Difference between revisions of "King Alfred the Great, or The Magic Banjo and the Mystic Raven"
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A [[harlequinade]] in which Alfred and two associates arrive at the Danish camp dressed as "Ethiopian Serenaders" (wearing black masks and woolly skull caps), Alfred playing a "Magic Banjo", with the other two using a concertina and bones respectively. | A [[harlequinade]] in which Alfred and two associates arrive at the Danish camp dressed as "Ethiopian Serenaders" (wearing black masks and woolly skull caps), Alfred playing a "Magic Banjo", with the other two using a concertina and bones respectively. | ||
− | Apparently first performed in 1850, and published as ''[[Harlequin Alfred the Great!, or, The magic banjo and the mystic raven! ]]'' by [[ | + | Apparently first performed in 1850, and published as ''[[Harlequin Alfred the Great!, or, The magic banjo and the mystic raven! ]]'' by [[L.C. Lacy]] (as a Lacy's acting edition) in 1851. |
==Translations and adaptations== | ==Translations and adaptations== |
Revision as of 06:27, 25 February 2020
King Alfred the Great, or The Magic Banjo and the Mystic Raven is a "grand historical pantomime" by "the author of Bluff King Hal".
Also found as Harlequin Alfred the Great!, or, The magic banjo and the mystic raven! or as Harlequin Alfred the Great!, or The Magic Banjo and the Mystic Raven!.
Contents
The original text
A harlequinade in which Alfred and two associates arrive at the Danish camp dressed as "Ethiopian Serenaders" (wearing black masks and woolly skull caps), Alfred playing a "Magic Banjo", with the other two using a concertina and bones respectively.
Apparently first performed in 1850, and published as Harlequin Alfred the Great!, or, The magic banjo and the mystic raven! by L.C. Lacy (as a Lacy's acting edition) in 1851.
Translations and adaptations
Performance history in South Africa
1863: Performed as King Alfred the Great, or The Magic Banjo and the Mystic Raven (and billed as "a Grand Christmas Pantomime") in the newly refurbished Garrison Theatre, Cape Town, on 28 and 29 December, along with The Goose with the Golden Eggs (Mayhew and Edwards).
Sources
https://catalog.princeton.edu/catalog/SCSB-6608944
Barbara Yorke. 2017. "Alfredism. The use and abuse of Alfred's reputation in later centuries", in Timothy Reuter (ed.). Alfred the Great: Papers from the Eleventh-Centenary Conferences. Routledge.[1]
David Horspool. 2006. King Alfred: Burnt Cakes and Other Legends. Harvard University Press: p. 199[2]
F.C.L. Bosman. 1980. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel II, 1856-1912. Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik: p. 255 .
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