Difference between revisions of "B. Mollan"
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==Contribution to South African theatre, media and performance== | ==Contribution to South African theatre, media and performance== | ||
− | He wrote a three act drama called ''[[The Wraith of Table Mountain]]'' (1866). Wrote a skit ''[[Governor van Brute]]'' (also known as ''[[ | + | He wrote a three act drama called ''[[The Wraith of Table Mountain]]'' (1866). |
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+ | Wrote a very successful skit called ''[[Governor van Brute, or Things as They Might Have Been]]'' (also known as ''[[Governor van Brute]]'' or ''[[Things as They Might Have Been]]'') based on [[Governor van Noot]] (also know as ''[[Things as They Were]]'') by [[C. Utting]]. ** | ||
According to [[William Groom]] he was also the author of the pantomime ''[[Little Jack Horner, or Harlequin A.B.C.]]'', though there is some doubt about this. He most probably contributed to the text, which had originally been devised for the 1857–8 Drury Lane production in London, when it was produced in Cape Town by [[Alfred Ray]] and [[R.S. Cooper]] in 1865. | According to [[William Groom]] he was also the author of the pantomime ''[[Little Jack Horner, or Harlequin A.B.C.]]'', though there is some doubt about this. He most probably contributed to the text, which had originally been devised for the 1857–8 Drury Lane production in London, when it was produced in Cape Town by [[Alfred Ray]] and [[R.S. Cooper]] in 1865. | ||
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[TH, JH] | [TH, JH] | ||
Revision as of 06:35, 27 February 2020
B. Mollan (fl 1860s) was a Cape Town based playwright and performer.
Contents
Biography
Contribution to South African theatre, media and performance
He wrote a three act drama called The Wraith of Table Mountain (1866).
Wrote a very successful skit called Governor van Brute, or Things as They Might Have Been (also known as Governor van Brute or Things as They Might Have Been) based on Governor van Noot (also know as Things as They Were) by C. Utting. **
According to William Groom he was also the author of the pantomime Little Jack Horner, or Harlequin A.B.C., though there is some doubt about this. He most probably contributed to the text, which had originally been devised for the 1857–8 Drury Lane production in London, when it was produced in Cape Town by Alfred Ray and R.S. Cooper in 1865.
[TH, JH]
Sources
P.J. du Toit. 1988. Amateurtoneel in Suid-Afrika. Pretoria: Academica
Jill Fletcher. 1994. The Story of Theatre in South Africa: A Guide to its History from 1780-1930. Cape Town: Vlaeberg.
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