Difference between revisions of "Een Misverstand"

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1898: Performed by the [[Hugenote Gedenkskool|Gedenkschool der Hugenoten]] in Paarl on 10 December, as part of an "entertainement". [[Ludwig Binge|L.W.B. Binge]] (1969, pp.27 and 43) maintains this was the first programme he could find of a performance in [[Afrikaans]], though the programme listed it as a "Dutch Play". The author later assured him it had been in [[Afrikaans]].1914: Performed on 28 September 1914 by the [[Debating Society of Nooitgedacht South]] in the Oudtshoorn district.   
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1898: Performed by the [[Hugenote Gedenkskool|Gedenkschool der Hugenoten]] in Paarl on 10 December, as part of an "entertainement". [[Ludwig Binge|L.W.B. Binge]] (1969, pp.27 and 43) maintains this was the first programme he could find of a performance in [[Afrikaans]], though the programme listed it as a "Dutch Play". The author later assured him it had in fact been in [[Afrikaans]].
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1914: Performed on 28 September 1914 by the [[Debating Society of Nooitgedacht South]] in the Oudtshoorn district.   
  
  

Revision as of 04:35, 28 October 2017

There appear to have been two plays performed in South Africa called Een Misverstand ("A misunderstanding").


Een Misverstand is Dutch one act comedy by P. Faddegon ()[]

The original text

Translations and adaptations

Performance history in South Africa

1874: Performed by Aurora II in the Oddfellows Hall, Cape Town on 1 September, with Arthur de Beaumont, of De Franctireur van Neufville (Van der Stempel).

Sources

F.C.L. Bosman. 1980. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel II, 1856-1916. Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik: pp.


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Een Misverstand ("A misunderstanding") an Afrikaans one act play by G.P. du Toit

This is an Afrikaans version of Turn Him Out, a farce in one act by Thomas John Williams (1824-1874), translated and adapted into Afrikaans by G.P. du Toit in 1898 as Een Misverstand ("A Misunderstanding").

See also Turn Him Out


Translations and adaptations

Performance history in South Africa

1898: Performed by the Gedenkschool der Hugenoten in Paarl on 10 December, as part of an "entertainement". L.W.B. Binge (1969, pp.27 and 43) maintains this was the first programme he could find of a performance in Afrikaans, though the programme listed it as a "Dutch Play". The author later assured him it had in fact been in Afrikaans.

1914: Performed on 28 September 1914 by the Debating Society of Nooitgedacht South in the Oudtshoorn district.



Sources

Ludwig Wilhelm Berthold Binge. 1969. Ontwikkeling van die Afrikaanse toneel (1832-1950). Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik: pp. 27,


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