The Honey Moon, or How to Rule a Wife

The Honey Moon, or How to Rule a Wife is a romantic play in five acts, mainly verse, by John Tobin (1770–1804).

(Very often referred to by its shortened title, The Honey Moon, and occasionally also The Honeymoon).

The original text
First produced in London at the Drury Lane Theatre on 31 January 1805, in New York in  1807. Printed London, 1805 and frequently reprinted. Was a decided success and remained a favourite on the English stage for twenty years.

Translations and adaptations
Translated into French by Charles Nodier as La Lune de Miel in Chefs d'œuvre des Théâtres Étrangers 1822.

Performance history in South Africa
A popular standby for players in Cape Town between 1811 and 1830.

1811: Performed in the African Theatre by the Garrison Players on 31 August, with  High Life Below Stairs (Townley).

1811: Performed in the African Theatre by the Garrison Players on 21 September with  The Review, or The Wags of Windsor.

1818: Performed in the African Theatre on 24 January by three visiting professional performers from Liverpool - a Mr Cooke, Mrs Cooke, Mrs Brough and Miss Williams, assisted by the Gentlemen Amateurs, probably including the talented Captain Carter. The afterpiece is The Devil To Pay (Coffey). They repeat it on 11 April, 1818, this time with The Weathercock (Tobin) as afterpiece.

1823: Performed by the English Theatricals company on 26 July, with The Blue Devils (Colman Jr)

1823: Performed by the English Theatricals company did the play on 9 August, with Modern Antiques (O'Keeffe)

1830: Performed on 11 September by All the World's a Stage, with The Married Bachelor, or Master and Man (O'Callaghan) as afterpiece.

1854: Performed in Cape Town on Friday, 18 August by the Amateur Company (aided by the Officers of the Garrison) in the Garrison Theatre. Also performed were Charles the Twelfth (Planché), A Peculiar Position author unnamed, but it was a translation from Scribe & Bayard by Planché) and The Two Bonnycastles (J.M. Morton).

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