Difference between revisions of "A Shot in the Dark"

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== Performance history in South Africa ==
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==
1962: Staged by [[Leonard Schach Productions]], first in the [[Hofmeyr Theatre]] in Cape Town and later in the [[Playhouse Theatre]] in Johannesburg, directed by [[Leonard Schach]], with [[Siegfried Mynhardt]] (Morestan), [[Kerry Jordan]] (Sevigne), [[Michael McGovern]] (Lablanche), [[Patricia Sanders]] (Antoinette), [[Patricia Denys]] (Josefa), [[Valerie Philip]] (Madame Beauveres),  
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1962: Staged by [[Leonard Schach Productions]], first in the [[Hofmeyr Theatre]] in Cape Town and later in the [[Playhouse Theatre]] in Johannesburg, directed by [[Leonard Schach]], with [[Siegfried Mynhardt]] (Morestan), [[Kerry Jordan]] (Sevigne), [[Michael McGovern]] (Lablanche), [[Patricia Sanders]] (Antoinette), [[Patricia Denys]] (Josefa), [[Valerie Philip]] (Madame Beauveres), [[Yossi Graber]] (Beauveres) and [[Robert Hahn]] (Guard). Settings by [[Pamela Lewis]].
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==

Revision as of 06:44, 26 January 2016

A Shot in the Dark is a 1961 comic play by American playwright Harry Kunitz (1908-1968) [1],

The original text

It is adapted from and based on L'Idiote [2] a comic mystery play by French playwright Marcel Achard (1899-1974) [3].

Translations and adaptations

It was made into a 1964 comedy film, also called A Shot in the Dark [4], which was the second installment in The Pink Panther film series directed by Blake Edwards and featuring Peter Sellers as Inspector Jacques Clouseau of the French Sûreté.

Performance history in South Africa

1962: Staged by Leonard Schach Productions, first in the Hofmeyr Theatre in Cape Town and later in the Playhouse Theatre in Johannesburg, directed by Leonard Schach, with Siegfried Mynhardt (Morestan), Kerry Jordan (Sevigne), Michael McGovern (Lablanche), Patricia Sanders (Antoinette), Patricia Denys (Josefa), Valerie Philip (Madame Beauveres), Yossi Graber (Beauveres) and Robert Hahn (Guard). Settings by Pamela Lewis.

Sources

Leonard Schach Productions theatre programme, 1962.

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