Difference between revisions of "Fanny Cathcart"

From ESAT
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(9 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Miss [[Fanny Cathcart]] (1833-1880),(18**-18**) was a British actress.  
+
Miss [[Fanny Cathcart]] (1833-1880) was a British/Australian actress who visited South Africa in the mid 1850s and possibly again at the start of the 1870s.  
  
Biography
+
 
 +
== Biography ==
  
 
Born Mary Fanny Cathcart  in England, daughter of a provincial theatrical manager. Her brothers also became well-known performers on the London stage.
 
Born Mary Fanny Cathcart  in England, daughter of a provincial theatrical manager. Her brothers also became well-known performers on the London stage.
Line 17: Line 18:
 
She was a member of the [[Gustavus V. Brooke|G.V.  Brooke]] company which visited Cape Town  ''en route'' to the Australian goldfields in 1854-55. The company consisted of Miss [[Fanny Cathcart]] and Mr [[R. Younge]] and they performed in the [[Barracks Theatre]]  during the revictualling of their vessel, along with local [[Amateur|amateurs]].
 
She was a member of the [[Gustavus V. Brooke|G.V.  Brooke]] company which visited Cape Town  ''en route'' to the Australian goldfields in 1854-55. The company consisted of Miss [[Fanny Cathcart]] and Mr [[R. Younge]] and they performed in the [[Barracks Theatre]]  during the revictualling of their vessel, along with local [[Amateur|amateurs]].
  
'''See further [[G.V.  Brooke]]'''  
+
''See further the entry on '''[[G.V.  Brooke]]'''''
 +
 
 +
She '''may''' also have been the same person as the [[Miss Cathcart]] who is mentioned as performing for [[Thomas Brazier]] in Cape Town on occasion in the period 1869 to 1871. ''For more information on this possibility, see the entry on the '''[[Young Men's Institute and Club Dramatic Company]]'''''.
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==

Latest revision as of 05:43, 28 December 2021

Miss Fanny Cathcart (1833-1880) was a British/Australian actress who visited South Africa in the mid 1850s and possibly again at the start of the 1870s.


Biography

Born Mary Fanny Cathcart in England, daughter of a provincial theatrical manager. Her brothers also became well-known performers on the London stage.

She was discovered by the British actor-manager Gustavus V. Brooke in 1853, becoming his leading juvenile actress for two years from September 1854. In 1854 they set out for a tour of the colonies, notably Australia, and having stopped at the Cape en route, arrived in Melbourne to make her début as Desdemona on 26 February at the Queen's Theatre Royal.

She married Robert James Heir in 1855 and would spend the rest of her career as an actress in Australia, later marrying the Australian actor and playwright George Frederick Price Darrell. Between 1872 and 1877 for example they toured New Zealand, America, Brisbane and Adelaide with Darrell's Dramatic Company.

She died, after a long illness, at her home in Carlton, Melbourne on 3 January 1880.

(See the article on "Mary Fanny Cathcart" by Helen M. Van Der Poorten, Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 3, (MUP), 1969[1])

Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance

She was a member of the G.V. Brooke company which visited Cape Town en route to the Australian goldfields in 1854-55. The company consisted of Miss Fanny Cathcart and Mr R. Younge and they performed in the Barracks Theatre during the revictualling of their vessel, along with local amateurs.

See further the entry on G.V. Brooke

She may also have been the same person as the Miss Cathcart who is mentioned as performing for Thomas Brazier in Cape Town on occasion in the period 1869 to 1871. For more information on this possibility, see the entry on the Young Men's Institute and Club Dramatic Company.

Sources

"Mary Fanny Cathcart" by Helen M. Van Der Poorten, Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 3, (MUP), 1969[2]

F.C.L. Bosman, 1928. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel I: 1652-1855. Pretoria: J.H. de Bussy. [3]: pp. 409-412

Go to South African Theatre/Bibliography

Return to

Return to ESAT Personalities C

Return to South African Theatre Personalities

Return to The ESAT Entries

Return to Main Page