. They both became reasonably proficient, but because it was not a recognised sport at that time no colours were awarded.There were house competitions and he and Bill both upheld Wilberforce. The highlight of John’s sporting career was when he was 16 and the Headmaster, Percy Sands, a Cambridge blue, challenged him to a game of Fives. John enjoyed it but he can’t remember the score! Mike Stathers (62-69) had a successful career as a journalist, becoming chief reporter of the Yorkshire Post. Thereafter, for more than 20 years, he was senior consultant and owner of one of the region’s leading PR and public affairs consultancies, The PR Company, until retiring in 2014. He is a former member and chairman of Shiptonthorpe (his home village) Parish Council and has served on a number of local community and business groups. He stood as a conservative candidate in the local elections in May 2015 and was duly elected for the Wolds Weighton ward. Tom Stoppard (51-54) joined the Queen at Windsor Castle in April 2015 as a Member of the Order of Merit. Widely respected as the most exclusive club in the world (it is restricted to 24 members), the Members of the Order of Merit meet every two years at the invitation of the Queen. Past members include Florence Nightingale, Winston Churchill, Mother Teresa, Thomas Hardy and Nelson Mandela. The Order was founded by Edward VII in 1902 and members are chosen by the monarch – an honour awarded to individuals of great achievement in the fields of the arts, learning, literature and science. As reported elsewhere in the magazine, Sir Tom was given a special award as “the greatest living playwright” on 30 November 2014 at the 60th London Evening Standard Theatre Awards in recognition of more than a half-century of work that has won him an Academy Award and four Tony Awards. His new play, The Hard Problem, took to the stage at the National Theatre in January 2015 and received mixed reviews. It was Sir Tom’s first play for the stage since Rock ’n’ Roll in 2006, and his first for the National since his trilogy, The Coast of Utopia, 2002. Bernard H Walker (38-45) remembers playing ‘fives’ at School and winning the athletics cup. He was House Captain under Housemaster R T E ‘Reggie’ Allen. Jack Wilson (39-46) remembers quite large crowds around the Fives court with people standing on chairs to see in through the only aperture over the heads of those who managed to get to the front. He recalls that Pocklington played Rugby Fives – as distinct from Eton Fives – where you had the in-built buttress which made it much more than simply hitting the ball at the wall. The ball was hit with H