Difference between revisions of "Love à la Mode"

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1824: Performed in Cape Town on 10 April by the [[English Theatricals]] amateur company in the [[African Theatre]], as afterpiece to ''[[Tekeli, or The Siege of Montgatz]]'' (Hook).
 
1824: Performed in Cape Town on 10 April by the [[English Theatricals]] amateur company in the [[African Theatre]], as afterpiece to ''[[Tekeli, or The Siege of Montgatz]]'' (Hook).
  
1853: Performed in Grahamstown on Tuesday 11 October by the [[Garrison Players]] in the [[Theatre Royal]], with as afterpiece ''[[The Three Clerks]]''.
+
1853: Performed in Grahamstown on Tuesday 11 October by the [[Garrison Players]] in the [[Theatre Royal]], with as afterpiece ''[[The Three Clerks]]'' (Oxberry).
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==

Revision as of 06:14, 22 February 2017

A comic satire by Charles Macklin (1699–1797)

The original text

First played: 1759 at the Drury Lane Theatre, London. First published: 1779.

Translations and adaptations

Performance history in South Africa

1807: Performed in Cape Town on 29 August by the Garrison Players in the African Theatre, as afterpiece to She Stoops to Conquer (Goldsmith).

1824: Performed in Cape Town on 10 April by the English Theatricals amateur company in the African Theatre, as afterpiece to Tekeli, or The Siege of Montgatz (Hook).

1853: Performed in Grahamstown on Tuesday 11 October by the Garrison Players in the Theatre Royal, with as afterpiece The Three Clerks (Oxberry).

Sources

Text of play (1806 version)[1]

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

F.C.L. Bosman, 1928:pp. 73,

Go to ESAT Bibliography

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