Difference between revisions of "Are You a Mason?"
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Translated into [[Afrikaans]] as ''[[Is Jy ‘n Bokryer?]]'' by [[Dirk J. Mostert]] and produced by [[André Huguenet]] in 194*. The play was greeted with enthusiasm in rural towns, but in the cities this comedy was boycotted due to Huguenet’s refusal to donate funds to the Governor-General's Fund for the war and he was marked as unpatriotic. | Translated into [[Afrikaans]] as ''[[Is Jy ‘n Bokryer?]]'' by [[Dirk J. Mostert]] and produced by [[André Huguenet]] in 194*. The play was greeted with enthusiasm in rural towns, but in the cities this comedy was boycotted due to Huguenet’s refusal to donate funds to the Governor-General's Fund for the war and he was marked as unpatriotic. | ||
− | [[Elsa Steenkamp]] directed ''Is Jy 'n Bokryer'' for a performance by students of the [[Drama Department, University of the Free State]], opening 14 October 1982. | + | [[Elsa Steenkamp]] directed ''Is Jy 'n Bokryer'' for a performance by students of the [[Drama Department, University of the Free State]], opening 14 October 1982 at the [[Scaena Theatre]]. |
== Sources == | == Sources == |
Revision as of 07:31, 23 August 2014
A farce in three acts. Adapted from the German play Die Logenbruder by Carl Laufs and Curt Kraatz by the Hungarian-American Leo Ditrichstein. (The latter name is also written "Leo Dietrichstein" in some South African sources).
First staged in English on the Broadway stage, starring William Collier, Sr. in 1901. Published in New York by E. Lederer and C. Herrmann, 1901.
Made into a silent film called Are You a Mason? by Adolph Zukor (Famous Players Film Company) and Charles Frohman, directed by Thomas Heffron and starring John Barrymore, distributed through Paramount Pictures. The film was directed by Thomas Heffron and stars John Barrymore in his third feature length film.
South African productions
George Giddens, brought from England by the Wheeler Theatre Company, acted in Are you a Mason?, a farce translated from original German farce Die Longenbrüder by Carl Laufs and Curt Kraatz by Leo Ditrichstein, at the Good Hope Theatre on 4 April 1904.
Translated into Afrikaans as Is Jy ‘n Bokryer? by Dirk J. Mostert and produced by André Huguenet in 194*. The play was greeted with enthusiasm in rural towns, but in the cities this comedy was boycotted due to Huguenet’s refusal to donate funds to the Governor-General's Fund for the war and he was marked as unpatriotic.
Elsa Steenkamp directed Is Jy 'n Bokryer for a performance by students of the Drama Department, University of the Free State, opening 14 October 1982 at the Scaena Theatre.
Sources
Worldcat entry on Die Logenbruder by Carl Laufs and Curt Kraatz[1]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leo_Ditrichstein
Bosman, 1980
LitNet: ATKV-Skrywersalbum - Dirk Mostert[2]
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