Difference between revisions of "Djin-Djin"

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(Created page with "''Djin-Djin'', described as "A Fairy Tale of Old Japan", was written by Bert Royle and J. C. Williamson, with music composed by Leon Caron and George F. Pack. The full...")
 
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1903: Performed by the [[Royal Australian Opera Company]]) in the Good Hope Theatre during May
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1903: Performed by the [[Royal Australian Opera Company]]) in the [[Good Hope Theatre]], Cape Town, during May
  
 
1903: Performed by the [[Royal Australian Opera Company]]) as the opening production for the newly built [[His Majesty's Theatre]], Johannesburg on 8 August.  
 
1903: Performed by the [[Royal Australian Opera Company]]) as the opening production for the newly built [[His Majesty's Theatre]], Johannesburg on 8 August.  

Revision as of 13:02, 12 October 2018

Djin-Djin, described as "A Fairy Tale of Old Japan", was written by Bert Royle and J. C. Williamson, with music composed by Leon Caron and George F. Pack.

The full title of the published work is Djin-Djin, the Japanese Bogie Man, or The Great Shogun Who Lost his Son and the Little Princess Who Found Him, but it is usually referred to by the abbreviated title in various guises: Djin-Djin, Djin Djin, Djinn-Djinn, etc.

It and was produced by Williamson and Musgrove in the Princess Theatre, Melbourne from 26 December 1895 to 14 February 1896.


1903: Performed by the Royal Australian Opera Company) in the Good Hope Theatre, Cape Town, during May

1903: Performed by the Royal Australian Opera Company) as the opening production for the newly built His Majesty's Theatre, Johannesburg on 8 August.



https://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/A57554

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pollard%27s_Lilliputian_Opera_Company