The Happy Journey to Trenton and Camden

From ESAT
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The Happy Journey to Trenton and Camden is a one-act play by Thornton Wilder ()http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thornton_Wilder].

The original text

Almost the entire play takes place during an automobile journey from Newark to Camden, New Jersey by a family on their way to visit a married daughter.

The first production was by the Yale Dramatic Association and the Vassar College Philalethis at the Yale University theater in New Haven, Connecticut on November 25, 1931. It was first published in The Long Christmas Dinner and Other Plays in One Act (New York: Coward-McCann, 1931).

Published in South Africa in the collection Spotlight: A Collection of One-act Plays for Active Participation, compiled by Betty Hugo and published by De-Jager Haum in 1989.

Translations and adaptations

Translated into Afrikaans as Die Voorspoedige Reis na Trenton en Camden (translator unknown) and produced by K.A.T. as one of their FATSA Festival entries in Cape Town in February and March 1952. The play was directed by Christie van der Merwe.

Translated into Afrikaans as Kom Ry Saam by Iris Roux. (Copy of the typed text)

Performance history in South Africa

1946: Presented as The Happy Journey to Camden by the University of Cape Town Speech and Drama Department, produced by Nancy Body. Little Theatre, Sept 1946. Featuring Leonard Schach, Sonia Lipman and Winifred Robertson.

1952: Performed in Afrikaans as Die Voorspoedige Reis na Trenton en Camden (translator unknown) by K.A.T. as one of their FATSA Festival entries in Cape Town in February and March. The play was directed by Christie van der Merwe.

1967: Presented by CAPAB's Theatre-go-round directed by Elliot Playfair in 1967 as The Happy Journey in a double bill with The Garden at the Threshold.

Sources

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Happy_Journey_to_Trenton_and_Camden

South African Opinion, 3(9):30, 1946.

Trek, 11(7):23, 1946.

Press clippings re CAPAB 1967 production held by NELM: [Collection: DICKERSON, Beth]: 2009. 61. 2. 14.

Copy of the Afrikaans text of Kom Ry Saam by Iris Roux, Drama Department collection, Stellenbosch.


Nel, 1972.

Return to

Return to H in Plays 2 Foreign Plays

Return to South_African_Theatre/Plays

Return to Main Page