Difference between revisions of "The Lawyer in the Sack, or Jack's Return!!!"
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== Performances in South Africa == | == Performances in South Africa == | ||
− | + | 1831: First performed as ''[[The Lawyer in the Sack]]'' by [[All the World's a Stage]] in Cape Town on 17 December, along with ''[[Der Freischütz]]'' (Weber) and ''[[The Spectre Bridegroom]]'' (Moncrieff). | |
+ | 1832: Performed as ''[[The Lawyer in the Sack, or Jack's Return!!!]]'' by [[All the World's a Stage]] in Cape Town on 30 January, along with ''[[The Iron Chest, or The Blood-Stained Knife]]'' (Colman) and ''[[The Sleeping Draught]]'' (Penley). | ||
== Sources == | == Sources == |
Revision as of 04:18, 24 March 2017
The Lawyer in the Sack, or Jack's Return!!! was a "Ballet Dance" (or "ballet with dancing"), possibly devised by H. Booth and performed in Cape Town.
Contents
The original text
Possibly devised by H. Booth during his stay in Cape Town, though Bosman does not count it as a South African work but one brought from England.
He also suggests that it this may have been a sequel to the "new Ballet Dance" called Jack at the Cape, or All Alive Among the Hottentots!, which was first performed in Cape Town by All the World's a Stage on 7th January 1832, but this is unlikely if the sequel was the first to be performed (on 17 December, 1831).
Translations and adaptations
Performances in South Africa
1831: First performed as The Lawyer in the Sack by All the World's a Stage in Cape Town on 17 December, along with Der Freischütz (Weber) and The Spectre Bridegroom (Moncrieff).
1832: Performed as The Lawyer in the Sack, or Jack's Return!!! by All the World's a Stage in Cape Town on 30 January, along with The Iron Chest, or The Blood-Stained Knife (Colman) and The Sleeping Draught (Penley).
Sources
F.C.L. Bosman, 1928. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel I: 1652-1855. Pretoria: J.H. de Bussy. [1]: pp. 219, 222, 374.
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