Shadow Pantomime
The Shadow Pantomime (or at times the Great Comic Shadow Pantomime) is the name of a theatre performance known in South Africa through the performances by the Le Roy and Duret Company in their 1866 and 1867 seasons.
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The original text
According to Groom (1928) and Bosman (1980), the Le Roy and Duret Company did the first performance in Cape Town of what they billed as a "Great Comic Shadow Pantomime, sensation from the Crystal Palace".
The latter statement is possibly a reference to something like the 1861 shadow pantomime put on by Nelson Lee in the Crystal Palace, London and reported on in the Evening Star and Dial of , [1]). So what was seen I n Cape Town was probably a piece of shadow theatre, devised and performed by the Le Roy and Duret Company itself in the 1860s.
Translations and adaptations
Performance history in South Africa
1866: Performed by the Le Roy and Duret theatre company in the Theatre Royal in Harrington Street, Cape Town, on 2nd August and billed as a "Great Comic Shadow Pantomime, sensation from the Crystal Palace". Also performed were The Mutiny at the Nore (Jerrold) and On the Sly (Morton).
1866: Performed by the Le Roy and Duret theatre company in the Theatre Royal in Harrington Street, Cape Town, as Shadow Pantomime 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 The Dancing Scotchman (Flexmore and Auriol?).
Sources
F.C.L. Bosman. 1980. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel II, 1856-1912. Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik: pp.
William Groom. 1899-1900. Drama in Cape Town. Cape Illustrated Magazine, 10(4): 478-481, 517-520, 547-552, 580-584, 640-643, 670-672, 706-708.
Evening Star And Dial, Tuesday, January 15, 1861[2]