Difference between revisions of "Gaiety Company"

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Gaiety (activity), lively celebration or festivities, performance activity, entertainments or amusements. Some sources refer to this as a dated use of the word.  
 
Gaiety (activity), lively celebration or festivities, performance activity, entertainments or amusements. Some sources refer to this as a dated use of the word.  
  
From the latter comes the theatrical use of the term to refer to the name for a type of light, often [[vaudeville]] style, entertainment, the people/companies that engage in it or the venues used for such performances. (Gaiety performance, gaiety company, gaiety theatre, etc.)
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From the latter comes the theatrical use of the term, especially in the late 19th century and early 20th century,  to refer to a type of light, often [[vaudeville]] style, entertainment, the people/companies that engage in it or the venues used for such performances. Hence its use as the name given to Gaiety performances, Gaiety Companies, Gaiety Theatres, etc.
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 +
A number of such companies and theatres are still in existence today
  
 
=Gaiety companies in South Africa=
 
=Gaiety companies in South Africa=

Revision as of 04:09, 30 March 2018

The name Gaiety Company was often used for theatre companies performing in South Africa during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

See also Gaiety Theatre[1]

The notion of "Gaiety" performances

Gaiety (or in some cases "Gayety") may refer to:

Gaiety (mood), the state of being happy, light-hearted or cheerful

Gaiety (activity), lively celebration or festivities, performance activity, entertainments or amusements. Some sources refer to this as a dated use of the word.

From the latter comes the theatrical use of the term, especially in the late 19th century and early 20th century, to refer to a type of light, often vaudeville style, entertainment, the people/companies that engage in it or the venues used for such performances. Hence its use as the name given to Gaiety performances, Gaiety Companies, Gaiety Theatres, etc.

A number of such companies and theatres are still in existence today

Gaiety companies in South Africa

Frank de Jongh's Gaiety companies

The name Gaiety Company was most notable in the case of theatrical companies brought to Cape Town by Frank de Jongh, lessee of the Cape Town Opera House from 1896-1937. These companies consisted of well-known overseas performers and artistes, including Zena Dare, Matheson Lang, Sybil Thorndike, Lewis Casson, Irene Vanbrugh and Kate Vaughan in a variety of plays, operas and ballets.

The Edward Sass Gaiety Company

In 1895 a Gaiety Company, led by Edward Sass, performed a number of plays in the Opera House, Cape Town, under the auspices of Ben and Frank Wheeler. Other company members included James Nelson, J.H. Darnley, J.B. Gordon, Emma Glynne and Ada Logan. Their repertoire included The New Woman (Grundy), Doctor Bill (Carré /Aidé), The Case of Rebellious Susan (Jones), Liberty Hall (Dibdin), The Solicitor (Darnley), The Masqueraders (Jones), The Second Mrs Tanqueray (Pinero) and The Bauble Shop (Jones).


A Gaiety Company also used the Good Hope Theatre in Cape Town in 1902 to perform pieces such as The Geisha and Kitty Grey. **

Sources

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaiety_Theatre

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaiety

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