Difference between revisions of "The Three Wishes"

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= The Three Wishes a play in two acts by [[James Ambrose Brown]]=
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= ''[[The Three Wishes]]'' by [[James Ambrose Brown]]=
  
 
==The original play==
 
==The original play==
  
Inspired by an Arabian fairy tale and tells the story of a dreamy Cape-Malay fisherman whose wife sends him to find the magic genie trapped in a bottle at the bottom of the sea.  
+
A play in two acts by [[James Ambrose Brown]], inspired by an Arabian fairy tale. It tells the story of a dreamy Cape-Malay fisherman whose wife sends him to find the magic genie trapped in a bottle at the bottom of the sea.  
  
 
Published by [[DALRO]] in 1978.  
 
Published by [[DALRO]] in 1978.  
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==Translations and adaptations==
 
==Translations and adaptations==
  
Translated into [[Afrikaans]] as ''[[Die Drie Wense]]'' by [[Johan Bernard]].
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Translated into [[Afrikaans]] as '''''[[Die Drie Wense]]''''' ("The three wishes")  by [[Johan Bernard]].
  
 
''[[The Three Wishes]]'' was also broadcast as a radio play in several episodes by the [[SABC]].
 
''[[The Three Wishes]]'' was also broadcast as a radio play in several episodes by the [[SABC]].

Revision as of 16:58, 13 June 2020

The ancient folktale of The Three Wishes has been used as material for songs, poems, stories, plays, films and other entertainment over the ages.

Below are a few South African examples.


The Three Wishes by James Ambrose Brown

The original play

A play in two acts by James Ambrose Brown, inspired by an Arabian fairy tale. It tells the story of a dreamy Cape-Malay fisherman whose wife sends him to find the magic genie trapped in a bottle at the bottom of the sea.

Published by DALRO in 1978.

Translations and adaptations

Translated into Afrikaans as Die Drie Wense ("The three wishes") by Johan Bernard.

The Three Wishes was also broadcast as a radio play in several episodes by the SABC.

Performances

1954: First staged by Children's Theatre Incorporated in Johannesburg in 1954 with Anna Romain Hoffman as director, and in Cape Town in 1955 with Hansel Hewitt as director. The Cape Town production had a coloured cast which, rather uniquely at the time, played to multiracial audiences.

1965: Staged at the Library Theatre as the last production for Children's Theatre with Stanley Coghan, June Hern.

1968: Performed in Afrikaans as Die Drie Wense

The Three Wishes a one act play by Ian Ferguson

Published in the collection Lean Your Ear This Way, edited by C. Dyer and published by Academica Publishers in 1989.

Sources

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