Difference between revisions of "Family Jars"
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== The original text == | == The original text == | ||
− | Orinally entitled Family Jars; or, The Double Mistake and the Triple Discovery and produced 26 August, 1822 at the The Little Theatre (or Theatre Royal) Haymarket, London, and acted nineteen times. Performed at the Park Theatre and Burton's Theatre in New York. Later printed in in Lacy's ‘Acting Edition of Plays,’ vol. xiv. 1850 and as an annotated text in The Dramatic Publishing Company's series ''Sergels's Acting Drama'' No 230, Chicago, 1860. | + | Orinally entitled Family Jars; or, The Double Mistake and the Triple Discovery and produced 26 August, 1822 at the The Little Theatre (or Theatre Royal) Haymarket, London, and acted nineteen times. Performed at the Park Theatre and Burton's Theatre in New York. Later printed in in Lacy's ‘Acting Edition of Plays,’ vol. xiv. 1850, by Turner and Fisher, Philapdelphia in 18** and as an annotated text in The Dramatic Publishing Company's series ''Sergels's Acting Drama'' No 230, Chicago, 1860. |
== Performance history in South Africa == | == Performance history in South Africa == |
Revision as of 06:05, 14 February 2017
Family Jars is a musical farce, in two acts by Joseph Lunn (1784–1863)[1]. Music by Perry.
Given as a one act farce by Gerald le Grys Norgate in Lunn's biography (Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 34[2])
Contents
The original text
Orinally entitled Family Jars; or, The Double Mistake and the Triple Discovery and produced 26 August, 1822 at the The Little Theatre (or Theatre Royal) Haymarket, London, and acted nineteen times. Performed at the Park Theatre and Burton's Theatre in New York. Later printed in in Lacy's ‘Acting Edition of Plays,’ vol. xiv. 1850, by Turner and Fisher, Philapdelphia in 18** and as an annotated text in The Dramatic Publishing Company's series Sergels's Acting Drama No 230, Chicago, 1860.
Performance history in South Africa
1855: Performed in Cape Town by Sefton Parry as afterpiece to Used Up, or The Peer and the Ploughboy (Boucicault), with a musical interlude. This was done on Wednesday 13 June, in a Drawing Room Theatre which he had constructed in the Commercial Rooms in Cape Town.
Translations and adaptations
Sources
http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Lunn,_Joseph_(DNB00)
http://www.eighteenthcenturydrama.amdigital.co.uk/Documents/Details/HL_LA_mssLA2306
Facsimile version of the 1860 edition, Hathitrust-ebook[3]
F.C.L. Bosman. 1928. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel I: 1652-1855. Pretoria: J.H. de Bussy. [4]: pp. 428-9,
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