Ethel Buckley
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Little Wunder: The story of the Palace Theatre, Sydney (Part 11)
During 1910 the Palace Theatre enjoyed much prosperity, from the polished performances of the Hugh J. Ward company to the mighty melodramas of Bland Holt performed by the Hamilton-Maxwell Dramatic Company. ELISABETH KUMM continues her history of the Pitt Street playhouse.With thearrival of Hugh J. Ward’s company, Ward was heralded as ‘A New Australian Manager’. Since his first appearance in Australia in 1899, as a member of the Hoyt-McKee company, American-born Ward had proved a popular actor and dancer, and his shift to management was a welcome move. In 1906, in association with George Willoughby, his English company had undertaken an eighteen-month tour of Australasia with the comedy The Man from Mexico. Having returned to London in 1908, he organised his own company, touring India, Burma, China, and the Straits Settlements. An article in Sydney’s Daily Telegraph (1 January 1910, p.6) noted:
In the tour in the East, just concluded, he was his own financier and manager; his knowledge of stage craft and long experience of the theatre enabled him to direct the production of his plays; and in the ultimate result, the box office receipts showed that the venture was, in a pecuniary sense, thoroughly successful. So far as the artistic merits of the productions are concerned, Sydney audiences who are enjoying the brisk acting of a talented, all-round company in “A Bachelor’s Honeymoon” will have but one opinion.
The Company’s first offering, A Bachelor’s Honeymoon, kicked off the 1909 Christmas season at the Palace, playing for a jolly six weeks. It was followed on 11 February 1910 by VIvian’s Papas, a farcical comedy by Leo Ditrichstein, that was described as a twin to A Bachelor’s Honeymoon on account of its ‘mirth-provoking qualities’. Vivian’s Papas had received its Australian debut during Hugh J. Ward’s initial Perth season, where it played several nights at the Theatre Royal from 12 June 1909.
Members of the Hugh J. Ward company on tour in the East. Hugh Ward is in the centre, with Grace Palotta to the left. From The Mirror, 21 May 1909, p.15.
Ditrichstein’s farce had premiered in New York in August 1903. The principal roles were played by Hattie Williams as Vivian Rogers, an actress who attracts the attention of two admirers or ‘papas’—Chester D. Farnham and Frederick W. Walker—played by comedians John C. Rice and Thomas A. Wise. In this production, the role of Alice Farnham, Chester’s wife, was played by Esther Tittell, a sister of actress Tittell Brune. Mixing comedy, drama and song, the play’s big attraction was a Wagnerian/grand opera spoof set against a realistic fire scene.
At the Palace, Grace Palotta had the titular role, renamed Vivian Gay, with Arthur Eldred and Hugh J. Ward as the two papas. As the piece contained several songs, tenor Walter Whyte was specially engaged to play one of the singing firemen; W.B. Beattie, another singer formerly with Williamson’s Royal Comic Opera Company, played the role of Edouard Pollak, a singing teacher. Ward’s wife, Grace Miller Ward (who would go on to establish herself as a noted Sydney-based singing teacher) paired with Whyte for the operatic fire scene. Maud Chetwynd (previously seen at the Palace with Allan Hamilton’s Dramatic Company in 1909) played the small role of Carrie the housemaid.
The fire scene provided an exciting climax to the play’s first act, with the Sydney Morning Herald (13 February 1910) observing: ‘Machinery recently imported from the United States provides a remarkable illusion, and it is hard to believe that the stage is not a mass of flames.’
From Table Talk (Melbourne), 1 July 1909, p.21. Author’s collection.
Vivian’s Papas played for just a week, closing on 18 February 1910. With the end of the season fast approaching, The Fencing Master (for the first time in Sydney) and The Man from Mexico(first introduced during the 1906 Willoughby-Ward tour), were performed for a week each. The first named play was a far cry from the antics of the two former plays. It was a serious drama, which provided Ward with the opportunity to show his versatility as an actor. A comedy-drama in three acts by Herbert Hall Winslow, the play was described by Ward as ‘one of the most beautiful and interesting plays I have ever had or seen’.1 Ward played the title character, Angelo Rossi, an Italian nobleman who has emigrated to New York after killing a man in a duel. When his son seeks to marry a young lady (Grace Palotta) of an upright family, the father of another man (W.B. Beattie) also after her affections, recognises Rossi as the man in the duel, thereby jeopardising the son’s chances of a good marriage.
The Fencing Master had received its premiere by Ward’s company in Calcutta in April 1909. According to Variety (May 1909), it ‘established a record for an opening of an American piece in point of distance from Broadway’. The same article noted that the play had been handed over to Ward without a title and ‘The Fencing Master’ had been selected by the players. It is not clear if the play was ever produced in America as the title had already been assigned to another work—Reginald de Koven’s 1892 opera—and would have been given another name. The piece received its first Australian outings in Perth in June 1909 and in Melbourne in August 1909.
The Man from Mexico, the comedy by George Broadhurst, that was the hit of the 1906 Willoughby-Ward season, brought the company’s Palace season to a close. Hugh Ward repeated his success as the ‘picturesque liar who talks about his adventures in Mexico so as to account for his absence from home while he has been serving a sentence in gaol’.2 The audience demanded repeated encores of his song ‘Nobody’ (written by Alex Rogers, with music by Bert A. Williams, and first published in 1905). Grace Palotta and Reginald Wykeham reprised their roles, along with Celia Ghiloni and Maud Chetwynd.
Nellie Fergusson (Jovita de Sutro), Harry Diver (Tom Barnes), Ethel Buckley (Nell), Kenneth Hunter (Dick Gordon) in The Luck of Roaring Camp. Photos by Talma. From Punch (Melbourne), 10 February 1910, p.185.
With the departure of Hugh J. Ward, George Marlow’s company made a welcome return. They began their season on 5 March 1910 with the first Sydney production of The Luck of Roaring Camp, a melodrama in four acts by Benjamin Landeck, set on the Californian goldfields. It was apparently adapted from a story by American novelist Bret Harte (‘America’s Charles Dickins’), however, reviews soon revealed that the title was the only similarity. The Daily Telegraph, for example, noted, Landeck’s play ‘bears not the faintest resemblance to Bret Harte’s well-known story of the that name … It relates not to the doings of Oakhurst, the gambler; Stumpy, the good-natured Kentuck, and the rest of them, but the schemes of one Tom Barnes to obtain undisputed possession of a certain hidden mine, and to destroy the happiness of Will Gordon and Nell Curtis—persons who are conspicuously absent from the pages of Bret Harte’.3
Landeck’s play had first been performed in London at the Fulham Theatre in March 1909, and in Australia in January 1910 during George Marlow’s Adelaide season.
Ethel Buckley played the heroine, Nell (she was to repeat the role in a 1911 film-version of the play), with Nellie Fergusson as the Spanish adventuress, Jovita de Sutro, who along with Tom Barnes, played by Harry Diver, is one of the villains of the piece. Kenneth Hunter proved popular with audiences as Will Gordon, the hero, and J.P. O’Neill provided ‘a good deal of merriment’ as Mary Flynn, ‘a buxom dame’ who has buried two husbands.4
Palace audiences did not mind that the play had little to do with Bret Harte’s original story. It attracted packed houses, with Marlow reportedly turning people away each night. It played for the full three weeks of the season, after which the company departed for Western Australia.
On Easter Saturday, the Allan Hamilton-Max Maxwell Dramatic Company opened their season at the Palace. Following the retirement of Bland Holt, the sole rights to some of his greatest successes were secured by the new partnership of Hamilton and Maxwell. Allan Hamilton was a well-known and respected theatre manager, whose dramatic company had played at the Palace in 1909. Max Maxwell, a Tasmanian-born actor, had been with the Bland Holt company for 14 years, starting off in bit parts and graduating to leading man.
The company’s repertoire of plays included Woman and Wine, In London Town, Revenge, The Lights o’ London and Woman’s Hate. They also acquired the original scenery for these plays, painted by John Brunton, who had only recently died, in July 1909, aged 60. English-born Brunton had been in Australia since 1886, having been engaged by Willliamson, Garner and Musgrove at the Theatre Royal in Melbourne, painting backdrops for everything from Gilbert & Sullivan to pantomime and drama. By the early 1890s, he was also working on cloths for other managements, and in 1896 he had replaced W.B. Spong as scenic artist with Bland Holt. During his fifteen years with Holt, he painted the scenes for a raft of melodramas. In addition to the five selected for revival, they included The Cotton King, The Union Jack, The Prodigal Daughter, A Life of Pleasure, Straight from the Heart, Sporting Life, The Breaking of the Drought, The White Heather, The Great Millionaire and The Great Rescue. He was working on The Sins of Society at the time of his death.
Actors were drawn principally from the Bland Holt company, including Harrie Ireland, Jennie Pollock, Arthur Styan, Godfrey Cass and Charles Brown, while Beatrice Holloway was from the Hamiliton company.
Hamilton and Maxwell launched their Sydney season with Woman and Wine, a melodrama by Arthur Shirley and Benjamin Landeck. Bland Holt’s staging was carefully observed, and the play was presented in true ‘Blandholtian’ style. Set pieces included the Longchamps Steeplechase, the Japanese Ball, and the spectacular revolving set to the Paris Flower Market, which featured a duel with knives between two women!
From The Star (Sydney), 11 April 1910, p.8Woman and Wine was initially produced in 1897 at the Pavilion Theatre in London, and in March 1899 at the Princess’s Theatre.
When Bland Holt first staged the play in Melbourne in April 1899 and Sydney in June 1900, the principal characters were played by Elizabeth Watson/Harrie Ireland (Marcel Rigadout), Frances Ross (Mary Andrews), Fitzmaurice Gill (La Colombe), Walter Baker (Dick Seymour) and Arthur Styan (Pierre Crucru). For this current revival, Arthur Styan was the only actor from the original cast. Other roles were now played by Jennie Pollock (Marcel Rigadout), Beatrice Holloway (Mary Andrews), Vera Remee (La Colombe) and Max Maxwell (Dick Seymour).
Woman and Wine played for a fortnight, and on 16 April 1910, the company presented In London Town, a rag to riches melodrama by George R. Sims and Arthur Shirley. First produced in London at the Crown Theatre in Peckham in August 1899, the play entered Bland Holt’s repertoire the following year when it played three nights at the Opera House in Brisbane in April 1900. It was subsequently seen in Melbourne in June 1901 and Sydney in May 1902.
Once again, the only original cast member in the current revival was Arthur Styan who reprised his role of the blind tramp, Richard Norrison. Other parts were played by Max Maxwell (John Hargreaves), Godfrey Cass (Frank Dalton), Beatrice Holloway (Alice Dalton), Charles Brown (Jack Parker), Muriel Dale (Liddy Blist) and Jennie Pollock (Rosa Norrison).
Two weeks later, on 30 April 1910, the company presented their final revival of the season: Revenge, a romantic military drama by E. Hill Mitchelson. This was the most recent of the Bland Holt melodramas, receiving its first Australian outing at the Theatre Royal in Melbourne in January 1907. Woven around the Austrian revolution, this tale of daring-do was set in a royal palace, providing John Brunton with the opportunity to design some elaborate sets, ranging from a throne room to a prison. Max Maxwell played the dashing hero, Captain Loris Vanessa, with Godfrey Cass and Beatrice Holloway as the King and Queen. Richard Bellairs and Jennie Pollock added ‘weight and emphasis’ as the two baddies, Prince Orloff and Braga Vanessa.
Revengeproved a money-maker for Hamilton and Maxwell, but with West Pictures driven from the Glaciarium by the winter skaters and due to commence their season at the Palace Theatre on 7 May 1910, the melodrama company was required to call it quits. Thus, the company, comprising some 32 people and 130 tons of scenery, departed on a protracted tour of New Zealand and Tasmania.
West Pictures held court until the first week of September, and on 10 September 1910, the Hamilton-Maxwell company made a welcome return. Their opening production was Women’s Revenge by Henry Pettitt, one of the most popular dramas in the Bland Holt repertoire. First produced at the Adelphi Theatre in London in 1893, with Charles Warner (Frank Drummond), Elizabeth Robins (Mary Lonsdale), Gertrude Kingston (Mabel Wentworth), and Charles Cartwright (Jephtha Grimshaw) as the leads. The following year, it was performed in Australia for the first time by the Bland Holt company, with Edward Sass, Henrietta Watson, Edith Blande and Walter Baker. The scenery was designed by George and John Gordon. Holt mounted an elaborate revival in 1897 with new scenery by John Brunton. The leads, on this occasion, were Walter Baker, Elizabeth Watson, Frances Ross and John Cosgrove.
The line-up of the Hamilton-Maxwell company was largely the same as it had been the previous March, with Beatrice Holloway, Max Maxwell and Richard Bellairs as the leads. However, two newcomers, Nellie Strong and Ronald W. Riley, now filled the roles vacated by Jennie Pollock and Arthur Styan, who had joined the Clarke and Meynell organisation.
Alas, one day into the season Beatrice Holloway fell ill with enteric fever (typhoid), with Vera Remee taking over the part of the heroine Mary Lonsdale.
Women’s Revenge played until 23 September. By way of farewelling the play—and in anticipation of the one to follow—‘J.B.’ contributed a little poem to the Bulletin.
From The Bulletin (Sydney), 22 September 1910, p.8
With the end of the season looming, Allan Hamilton announced two new dramas, The Little Breadwinnerand Why Men Love Women. These were being presented by arrangement with Messrs Clarke and Meynell.
The first of these plays, The Little Breadwinner, had already been performed throughout Western Australia, Victoria, and Queensland by the Clarke and Meynell company. It had been given its Australian premiere at His Majesty’s Theatre in Perth in February 1908, with G.P. Carey, Fred Coape, Beatrice Holloway, C.R. Stanford, Ida Gresham and Queenie Williams in the principal roles. The last named was a child star who had been seen to good effect in the Meynell and Gunn hit show The Fatal Wedding, performing with the ‘Tin Can Band’.
Described as a Domestic Drama in five acts, the play by J.A. Campbell, had first been performed in Birmingham in December 1905 (by J.A. Campbell’s own company), prior to opening in London, at the Standard Theatre, on 19 March 1906. The London cast included J.C. Aubrey (Lord William), C. King (Richard), Kathleen Russell (Margaret) and Little Maud Harris (Meg).
The play tells the story of Dick Lawrence, the adopted son of Lord William Dorrington, who wrongly convicted of stealing, is banished from the household. Moving to London with his betrothed, Margaret, the couple live in poverty, and with his wife now blind, they rely on their little daughter Meg to keep ‘the wolf from the door by singing in the street’. Eventually the true perpetrator of the theft is found, and the whole family is reunited.
The first Sydney production of The Little Breadwinner opened on 24 September 1910. Apart from Queenie Williams, who played Meg, the ‘little breadwinner’ of the title, the line up of the company was completely new, with Charles Brown (Lord William), Max Maxwell (Dick Lawrence), Vera Remee (Margaret), with Richard Bellairs as Joseph Prior, the chief villain.
The Little Breadwinnerproved a little winner, especially the performance of Queenie Williams.5
The final play of the season was Why Men Love Women by Walter Howard, the author of the highly popular melodrama The Midnight Wedding. This play had been announced for performance by the Harcourt Beatty-Madge McIntosh company in 1908 but was not performed. And in early 1910, it was slated for performance in Melbourne by the Clarke-Meynell company. It finally received its first Australian production at Maitland (NSW) on 12 March 1910 by the Edwin Geach company. The principal characters were played by Walter Vincent (Gerald Fielding), Lottie Lyell (Violet Livingstone), Raymond Longford (Captain Serge Staniloff), Ida Gresham (Mariel Toloski), and C.R. Stanford (Maharajah of Balore).
Described as an ‘Anglo-Indian drama, with many stirring and sensational interests’, the play had first been performed in Manchester (UK) in 1901. It did very well in the British provinces, but never reached the West End.
When the play opened In Sydney on 8 October 1910, it was incorrectly advertised as being the ‘first production in Australia’. It received a warm reception, being ‘joyously acclaimed by a crowded house at the Palace Theatre’.6 The principal characters were performed by Vera Remee (Violet Livingstone), Max Maxwell (Gerald Fielding), Richard Bellairs (Captain Staniloff), Ronald W. Riley (Maharajah) and Nellie Strong (Muriel Zoluski). Interestingly, all the reviews make it clear that the title of the play is never really explained. There was a scene in which the hero gave a poetic speech, the ‘Allegory of Love, the Maiden, and the Rose’, which gave promise of a solution, but apparently left the most attentive listeners still without a firm answer!
Why Men Love Women played to packed houses, but was withdrawn at the height of it success on 28 October 1910 to make way for The Spider and the Fly. Described as a ‘sensational drama of modern times’, this new play, being performed in Australia for the first time, was written by two stalwarts of the genre, Sutton Vane and Arthur Shirley.
It had first been performed at the Grand Theatre, Brighton, in April 1906, and at the Kennington Theatre, London, the following August. The story of two half-brothers, one good, and one bad. The good brother, Cyril Girdlestone, is happily married with a wife and infant. Cyril had previously been tricked into a marriage with an adventuress, Lola Grey, but following her death was free to marry his true sweetheart, Edith McAllister. When Cyril’s half-brother, Welby, learns that Cyril has become the sole heir of their father’s fortune, he plots with Lola (who isn’t really dead, and who had married Cyril bigamously), to kill the young family. She sets a trap, whereby Cyril and Edith are locked in a room in which the ceiling can be mechanically lowered, thereby squashing any inhabitants! Ultimately the villainous Lola is caught in her own snare. The cast included Max Maxwell and Vera Remee as the hero and heroine, with Richard Bellairs as the scheming half-brother, and Nellie Strong as the adventuress.
The Spider and the Flywas played until 11 November 1910, and on the following night the company reprised the melodrama Revenge, which they had first presented earlier in the year—and which had been the hit of that season. Max Maxwell and Richard Bellairs once again played Captain Loris Vanessa and Prince Orloff respectively, while Ronald W. Riley and Vera Remee now played the King and Queen, with Nellie Strong as Braga Vanessa.
Revengeplayed for twelve nights, closing on 25 November, thus bringing the highly successful Hamilton-Maxwell season to an end. With the end of this engagement, the company was disbanded, with Max Maxwell and Allan Hamilton going their separate ways. Maxwell set off on a country tour, and readers will be happy to note that he was re-joined by Beatrice Holloway as his leading lady, fully recovered from her recent severe indisposition.
The following night, 26 November, saw the return to the Sydney stage of Maggie Moore, accompanied by her husband H.R. Roberts. Their company included many old favourites, including A.E. Greenaway, C.R. Stanford and Ethel Bashford.
From The Bulletin (Sydney), 24 November 1910, p.8The company’s three-week season saw the production of three plays, playing for a week each. The first was Shadows of a Great City, written by Joseph Jefferson and Livingston Robert Sherwell and first performed in America in 1884, Australia in 1885, and the UK in 1887. Set amidst the urban underbelly of the New York docks and on Blackwell’s Island, the play introduced a myriad of gritty characters. As Biddy Roonan, Maggie Moore played a big-hearted Irish washerwoman, replete with songs. (Interestingly, when the play was revived in Australia in 1887, the role of Biddy was played by comic Grattan Riggs.)
Six nights later, a change of bill saw a revival of A Gambler’s Sweetheart, originally performed by them eighteen months earlier, under the auspices of Clarke and Meynell. Written by Clay M. Greene (of Struck Oilfame), H.R. Roberts and Maggie Moore reprised their characters of Mason (the gambler) and Bessie Fairfax (his sweetheart). The Sydney Morning Herald observed of her performance, that she played Bessie ‘with a vivacity and archness reminiscent of her never-to-be-forgotten Lizzie Stofel [in Struck Oil].’7
The following night, Saturday, 9 December 1910, they presented their final offering, a revival of The Prince Chap, previously seen at the Palace during 1908. H.R. Roberts and A.E. Greenaway revived their original roles of William Peyton and the Earl of Henningford, as did Little Vera Huggett and Beryl Yates who played the girl Claudia in Acts 1 and 2 respectively. Ethel Bashford played Claudia in Act 3. As Maggie Moore was not in the play, the evening concluded with the one act farce The Chinese Question, specially written for her by Clay M. Greene, in which she played Kitty McShane (alias San See Lo).
Next the Mosman Musical Society took over the theatre for a week, from 17-23 December, presenting Auber’s comic opera Fra Diavolo.
The year cycled back to where it began with the return of Hugh J. Ward’s company, bringing with them a new comedy, The Girl from Rector’s.
To be continued
Endnotes
1. Kalgoorlie Miner, 23 June 1909, p.8
2. Referee, 2 March 1910, p.16
3. Daily Telegraph, 7 March 1910, p.10
4. Australian Town and Country Journal, 9 March 1910, p.51
5. For more information on the career of Queenie Williams, see Nick Murphy’s, Queenie Williams (1896-1962) & the last Pollard’s tour of America – Forgotten Australian Actors (forgottenaustralianactresses.com)
6. Sydney Morning Herald, 10 October 1910, p.5
7. Sydney Morning Herald, 5 December 1910, p.4
References
Allardyce Nicoll, English Drama 1900–1930: The beginnings of the modern period, Cambridge University Press, 1973
L. Carson (editor), The Stage Year Book, Carson & Comerford Lrd, 1910
Reginald Clarence, The Stage Cyclopaedia: A bibliography of play, Burt Franklin, 1970 (originally published in 1909)
Nick Murphy, Queenie Williams (1896-1962) & the last Pollard’s tour of America, Forgotten Australian Actors (website)
J.P. Wearing, The London Stage, 1900–1909: A calendar of productions, performers, and personnel, 2nd edition, Rowman & Littlefield, 2014
Newspapers
Australian Town and Country Journal (Sydney), The Bulletin (Sydney), The Daily Telegraph (Sydney), Kalgoorlie Miner, The Mirror (Sydney), Punch (Melbourne), The Referee (Sydney), The Star (Sydney), The Sydney Morning Herald, Table Talk (Melbourne)
Trove, https://trove.nla.gov.au/
Pictures
National Library of Australia, Canberra
State Library of New South Wales, Sydney
State Library Victoria, Melbourne
With thanks to
Rob Morrison, Nick Murphy
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Little Wunder: The story of the Palace Theatre, Sydney (Part 15)
Despite 1914 marking the beginning of World War One, the range of novelties at the Palace continued unabated. In addition to the spectacular Land of Nod and return visits by Allen Doone, the theatre also welcomed the “Scotch Dickens” Harry Lauder and controversial bare-foot dancer Maud Allan, as well as various war-themed dramas after August when the call to arms went out.On 20 December 1913, the American Musical Burlesque Company, headed by Bert Le Blanc, Dave Nowlin and Harry Burgess, commenced their second season at the Palace, opening with A Day at the Races, which kept the house in stitches until 30 January. The next evening The Grafters returned, followed by The Speculators on 14 February 1914. For the final week of the season, 21–27 February, the company presented a double bill of The Grafters and A Day at the Races.
As audiences were laughing and enjoying themselves, they would have been unaware of what the coming year would have in store. On the theatre front, things looked rosy with return seasons by many of the old favourites anticipated, but overseas the political situation was very gloomy.
With the departure of the American funsters, William Anderson’s residency at the Palace continued with the first Sydney production of the pantomime extravaganza The Land of Nod. Written by the prolific songwriting team of Frank R. Adams and Will M. Hough, with music by Joseph E. Howard, the show had been a big hit in Chicago in 1905, with Mabel Barrison, Alma Youlin and William Norris, where it ran for five months. However, it did not do so well in New York in 1907, when it played just 17 performances. As a fairy-tale set in a kingdom made of cards, it is now seen as an “early Wizard of Oz type story”.1
The Land of Nod had already been produced in Melbourne as the Christmas attraction at the King’s Theatre, where it played for ten weeks or 71 performances, with Anna McNabb as Bonnie and Ruth Nevins as Jack of Hearts. In addition to the American principals, New Zealand-born Tom Armstrong who played the Man in the Moon, was also responsible for composing the song “In the Shade of My Bungalow” (which had been included in the Chicago production). Many old favourites such as Maud Chetwynd, Priscilla Verne and Tom Cannam also appeared.
The musical reached Sydney amid a blaze of publicity, so much so, that “the Palace Theatre was far from big enough to hold all who wanted to see the opening of the piece”.2 Although the spectacle did not disappoint, the Sunday Times noted “the smallness of the stage did much to spoil the beautiful scenic settings, and the producer had evidently gone through some of the big ensemble scenas with a blunt axe”.3In addition to a multitude of “pictorial and mechanical features” including “The Electric Hurricane Devastation of the Card Palace of the King and Queen of Hearts”, “The Wonderful Rubber Girl” and “The Startling X Ray Gowns”, the show comprised some twenty-five song and dance routines.
At least five of the songs were from the original 1905/1907 productions—“Love’s Contagious”, “The Belle of Bald Head Row”, “Same Old Moon” and “You Can’t Keep a Good Man Down”, written by the show’s composers; “When It’s Apple Blossom Time” by Mellor, Gifford and Trevor; and the previously mentioned “In the Shade of My Bungalow” by Tom Armstrong and Don Matthews—while the remainder were interpolated numbers—“The Sleepy Pyjama Girl” by Robert Wade;. “Kill That Bear!” by Earle C. Jones and Charles N. Daniels; “Hello! Melbourne Town” by Stanley Murphy and Henry I. Marshall; and “Australia for Mine” by Arthur Don, to name a few.4
The Land of Nod packed the Palace for six weeks, closing on Thursday, 9 April 1914. The following night, Good Friday, the motion picture Atop of the World in Motion was screened for one night only.5
On Easter Saturday, 10 April, Allen Doone returned to Palace having just concluded a sold-out season in Melbourne. He commenced his Sydney stint with a revival of the patriotic Irish drama The Wearing of the Green. From the moment he stepped back on to the stage, he was greeted by a “storm of applause”, and this enthusiasm continued for the full eight weeks of his season. On 25 April he revived Molly Bawn, and on 2 May, the old Dion Boucicault sensation drama The Colleen Bawn. Unfortunately for Doone, following the first night of The Colleen Bawn, he was ordered by his doctor to rest his throat, and H.R. Roberts took his place as Myles-na-Coppaleen. Roberts was said to have played the role “nearly 1000 times”.6 Doone’s reappearance on Saturday, 9 May, was met by a crowded and enthusiastic house.
A week later, 16 May, the company presented a brand-new play, The Burglar and the Lady by Langdon McCormick, for the first time in Australia. Described as being “off the beaten track of the ordinary Doone play”, it featured two well-known fictional characters, Raffles and Sherlock Holmes, with the former outwitting the later following a series of robberies. As Raffles, Allen Doone “succeeded in making this dare-devil, winning character all that the heart of the most fastidious matinee girl could desire”, while Onslow Edgeworth as Holmes “invested the role … with all the tradition of mystery and grim consistent lack of humour usually associated with this gentlemen”.7 Overall the piece was proclaimed a success by the press: “The Allen Doone company as a whole rose to the new opportunities which were thus given”, and as the Referee noted, Doone and Edna Keeley (who played the lady) “both retained just a suggestion of the Irish brogue”.8 “Mr Allen Doone takes the part of Raffles, and he played the piece with his accustomed zeal and freedom. He was in good voice, for he sang a new song, ‘Old Erin, the Shamrock, and You’.” 9
In America, this play had received its premiere in Trenton, New Jersey, in October 1905, as a vehicle for the boxer turned actor James J. Corbett. The piece proved popular on tour for several years, and in 1914, Corbett reprised his role of Raffles in a motion picture adaptation.10In 1915, Australians had the opportunity to see Corbett in the film—and in real life when he toured for Hugh D. McIntosh’s Tivoli circuit.
The Burglar and the Lady played until the end of the season on 29 May 1914, with Doone announcing his planned return to the Palace on 7 November with a host of new plays, including The King’s Highway, Dick of the Dales, O’Shea the Rogue and a new version of Robert Emmett.11
With the theatre now under the management of Dix and Baker (a theatrical partnership between New Zealander Percy R. Dix and Sydney-based Reuben S. Baker registered in 1912), the next attraction was Bess of Arizona starring Ethel Buckley, a young actress who as the wife of George Marlow, had previously been seen at the Palace in her husband’s company. The new piece, a four-act drama set in America, was an entirely original work, written by John Morrison and Frank Edwards. It had been given its premiere in Newcastle on 16 May 1914 following a single copyright performance on 9 May.
As Bess, the cowgirl, pre-publicity informed “she’s a dead game sport; she never stops to ask fool questions, but goes right in and brings home the bacon.” 12
Ably supported by Robert Inman as the hero, C.R. Stanford as the Sherrif, and John Cosgrove as the proprietor of a shanty, the play promised much, and the opening night reviews were generally enthusiastic:
Despite its obvious defects and glaring improbabilities, there are thrills from curtain to curtain in the new melodrama, and Messrs Dix and Baker are to be congratulated on the success of their initial Sydney venture.13
The play attracted an enthusiastic opening night audience, and although the bills acknowledged the “wonderful reception”, Bess of Arizona held the stage for just one week. The following Saturday, 6 June, Ethel Buckley revived one of her former successes, Lured to London, in which she played Natty, the Hero of the London Slums. The drama was withdrawn the following Friday, which also marked the end of the season.
Next, on Saturday, 13 June 1914, the film of The Silence of Dean Maitland was presented under the continued direction of Dix and Baker. The film received a private viewing at the Criterion Theatre on 9 June prior to its public opening at the Palace. Produced by the Fraser Film Company, it was an adaptation of the novel by Maxwell Gray, directed by Raymond Longford, with Harry Thomas as the Rev. Cyril Maitland. As noted by Pike and Cooper in their 1980 guide to Australian feature films:
Its presentation [at the Palace] was unusually elaborate: music accompaniment was provided by a grand organ and chimes, with a children’s choir of fifty voices; as the drama rose to the climax of the dean’s last sermon, Longford’s camera moved into a close-up of his face, and an actor stepped onto the stage to deliver the sermon in synchronization with the Dean’s lips.14
The film received two screening a day for a week, and was followed on 20 June by another film, Nero and Agrippina, a two-and-a-half-hour epic from the Gloria Company of Italy.15 It played twice daily for a week.
On Saturday, 27 June, the Palace hosted a “Good-bye to Harry Lauder”. Harry Lauder was a Scottish performer, and his songs and character skits were enormously popular. He had been brought to Australia by J.&N. Tait for a 28-week tour of Australia and New Zealand, commencing in Melbourne on 11 April 1914. According to newspaper reports, Lauder, who was known as the “Scotch Dickens” was being paid £25,000 for the tour.16 In addition, a “star” combination of vaudeville artists from London, New York and Paris had been engaged to support him. Described as “short and sturdy, with a strong and rugged face that gleams with kindly intelligence and humour”, when he was not playing one of his characters, he was invariably dressed in a dark green tartan representing the clan Macleod.17
Lauder’s first Sydney season opened at the Theatre Royal on 27 May to 26 June, transferring to Palace for four farewell nights and two matinees. On his final night in Sydney, he told his audience: “I have been very happy in Sydney. Nothing has been left undone by my friends to make my visit to this beautiful city as enjoyable and comfortable as possible. I am sorry to be going away, but no matter wherever I may go I can never hope to meet more appreciative audiences.” 18 To commemorate the event, a flashlight photograph of the audience was taken.19
While Lauder was making his farewell to Sydney, Australians received the news that Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, had been assassinated in Sarajevo—an event that was to result in the Britain declaring war on Germany on 4 August. And as a result, Australia was also at war.
Maud Allan in The Vision of Salome, 1908. Photo by Foulsham & Banfield. National Portrait Gallery, London.
Meanwhile, at the Palace, audiences highly anticipated the arrival of Canadian dancer Maud Allan. Dancing bare-footed, bare-legged, and bare-armed, her dancing style which was entirely new had attracted controversy. In addition to dances set to music by Mendelssohn and Schubert, she also presented the spectacular Vision of Salome, composed by Marcel Remy, which featured a special stage setting designed by Joseph Harker and painted by Harry Whaite and George Dixon. The Bulletin had a bit of fun at Maud Allan’s expense:
The famous Salome Dance, which has been Maud’s fortune, is carefully melodramatic, and, with its fine setting, gory accessories and music, requires less mental effort on the onlooker’s part. The trifling bead and chiffon costume resists the whirlwind dancing so well that one suspects it was rigged by a female sailor with long experience of typhoons.20
Frank St Leger conducted a thirty-five-piece orchestra, and Russian brothers Leo, Jan and Mischel Cherniavsky, previously seen at the Palace in 1908, performed works by Chopin and Liszt. Presented by William Anderson, by arrangement with W. Angus MacLeod, the season was set to run from 4–10 July 1914.
On Tuesday, 7 July, Allan’s foot slipped while dancing the Vision of Salome and as a result she was ordered to rest by her doctor. With performances cancelled, replacement dates were announced for 11 July, with two special matinees on Wednesday 15 and 22 July, but as her injury did not improve, the whole season was abandoned. It was announced that she would continue with her tour and return to Sydney at a later date.
Due to the season being truncated, William Anderson lost heavily, taking the step to sue Maud Allan for breach of contract and claiming £1000 in damages. During the trial, which was held before Mr Justice Ferguson and a jury at Sydney’s Banco Court in late October, Anderson alleged that Allan’s injury was overblown and that he believed her to be “suffering from bad tempter”. Maud Allan contended that the stage floor was unfit for dancing and that although it had been patched up, it was still inadequate, and as a result, she had slipped and dislocated her semi-lunar cartilage. Evidence by medical specialists supported her claim and in line with a condition of the contact, “that if serious illness rendered the fulfilment of the contact impossible it should be null and void”, the jury returned a verdict in her favour.21
Under William Anderson’s direction, the Palace quickly instigated a season of films, beginning with Tess of the Storm Country22 on 18 July, followed by Inheritance of Hatred on 25 July. The first film, which starred Mary Pickford as the heroine, had already been seen in Sydney, and as a result of its continued popularity, extra sessions were given on 30 and 31 July. Inheritance of Hatred, which was being screened for the first time in Australia, featured Mari Carmi, and was produced by the Cines Company of Italy.23
Leroy, Talma, and Bosco, 1914. Photo by Fruhling Studios, Adelaide. Potter & Potter Auctions, Chicago.
The 1 August, E.J. Carroll took over the lessee of the theatre, presenting Leroy, Talma, and Bosco, billed as the “World-Famous Magicians”. Servais Le Roy was a Belgian magician, Talma (nee Mary Ann Ford) was the English-born wife of Leroy and also an accomplished magician, while Leon Bosco provided the comic relief. The trio had previously performed at the Tivoli Theatre under Harry Rickards’ management in 1906. Now, with themselves as the headliners, they presented a full show that also included Warner and White, American society dancers; Santo Santucci, “The Wizard of the Accordion”; and “The Unknown”, a protean juggler. The main illusion during the Sydney season was “Nero, or Thrown to the Lions”, whereby a Christian maiden (Talma) is captured by Nero (Leroy) and thrown to the lions, but through a “superhuman feat of magic” manages to escape their clutches. To dispel the misconception that the lions were not real, a cage holding the two lions was placed on display in the Palace vestibule during the day so people could see the animals up close.24
Over the course of their four-week season Leroy, Talma, and Bosco played to “splendid houses”. They presented many new tricks, including the patriotic illusionary tableau “The Glory of France”. Due to the magicians’ success, at the conclusion of their Palace season, they transferred to the Little Theatre for a series of farewell performances.
With war declared, the introduction of war-themed dramas began in earnest when the newly formed partnership of Beaumont Smith and Louis Meyer presented The Clash of Arms by Edward White on 29 August. Described as a “highly realistic war drama” in four acts, it featured a strong cast headed by William F. Grant, Reginald Wykeham, Cyril Mackay and May Congdon. The story, which dealt with “the present great struggle”, provided a possible outline of events to come:
The first acts shows England at the declaration of war, the second occurs on the German-French frontier, the third is at British Army headquarters, and the fourth depicts a field telegraph station at work with the battle ranging outside.25
Though some reviewers felt that by depicting scenes of carnage on the battlefield, the play was overtly manipulative in stirring up patriotic fervour—“The patriotism that needs rousing by pictures of disgusting brutality is a sorry sort of patriotism”, wrote the Sun 26—others such as the Sunday Times declared it to be “the right play at the right time”.27 Though reviews were mixed, the audience response was said to be “immense”. This may have been something of an exaggeration as the play was withdrawn after just four nights, The Newsletter surmising that “The people are not war mad, though the daily papers endeavour to whip up the jingo spirit [and] The Clash of Arms, specially written to please the patriotic, was a miserable failure”.28 It was replaced by another play from the Smith and Meyer stable.
UK-based theatre entrepreneur Louis Meyer ran the Strand and Garrick Theatres in London, and following a meeting with the entrepreneurial Beaumont Smith arranged to tour his plays to Australia. Smith had worked as a journalist (Gadfly, Bulletin, Lone Hand) prior to becoming secretary and press agent for William Anderson. In 1911 he set up his own production company, successfully touring a show called Tiny Townthroughout Europe, Australia, South Africa and Canada. He had also had a hand in adapting On Our Selection for the stage.29 Like Smith, Meyer was a man of many talents. A skilled black and white artist, he contributed to Pick-Me-Up and London Opinion, becoming art editor and joint manager of the last-named journal. Since 1910, he had enjoyed success as a theatre producer, beginning with The Woman in the Case starring Violet Vanbrugh. He had also dabbled in playwrighting, translating the play The Real Thing from the French.30
Mr Wu, an “Anglo-Eastern drama”in three acts by Harry M. Vernon and Harold Owen, had already been seen at the Adelphi Theatre in Sydney on 11 July 1914 when it inaugurated the partnership of Smith and Meyer. The play’s popularity in London was enormous, having opened at the Strand Theatre on 27 November 1913. With matinee idol Matheson Lang in the title role, it would run until 28 November 1914, amassing 404 performances.31
As the Sydney Morning Herald noted:
Last night the play was revived at the Palace … when the big situations again held the audience firmly. The cast is practically the same as played the piece so effectively at the Adelphi Theatre, and playgoers who missed it then may see it now to advantage in the smaller house.32
As noted above, the main parts were played by the same actors, notably William F. Grant as Mr Wu, the Oxford educated Chinese businessman, who kills his own daughter after learning she is to have the child of an Englishman, and then seeks revenge on the young man and his father who runs a company in Hong Kong.
The two principals William F. Grant (who had also played the lead in Clash of Arms) and May Congdon, who played Mrs Gregory, had been in Australia before: Grant in the early 1900s in Trilby with Tyrone Power and Ben Hur; and May Congdon with Meynell and Gunn’s company, appearing in The Fatal Wedding and other dramas. Cyril Mackay who played the young man, had previously been seen at the Palace in February 1913 in The Bushgirl opposite Eugenie Duggan.
Mr Wu played until 11 September 1914. At the matinee the Palace held the first of many benefits in aid of the war effort. This one, the Red Cross Stage Children’s Matinee, saw the Auction of Eight Boxes by Reg Wykeham and H.R. Roberts; with another matinee for the same cause on 17 September.
Next the theatre hosted the screening of Josephine,33 a film about Empress Josephine, which played twice daily from 12–18 September.
William Anderson’s Specially Organised Dramatic Company made a welcome returned on 19 September with an old-fashioned melodrama, The Face at the Window by E. Brook Warren, first performed in London in 1899 and in Australia by Anderson’s company in 1903. With this production, Robert Inman was reviving his original role as Paul Gouffet, the detective, with Vera Remee as the leading lady. A lurid melodrama, the opening night attracted a crowded house:
Though there appeared to be some trace of hurried rehearsal, “The Face at the Window” was, on the whole, adequately presented, and Miss Vera Remee carried off the palm as the heroine, Marie de Brisson, her interpretation of the part being natural and convincing. Miss Connie Martyn furnished an admirable sketch of Mother Pinau, the old and relentless hag who has charge of the Rogues’ Retreat. Mr Robert Inman, as the self-contained Detective Gouffet, was quite up to his usual standard, and had much to do with the success of the sensational scene in the Rogues’ Retreat, and the subsequent fight on the housetops. As Delgado (The Wolf) Mr Carl C. Francis presented in clearly defined lines all the attributes of the melodramatic villain.34
It played until 2 October 1914.
On the 10 October, the Smith-Beaumont partnership launched their next major play direct from London: The Glad Eye, a farcical comedy in three acts by Jose G. Levy, adapted from the French of Paul Armont & Nicholas Nancey. Like many French farces to come before (and after), The Glad Eye concerns a pair of wayward husbands who pretend to go on a balloon flight in order to escape a boring trip to the country with their wives.
The leading actress, Ethel Dane as Kiki, the Parisien milliner, reprised the role she had played in London for almost 500 performances, firstly at the Globe, transferring to the Apollo and then to the Strand Theatre from November 1911.35 An entirely new company of players was engaged to support her in Australia, including Tom Shelford (Gaston) and H.J. Ford (Maurice) as the husbands, with Dorothy Whittaker (Lucienne) and Alice Hamilton (Suzanne) as their wives. In London these roles had been played by Lawrence Grossmith, H. Marsh Allen, Auriol Lee and Daisy Markham.
Ethel Dane was an Australian who acted as Emily Spiller prior to her departure for England in 1902. This was the first representation in Sydney, the comedy having already played a five-week season in Melbourne. The Glad Eyewould go on to enjoy many revivals over the next few years.
The Sydney Sportsman neatly summarized the plot and reaction of the audience:
There was standing room only, and very little of that when “Sportsman” called in to see the fun on Saturday night. It is a performance that gets off the marks as if it were wearing a pair of running shoes, and fairly races with hilarity at full speed from barrier to winning post. The merriment circles around the ludicrous efforts of two gay husbands, who are endeavouring to escape the boredom of a trip in the country. Probably no other two husbands caused such an amount of laughter since husbands were invented. The company, both masculine and feminine members, are a fine crop of comedy dispensers.36
The final engagement for the year was Allen Doone and his company, returning as promised on 7 November. He commenced his season with a brand-new play, The Bold Soger Boy, originally written by Theodore Burt Sayre for Andrew Mack and performed by him for the first time in 1903. Set in an American military camp, albeit with numerous Irish characters, the story involved the thwarting of a German spy. The play also gave Doone the opportunity to sing several new songs: “The Colleen That I Marry”, “The Rose of Old Kerry” and “The Kerry Guards”.
There can be no doubt that the new play, “The Bold Soger Boy”, has achieved an instantaneous success in Sydney. The play itself is interesting, but its appeal would be a good deal less had its interpretation less humour and elan. … Needless to say, Mr Allen Doone plays the gallant lieutenant, and plays it with all his wonted grace and conviction. One is not surprised at his capturing the heart of the fair Helen, delightfully impersonated by Miss Edna Keeley, whose acting is performed with charm and naturalness.37
Two revivals followed: A Romance in Ireland from 28 November, and Sweet County Kerry from 12 December.
To be continued
Endnotes
1. Stubblebine, p.129
2. The Sun (Sydney), 1 March 1914, p.4
3. Sunday Times (Sydney), 1 March 1914, p. 6
4. These songs were all published in Australia by either Allans & Co. or Albert’s Music Store and may be found in the collection of the National Library of Australia.
5. Internet Movie Database, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0002039
6. Advertisement, The Sun (Sydney), 3 May 1914, p.10
7. The Sun (Sydney), 17 May 1914, p.4
8. Referee (Sydney), 20 May 1914, p.15
9. Australian Town and Country Journal (Sydney), 20 May 1914, p.45. The song “Old Erin, the Shamrock, and You” was composed by Robert S. Vaughan and Edna Williams, a copy of which may be found at the National Library of Australia (not digitized).
10. Sherlock Holmes on the Stage, p.49. See also Internet Movie Database, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0003730
11. Sunday Times (Sydney), 17 May 1914, p.27
12. The Bulletin (Sydney), 28 May 1914, p.8
13. Sydney Morning Herald, 1 June 1914, p.5
14. Pike & Cooper, pp.66-67
15. Internet Movie Database, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0188942
16. Various, including Bairnsdale Advertiser, 10 February 1914, p.2
17. Sydney Morning Herald, 31 March 1914, p.12
18. Daily Telegraph (Sydney), 2 July 1914, p.15.
19. Ibid. Curiously, this photo does not seem to have been published. A similar photo taken to commemorate Lauder’s 32nd (last) performance at the Melbourne King’s Theatre, 8 May 1914 is in the collection of the Australian Performing Arts Collection, Arts Centre, Melbourne.
20. The Bulletin (Sydney), 9 July 1914, p.8
21. See Daily Telegraph (Sydney), 24 October 1914, p.15, 27 October 1914, p.7, 28 October 1914, p.7 & 29 October 1914, p.3. Maud Allan’s return Sydney season was at the Theatre Royal, 25–30 October 1914.
22. Internet Movie Database, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0004681
23. Internet Movie Database, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0963329
24. The Sun (Sydney), 23 August 1914, p.14
25. Evening News (Sydney), 29 August 1914, p.3
26. The Sun (Sydney), 30 August 1914, p.9
27. Sunday Times (Sydney), 30 August 1914, p.6
28. The Newsletter (Sydney), 26 September 1914, p.2
29. Australian Dictionary of Biography, https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/smith-frank-beaumont-beau-11722
30. The Stage (London), 4 February 1915, p.19
31. Wearing, p.241. The Mr Wu was performed at the Strand Theatre, 27 November 1913-29 August 1914, transferring to the Savoy Theatre, 31 August 1914-28 November 1914. The role of Wu Li Chang was also played by Frank Royde.
32. Sydney Morning Herald, 4 September 1914, p.10
33. Internet Movie Database, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1112704
34. Sydney Morning Herald, 21 September 1914, p.4
35. Wearing, p.109. The Glad Eye opened at the Globe Theatre, 4 November 1911-23 December 1911, transferring to the Apollo Theatre, 26 December 1911-31 August 1912, transferring then to the Strand Theatre, 2 September 1912-30 January 1913.
36. Sydney Sportsman, 14 October 1914, p.3
37. Sydney Morning Herald, 9 November 1914, p.5
References
Australian Dictionary of Biography
Dan Dietz, The Complete Book of 1900s Broadway Musicals, Rowman & Littlefield, 2022
Internet Movie Database, www.imdb.com
Eric Irvin, Australian Melodrama: Eighty years of popular theatre, Hale & Iremonger, 1981
Amnon Kabatchnik, Sherlock Holmes on the Stage: A chronological encyclopedia of plays featuring the great detective, Scarecrow Press, 2008
Allardyce Nicoll, English Drama 1900–1930: The beginnings of the modern period, Cambridge University Press, 1973
Andrew Pike & Ross Cooper, Australian Film, 1900–1977, Oxford University Press in association with The Australian Film Institute, 1980
Eric Reade, The Australian Screen—A Pictorial History of Australian Film Making, Lansdowne Press, Melbourne, 1975
Donald J. Stubblebine, Early Broadway Sheet Music: A comprehensive listing of published music from Broadway and other stage shows, 1843-1918, McFarland & Company, Inc., 2002
J.P. Wearing, The London Stage, 1910–1919: A calendar of productions, performers, and personnel, 2nd edition, Rowman & Littlefield, 2014
Newspapers
Trove, trove.nla.gov.au
Pictures
National Library of Australia, Canberra
National Portrait Gallery, London
State Library Victoria, Melbourne
With thanks to
Rob Morrison
-
Little Wunder: The story of the Palace Theatre, Sydney (Part 9)
ELISABETH KUMM continues her forensic look at the history of Sydney’s Palace Theatre. Part 9 focusses on the year 1908, which sees a ‘mixed bag’ of entertainment occupying the theatre’s stage, from boxing matches to magicians, as well as the final Sydney appearances of J.F. Sheridan and Frank Thornton, and a world premiere—the sensational Australian drama The Miner’s Trust.Following the departure of Carter, the Great Magician on 6 December 1907, the Sydney Muffs returned for a brief season from 16 December to 20 December 1907, presenting three plays: Rob Roy, The New Boy and A Village Priest.
Boxing Day saw the first appearance of Irish-American comedian J.F. Sheridan at the Palace. Playgoers were well-acquainted with Sheridan’s special brand of comedy. Since his first trip in 1884, he had been a regular visitor to these shores. Sheridan’s speciality was ‘travestie’ roles, which is to say he played female characters, typically buxom Irish widows!
The attraction at the Palace was Cinderella, a Christmas pantomime devised by J.F. Sheridan and Fred W. Weierter, with topical allusions by journalist Pat Finn (son of Edmund Finn, who as ‘Garryowen’ wrote Chronicles of Early Melbourne). Presented in association with William Anderson, this work had already been seen in Perth, Fremantle and Adelaide during the Christmas/New Year period 1906/07, though it seems it had its first outing back in 1902.1
Naturally, Sheridan played the Baroness. Other roles were performed by Heba Barlow (Cinderella), Stella Selbourne (Prince Charming), Marie Eaton (Dandini), along with Olive Sinclair as the Fairy Queen, Miss Roland Watts Phillips and Percy Denton as the Ugly Sisters, and Joseph Lamphier as the Baron. Sheridan was the undoubted star of the show, as noted in the Sydney Morning Herald, 27 December 1907:
Probably, when the memory of this year’s Cinderella has become obliterated, or confused with other versions, there will still remain one outstanding feature of artistic distinction, and that will be John F. Sheridan’s inexpressibly quaint and ridiculous portrait of the Baroness Bounder. On his entrance the comedian presents the severe simplicity of some antique spinster of uncertain age and horribly certain ugliness, in the dress of the Early Victorian era, with crinoline, lace collar and cuffs, and a chastely discreet exhibition of fowl-like, sinewy neck. Probably an ugliness less insistent would make this character even more telling than it is because its whole value consists in the marvellous way in which the actor always keeps within the bounds of lifelike femininity. It is a real study; and the Baroness singing ‘Will he answer, Goo-Goo?’ in a prim little voice, and with a daintily dished style of old-maidenly dancing, is a thing to be remembered.2
The song, ‘Will he answer, Goo-Goo’ was published by Allan & Co., and the sheet music cover featured a portrait of Sheridan in his costume as the Baroness.3
The pantomime was a riot of colour and movement. As the Australian Star noted, ‘With limited stage accommodation Messrs. William Anderson and John F. Sheridan have succeeded in putting on some wonderfully good spectacles with more than 100 performers on stage.’ One of the highlights was the Porcelain March. Other attractions included a Snow and Robin ballet, Sappho and Rainbow ballets, and an amusing routine entitled ‘five minutes on ice’ by American champion roller-skater Fred Norris.4
Cinderellaran until 30 January 1908, and the following night, for one performance only, the company presented Fun on the Bristol, in which Sheridan played his most enduring character, that of the Widow O’Brien.
Thereafter, the company took Cinderella to Newcastle, and then on to New Zealand. In October 1908, Sheridan returned to Sydney and was seen in a matinee benefit at the Tivoli in aid of the NSW Vaudeville Club, in what would be his last appearance in the city. Two months later, in Newcastle, about to open his Christmas season, he died of heart failure. He was 65.
Thereafter a ‘mixed bag’ of tenants occupied the Palace stage.
Following the departure of the Sheridan company, Spencer’s Theatrescope Co. returned for a six-week season of novelties, from 2 February to 27 March.
From 28 March to 2 April, the NSW Sports Club Ltd presented amateur boxing and wrestling tournaments.
On 3 April, the Bank of NSW Musical and Dramatic Society staged the A.W. Pinero comedy The Parvenu.
Magic returned from 4 April to 27 May with the Maskelyne and Devant’s Mysteries. Though neither John Nevil Maskelyne nor David Devant was in the company, the tricks that they perfected at the Egyptian Hall in London formed the basis of the show. Magician and illusionist Owen Clark was the principal performer, supported by Gintaro, a Japanese juggler, with comedian Barclay Gammon at the piano. Clark proved to be an able and popular performer, though on opening night he upset the gallery boys who not being able to see the stage clearly due to a piece of stage apparatus blocking their view, shouted to Clark to have it raised. But not understanding their calls, an altercation ensued, and the management had to bring the curtain down while the problem was rectified.5
Decorative program for the 1908 Australian and New Zealand tour of Edward Branscombe’s Scarlet Troubadours. Reed Gallery, Dunedin Public Libraries, New Zealand.
On 30 May and the following week, the Scarlet Troubadours made their first appearance in Sydney, having already achieved success in Perth, Adelaide, and Melbourne. Described as a ‘costume concert company’, this troupe was under the direction of the enterprising concert promoter Edward Branscombe. He had visited Australia several times before, notably with the Westminster Glee Party in 1903. Branscombe would go on to establish The Dandies, individual troupes of performers distinguished by the colour of their costumes—Red Dandies, Green Dandies, Pink Dandies, etc. During the summer months, these troupes performed throughout Branscombe’s network of open-air theatres.
The Scarlet Troubadours, 1908. Maude Fane is second from the left in the middle row. HAT Archive.
The line-up of the Scarlet Troubadours comprised eight performers. One of the ladies in particular, Maude Fane, would go on to enjoy a successful career in musical comedy with JCW. She was described as ‘a discovery of Mr. Branscombe … gifted with a soprano of unusual clearness and sparkle’.6
Then on 6 June, West’s Pictures settled in, presenting the ‘latest novelties and surprises in cinematography’, accompanied by De Groen’s Vice-Regal Band.
From 31 August, McMahon and Carroll commenced a four-week season of films.
Finally on 5 September, comedy returned to the Palace when Frank Thornton commenced a four-week farewell season, presenting revivals of his two most popular plays: The Private Secretary (in which he played the hapless cleric the Reverend Spalding) and Charley’s Aunt (where he excelled as Lord Fancourt Babberley, aka Donna Lucia, the Aunt from Brazil—‘where the nuts come from’!). Thornton was supported by an ‘all new’ company that included Templer Powell, Charles Stone, Belle Donaldson, Clare Manifield and Harriet Trench.
Like Sheridan, Thornton had been a regular visitor to Australia, making six tours between 1885 and 1909. Thornton made his final bow before a Sydney audience on 9 October, the Sydney Morning Herald, 10 October 1908, reporting:
Laughter reigned supreme, however, until the very end, when, in a touching and dignified speech of farewell, Mr. Thornton revealed to a surprised and regretful audience his resolution to retire from the stage. In doing this he remarked that his heart was too full on that occasion of long leave-taking to do justice either to himself or them … He was now terminating his sixth return to the country he had learned to love so well.7
Thornton concluded his tour with appearances in Brisbane and Melbourne, and on his return to England, true to his word, he settled into quiet retirement. He died in 1918, aged 73.
Saturday, 10 October 1908 saw the return of Meynell and Gunn’s Dramatic Company. During the following five weeks they presented two plays: Two Little Sailor Boysand A Miner’s Trust.
Two Little Sailor Boys, a drama by Walter Howard, the author of the highly successful The Midnight Wedding, was being presented for the first time in Sydney. The title characters were played by Louise Carbasse and Maisie Maxwell, though it seems they did not make an appearance until the last act. The real focus of the drama was the ‘handsome adventuress’ Lola (played by Lilian Meyers), described as an ‘utterly callous fortune hunter’. She is the mother of one of the sailor boys, Tom Yorke, who almost drowns when she pushes him into a swirling river, only to be saved by Cyril Grey, the other sailor boy of the title.
Sydney-born Louise Carbasse, who played the role of Cyril, would go on to have a successful career as Louise Lovely appearing in some fifty Hollywood movies between 1915 and 1924.
Other roles were played by Conway Wingfield, Maud Chetwynd and Lorna Forbes.
Three weeks later, on 31 October, the same company presented A Miner’s Trust by Jo Smith, ‘for the first time on any stage’. A former Melbourne businessman, Smith would go on to have further success with The Bushwoman (1909) and The Girl of the Never-Never (1912). With respect to ‘home-grown’ talent, Anderson was one of the few managers who was prepared to back Australian plays. This new piece, which was having its ‘world premiere’, was set in part on the Australian goldfields in the early days. The melodramatic plot concerns two miners, Alan Trengrove (Conway Wingfield) and Jack Howard (Wentworth Watkins), who having amassed considerable fortunes are returning to England after ten years in Australia. The two men are similar in appearance—and when Howard is murdered en route for home, Trengarth takes his place; not for any sinister reason, but to save Howard’s blind sweetheart, Alice Medway (Lorna Forbes), from certain shock should she learn the truth about the death of her fiancé! But the hero faces numerous dilemmas, when among other things, he falls in love with Alice’s sister Ida (Lilian Meyers) and having changed his name learns that as himself he has been left a fortune following the death of his uncle. A Miner’s Trust played until 13 November.
Advertising postcard for The Prince Chap, Criterion Theatre, London, 1906. Author's collection.
The following evening, H.R. Roberts (under the management of Harold Ashton and Allan Hamilton) made his debut at the Palace. This New Zealand-born actor, well-known in Sydney, was making his reappearance in Australia after nine years abroad. Roberts’ opening play was The Prince Chap, a comedy-drama by Edward Peple, based on Peple’s 1904 novel of the same name. This was the first Sydney production; the play having already been seen in Christchurch on 1 June 1908 and in Melbourne on 15 August 1908.
When The Prince Chap was premiered in New York at Madison Square Theatre in September 1905, the principal role of William Peyton was created by Cyril Scott. Roberts, however, played the role in London, when it received its British opening at the Criterion Theatre on 16 July 1906. Other players in the company included Hilda Trevelyan, Sam Sothern, Lilias Waldegrave, Janet Alexander and A.E. Greenaway.
Peple was taken by H.R. Roberts portrayal of William Payton. Quoting a letter from Peple to Roberts, the Daily Telegraph recorded:
It is rather a remarkable coincidence that, in writing both the play and the novel, I should have described the leading character as a man whose personality and temperament are so eminently in accord with your own; and indeed, had I called upon you originally as a model for the man himself, I could not have been more accurate in portraying the spirit and individuality of my hero.8
Set in London, it tells the story of a young sculptor whose loses the affections of his sweetheart when, after seeing him with a young girl, mistakenly believes he is the father. The girl, Claudia, is the daughter of one of his models (who in the play’s prologue, asks William to look after her daughter, before dramatically dying in his arms)—and he raises her as his own. The play spans some thirteen years, and when the final curtain falls, Peyton, now a successful artist, realises that he is in love with Claudia, who is now a young woman. The play’s three acts are subtitled: The Child (Act 1), The Girl (Act 2) and The Little Woman (Act 3), and to represent Claudia at each of these times, she is played by three different actresses.
In Australia, Claudia was played by Vera Huggett (Act 1), Beryl Yates (Act 2) and Justina Wayne (Act 3). Australian actor A.E. Greenaway reprised his London role of the Earl of Henningford, while other newcomers included Frank Lamb (Marcus Runion) and Mary Keogh (Phoebe Puckers), with Vera Remee as Alice Travers (Peyton’s former sweetheart).
The play was enthusiastically received, but due to the short season it only played for a fortnight. On 28 November, the company produced A Message from Mars. This play had been seen at the Palace back in 1901 with the Hawtrey Comedy Company. In this current revival, Roberts played Horace Parker, with A.E. Greenaway as the Messenger from Mars, and Fanny Erris as Minnie Templar.
Six nights later, Maggie Moore joined the company. She was reappearing after an absence of six years. Her last Sydney season had been at the Palace in June 1903. Maggie and Roberts, who had been performing together since the early 1890s, had ‘tied the knot’ in New York in April 1902. Maggie had first come to Australia in the mid-1870s with her then husband J.C. Williamson, but the two had separated by 1891, finally divorcing in 1899.9
On Saturday, 5 December 1908, Maggie joined her husband in a revival of Struck Oil, a play they had performed in together on many occasions, though it was Maggie and Williamson who had first created the characters of Lizzie Stofel and her father John Stofel back in the 1870s. In this current revival, Maggie introduced two new songs: ‘Dixie and the Girl I Love’ and ‘I’ll Be Waiting, Dearie, When You Come Back Home’.
Struck Oil held the stage until 24 December. On Boxing Day, Edwin Geach took over the theatre, presenting two shows daily: the Christmas pantomime Robinson Crusoeat 2pm and the drama The Woman Paysin the evening.
Robinson Crusoe, with libretto and score by Fred W. Weierter, featured an ‘all-juvenile’ cast headed by Louie Crawshaw (Robinson Crusoe), Florrie Johnson (Polly Perkins) and Walter Cornock (Will Atkins). The piece had been seen in Sydney the previous Christmas when it was staged at William Anderson’s Wonderland City, transferring to the Oxford Theatre in George Street in mid-January.
The pantomime was a hit: ‘the pretty little playhouse was packed with parents and their children, and a capital entertainment on a modest scale at popular prices was given by a great troupe of well-trained juveniles’.10
The evening show was in compete contrast. Written by Frank M. Thorne, The Woman Payswas a sensation drama in which ‘Thrilling incidents follow one another in quick succession, and the action of the drama is worked out in melodramatic fashion’, including a spectacular waterfall scene and a shipwreck. ‘The old story of man’s inhumanity to woman, and of the woman’s revenge’, the central characters were played by Nellie Fergusson (Madge Threadgold), Kenneth Hunter (Sid. Armstrong), Jefferson Taite (Roger Marchant), and Ethel Buckley (Polly Stokes).11 Having had its UK premiere in Gateshead in 1907, the piece was being performed in Sydney for the first time, the company having given the Australian premiere at the Victoria Theatre, Newcastle, on 8 September 1908, and it had been produced in Melbourne the following month.
At the Palace, The Woman Pays attracted crowded houses, but due to the brevity of the season, it was withdrawn on 8 January 1909 and replaced by the ‘the most popular drama of the century’, East Lynne, with Nellie Fergusson in the dual role of Lady Isabel and Madam Vine. It played for six nights—and on 15 January 1909, both it and Robinson Crusoe were performed for the last times.
To be continued
Endnotes
1. See https://ozvta.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/1907-682019-1.pdf
2. Sydney Morning Herald, 27 December 1907, p.6
3. https://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn7052964
4. Australian Star, 19 December 1907, p.8
5. Magical Nights at the Theatre, pp. 145-146
6. Bulletin, 28 May 1908, p.9
7. Sydney Morning Herald, 10 October 1908, p.16
8. Daily Telegraph, 18 April 1908, p.17
9. See Leann Richards, How Mrs J C Williamson Struck Oil | Stage Whispers
10. Sydney Morning Herald, 28 December 1908, p.3
11. Sydney Morning Herald, 28 December 1908, p.3
References
Eric Irvin, Australian Melodrama: Eighty years of popular theatre, Hale & Iremonger, 1981
Allardyce Nicoll, English Drama 1900–1930: The beginnings of the modern period, Cambridge University Press, 1973
Peter Sumner, Australian Theatrical Posters 1825–1914, Josef Lebovic Gallery, 1988
J.P. Wearing, The London Stage, 1900–1909: A calendar of productions, performers, and personnel, 2nd edition, Rowman & Littlefield, 2014
Newspapers
The Australian Star (Sydney), The Bulletin (Sydney), The Daily Telegraph (Sydney), The Gadfly (Adelaide), The Referee (Sydney), The Sphere (London), Sydney Mail, The Sydney Morning Herald, Town and Country Journal (Sydney)
Trove, https://trove.nla.gov.au/
Pictures
Australian Performing Arts Collection, Arts Centre Melbourne
HAT Archive
National Library of Australia, Canberra
Powerhouse Collection, Sydney
Reed Gallery, Dunedin Public Libraries, New Zealand
State Library of New South Wales, Sydney
State Library Victoria, Melbourne
With thanks to
John S. Clark, Judy Leech, Rob Morrison