Difference between revisions of "Blithe Spirit"

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''Blithe Spirit'' by Noël Coward. Professor [[Rosalie van der Gucht]] directed this play for [[PACT]] in 1977.
 
''Blithe Spirit'' by Noël Coward. Professor [[Rosalie van der Gucht]] directed this play for [[PACT]] in 1977.
  
[[Lois Butlin]], [[John Whiteley]], [[Helen Bourne]], [[Paddy Canavan]], [[Colin Duell]] and [[Lyn Szymczak]] in ''Blithe Spirit'' in 1977, by [[Anthony Johnson]] for [[CAPAB]].  
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[[Lois Butlin]], [[John Whiteley]], [[Helen Bourne]], [[Paddy Canavan]], [[Colin Duell]] and [[Lyn Szymczak]] in ''Blithe Spirit'' in 1977, directed by [[Anthony Johnson]] for [[CAPAB]].
 
 
 
 
  
 
==Translations and adaptations==
 
==Translations and adaptations==

Revision as of 10:22, 13 February 2014

Blithe Spirit by Noël Coward. A a comic play which takes its title from Shelley’s poem To a Skylark. The action of the play centres on socialite Charles Condomine being haunted by the ghost of his first wife Elvira following a séance, and Elvira's continued (and increasingly desperate) efforts to disrupt Charles' current marriage. First produced in the West End in 1941, setting box-office records and becoming a perennial favourite across the world and in South Africa.

Performance history in South Africa

In 1944 produced in Johannesburg by the Gwen ffrangçon-Davies / Marda Vanne Company in collaboration with African Consolidated Theatres Ltd, also starring Margaret Inglis and Siegfried Mynhardt – a production attended by the author.

1944 at the Alhambra Theatre, Cape Town, Rolf Lefebvre, Gwen ffrangçon-Davies as Ruth, Margaret Inglis as Elvira, Marda Vanne as Madame Arcati, Ivy Collins, Jessie Bryant, Siegfried Mynhardt (Doctor Bradman). Setting by Basil South.

In 1964 Taubie Kushlick presented the play at the Intimate Theatre, directed by Peter Shaffer.

Blithe Spirit by Noël Coward. Professor Rosalie van der Gucht directed this play for PACT in 1977.

Lois Butlin, John Whiteley, Helen Bourne, Paddy Canavan, Colin Duell and Lyn Szymczak in Blithe Spirit in 1977, directed by Anthony Johnson for CAPAB.

Translations and adaptations

Translated into Afrikaans as Die Vryerige Spook (lit. “The Amorous Ghost”) by Danie van den Heever and first produced in 1952 by JAATS, directed by Isobel McLaren, starring Danie van den Heever, Neil de Villiers, Dora Vosloo, Ester van Waart, Marie de Flamingh, Suzanne van den Heever and Zanne Cloete.

PACOFS 1984, directed by Desmond Hughes, with Francesca Bantock, Blaise Koch.

Sources

South African Opinion, 1(8):20; Trek 9(7):18, 1944.

Photograph - NELM Manuscripts - [Collection: FLETCHER, Jill]: 2005. 75. 19. 50.

Helikon, 1(6):40.

PACOFS Drama 25 Years, 1963-1988


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