The Lilian Meyers Dramatic Company—with its sumptuously dressed 24-year-old leading lady—enjoyed a particularly good season at Charters Towers, Queensland, over Christmas 1906 1 —so good, in fact, that manager Fred Patey promised to return for Christmas 1907.2 But, instead, the company headed south, gambling on their first Tasmanian tour. The new plan included two seasons at Hobart’s Theatre Royal, beginning 9 November 1907, and two at Launceston’s Academy of Music. Before departing from Tasmania on 12 February 1908,3 the company would also make brief circuits of small communities, and venture to the western mining towns of Zeehan, Queenstown and Waratah.
(See Table A: Town, Dates, Venue, Productions)
Accidents and incidents are inevitable when companies travel. But the most complicated, most damaging, and most public misadventure occurred after the tour’s conclusion, when John Norton’s scurrilous newspaper, Truth, made several allegations about “haughty hamfats”—referring to Lilian Meyers and manager Patey.4 Company members had not been paid, Truth said, nor hotel bills. Furthermore, an explosive argument between Patey and lead actor Kenneth Hunter had resulted in Hunter’s departure.
Truth’s version of events must be accepted with caution but, nevertheless, the article reveals the difficulties of provincial touring. It also provides a glimpse of Lilian Meyers, a fascinating performer barely remembered today.5
Lilian Meyers
Lilian Meyers (b. 1884) grew up in a horse-racing family. Parents Charles Norman and Louisa Ellen Meyers lived in Caulfield (Melbourne),6 conveniently close to the racetrack. Her father, a paper merchant,7 operated a race-horse stud 8 and could be violent and sometimes scandalous.9 Her older brother Charles Norman (jr.), was a veterinarian who tended horses at the racetrack, and—after his father’s 1926 death 10—raced horses and established his own stud.11 Later, his mother Louisa Meyers also successfully raced her own horses.12
Despite Lilian’s Jewish heritage,13 she attended Fitzroy’s Academy of Mary Immaculate.14 Five years of elocution studies with British stage veteran James F. Cathcart15 laid a foundation for Melbourne University’s proclamation that she was “an elocutionist of a very high order”.16
One newspaper commented on her “wealth of raven hair and remarkably expressive eyes”;17 another writer noted her “comfortable private income”.18 It was also suggested that her father financed her theatre company19 —but this was no vanity project. Lilian had prepared for leading roles by undertaking small parts for several years with J.C. Williamson companies. She claimed she was “specially engaged by Mr Williamson to understudy Miss Tittell Brune”,20 and also understudied May Chevalier in Cuyler Hastings's Company. On one occasion, when she took the female lead “at one hour’s notice”, Mr Hastings publicly stated that “she was word-perfect, a feat which he had never witnessed before”.21
“Only merit and talent could gain such a high position in such a short space of time”,22 said the ambitious Miss Meyers. Frustrated by the prominence of imported international stars like Tittell Brune, May Chevalier and Cuyler Hastings—alongside who she had worked—she took action when just 21 years old:
Miss Lilian Meyers ... found that supporting “stars” was but a poor return for all her hard work and study, so the plucky lady decided to organise her own combinations, and travel the Commonwealth.23
On 22 December 1905, the Bathurst Advocate announced: “Miss Meyers has completed arrangements with Mr Wm. Anderson to present four of his best productions ... in a truly Metropolitan style”.24 At this point, she had never carried a show, night after night, role after role. If it turned out that she lacked skill, charisma and stamina, even her father's funds would not guarantee success. But Lilian Meyers was clearly a bold, confident risk-taker.
Nevertheless, her youth and lack of experience demanded a reliable hand at the helm. That hand belonged to Fred E. Patey, who had held similar managerial positions since at least 1888.25
The company launched its melodrama-heavy country tour from Bathurst, with When London Sleeps (Charles Darrell, 1896); Camille (Alexandre Dumas, fils, 1852); The Worst Woman in London (Walter Melville, 1899), and the “Anglo-American drama”, The Evil Men Do (Theodore Kremer, 1903).26 At this stage of melodrama's development, it was criticised as “[c]rude, violent, dynamic in action, psychologically and morally simplistic, reliant on machinery and technological know-how for its powerful effect”.27 Melodramas were more complex and nuanced than this,28 but nevertheless attracted sneers:
Lilian Meyers ... was at latest leading lady with her own company at Albury, where they astonished the natives with The Worst Woman in Wodonga, or something like that.29
Theatre Royal, Hobart, photo by Alfred Winter. Allport Library and Museum of FineArts, State Library and Archives of Tasmania.
Travelling in Tasmania
Lilian Meyers and company disembarked from the Westralia at Hobart on 7 November 1907.30 She had previously visited with Cuyler Hastings in 1903,31 but back then, she was a mere understudy. Now she headed her own company.
A local journalist interviewed Lilian Meyers at Heathorn’s Hotel. Miss Meyers pointed out that Hobart’s most important venue, the Theatre Royal (licensed to seat 629 people),32 was only one-third the size of His Majesty’s Theatre in Brisbane. There, she said, they had performed to “standing room only” for nine weeks straight.33 But, she confided, she had a strategy for making the best of smaller audiences. “I quite appreciate the fact that the playgoing community of Hobart is a small one, and that constant change of bill is necessary”, said Miss Meyers. “But you will see I am quite prepared for this”.34
(See Table B for populations of towns visited)
The 26-member company (see Personnel List) would deliver the 15-play repertoire (see Table C for repertoire), in a range of different styles that appealed—she said—“to every class of the theatregoing community”.35 To compensate for the restricted customer base, the repertoire would repeatedly lure customers with fresh stories and new thrills. Patrons could expect high-quality presentation, including new scenery “painted for this tour by the company's artist, Mr E. Lake”.36 She claimed the necessary equipment weighed 100 tons,37 but this was sometimes cited as “50 tons”.38 This may mean the first figure was exaggerated for effect; equally it could indicate that the load was divided and stored as they travelled. Table A suggests a possible division of sets and costumes: on the first small-town circuit, for example, the company could limit their baggage to stage equipment needed for just two plays, The Executioner’s Daughter and Camille.
The initial four-week Hobart season opened with The Executioner’s Daughter, which had “a highly sensational character, relieved by a vein of comedy-writing”.39 Miss Meyers had apparently purchased exclusive performing rights,40 and the company’s publicity spruiked it as a “new work”.41 This wasn’t strictly true: Tasmanian audiences had seen Charles Holloway’s production during April 1902.42 Nevertheless, opening-night attendees were enthusiastic:
The curtain was repeatedly raised at the close of each act for the principals to acknowledge the applause which came from all parts of a well-filled house, and Miss Meyers received several bouquets.43
The play tells of a French executioner who provides his family with a luxurious life, while hiding the grisly nature of his work. His virtuous daughter Annette—played by Lillian Meyers—is accused of murder and dragged to the guillotine dominating the stage. On recognising the young woman, the executioner states that “no law can compel a man to kill his own child”. However, another character:
resolves to carry out the execution himself, thereby intensifying the scene, till it makes one’s flesh creep. The reprieve arrives at the last moment, and the tension is relieved ... 44
But relief is short-lived; evil-doers burn a telegraph office to destroy the telegrammed pardon. A reviewer admited the story “sometimes strains credulity” but, to compensate, “the action is rapid, and the scenes highly dramatic”.45
Camille, presented two nights later, “roused the audience to a high pitch of enthusiasm”.46 Lilian Meyers publicised herself as “the youngest pourtrayer [sic.] of this difficult part that has ever appeared in Australasia”, and she was also one of the best dressed: “Miss Meyers’ wardrobe for this play alone having cost £180”.47 The reviewer was impressed with the lead actress’s performance:
she drew in fine nervous strokes the awakening passion of Camille in her first passage with Armand ... in the passionate invective against society in the second act the full power of the actress first became apparent. The death of Camille added the final touch to a clever actress’s version of a great part. The staging of the play was appropriate, and the costumes worn by the actresses were rich and of good design.48
The first Hobart season ended on 28 November with a performance of Camille attended by Their Excellencies Governor and Lady Strickland.49
After Hobart’s applause, Launceston’s negative responses to The Executioner’s Daughter must have hit hard:
The demand for melodrama ... is ... somewhat restricted, the natural result of which is that there was room for more [patrons] at the Academy of Music on Saturday night ... Miss Lilian Meyers ... has some of the qualifications of a fair exponent of histrionism [sic.], but, unfortunately, she moves along in the old melodramatic groove.50
Surprisingly, the following night’s presentation of the same play, in the same theatre, received a positive assessment. A “large and appreciative audience” attended, and Lilian Meyers “was again a decided success”.51 But at the end of that season, the company received mean-spirited parting comments:
Most of the pieces played have been uninteresting—being too sensational and unreal ... Miss Meyers wears some attractive costumes, but they did not suit her style, she having a decided tendency to embonpoint; some of her attitudes, too, lack grace; in fact, they are extraordinary, and only possible to a very graceful slim figure.52
Now the company travelled frequently, the route doubling back on itself and circling around. There was a new venue nearly every day (see Table A). At the newly renovated Deloraine Town Hall on 16 December, the company presented The Executioner’s Daughter. Prior to alterations, the building did not comply with the Health Act, and the local Council pointed out “that companies could not play for want of room”.53 Lilian Meyers and company benefitted from “extensive renovations and splendid improvements ... an entirely new and up-to-date stage ... a handsome proscenium and red cloth curtain, and new escape and exit doors”, making “the hall one of the safest and most compact in Tasmania”.54
The following evening, the La Trobe Oddfellows’ Hall proffered a too-small stage, forcing a quick decision to present Camille instead of the advertised Executioner’s Daughter.55 The audience did not seem disappointed. A newspaper review reported that all performers’ parts were “well sustained, and the audience frequently applauded. The acting of Miss Lilian Meyers was specially admired”.56
Then, the next night at Devonport Town Hall, The Executioner’s Daughter claimed a victim when, during the performance, “the drum of the scene” fell on May Renno’s shoulder. She wasn’t injured; the show went on.57
At Ulverstone Town Hall—built 1883, capacity around 40058— the presentations of The Executioner's Daughter (19 December), and Camille (20 December), were free of mishaps. The company then doubled back to Devonport Town Hall (Camille, 21 December), and Deloraine Town Hall (The Executioner's Daughter, 23 December), before travelling to Hobart to open their second Theatre Royal season (26 December–10 January) with Hands across the Sea.
Truth
At the Theatre Royal on 7 January 1908, leading man Kenneth Hunter played Joe Saunders in My Partner, and was “loudly applauded”59—which raises questions about why, within a week, he departed the company.
Truth’s version of the disagreement between Hunter and manager Patey60 is that it erupted while the cast made-up for The Colleen Bawn at the Theatre Royal. There were only two performances of that play at that theatre—8 and 9 January—so the argument must have occurred on one of those nights. The basis for the tension is unclear, but Truth makes unpleasant insinuations that manager Patey—a married man—was jealous of a close relationship between Lilian Meyers and leading man Hunter.
Then, on 10 January, “a special benefit programme”61 celebrated the company’s final night in Hobart. Lilian Meyers and Kenneth Hunter presented excerpts from several plays. Although Hunter had been with Lilian Meyers for 12 months,62 that was his final appearance with the company.
The next performance was Hands across the Sea, on 13 January at Launceston. E.A. Melville took the role of hero Jack Dudley, previously played by Hunter.63 According to Launceston’s Daily Telegraph, the replacement actor “has materially strengthened the company. His bearing is natural and pleasing”.64 Melville had been with the Meyers company since March 1907,65 but did not take on all Hunter's leading roles. For example, on 15 January, George Merriman (actor/stage manager)66 played Hardress Cregan in The Colleen Bawn.67
These were short-term fixes, and new problems arose. Now, hotel bills were apparently not paid (unverifiable), and “members of the combination had to go to the trouble and expense of suing for their salaries in the police courts”.68 Truth named 10 (out of approximately 26) members who initiated actions against Lilian Meyers and Fred Patey.
On January 29 1908, at Launceston Police Court, Edward “Teddy” Miles Lake (mechanist) claimed £12, and Alfred “Ike” Edward Souter (scenic artist) claimed £14, “due for services rendered behind the footlights ... Subsequently the case was settled out of court, the amounts due being paid”.69
Despite its difficulties, the following day,70 the company travelled by ss Mahinapun from Burnie to the West Coast to visit Zeehan (1–5 February), Queenstown (6–9 February), and Waratah (10 February). All were mining towns, but Zeehan and Queenstown, with populations over 5,000, were much larger than the small places the company had previously visited (Table B). Assuming these miners were as eager for entertainment as those in Charters Towers, this part of the company’s tour was potentially its most profitable. Indeed, the Gaiety Theatre in Zeehan had a stage that matched the size of the Hobart Theatre Royal, and seated 1000 patrons71 —about 400 more than the Theatre Royal.
The company presented four plays at Zeehan: The Executioner’s Daughter, Hands across the Sea, The Sorrows of Satan, and No Wedding Bells for Her. Three of the four were staged at Queenstown’s Metropole Theatre (The Sorrows of Satan was omitted).
Crowds flocked to the Gaiety on opening night, and accolades from audience and reviewer were no doubt a balm amid the company’s challenges:
Every available seat was occupied, large numbers only finding room to stand. The Executioner’s Daughter ... satisfied the public taste ... This satisfaction of course, was in greater measure due to the splendid characterisations of the different players ... Miss Meyers had opportunities for showing her undoubted talents. By her sympathetic rendering of the hapless Annette, she proved herself to possess that invaluable quality ... which Mr Beerbhom Tree has called “instinct”. Other noteworthy features were her good looks, graceful figure and deportment ...72
The last night at Queenstown’s Metropole was Sunday 9 February; a Sacred and Classical Concert was held instead of a play. The following night, at Waratah’s Atheneum Hall, the company had a “bumper house”73 for No Wedding Bells for Her, the final performance of the tour. Then, on Tuesday 11 February, the company “returned from the West Coast by train ... after a successful season, and leave tonight by the Wakatipu for Sydney”.74
Two days later, on 13 February 1908, at Burnie Police Court, William Russell (scene shifter) sued for £3 1s “wages due”. He was awarded the amount claimed, plus 9s 6d court costs, and £1 1s counsel’s fee.75
And on 19 February 1908, at the Launceston Court of Requests, J. Newton, W. Artis, William Russell (again) and A. Cartledge claimed a total of £7 10s 8d. Unfortunately, “there was no appearance of the plaintifs, the case was struck out”.76 It is likely the plaintifs had departed on 12 February, with the rest of the company, on the Wakatipu.77
Truth states that actors May and Daisy Renno and Arthur Shirley also “invoked the assistance of the law”,78 but their cases cannot be verified in newspapers.
The company did not appear to have a prior history of non-payment during earlier travels in New South Wales and Queensland. However, that didn’t prevent Truth’s offensive comment about the company’s financial difficulties. Lilian Meyers is referred to as “Jewish”, in a context that suggests theft:
Truth advises the members of the company ... also the local publicans, to keep their two glims wide open and tightly glued on Mr Fred Patey and his fat Jewish lady star ... It is people of this description, the rotters in “the business,” by these endeavouring to evade the payment of their just liabilities, who bring discredit on an honorable calling—the theatrical profession.79
This was typical of Truth: “Norton’s attacks ranged over Jews, Chinese and wealthy plutocrats”.80
In all likelihood, the company came to grief by underestimating the touring costs. Although Lilian Meyers was aware of the challenges of touring small communities, her strategy for touring Tasmania ironically involved presenting a repertoire larger than that for the previous NSW tour, which in turn required more personnel, both on and off stage. The short stays also generated additional handling, transport and storage costs. So, in small venues with limited capacity, and with 100 tons of sets to manage, the strategy may have proved more expensive than expected—and the takings smaller.
There is yet another possibility. Truth reveals that the Meyers’ company received an inviting deal from Allan Hamilton, leesee of Hobart’s Theatre Royal and Launceston's Academy of Music:
The probabilities are that the Lilian Myers [sic.] show would not have done this particular Tasmanian tour but that Mr Allan Hamilton let them into the Hobart and Launceston theatres ... Mr Hamilton found the theatres, the local printing, lighting, front of the house and orchestra (except conductor), all of which were promptly paid. Patey and Myers were to supply plays, actors, musical conductor (Mr Florack) and stage hands. ... Outside of ... Hobart and Launceston, Mr Allan Hamilton had absolutely nothing to do with the Myers-cum-Patey theatrical enterprise.81
At first glance, this arrangement appears generous, possibly enticing the company away from Charters Towers. But maybe the offer was not as generous as it appears. If Allan Hamilton took all the earnings from the two big venues, both of which supported two long seasons, Lilian Meyers’ takings may not have been all they had hoped.
And there is at least one precedent of a Hamilton-associated tour that left actors unpaid. In July 1885, Messrs J.L. Hall and Allan Hamilton requested a theatrical agent to engage Melbourne “talent” for a Tasmanian tour. The route visited properties owned or leased by Hall and Hamilton, including several visited by the Lilian Meyers company in 1908: Theatre Royal, Hobart; Oddfellows’ Hall, La Trobe; and Town Hall, Ulverstone.
Once travelling began, however, the 1885 company found:
business in Tasmania this trip was far from being gay. Half and quarter salaries were suggested, and it finished up with no salaries at all ... [Mr Hall and Mr Hamilton] were simply very sorry .... These unfortunate people, who were induced in good faith to go over to Tasmania, have not been paid; and it seems as though somebody had not acted very manly in the business.82
Lilian Meyers’ 1907/1908 experience certainly parallels that of the 1885 company. If there were something awry with the Hamilton arrangement, maybe the odds were stacked against Lilian Meyers, right from the beginning. And maybe she never knew what was going on.
Afterwards
Lilian Meyers’ new Brisbane season opened 8 March 1908 at His Majesty’s, with new leading man Ernest Leicester, along with some loyal Tasmanian troupe members.83 But at season's end, she disbanded her company,84 and joined the Meynell-Gunn enterprise, recently expanded by Rupert Clarke and John Wren.85 On 1 August, she opened as lead in Two Little Sailor Boys at Melbourne’s Theatre Royal.
At that point, Lilian Meyers’ connections to the theatre world intersected with her connections to horse racing. John Wren—millionaire race-horse owner who for years ran the illegal Collingwood tote—knew Miss Meyers’ veterinarian brother, and must have known her father, C.N. Meyers.86 And stud-owner Rupert Clarke undoubtedly knew the Meyers from horse-racing circles.
But what of the other members of the Tasmanian company? Ousted leading man Kenneth Hunter joined Geach’s Dramatic Company;87 Arthur Albert returned to vaudeville;88 and George Merriman became involved with a new medium altogether, joining McMahon’s Picture Show.89
Young Ray Shirley found fame under the name “Arthur Shirley”—and the name change happened on this tour. His first inclusion in the published cast list was for A Daughter of the Million, in which he played Jenkins from Scotland Yard. Accidentally or as a deliberate joke, he was listed as A. G. Shirley90 —“A.G” being the initials of the much more famous, very prolific British playwright, Arthur George Shirley. Ray assumed the name “Arthur” from then on.
In February 1909, Fred Patey was hired by boxer Tommy Burns—defeated by Jack Johnson three months earlier—“to assist in the productions of the ex-champion's theatrical enterprises”.91
The May Renno Dramatic Organisation presented The Greatest Scoundrel Living at Casino on 2 October 1909.92 Seven of the 14 company members had previously been with Lilian Meyers, in this or earlier companies: May and Daisy Renno, Ray Longford, Augustus Neville, David Drayton, Ada Clyde, and Arthur Shirley.93
Longford later became an acclaimed silent film director, making The Silence of Dean Maitland (1914) in which Arthur Shirley starred, leading to Shirley’s Hollywood career.
But Lilian Meyers made the most unexpected move of all. In 1910, she travelled to New York. On arrival, she presented a theatrical agent with a professional recommendation written by James Cassius Williamson:
A few weeks later, the agent wrote to JCW, to say he had done his best for the young lady by getting her married into the family. The happy man is his brother-in-law, who assists him in his play-booking business.94
Lilian Meyers—always bold, always confident—married Gerald Bacon in New York on 11 September 1910.

Endnotes
1. “Lilian Meyers Dramatic Company”, Evening Telegraph (Charters Towers), 2 January 1907.
2. “Brief Mention”, Evening Telegraph (Charters Towers), 8 January 1907, p.2.
3. “Burnie”, North Western Advocate and the Emu Bay Times, 12 February 1908, p.2: “The Lilian Meyers Dramatic Company returned from the west coast by train yesterday after a successful season, and leave to-night by the Wakatipu for Sydney”.
4. “Haughty Hamfats: The Tasmanian Theatrical Tour of the Lilian Myers Dramatic Company”, Truth (Brisbane), 22 March 1908, p.9.
5. More about Lilian Myers can be found in previous issues of On Stage magazine:
Elisabeth Kumm, “Little Wunder: The Story of the Palace Theatre (Part 9)”, On Stage, Little Wunder: The story of the Palace Theatre, Sydney (Part 9) - Theatre Heritage Australia
Frank Van Straten, “Frank Neil—‘He Lived Show Business’ (Part 1)”, On Stage, https://www.theatreheritage.org.au/on-stage-magazine/profiles/item/880-frank-neil-he-lived-show-business-part-1
6. “Mr C.N. Meyers to Miss N. Phillips”, Punch (Melbourne), 29 September 1910, p.30.
7. “Jewellery in Dispute”, Herald (Melbourne), 23 February 1916, p.8.
8. In the last half-year of his life, C.N. Meyers’ stable raced 5 winning horses, for a total of 6 wins, with £2,747 prize money. “Principal Winning Owners”, Australasian (Melbourne), 7 August 1926, p.24.
9. For violence, see: “£49 Asked for Assault on Retired Bookmaker”, Herald (Melbourne), 2 June 1916, p.10.
For scandal, see: “Jewelery in Dispute”, Herald (Melbourne), 23 February 1916, p.8.
10. “Blind Sportsman Dead”, Circular Head Chronicle (Stanley), 30 June 1926, p.5.
11. “Turf Notes and Gossip”, Australasian (Melbourne), 15 May 1926, p.23. “An Unlucky Mare”, Australasian (Melbourne), 23 June 1928, p.29.
12. She co-owned race winner Fission, who became “the dam of more winners than any other mare in the book”. “Fission’s Great Record as Stud Matron”, Herald (Melbourne), 27 August 1947, p.19.
13. “Lilian Meyers Dramatic Season”, Brisbane Courier, 11 February 1907, p6.
14. “AMDG”, Australasian (Melbourne), 7 January 1899, p41.
15. “Dramatic Notes”, Australasian (Melbourne), 27 December 1902, p26. Information about Cathcart comes from his death announcement. His connection to Lilian Meyers has not been verified.
16. “Lilian Meyers' Company”, North Western Advocate and the Emu Bay Times, 16 December 1907, p.4. This claim has not been verified.
17. “Lilian Meyers’ Company”, North Western Advocate and the Emu Bay Times, 16 December 1907, p.4.
18. “Who’s Who To-day”, Newsletter: An Australian Paper for Australian People (Sydney), 25 July 1908, p.10.
19. Frank Van Straten, “Frank Neil—‘He Lived Show Business’ (Part 1)”, On Stage, https://www.theatreheritage.org.au/on-stage-magazine/profiles/item/880-frank-neil-he-lived-show-business-part-1
20. “Theatre Royal”, Mercury (Hobart), 8 November 1907, p.7.
21. “Sherlock Holmes”, Advertiser (Adelaide), 12 September 1904, p.9.
22. “Lilian Meyers’ Company”, North Western Advocate and the Emu Bay Times, 16 December 1907, p.4.
23. “Lilian Meyers Company”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 28 November 1907, p.5.
24. “The Lilian Meyers Company”, National Advocate (Bathurst), 22 December 1905, p.2.
25. See advertisement for the Academy of Music production of The Mystery of a Hansom Cab (Ballarat Star, 26 September 1888, p.3).
26. “The Lilian Meyers Company”, National Advocate (Bathurst), 30 December 1905, p.2. As far as I can see, The Evil Men Do was infrequently performed by the Lilian Meyers Company. The “Anglo-American” (not “Anglo-Australian”) detail is from “King’s Theatre”, Fitzroy City Press, 5 April 1913, p.2; William Anderson apparently spared no expense for this production. The play is not mentioned in Eric Irvin’s Australian Melodrama: Eighty Years of Popular Theatre, Hale & Iremonger, Sydney, 1981.
27. Daniel C. Gerould, Introduction: “Americanisation of Melodrama”, American Melodrama, ed. Daniel C. Gerould, Performing Arts Journal Publications, New York, NY, pp.7–29, p.7.
28. This is demonstrated in Peter Brooks’ significant The Melodramatic Imagination: Balzac, Henry James, and the Mode of Excess, Columbia University Press, New York, NY, 1985.
29. “At Poverty Point”, Bulletin (Sydney), 10 May 1906, p.9.
30. “Theatre Royal”, Mercury (Hobart), 8 November 1907, p.7.
31. “Theatre Royal”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 15 June 1903, p.1.
32. “Overcrowding the Theatre”, Daily Post (Hobart), 6 October 1909, p.4. During the 1909 Nellie Stewart appearance at the Theatre Royal, “police counted 1125 persons leaving the building”. Harry Musgrove, manager of the company, paid a fine. It is surprising that the “official” 1909 capacity is far under the 800 calculated by the Friends of the Theatre Royal in 2025, but the crowded theatre in 1909 was far over the 800 figure. Thanks to Meyrick Harris and the Friends of the Theatre Royal for helping with my query. Email to Jeannette Delamoir, 26 May 2025.
33. “Theatre Royal”, Mercury (Hobart), 8 November 1907, p.7.
34. “Theatre Royal”, Mercury (Hobart), 8 November 1907, p.7.
35. “Theatre Royal”, Mercury (Hobart), 8 November 1907, p.7.
36. “Amusements”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 26 November 1907, p.5.
37. “Theatre Royal”, Mercury (Hobart), 8 November 1907, p.7.
38. “Amusements”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 26 November1907, p.5.
39. “Amusements”, Mercury (Hobart), 11 November 1907, p.6.
40. “Amusements” Mercury (Hobart), 31 October 1907, p.3.
41. “Amusements” Mercury (Hobart), 31 October 1907, p.3.
42. “Theatre Royal”, Mercury (Hobart), 19 April 1902, p.4.
43. “Amusements”, Mercury (Hobart), 11 November 1907, p.6.
44. “Amusements”, Mercury (Hobart), 11 November 1907, p.6.
45. “Amusements”, Mercury (Hobart), 11 November 1907, p.6.
46. “Amusements”, Tasmanian News (Hobart), 14 November 1907, p.4.
47. Advertisement, Mudgee Guardian and North-Western Representative, 29 January 1906, p.3.
48. “Music and Drama”, Mercury (Hobart), 19 November 1907, p.2.
49. “Amusements”, Tasmanian News (Hobart), 27 November 1907, p.4.
50. “Miss Lilian Meyers”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 2 December 1907, p.7.
51. “Amusements”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 3 December 1907, p.8.
52. “The Ladies’ Column”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 12 December 1907, p.6.
53. Health Act: “North-Western News”, North West Advocate and Emu Bay Times, 28 July 1904, p.2.
Companies could not play: “Chudleigh”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 7 July 1904, p.5.
54. “Reopening of Deloraine Town Hall”, Examiner (Launceston), 11 February 1905, p.7.
55. “La Trobe”, North Western Advocate and Emu Bay Times, 19 December 1907, p.2.
56. “La Trobe”, North Western Advocate and Emu Bay Times, 19 December 1907, p.2.
57. “Devonport Theatrical Performance”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 19 December 1907, p.5.
58. Built in 1883: “River Leven”, Mercury (Hobart), 22 January 1883, p.3.
Capacity of 400: The 1883 Town Hall was replaced in 1921 with a new hall seating 950, “rather more than double the capacity of the old building”. “Ulverstone”, Examiner (Launceston), 26 May 1921, p.2.
59. “Amusements”, Mercury (Hobart), 8 January 1908, p.3.
60. “Haughty Hamfats: The Tasmanian Theatrical Tour of the Lilian Myers Dramatic Company”, Truth (Brisbane), 22 March 1908, p.9.
61. “Amusements: Theatre Royal”, Mercury (Hobart), 11 January 1908, p.3.
62. “The Lilian Meyers Dramatic Co.”, Morning Post (Cairns), 10 January 1907, p.2.
63. “Theatre Royal”, Tasmanian News (Hobart), 27 December 1907, p.2.
64. “Amusements”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 14 January 1908, p.5.
65. “Evening Entertainments”, Telegraph (Brisbane), 15 March 1907, p.4.
66. “Haughty Hamfats: The Tasmanian Theatrical Tour of the Lilian Myers Dramatic Company”, Truth (Brisbane), 22 March 1908, p.9.
67. “Amusements”, Examiner (Launceston), 16 January 1908, p.5.
68. “Haughty Hamfats: The Tasmanian Theatrical Tour of the Lilian Myers Dramatic Company”, Truth (Brisbane), 22 March 1908, p.9.
69. “Actors’ Salaries”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 29 January 1908, p.4.
70. “Burnie”, North Western Advocate and the Emu Bay Times, 31 January 1908, p.2.
71. Stage size: Gabrielle Lis, 2021, “Boom and Bust in the Gaiety”, Island, issue 161, 2021, https://islandmag.com/read/boom-and-bust-in-the-gaiety-by-gabrielle-lis. Accessed 17 June 2025.
1000 patrons: “Gaiety Theatre, Zeehan”, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaiety_Theatre,_Zeehan. Accessed 17 June 2025.
72. “Lilian Meyers”, Zeehan and Dundas Herald, 3 February 1908, p.3.
73. “Waratah”, North Western Advocate and the Emu Bay Times, 14 February 1908, p.4.
74. “Burnie”, North Western Advocate and the Emu Bay Times, 12 February 1908, p.2.
75. “Burnie. Dramatic Company Sued”, Northwestern Advocate and the Emu Bay Times, 13 February 1908, p.2.
76. “Court of Requests”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 18 February 1908, p.3.
77. “Court of Requests”, Examiner (Launceston), 19 February 1908, p.6.
78. “Haughty Hamfats: The Tasmanian Theatrical Tour of the Lilian Myers Dramatic Company”, Truth (Brisbane), 22 March 1908, p.9.
79. “Haughty Hamfats: The Tasmanian Theatrical Tour of the Lilian Myers Dramatic Company”, Truth (Brisbane), 22 March 1908, p.9.
80. Niall Brennan, John Wren, Gambler: His Life and Times, Hill of Content, Melbourne, 1976, p.107.
81. “Haughty Hamfats: The Tasmanian Theatrical Tour of the Lilian Myers Dramatic Company”, Truth (Brisbane), 22 March 1908, p.9.
82. “Theatrical Troubles”, Launceston Examiner, 27 July 1885, p.3.
83. For Ernest Leicester: “His Majesty’s”, Truth (Brisbane), 1 March 1908, p.8. Cast list for Hands across the Sea, in Brisbane Courier, 14 March 1908, p.2. Among those who stayed with Lilian Meyers: Fred Patey, Vincent Scully, E.A. Melville, Frank Crossley, T.H. Cunningham, Claire Terry, Cora Warner, and Tempe Piggott.
84. “Who's Who To-day”, Newsletter: An Australian Paper for Australian People, 25 July 1908, p.10.
85. “Greenroom Gossip”, Punch (Melbourne), 30 April 1908, p.34. The writer of the “Lady's Letter” column pondered: “I wonder if he [i.e., John Wren] ever muses about the eccentricities of fortune which have brought him, the once humble boot operative, into partnership with Victoria's only Baronet”. (Punch, 23 April 1908, p.22)
86. John Wren knew Norman Meyers (jr.) because of their sometimes dramatic race track interactions: See “Turf Notes and Gossip”, Australasian (Melbourne), 15 May 1926, p.23. Undoubtedly, stud-owner Rupert Clarke knew C.N. Meyers (sr.) from horse-racing circles. Interestingly the older Meyers was born in Collingwood in 1860; Wren was born there in 1871.
87. “In Bohemia”, Truth (Brisbane), 15 March 1908, p.12.
88. “National Amphitheatre”, Daily Telegraph (Sydney), 1 February 1908, p.10.
89. “Haughty Hamfats: The Tasmanian Theatrical Tour of the Lilian Myers Dramatic Company”, Truth (Brisbane), 22 March 1908, p.9.
90. Advertisement, Mercury (Hobart), 23 November 1907, p.5.
91. “On and Off the Stage”, Table Talk (Melbourne), 11 February 1909, p.22.
92. “May Renno Dramatic Organisation”, Northern Star (Lismore), 1 October 1908, p.3.
93. For company members from Lilian Meyers’ company: “Theatrical Performances”, Richmond River Express and Casino Kyogle Advertiser, 15 September 1908, p.2. For Arthur Shirley: “May Renno Dramatic Company”, Northern Star (Lismore), 6 October 1908, p3.
94. “At Poverty Point”, Bulletin (Sydney), 8 December 1910, p.9.
List: Personnel (alphabetical)
The company was said to have 26 members, but it is unclear if this referred to those both on and off the stage. These 24 names are taken from cast lists published in newspapers:
The Executioner's Daughter, Mercury (Hobart), 9 November 1907, p.5
A Daughter of the Million, Mercury (Hobart), 23 November 1907, p.5.
The list for The Executioner’s Daughter notes “an Army of Auxiliaries” playing “Soldiers, Courtiers, Police Officials, Monks, etc.”. One of these may have been an un-named Arthur Shirley, who was not shown in the cast until A Daughter of the Million, in which he played Jenkins (from Scotland Yard). Another unnamed young cast member may have been Frank Neil, who apparently celebrated his 21st birthday with the company on 23 December 1907, at Deloraine. (Frank Van Straten, “Frank Neil—‘He Lived Show Business’ (Part 1)”, On Stage, https://www.theatreheritage.org.au/on-stage-magazine/profiles/item/880-frank-neil-he-lived-show-business-part-1)
Albert, Arthur
Cunningham, Thomas
Evans, Lyn
Hunter, Kenneth
Jordan, Arthur
Lake, Edward (scenic artist/mechanist, played a small role in Camille, “Amusements”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 4 December 1907, p.5)
Melville, E.A.
Merriman, George
Meyers, Lilian
Murray, Paltney
Napier, Francis
Page, Holly
Patey, Fred E.
Piggott, Tempe
Renno, May
Renno, Winifred (Daisy)
Rosomond, F.
Rossmore, Joe
Royd, Arthur
Scully, Vincent
Shirley, Arthur
Steele, Paul
Terry, Clare
Warner, Cora
Also:
Artis, W. (role unknown)
Cartledge, A.( role unknown)
Newton, J. (role unknown)
Russell, William (scene shifter)
Souter, Alfred Edward (scenic artist)
These names became apparent when company members sued for payment.
Table A: Town, Dates, Venue, Capacity (when known), Productions
| Towns | Dates | Venue | Capacity | Productions |
| Hobart | 9–28 November 1907 | Theatre Royal | First season: The Executioner’s Daughter x 3 Camille x 2 No Wedding Bells for Her x 3 Two Little Drummer Boys x 2 The Sorrows of Satan x 2 The Woman who Did East Lynne The Daughter of the Million x 2 The New Magdalen |
|
| Launceston | 30 November–12 December 1907 | Academy of Music | “Over 900” (Australian Variety Theatre Archive, “Popular Culture Entertainment 1850-1930 /Theatres/Venues 5a: Hobart and Launceston”, https://ozvta.com/theatres-tas/2/, accessed 9 June 2025). |
First season: The Executioner’s Daughter x 2 Camille Two Little Drummer Boys x 2 The Sorrows of Satan The Daughter of the Million x 2 The Lady of Lyons No Wedding Bells for Her East Lynne |
| Beaconsfield | 13, 14 December 1907 | Venue unknown | This was advertised (Daily Telegraph, 7 December 1907, p.8), but the venue and the productions were not identified. Nor did any performance(s) seem to be reviewed. | |
| Deloraine | 16 December 1907 | Town Hall | The Executioner's Daughter | |
| La Trobe | 17 December 1907 | Oddfellows Hall | The Executioner’s Daughter was scheduled, but the stage was too cramped and Camille was substituted. | |
| Devonport | 18 December 1907 | Town Hall | The Executioner’s Daughter May Renno struck by drum of the scene. |
|
| Ulverstone | 19, 20 December 1907 | Town Hall | 450 (estimated)2 | Camille |
| Devonport | 21 December 1907 | Town Hall | Camille | |
| Deloraine | 23 December 1907 | Town Hall | The Executioner’s Daughter | |
| Hobart | 26 December–10 January 1908 | Theatre Royal | Second season: Hands across the Sea x 3 The Lady of Lyons The Executioner’s Daughter The Kellys x 2 The Sorrows of Satan Uncle Tom's Cabin x 2 (afternoon & night) My Partner The Colleen Bawn x 2 Conclusion of Lilian Meyers’ Hobart Season |
|
| Launceston | 13–20 January 1908 | Academy of Music | Second season: Hands across the Sea x 2 The Colleen Bawn Uncle Tom's Cabin The New Magdalen My Partner The Woman who Did |
|
| Beaconsfield | 21–22 January 1908 | Venue unknown | Hands across the Sea The Sorrows of Satan |
|
| Devonport | 24 January 1908 | Town Hall | The Sorrows of Satan | |
| Burnie | 25–28 January1908 | Town Hall | The Executioner’s Daughter No Wedding Bells for Her The Sorrows of Satan |
|
| Launceston | 29 January 1908 | Edward Miles Lake, Alfred Edward Souter sue Lilian Meyers and FE Patey for £12 and £14. Settled out of Court. | ||
| Burnie | 30 January 1908 | Company members board ss Mahinapua at Burnie en route to West Coast. | ||
| Zeehan | 1–5 February 1908 | Gaiety Theatre | 1,000 (Gabrielle Lis, “Boom and Bust in the Gaiety”, Island, 2021, no. 161, https://islandmag.com/read/boom-and-bust-in-the-gaiety-by-gabrielle-lis, accessed June 9 2025.) |
The Executioner’s Daughter Hands across the Sea The Sorrows of Satan No Wedding Bells for Her |
| Queenstown | 6–9 February 1908 | Metropole Theatre | The Executioner’s Daughter No Wedding Bells for Her Hands across the Sea Sacred and Classical Concert |
|
| Waratah | 10 February 1908 | Athenaeum Hall | No Wedding Bells for Her | |
| Launceston | 12 February 1908 | The company leaves on ss Wakatipu, Launceston to Sydney. | ||
| Burnie | 12 February 1908 | Burnie Police Court | William Russell, scene shifter, sues Lilian Meyers and William Patey, for £3 1s, for work done between 23 January and 11 February. Decision: claimant awarded amount claimed, plus court costs, plus counsel's fee. | |
| Launceston | 18 February 1908 | Launceston Court of Requests | J. Newton, W. Artis, W. Russell, and A. Cartledge sue Lillian Meyers for work done, total amount £7 10s. Case struck out because of non-appearance of plaintiffs. |
Endnotes
1. “Overcrowding the Theatre”, Daily Post (Hobart), 6 October 1909, p.4. During the 1909 Nellie Stewart appearance at the Theatre Royal, “police counted 1125 persons leaving the building”. Harry Musgrove, manager of the company, paid a fine. It is surprising that the “official” 1909 capacity is far under the 800 calculated by the Friends of the Theatre Royal in 2025, but the crowded theatre was far over the 800 figure. Thanks to Meyrick Harris and the Friends of the Theatre Royal for helping with my query. Email to Jeannette Delamoir, 26 May 2025.
2. The estimate is based on the report that the 1883 Town Hall, which was replaced in 1921, seated 950, “rather more than double the capacity of the old building”. “Ulverstone”, Examiner (Launceston), 26 May 1921, p.2.
Table B: Population in towns visited (alphabetical order)
Tasmanian Census, 1901. (Mercury [Hobart], 3 September 1901, p.3.)
| Beaconsfield | 2658 |
| Burnie | 1548 |
| Deloraine | 949 |
| Devonport | 673 |
| Hobart | 24,654 |
| La Trobe | 1360 |
| Launceston | 18,022 |
| Queenstown | 5051 |
| Ulverstone | 1164 |
| Waratah | 350 |
| Zeehan | 5014 |
Table C. Repertoire (alphabetical)
| Title | Author | Year first performed |
| Camille | Alexandre Dumas | 1852 |
| The Colleen Bawn | Dion Boucicault | 1860 |
| A Daughter of the Million | Clarence Burnette | Not known, but Lilian Meyers claimed to have performed it for the “first time in the Commonwealth”. “The Woman who Did”, Tasmanian News (Hobart), 21 November 1907, p.2. |
| East Lynne | Ellen Wood (book) | Various adaptations from book’s publication, 1861 onwards. |
| The Executioner’s Daughter | E. Hill-Mitchenson | 1896 |
| Hands across the Sea | Henry Pettit and G.R. Sims | 1887 |
| The Kellys | Unknown | This was claimed to be an “entirely new drama”. “The Kellys”, Mercury (Hobart), 1 January 1908, p.3. |
| The Lady of Lyons | Bulwer Lytton | 1838 |
| My Partner | Bartley Campbell | 1879 |
| The New Magdalen | Wilkie Collins | 1873 |
| No Wedding Bells for Her | Theodore Kremer | 1903 |
| The Sorrows of Satan | Marie Corelli (book) | 1895 Dramatisation by George Darrell. “Lilian Meyers Company”, Daily Telegraph (Launceston), 29 November 1907, p.7. |
| Two Little Drummer Boys | Walter Howard | 1899 |
| Uncle Tom's Cabin | Harriet Beecher Stowe (book) | Numerous versions from book's publication, 1851, onwards. |
| The Woman who Did | Grant Allen | 1896 |
