Difference between revisions of "Dick Whittington"
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+ | [[Dick Whittington]] can refer to a popular character of English folklore and pantomime, or to the very many play texts based on the story. | ||
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+ | =The character Dick Whittington= | ||
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+ | The story of Richard Whittington (c. 1354–1423), a wealthy merchant and later Lord Mayor of London, has become part of English folklore in the guise of the story of ''[[Dick Whittington and His Cat]]'', which describes Whittington's rise from poverty-stricken childhood with the fortune he made through the sale of his cat to a rat-infested country. It is however totally fictional, with little evidence to support the story of the cat, but the tale has provided a popular theme in British pantomime, especially at Christmas time from be. | ||
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+ | =The play texts= | ||
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=''[[Dick Whittington and His Cat]]'' = | =''[[Dick Whittington and His Cat]]'' = |
Revision as of 06:20, 5 August 2019
Dick Whittington can refer to a popular character of English folklore and pantomime, or to the very many play texts based on the story.
Contents
The character Dick Whittington
The story of Richard Whittington (c. 1354–1423), a wealthy merchant and later Lord Mayor of London, has become part of English folklore in the guise of the story of Dick Whittington and His Cat, which describes Whittington's rise from poverty-stricken childhood with the fortune he made through the sale of his cat to a rat-infested country. It is however totally fictional, with little evidence to support the story of the cat, but the tale has provided a popular theme in British pantomime, especially at Christmas time from be.
The play texts
Dick Whittington and His Cat
1917: Produced by Dan Thomas at His Majesty’s Theatre in Johannesburg, with Horace Green.
Dick Whittington by Geoff Tansley
A pantomime created
. 1946: Performed by the Ashley Street Primary School at Cape Town's City Hall, produced by Freda Druker and Cornelia Conradie, June 1946, with Basil Leach, George Veenendal, Bernard Hess, Yusuf Jakoet, Johaar Mosaval.
1952: Produced by ACT, directed by Frank Rogaly in 1952. Visiting British actor Terry-Thomas starred in the show.
Sources
Trek, 10(26):22, 1946.
Theatre programme (ACT production) held by NELM: [Collection: FARMER, Anthony]: 2007. 18. 13. 1417.
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