Difference between revisions of "French Dramatic Artistes"

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A company of professional artists from Mauritius who visited Cape Town under the leadership of [[Dalle Case]] in 1848 and performed a season of circus-style programmes in February 1848, including a Grand Musical Interlude, a Grand Comic Ballet, a Comic Solo, a Grand and Comic Galopade and a Graceful Waltz. The cast included [[L. Vitor]], [[C. Crosset]] and [[X. Hus]].  They appeared at the [[Victoria Theatre]] and later at the [[Garrison Theatre]].   
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A company of professional artists from Mauritius who visited Cape Town under the leadership of [[Dalle Case]] in 1848 and performed a season of circus-style programmes in February 1848, including a Grand Musical Interlude, a Grand Comic Ballet, a Comic Solo, a Grand and Comic Galopade and a Graceful Waltz. The cast included [[L. Vitor]], [[C. Crosset]] and [[X. Hus]].  They appeared at the [[Victoria Theatre]] and later at the [[Garrison Theatre]].  It may have been the [[French Theatrical Company]] reported on by “[[Sam Sly]]” to have opened the [[Drury Lane Theatre]] on Constitution Hill in Cape Town on June 19th, 1848, with “tragic Scenes, Vaudevilles, and Interludes of music and dancing”.
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==
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== For more information ==
 
== For more information ==
  
See also [[French Theatrical Company]]
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See also [[French Theatrical Company]] and [[French Theatre in South Africa]]
  
 
== Return to ==
 
== Return to ==

Revision as of 05:59, 26 November 2010

A company of professional artists from Mauritius who visited Cape Town under the leadership of Dalle Case in 1848 and performed a season of circus-style programmes in February 1848, including a Grand Musical Interlude, a Grand Comic Ballet, a Comic Solo, a Grand and Comic Galopade and a Graceful Waltz. The cast included L. Vitor, C. Crosset and X. Hus. They appeared at the Victoria Theatre and later at the Garrison Theatre. It may have been the French Theatrical Company reported on by “Sam Sly” to have opened the Drury Lane Theatre on Constitution Hill in Cape Town on June 19th, 1848, with “tragic Scenes, Vaudevilles, and Interludes of music and dancing”.

Sources

Fletcher, 1994

For more information

See also French Theatrical Company and French Theatre in South Africa

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