Jump to content

The Bushrangers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Bushrangers
Written byHenry Melville
Date premiered29 May 1834[1][2]
Place premieredArgyle Rooms, Hobart
Original languageEnglish
Subjectbushrangers
GenreMelodrama

The Bushrangers; or Norwood Vale is a 1834 Australian stage play by Henry Melville. It was the first play with an Australian theme to be published and staged in Australia.[3]

It is not to be confused with the 1829 play The Bushrangers by David Burn. According to Margare Williams, the plays "belong to two very different studies of the bushranging subject, and the immigrant Melville’s is, surprisingly, the less specific of the two. It has about as simple a melodramatic plot as it would be possible to find and seems to confirm the author’s description of it in his foreword to the published text as ‘a theatrical piece, introducing a few Colonial characters’."[4]

History

[edit]

The play was printed in Hobart Town Magazine in April 1834. It was staged in Hobart the following month and in Launceston during November.[5]

It marked the earliest appearance of blackface in an Australian play.[6]

Leslie Rees observed "the play was divided into three acts with thirteen scenes, but on paper it scarcely seemed longer than a one-act play, a series of tableaux with running comments."[7] The play was written relatively quickly. Richard Fotheringham argues "much of this brief play is conventional in character and plot, but its colonial setting and staging lend even its trite and predictable elements an unexpected interest."[8]

Premise

[edit]

A party of bushrangers plot an attack on the bush home of a settler, Norwood, who has a daughter Marian. The settler is saved by his daughter’s lover, Frederick Seymour, previously turned down by the father, and by an Aboriginal, Murrahwa.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Classified Advertising". The Hobart Town Courier (Tas. : 1827 - 1839). Tas.: National Library of Australia. 6 June 1834. p. 3. Retrieved 7 September 2013.
  2. ^ "Advertising". Colonial Times. Vol. 19, no. 943. Tasmania, Australia. 27 May 1834. p. 3. Retrieved 6 July 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  3. ^ E. Flinn, 'Melville, Henry (1799–1873)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University accessed 7 September 2013.
  4. ^ Williams, Margaret (1983). Australia on the popular stage, 1829-1929 : an historical entertainment in six acts. p. 9.
  5. ^ "INNS are a Link with Colourful Past BOOK of the WEEK". The Mercury. Vol. CLXXIII, no. 25, 602. Tasmania, Australia. 10 January 1953. p. 15. Retrieved 28 August 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
  6. ^ Blackface minstrel shows at Creative spirits accessed 7 Sept 2013
  7. ^ Rees, Leslie (1987). Australian drama, 1970-1985 : a historical and critical survey. p. 8.
  8. ^ Fortheringham p 6
[edit]

Bibliography

[edit]