Difference between revisions of "The Little Minister"
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== Performance history in South Africa == | == Performance history in South Africa == | ||
− | An amateur production (the [[Medical School Players]]) staged the play at the [[Wits Great Hall|Wits University Hall]] in 1944, featuring [[Thomas Bothwell]] and [[Peggy Irwin]]. Produced by Mr Goldblatt. Set design by [[Rene Shapshak]]. | + | |
+ | |||
+ | 1944: An amateur production (the [[Medical School Players]]) staged the play at the [[Wits Great Hall|Wits University Hall]] in 1944, featuring [[Thomas Bothwell]] and [[Peggy Irwin]]. Produced by [[Mr Goldblatt]]. Set design by [[Rene Shapshak]]. | ||
===Sources=== | ===Sources=== | ||
− | ''South African Opinion'', 1(3), 1944, 18 | + | ''[[South African Opinion]]'', 1(3), 1944, 18 |
Latest revision as of 06:08, 9 December 2021
The Little Minister, by Scottish author and dramatist Sir James Barrie [1] (1860-1937), best remembered as the creator of Peter Pan. A young minister falls in love with a gypsy girl who turns out to be the world’s equivalent of a fairy princess.
Performance history in South Africa
1944: An amateur production (the Medical School Players) staged the play at the Wits University Hall in 1944, featuring Thomas Bothwell and Peggy Irwin. Produced by Mr Goldblatt. Set design by Rene Shapshak.
Sources
South African Opinion, 1(3), 1944, 18
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