Difference between revisions of "The White Queen"
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==The original text== | ==The original text== | ||
− | An | + | An adaptation of Wilkie Collins's sensational novel ''[[The Woman in White]]'', it was specifically written for the actress [[Lillian Beddard]], said by her to be by "Palgrave of London" (i.e. R. Palgrave, other sources have is a play J.W. Boulding as the author - or it may have been both jointly, for they had also authored ''[[Jane Shore]]'' as a team in 1885). |
The play was most successfully produced in London by Bedard, who later took it on her many international tours as part of her repertoire. | The play was most successfully produced in London by Bedard, who later took it on her many international tours as part of her repertoire. |
Revision as of 06:56, 29 July 2021
The White Queen is an historical play by J.W. Boulding and/or R. Palgrave(?)
Not to be confused with Philippa Gregory's novel or the BBC series based on it.
Contents
The original text
An adaptation of Wilkie Collins's sensational novel The Woman in White, it was specifically written for the actress Lillian Beddard, said by her to be by "Palgrave of London" (i.e. R. Palgrave, other sources have is a play J.W. Boulding as the author - or it may have been both jointly, for they had also authored Jane Shore as a team in 1885).
The play was most successfully produced in London by Bedard, who later took it on her many international tours as part of her repertoire.
Translations and adaptations
Performance history in South Africa
1888-9 The White Queen performed by Lillian Beddard and her company in South Africa, with Beddard as "Lady Mary". Among the cities played were Johannesburg (the Theatre Royal, 21-26 June), Kimberley and Cape Town (the Exhibition Theatre).
Sources
Laurence Wright. "Shakespeare in South Africa: The Nineteenth Century". Internet Shakespeare Editions[online]. University of Victoria, Accessed 16 July 2020[1]
"A Grass Widow Now, Lillian Beddard Will Face the Footlights and Her Diamonds Alone", in The San Francisco Call, Monday, March 30, 1896[2]
F.C.L. Bosman. 1980. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel II, 1856-1916. Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik: pp. 388-9
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