Fun on the Bristol
Fun on the Bristol is a musical comedy created by John F. Sheridan (1848-1908)[] and written by George Fawcett
Also known as Fun on the Bristol, or A Night on the Sound.
The play was inspired by Sheridan’s involvement in a short sketch called Muldoon's Trip to Boston devised at the Brooklyn Playhouse - a skit on the H.M.S. Pinafore craze then sweeping America, in which a Mrs. Muldoon takes her daughter, who was crazy about the musical, from New York to Boston to put her in an insane asylum. Once on board ship, an impromptu concert was then organised in the saloon. The success of the farce impressed Sheridan, particularly the role of the Widow, which he saw as a potential vehicle for himself.
Working with the actor and dramatist George Fawcett Rowe, Sheridan committed his ideas to paper, they talked over the scenes, and ultimately Fun on the Bristol was written. The action takes place in an uptown New York house and later on the Sound steamer Bristol, the story revolving around the elderly Irish Widow O'Brien and her two daughters.
First performed at Newport, Rhode Island in 1879, then opened at the Theatre Royal in Manchester on May 15 1882 The play was an immediate sensation across the world.
1904: Performed at the Good Hope Theatre, Cape Town, on 10 September, with John F. Sheridan in the role of the Widow.
E. Le Roy Rice. 1911. Monarchs of Minstrelsy, from "Daddy" Rice to Date. Рипол Классик: p.183[1]
J.P. Wearing. 2013. The London Stage 1890-1899: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel. (Second, revised edition, p. 423). Scarecrow Press, Google E-book: p. 183[2]