Difference between revisions of "Dear Brutus"

From ESAT
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 4: Line 4:
 
It was first produced in South Africa in 1922 at the [[Opera House]] in Pretoria, starring [[Madge Fabian]].  
 
It was first produced in South Africa in 1922 at the [[Opera House]] in Pretoria, starring [[Madge Fabian]].  
  
It was the play chosen for the first English production done by [[NTO]] and was directed for them by [[Leontine Sagan]] and featuring [[Siegfried Mynhardt]] as Lob. The production premièred in February 1948 at the [[Little Theatre]] in Cape Town, before going on a national tour with the Afrikaans play [[Altyd My Liefste]] (a translation of Lessing's [[Minna von Barnhelm]]). The NTO productions had 134 performances on its tour through the country, closing in Johannesburg in July 1948.
+
It was the play chosen for the first English production done by [[NTO]] and was directed for them by [[Leontine Sagan]] and featuring [[Siegfried Mynhardt]] as Lob. The production premièred in February 1948 at the [[Little Theatre]] in Cape Town, before going on a national tour with the Afrikaans play ''[[Altyd My Liefste]]'' (a translation of Lessing's ''[[Minna von Barnhelm]]''). The NTO productions had 134 performances on its tour through the country, closing in Johannesburg in July 1948.
  
 
==Translations and adaptations==
 
==Translations and adaptations==

Revision as of 14:29, 27 January 2016

Dear Brutus by Scottish dramatist J.M. Barrie [1] (1860-1937). A play about **. Written in 1917.

Performance history in South Africa

It was first produced in South Africa in 1922 at the Opera House in Pretoria, starring Madge Fabian.

It was the play chosen for the first English production done by NTO and was directed for them by Leontine Sagan and featuring Siegfried Mynhardt as Lob. The production premièred in February 1948 at the Little Theatre in Cape Town, before going on a national tour with the Afrikaans play Altyd My Liefste (a translation of Lessing's Minna von Barnhelm). The NTO productions had 134 performances on its tour through the country, closing in Johannesburg in July 1948.

Translations and adaptations

Sources

Inskip, 1977. p 21

Return to

Return to D in Plays II Foreign Plays

Return to South_African_Theatre/Plays

Return to The ESAT Entries

Return to Main Page