Furious parents blast primary school for including '˜boozing' in Christmas play script

Shocked parents have slammed a primary school after sending kids home with a Christmas play script - where their characters complain about boozing.
An example of a nativity scene at Christmas time.An example of a nativity scene at Christmas time.
An example of a nativity scene at Christmas time.

Mums and dads of nine-year-old pupils were not amused by the nativity in which moan about parents getting drunk.

‘The How Christmas Came To Be’ production, which is due to be performed today, features children aged from 11 to as young as five.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

One Year Five pupil plays a Viking called “Olaf” and exclaims: “We need to get ready for the feast and more importantly... the drinking.”

Another pupil pleads as the casks are opened: “Please father. Don’t put us through that again.”

One nine-year-old begs with their “partner”: “Please don’t get like last year.”

Read More
New mum '˜bleeds to death after getting lost in Edinburgh hospital'

A dad of one of the pupils said: “It’s disgusting. My daughter was asked to be a drunk person.”

Another outraged parent said: “It’s always been a bit off the wall but someone’s taking it too far.”

At one part in the script, two “daughters” talk about their dad’s “famous home brew”.

It reads:”After narrowly avoiding his wife with mistletoe Olaf says: Phew! That was a close call. Right, I’d better go and get those barrels of ale tapped.

Daughter 1: You’re right Daddy. Solstice celebrations are not the same without your famous home brew!

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Daughter 2: Don’t you remember last year when Mother drank so much she...

(All guests enter the stage and are drinking and eating) Aunty: Please don’t get like last year.

Uncle: I don’t know what you’re talking about dear!

Children: Please father! Don’t put us through that again!

Child 1: It was so embarrassing”

A former pupil, who now helps people battling alcoholism, said: “They’ve got to be joking.”

The school said the script was not written by teachers at the school due to “the time it takes to write an engaging script” and was instead written externally.

A spokesperson from the Duke of Bedford school in Thorney, Cambs., said: “During one scene Viking adults pretend to drink and eat. At no point were children instructed to act drunk.”

Related topics: