Difference between revisions of "Robert Marshall"

From ESAT
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 21: Line 21:
  
  
 
+
''[[ The Subaltern]]'' ()
''[[The Shades of Night]]'' (1895)
+
''[[Strategy]]'' ()
''[[His Excellency the Governor]]'' (1898)''[[The Duke of Killiecrankie]]'' (1904)
+
''[[Guy Fawkes]]'' ()
[[A Royal Family]] (1898)
+
''[[1746]]'' (never performed)
[[The Broad Road]] (1898) Terry's Theatre, London
+
''[[The Great Day]]'' (1893/4, censored and never performed)
[[The Noble Lord]] (1900) Criterion, London[7]
+
''[[The Shades of Night]]'' (The Lyceum, 1895)
[[The Second in Command]] (1900)
+
''[[His Excellency the Governor]]'' (1895/?)
[[Prince Charlie]] (1901) one-act play
+
''[[A Royal Family]]'' (1898)
[[The Haunted Major]] (1902) a novel, a.k.a. The Enchanted Golf Clubs[8]
+
''[[The Broad Road]]'' (1898) Terry's Theatre, London
[[There's Many a Slip]] (1902) a translation of Bataille de Dames by Ernest Legouvé and Eugène Scribe.[4]
+
''[[The Second in Command]]'' (1900)
[[The Unforeseen]] (1903)
+
''[[The Noble Lord]]'' (1900) Criterion, London
 
+
''[[Prince Charlie]]'' (1901) one-act play
[[Everybody's Secret]] (1905) with L.N. Parker, adaptation from Pierre Wolff's Le Secret de Polichinelle
+
''[[There's Many a Slip]]'' (1902) a translation of ''[[Bataille de Dames]]'' by Ernest Legouvé and Eugène Scribe.
[[The Lady of Leeds]] (1905)[6]
+
''[[The Unforeseen]]'' (1903)
[[The Alabaster Staircase]] (1906)
+
''[[The Duke of Killiecrankie]]'' (1904)
[[The Outsider]] (1908)[9]
+
''[[Everybody's Secret]]'' (1905) with L.N. Parker, adaptation from Pierre Wolff's ''[[Le Secret de Polichinelle]]''
[[Second in Command]] (1910)
+
''[[The Lady of Leeds]]'' (1905)
[[The Second Fortune]]
+
''[[The Alabaster Staircase]]'' (1906)
 +
''[[The Outsider]]'' (1908)
 +
''[[Second in Command]]'' (1910)
 +
''[[The Second Fortune]]''
  
 
==Sources==
 
==Sources==

Revision as of 05:16, 9 May 2019

Robert Marshall (1863-1910)[1] was a Scottish born army captain, an amateur actor and a playwright.

Biography

Born in Edinburgh, he went to school in St Andrews and afterwards to the University of Edinburgh, where he studied Greek, Latin and English literature. When his father's death put a stop to his studies, he enlisted in the 71st Highland Light Infantry.

He had postings with the Duke of Wellington's West Riding Regiment stationed in the Bermudas, then in Canada and Barbados. In 1893, he was posted to the Cape Colony as adjutant to Sir William Gordon Cameron, a post which he held for over a year, before he was posted as aide-de-camp to Sir Walter Hely-Hutchinson, Governor of Natal.

While on guard duty on Agar's Island, in the Bermudas, he had written his first play The Subaltern, which was produced by The Amateur Dramatic Club of Bermuda for which he also acted and painted sets. From there on he would use his spare time in the military to produce a range of plays, three of them apparently written while in South Africa, though they were not performed there at the time, but in London (The Great Day, The Shades of Night in Cape Town (1893) and His Excellency the Governor in Pietermaritzburg in Natal). The last mentioned was his first important play and - in view of its financial success - he resigned from the military to take up playwriting as his profession. He went on to write at least two other big successes before his untimely death at 47 years of age, namely The Second in Command and The Duke of Killiecrankie.

His South African period

In 1893, he was posted to the Cape Colony as adjutant to Sir William Gordon Cameron, a post which he held for over a year. While stationed at the Cape Town Castle, he wrote a play entitled The Great Day which was to have been produced in London by George Alexander but F. Pigott, the Examiner of Plays, objected to it and so this never occurred.

He was then posted to the Colony of Natal where he became aide-de-camp to Sir Walter Hely-Hutchinson, Governor of Natal and at this stage, probably while in Natal, wrote his first important play, namely His Excellency the Governor - which go on to a to become enough of a success for Marshall to enable him to resign from the military and take up playwriting as his full-time profession.

Plays by Robert Marshall that have been performed in South Africa

While there is no indication that any of his plays were actually tried out or produced in South Africa during his sojourn there - not even the two that he wrote while stationed in Cape Town and Pietermaritzburg. However, some of the work was brought to South Africa by British touring companies and others. Among them have been The Duke of Killiecrankie (,


The Subaltern () Strategy () Guy Fawkes () 1746 (never performed) The Great Day (1893/4, censored and never performed) The Shades of Night (The Lyceum, 1895) His Excellency the Governor (1895/?) A Royal Family (1898) The Broad Road (1898) Terry's Theatre, London The Second in Command (1900) The Noble Lord (1900) Criterion, London Prince Charlie (1901) one-act play There's Many a Slip (1902) a translation of Bataille de Dames by Ernest Legouvé and Eugène Scribe. The Unforeseen (1903) The Duke of Killiecrankie (1904) Everybody's Secret (1905) with L.N. Parker, adaptation from Pierre Wolff's Le Secret de Polichinelle The Lady of Leeds (1905) The Alabaster Staircase (1906) The Outsider (1908) Second in Command (1910) The Second Fortune

Sources

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Marshall_(dramatist)

Go to the ESAT Bibliography

Return to

Return to ESAT Personalities M

Return to South African Theatre Personalities

Return to The ESAT Entries

Return to Main Page