Difference between revisions of "The Inchcape Bell, or The Dumb Sailor Boy"

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==The original text==
 
==The original text==
  
Possibly inspired by Robert Southey’s poem ''The Inchcape Bell'' (1802) and largely founded on the legend of the Inch Cape Rock in Scotland.  The play was performed 26 May 1828 at the Surrey Theatre.  
+
Possibly inspired by Robert Southey’s poem ''The Inchcape Bell'' (1802) and largely founded on the legend of the Inch Cape Rock in Scotland.  The play was performed in London on 26 May 1828 at the Surrey Theatre.
  
 
==South African productions ==
 
==South African productions ==

Revision as of 11:04, 3 January 2016

The Inchcape Bell, or The Dumb Sailor Boy is a nautical melodrama in 4 acts by Edward Fitzball (1792–1873)[1]. (Some alternative titles found include The Inchcape Bell, or The Dumb Sailor Boy of the Rocks and The Inch Cape Bell, or The Dumb Boy of the Rocks.)

The original text

Possibly inspired by Robert Southey’s poem The Inchcape Bell (1802) and largely founded on the legend of the Inch Cape Rock in Scotland. The play was performed in London on 26 May 1828 at the Surrey Theatre.

South African productions

1833: Performed in Cape Town in the African Theatre by the All the World's a Stage on 8 August, with The Two Gregorys, or Where Does the Money Come From? (Dibdin) and a vaudeville act on the "slack rope" by Monsieur Dupree.

Sources

Frederick Burwick. 2015. British Drama of the Industrial Revolution. Cambridge University Press: p. 224[2] Larry Stephen Clifton. 1993. The Terrible Fitzball: The Melodramatist of the Macabre. Popular Press[3]

F.C.L. Bosman, 1928[4]: pp. 226-7

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