أنت هنا

قراءة كتاب A Book of Burlesque Sketches of English Stage Travestie and Parody

تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"

‏اللغة: English
A Book of Burlesque
Sketches of English Stage Travestie and Parody

A Book of Burlesque Sketches of English Stage Travestie and Parody

تقييمك:
0
لا توجد اصوات
المؤلف:
دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 1


A
BOOK OF BURLESQUE

Sketches

OF
ENGLISH STAGE TRAVESTIE
AND PARODY

BY
WILLIAM DAVENPORT ADAMS
Author of "A Dictionary of English Literature," "Rambles in Book-Land" etc., etc.

WITH PORTRAITS OF F. C. BURNAND, W. S. GILBERT, AND G. R. SIMS

LONDON
HENRY AND CO., BOUVERIE STREET, E.C.
1891


The Whitefriars Library of Wit and Humour.


Vol. I.

ESSAYS IN LITTLE. By Andrew Lang.       [Seventh Thousand.

Vol. II.

SAWN OFF: A Tale of a Family Tree. By G. Manville Fenn.       [Fourth Thousand.

Vol. III.

A LITTLE IRISH GIRL. By the Author of "Molly Bawn."       [Ready.

Vol. IV.

THREE WEEKS AT MOPETOWN. By Percy Fitzgerald.       [Ready.

Vol. V.

A BOOK OF BURLESQUE. By William Davenport Adams.       [Ready.

Vol. VI.

IN A CANADIAN CANOE. By Barry O. E. Pain, B.A.       [July.


PREFACE.

In the pages that follow, I make no attempt to supply a consecutive and comprehensive history of English stage travestie. This would have been impossible within the limits assigned to me. My object has been simply to furnish an introduction to such a history, supplemented by sketches of the various groups into which English stage burlesques naturally fall, with such extracts as might serve to exhibit the respective methods of individual travestie-writers. My business has been with the literary rather than the histrionic side of burlesque—with the witty and humorous, rather than the purely theatrical, features of the subject with which I had to deal. At the same time, I hope that the details I have been able to give concerning dates, and "casts," and so on, may be useful to at least a large section of my readers.


I ought to say that, while I have endeavoured to mention all the most representative burlesques of which our stage history keeps record, I have intentionally left outside of my scheme all "extravaganzas," "bouffoneries musicales," and other such miscellaneous varieties of comic literature,—confining myself to definite and deliberate travesties of subjects previously existent.


I have to thank more than one kind friend for information and material supplied, and more than one living writer of burlesque for the opportunity of consulting his "prompt books" and thus quoting from unpublished work.

Davenport Adams, jun.

Note.—Those who desire to extend their acquaintance with the literature of English stage burlesque may be recommended to turn first to the travesties published by Mr. French, which include those by Planché, and many by the Broughs, H. J. Byron, Talfourd, F. C. Burnand, etc. Mr. Gilbert's "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern" is to be found in his volume entitled "Foggerty's Fairy, and Other Stories." A large proportion of the burlesques discussed, quoted, or mentioned in the following chapters are out of print, and to be seen only at the British Museum, on the second-hand bookstalls, or on the shelves of private collectors.

[We beg to acknowledge the courtesy of MM. Walèry, Limited, in permitting us to avail ourselves of their photographs of Messrs. Burnand and Gilbert; and of Mr. Bassano for the same permission in regard to that of Mr. G. R. Sims.Ed. W. L.]


CONTENTS.

PAGE
I. THE BEGINNINGS OF BURLESQUE 1
II. THE "PALMY" DAYS 33
III. "CLASSICAL" BURLESQUE 44
IV. BURLESQUE OF FAËRIE 72
V. BURLESQUE OF HISTORY 99
VI. BURLESQUE OF SHAKESPEARE 121
VII. BURLESQUE OF MODERN DRAMA 146
VIII. BURLESQUE OF OPERA 174
IX. BURLESQUE OF FICTION AND SONG 193
X. THE NEW BURLESQUE 207

A BOOK OF BURLESQUE.


I.

THE BEGINNINGS OF BURLESQUE.

Who shall say when the spirit of burlesque first made its appearance on our stage? There were traces of it, we may be sure, in the Mysteries and Moralities of pre-Elizabethan days; the monkish dramatists were not devoid of humour, and the first lay playwrights had a rough sense of ridicule. The "Vice" which figured in so many of our rude old dramas had in him an element of satire, and the

الصفحات