The Bottle
The Bottle is a drama in two acts by T.P. Taylor (Tom Taylor, 1817-1880)[1]
Also found as The Bottle, or The Drunkard's Doom and possibly The Bottle and the Boy.
Contents
The original text
A play consisting of "eight tableaux" about the evils of drink, based on the graphic illustrations - also entitled The Bottle - by George Cruikshank. In a series of eight plates, in its turn inspired by the 18th century painter William Hogarth’s The Rake’s Progress, Cruikshank charts a drinker’s decline from first glass to unemployment, poverty, violence and insanity. The series was published in 1847.
Taylor's play was also published in 1847 by John Dicks.
Translations and adaptations
The play may have been adapted for young players and performed in Cape Town under the title The Bottle and the Boy in 1872.
Performance history in South Africa
1850(?): Performed in Cape Town by James Lycett and company in the Drury Lane Theatre
1872: Members of Land of Hope (i.e. the Cape Town Juvenile Temperence Society) perform a play they call The Bottle and the Boy at the annual general meeting in November. No author is given, though it may have been an adaptation for young players of Taylor's play. Bosman (1980:p.282) mentions that according to the Cape Argus, "(t)he piece created considerable amusement" - which may suggest a farce, but it is more likely that the performances of drunk men by young people were found to be amusing.
1876: Performed on 23 August as The Bottle, or The Drunkard's Doom in the Athenaeum Hall, Cape Town, by the Disney Roebuck company, under the temporary management of C. Wiltstone. The afterpiece is Checkmate (Halliday).
Sources
https://archive.org/details/bottleadramaintw00tayluoft
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Taylor
The Bottle, a series of temperance themed illustrations by George Cruikshank, with poetry by Charles Mackay[2]
F.C.L. Bosman. 1928. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel I: 1652-1855. Pretoria: J.H. de Bussy. [3].
F.C.L. Bosman, 1980. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel II, 1856-1916. Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik: pp.282, 342, 346, 349
P.W. Laidler. 1926. The Annals of the Cape Stage. Edinburgh: William Bryce.
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