The Dancing Scotchman

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The Dancing Scotchman is the name of a comic dance performance or ballet created by the couple Richard Flexmore (1824-1860) and Francesca Auriol (1829-1862, also known as Francisca Auriol).

The original text

Created, choreographed and danced at the Standard Theatre, London, by Flexmore and Auriol in 1854.

Translations and adaptations

Performance history in South Africa

1866: A "new and interesting ballet" called The Dancing Scotchman, or Love in all Corners was performed on the 20th of August by the Le Roy and Duret theatre company in the Theatre Royal in Harrington Street, Cape Town, as afterpiece to a performance of Retribution (Taylor). It was most probably a work created by members of the British company, based on the earlier work by Flexmore and Auriol.

1866: Performed as The Dancing Scotchman on the 23rd of August by the Le Roy and Duret theatre company in the Theatre Royal in Harrington Street, Cape Town, as afterpiece to a performance of Plot and Passion (Taylor and Lang).

1866: Performed by the Le Roy and Duret theatre company in the Theatre Royal in Harrington Street, Cape Town, as The Dancing Scotchman on the 25th of August. This was part of a children's matinee, which also included On the Sly, The Nervous Cures (Brown and Norton) and Shadow Pantomime.

Sources

F.C.L. Bosman. 1980. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel II, 1856-1912. Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik: pp. 111, 115

Allan Stuart Jackson. 1993. The Standard Theatre of Victorian England. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press: p. 118[1]