Difference between revisions of "A.R. Bennett"

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(Created page with "A.R. Bennett was a railway worker and amateur singer and performer. ''The Mikado''")
 
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[[A.R. Bennett]] was a railway worker and [[amateur]] singer and performer.
 
[[A.R. Bennett]] was a railway worker and [[amateur]] singer and performer.
  
''[[The Mikado]]''
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==Biography==
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He seems to have been born in Scotland and had settled in Cape Town as an employee at the Railway Work Shops in Salt River. According to [[D.C. Boonzaier]] (1923), Bennett  "possessed a very powerful and pure tenor voice, but had no histrionic ability whatever" and had a heavy Scots accent to boot. 
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He had his one moment in the theatrical spotlight when he appeared in the first South African production of ''[[The Mikado]]'' (Gilbert and Sullivan), produced by the [[Wheeler Company]]. It opened at the [[Theatre Royal]], Burg Street, Cape on 3 July, 1886, a woman,  [[Miss Pell]], appeared in the tenor role of  "Nanki-Poo". However, after a few nights she was replaced in the tenor role by [[A.R. Bennett]]. The production played for four weeks. 
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Nothing more is heard of Bennett as stage performer after that.

Revision as of 05:23, 7 September 2021

A.R. Bennett was a railway worker and amateur singer and performer.

Biography

He seems to have been born in Scotland and had settled in Cape Town as an employee at the Railway Work Shops in Salt River. According to D.C. Boonzaier (1923), Bennett "possessed a very powerful and pure tenor voice, but had no histrionic ability whatever" and had a heavy Scots accent to boot.

He had his one moment in the theatrical spotlight when he appeared in the first South African production of The Mikado (Gilbert and Sullivan), produced by the Wheeler Company. It opened at the Theatre Royal, Burg Street, Cape on 3 July, 1886, a woman, Miss Pell, appeared in the tenor role of "Nanki-Poo". However, after a few nights she was replaced in the tenor role by A.R. Bennett. The production played for four weeks.

Nothing more is heard of Bennett as stage performer after that.