Le Barbier de Séville, ou La Précaution Inutile
Le Barbier de Séville, ou La Précaution Inutile is a comedy in four acts by Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais (usually referred to simply as "Beaumarchais", 1732-1799)[1]. (The texts of the Beaumarchais play and the popular Rossini opera based on it, are both often both referred to simply as Le Barbier de Seville or The Barber of Seville)
Contents
The original text
Written in 1772 as the first of a trilogy of plays entitled Le Roman de la Famille Almaviva, with the others being Le Mariage de Figaro (1778) and L'Autre Tartuffe ou La Mère coupable (1792).
First performed in Paris on 23 and 25 February, 1775 at the Comédie-Française and was published by Ruault, Paris, in the same year.
Translations and adaptations
Translated into Dutch as De Barbier van Seville, of De Onnutte Voorzorg, published in 1793.
It was twice adapted into an opera:
Il Barbiere di Siviglia, ovvero La Precauzione Inutile by Paisiello (1782).
Il Barbiere di Siviglia by Gioachino Rossini (1816).
Performance history in South Africa
1783: According to travel-writer Le Vaillant (cited by Fletcher, 1994: p. 18) a good production of Beaumarchais's play was done in French in the Cape in 1783. Performed (wholly or in part) in the Cape Town Barracks Theatre during the occupation by French troops sent to defend the Cape against the British Fleet (1781-1795), it was possibly the first production by them and it counts as one of the first documented performances in South Africa.
1804: Performed in the African Theatre by Het Fransche Liefhebbery Geselschap, a new French company, amalgamated with the ordinary French Theatre-lovers in the Cape, under the leadership of C.M. Villet on Saturday 2 April, repeated on 30 April - this time with the addition of Arlequin Afficheur (Desfountaines and Barré).
1824: Performed in Dutch as De Barbier van Seville, of De Onnutte Voorzorg, on 31 July in the African Theatre by the amateur company Honi Soit qui Mal y Pense, apparently with the overture of Rossini's opera and other music provided by Charles Etienne Boniface. It was accompanied by the one act play Jérome Pointu by Beaunoir (but wrongly accredited to "D'Orvigny" by F.C.L. Bosman (1928, p. 279) or by his source).
Sources
http://www.dbnl.org/tekst/worp001gesc02_01/worp001gesc02_01_0019.php
Jill Fletcher. 1994. The Story of Theatre in South Africa: A Guide to its History from 1780-1930. Cape Town: Vlaeberg: pp. 18, 32
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Barbier_de_S%C3%A9ville
F.C.L. Bosman, 1928. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel I: 1652-1855. Pretoria: J.H. de Bussy. [2]: pp. 89-90, 279-80,
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