Difference between revisions of "Gaslight"

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== Performance history in South Africa ==
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==
  
Produced by [[Robert Quentin]] at the [[Little Theatre]] for the Combined Dramatic Societies of Cape Town in 1941. With [[Walter Paterson]], [[Eirwen Llewelyn Jones]], [[George Royle]], set designer [[Cecil Pym, lighting by [[H. Lerner]].
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Produced by [[Robert Quentin]] at the [[Little Theatre]] for the Combined Dramatic Societies of Cape Town in 1941. With [[Walter Paterson]], [[Eirwen Llewelyn Jones]], [[George Royle]], set designer [[Cecil Pym]], lighting by [[H. Lerner]].
  
 
Gaslight performed by the [[Langford-Inglis Company]] in 1962.
 
Gaslight performed by the [[Langford-Inglis Company]] in 1962.

Revision as of 17:17, 25 October 2013

Originally called Gas Light, it is a 1938 play by Patrick Hamilton. (The two filmed versions introduced the current spelling of "Gaslight").

The original play premiered in London in December 1938 and ran for six months.

It opened in New York with the title Angel Street and premiered on Broadway at the John Golden Theatre on 5 December 1941, transferred to the Bijou Theatre on 2 October 1944, and closed on 30 December 1944 after 1295 performances.


Filmed twice in the 1940s. The first, a British film, was made in 1940 and directed by Thorold Dickinson, starring Anton Walbrook, Diana Wynyard and Frank Pettingell. Then another version in 1944 by MGM, directed by George Cukor (1944 - with Ingrid bergman, Charles Boyer and Angela Lansbury).

Performance history in South Africa

Produced by Robert Quentin at the Little Theatre for the Combined Dramatic Societies of Cape Town in 1941. With Walter Paterson, Eirwen Llewelyn Jones, George Royle, set designer Cecil Pym, lighting by H. Lerner.

Gaslight performed by the Langford-Inglis Company in 1962.

Sources

Trek, 5 December 1941, 20.

Translations and adaptations

Translated into Afrikaans by Pierre de Wet as Satansloon ("Satan's Payment") and produced by his company in 1942. He later made into a film by the same name.

Sources

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

Programme Alexander Theatre. No 166 September, 1963.

Go to South African Theatre/Bibliography

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