Difference between revisions of "She Stoops to Conquer"

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''She Stoops to Conquer'' (1773) is a comedy in two acts by Irish playwright Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_Goldsmith].  
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''[[She Stoops to Conquer]]'' (1773) is a comedy in two acts by Anglo-Irish playwright Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_Goldsmith].  
  
  
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Initially entitled ''[[Mistakes of a Night]]'', the play was first performed in  London at Covent Garden Theatre on 15 March 1773. Still regularly performed today.
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Initially entitled ''[[Mistakes of a Night]]'', the play was first performed in  London at Covent Garden Theatre on 15 March 1773. It is considered one of the few fine plays from its period and is still regularly studied and performed today.
  
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==

Revision as of 05:41, 8 December 2015

She Stoops to Conquer (1773) is a comedy in two acts by Anglo-Irish playwright Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)[1].


The original text

Initially entitled Mistakes of a Night, the play was first performed in London at Covent Garden Theatre on 15 March 1773. It is considered one of the few fine plays from its period and is still regularly studied and performed today.

Performance history in South Africa

1807: First performed in South Africa by the Garrison Players in the African Theatre in Cape Town on the 20th of June, followed by what was ostensibly a one-act version of Foote's farce Taste. The company included Captain Frazer, Mr Morgan,Captain Collins and, exceptionally for the time, a Mrs Kinniburgh. The production was managed by Mr Morgan, who also read a prologue written for the occasion by Captain Frazer, who in turn sang a song he had written (in character as Lady "Pentweazle" in Taste ), while Captain Collins read an epilogue he had written. According to F.C.L. Bosman (1928: p. 70)[2] these pieces are the oldest extant remnants of local theatrical writing (though not, he emphasizes, the earliest piece of written text or performance text, since there are records of earlier indigenous performances, prologues and even texts - e.g. Mrs Somers's prologue to a performance of Foote's Taste in 1800).

1807: Performed once again by the Garrison Players in the African Theatre in Cape Town on the 29th of August, followed by Love à la Mode (Macklin).

1808: Performed by the Garrison Players in the African Theatre in Cape Town on the 29th of August, followed by The Apprentice (Murphy). Enhanced by a variety programme of song and dance, this was benefit evening for the widows and children of the 83rd Regiment.

1818: Performed by the Gentlemen Amateurs under the title She Stoops to Conquer, or Mistakes of a Night, with the help of Mr Cooke and his company of ladies, in the African Theatre, Cape Town on 16 May (with The Poor Soldier by O'Keeffe)

1818: Repeated (now announced as She Stoops to Conquer) on 27 June by the Gentlemen Amateurs , with as afterpiece now Chrononthothologus (Carey).

1933: In 1933, the play was the first production by Herbert Dhlomo's Bantu Dramatic Society, playing as opening piece in the Bantu Men's Social Centre on 28 April, 1933.

1954: Presented by the National Theatre Organisation, produced by Taubie Kushlick starring Alan Chadwick, Barry Wallman, Pieter Geldenhuys, Frank Wise, Patrick Trevor, Leonard Graham, Joyce Bradley, Pamela Murray, Stephanie Shiller, Pat Simpson, Gordon Fergusson. Decor by Frank Graves, costumes by Doreen Graves, lighting by Harry Ligoff.

1966: A PACOFS production in 1966 was directed by John Boulter, the cast including Deon Joubert and Christine Basson.

1969: Directed by Roy Sargeant for NAPAC, opening on 28 April 1969 in St John's Theatre. Décor by Bill Smuts, costumes by Lucille Cross. The cast included Mervyn Johns, Helen Braithwaite, David McKail, Gillian Lomberg, Don McCorkindale, Christopher Galloway, Judy Murton and others.

Translations and adaptations

She Stoops to Conquer - Mistakes of an African Knight, adapted and directed by Nicholas Ellenbogen at the National Arts Festival, 1985. Set in Natal on a cane farm at around 1900. The cast included Greg Melvill-Smith, Bruce Young, Annie Robinson, Sue Pearson, Stephen Gurney, Brendon Grealy, Nicholas Ellenbogen, Frances Chili, Hamilton Ncayiyana, Ali Mohammed, Judy Ditchfield.

Sources

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/She_Stoops_to_Conquer

F.C.L. Bosman, 1928[3]: pp. 70-77, 154, 1.

PACOFS Drama 25 Years, 1963-1988

NTO theatre programme, 1954.

Teater SA, 1(4), 1969.

National Arts Festival programme, 1985.

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