Difference between revisions of "The Two Gregories, or "Where Did the Money Come From?""

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==South African productions ==
 
==South African productions ==
  
1833: Performed in Cape Town in the [[African Theatre]] by the [[All the World's a Stage]] on 13 July, (under the slightly inaccurate title of ''[[The Two Gregorys, or Where Does the Money Come From?]]'') with ''[[The Inchcape Bell, or The Dumb Sailor Boy]]'' (Fitzball) and a vaudeville act  on the "slack rope" by [[Monsieur Dupree]].
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1833: Performed in Cape Town in the [[African Theatre]] by the [[All the World's a Stage]] on 3 August, (under the slightly inaccurate title of ''[[The Two Gregorys, or Where Does the Money Come From?]]'') with ''[[The Inchcape Bell, or The Dumb Sailor Boy]]'' (Fitzball) and a vaudeville act  on the "slack rope" by [[Monsieur Dupree]].
  
 
==Sources==
 
==Sources==

Revision as of 07:40, 24 July 2016

The Two Gregories, or "Where Did the Money Come From?" is a "Ballad Farce" by Thomas Dibdin (1771–1841)[1].

The original text

Based on Charles Augustin Sewrin's Jocrisse-maître et Jocrisse-valet, a French one act comedy, first produced at the Théâtre des Variétés-Panoramas, Paris, on 29 October, 1810 and published by Masson in 1810.

Dibdin's English text performed at the Surrey Theatre, London, in 1821. Published for the Proprietor, at Roach's Old Established Library, 1821.

South African productions

1833: Performed in Cape Town in the African Theatre by the All the World's a Stage on 3 August, (under the slightly inaccurate title of The Two Gregorys, or Where Does the Money Come From?) with The Inchcape Bell, or The Dumb Sailor Boy (Fitzball) and a vaudeville act on the "slack rope" by Monsieur Dupree.

Sources

Facsimile version of the 1810 edition of Jocrisse-maître et Jocrisse-valet, Google E-Book[2]

Facsimile version of the 1821 edition of The Two Gregories, or "Where Did the Money Come From?", Google E-Book[3]

F.C.L. Bosman, 1928[4]: pp. 227

Go to the ESAT Bibliography

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