Bonbons and Roses for Dolly

Last updated

Bonbons and Roses for Dolly
Written by Dorothy Hewett
Characters
  • Dolly Garden
  • Ned Corker
  • Mary Corker
  • Jack Garden
  • Maddy Garden
  • Mr Ortabee
  • Ollie Pullitt
  • The Boyfriend
  • The Builder
Date premiered1972
GenreExpressionist
SettingCinema foyer

Bonbons and Roses for Dolly, Dorothy Hewett's fourth full-length play, was written in 1971, soon after The Chapel Perilous . It begins with the rise to riches of three generations of a family, and the opening of their new picture house, the Crystal Palace. Over the years the cinema descends into ruin. The daughter Dolly inherits the decaying theatre. She symbolically shoots her grandparents and parents, then herself, as her dreams crumble.

Contents

Setting

Foyer of a 1938 Art Deco movie house, the Crystal Palace. A central flight of stairs leads up to a perspex mirror-curtain/ projection screen, which acts as a gateway to the wider present and to the past. Blow-up portraits of movie stars of the 1930s and '40s are prominent.

In Act One the theatre is in the process of construction. At completion a neon sign flares out "Crystal Palace".

In Act Two the foyer is shabby, diminished and lit by one dim bulb. All is in decay. The sign says "Cry Palace".

At the start of Act 3 the stage is dark except for a lit central love-seat, a projection screen that is lowered from the flies, and Ortabee sitting at the organ.

Characters

Five Dummies

Synopsis

In keeping with other expressionist works, the play's dialogue is rapidly, almost inconsequentially exchanged between characters. The text is interwoven with songs, recorded music, extravagant lighting effects and media projections.

Act I 1930s

Ortabee and the Wurlitzer cinema organ rise from the pit as he plays "Tiptoe through the tulips" against projected images of brownshirt Nazis and of Dolly glamorously descending the staircase, Ziegfeld Follies style. Ortabee sings the "Bonbons and roses for Dolly" theme. The Builder recites bills of quantities while Mary describes how to perfume gloves, how she became a society dressmaker and met handsome and unreliable Ned Corker, She finds nits in Maddie's long golden curls and has her head shaved. The family move to Western Australia and Mary makes the family fortune. Ned gives up alcohol. Maddy meets Jack, who has returned from the War, and they marry. Ned sings "Old Henry Parkes".The cast talk of memory and wickedness in the bush.

The Worker completes the cinema in 1938. A neon sign "Crystal Palace" lights up. The cast drag in the dummies for a celebration, while lights whirl. Ollie Pullitt has complementary tickets for the first performance. All sing the Bonbons theme, finishing with "All for you" repeated as Dolly sweeps down the stairs, a perfect '30s girl in pale green crepe-de-chine.

Act II 1960s

Ortabee and the Wurlitzer are tatty and ageing. Ortabee tap dances and tells the dummies they were all a great team in the theatre's heyday. He says he "got five years for fumbling little boys in the back stalls". The neon sign now reads "Cry Palace".

Dolly has inherited the cinema and she makes a surprise visit, dowdy and middle-aged. Ortabee sings, "I'd know you anywhere". Dolly knocks a hole in the mirror and walks through. The scene fires up into streamers and action as the decrepit theatre revives. Jack and Ned offer Dolly bonbons and roses. Dolly is waiting for the Boyfriend, who is late. Nazi images are on the screen. Dolly does a semi-strip while singing "Listen darling". She waves her hand like a wand, and the theatre shimmers and fires up a further level. An enormous portrait of a glamorised Dolly descends from the roof. Ortabee, wearing a Liberace coat, and the cast greet Dolly the musical star, sex symbol of a nation. All sing, "You're so marvellous". The Boyfriend arrives, and sings "Sensational Story". Dolly pulls out a pearl-handled revolver and shoots him – and then shoots Ned, Mary, Maddy and Jack. Dolly asks for more bonbons and roses and shoots herself. The lights dim. Ortabee talks about dreams, visions and glamour, then loneliness.

Act III 1972

Scenes and dialogue relate to "The Bomb". Ortabee sings "Violence is as American as cherry pie". Ollie drags in the Mate dummy, sits on the Love Seat, and delivers an outrageous and hilarious monologue in Edna Everage style, proceeding through a Keep Australia White rant, her home abortions in the fridge, the Royal Family and the Fondas, and how she likes a man to be a man. The Corkers and Gardens appear in ghostly light as Ollie discusses them. Mary, Ned, Maddy and Jack express disconnected events in their lives and talk of their graves. They all sing "We're only shadows in a picture show" and leave. Ollie returns and sings "Karakatta Blues" with Ortabee. With the movie show over, Ollie shakes the Mate dummy to wake him and has a menstrual flooding. Ortabee pulls Ollie down and tickles her fancy until she orgasms. The cast all re-enter and sing the "Bonbons" theme: "We made it and we created it all for you".

Performances

Quotations

Music

The music consists of recordings and original songs covering three time periods: Music Hall for Act 1, '60s music in Act 2 and '70s music in Act 3.

The original music from each staging was not published and so had to be re-composed for subsequent performances. The Jane Street compositions by Mervyn Drake included some of Hewett's most memorable songs, including "Bonbons and Roses for Dolly", "Old Henry Parkes" and several others. The Playhouse performance has been recorded. [7]

Themes

The Corker and Garden characters are shades of Hewett's grandparents and parents, and the setting is an idealised version of their cinema the Regal Theatre. [8] The family are from Hewett's 1966 epic poem "Legend of the Green Country", [9] and were later described in considerably more detail in Hewett's autobiography Wild Card. [10] Dolly Garden is a personification of Hewett's childhood longings for Hollywood, while Sally Banner in The Chapel Perilous personified her desire for a literary career.

In Act I, Ned and Mary, echoed by Maddie and Jack, establish a pattern of youthful hopes and dreams succeeded by disgust and lovelessness. In Act II, a despairing Dolly, with all her dreams lost, shoots the phantasms of her family, then herself. Ollie Pullit emerges in Act III, "a monster of nightmarish crudity and vulgarity", in what is the most powerful development in the play.

Arthur Ballet [11] states. "A portrait is presented of life and death, encapsulated in a moving picture house. A strange dreamlike memory of a wondrous world which never existed is contrasted with the suburban, middle-aged Ollie's final, agonising hilarious monologue ... Ollie, a minor character (a member of the audience in fact) becomes the driving force and living factor of the play, the theatre house and the world stage...Little is sacred and everything is." [12]

The play as written presents considerable challenges for set design and lighting.

Reception and criticism

The initial performance in Perth in 1972 was terminated four days early after vandalism at the theatre. The audience were sharply divided; people either regarded it as an obscenity and walked out, or recognised it as a poetic drama of some complexity and saw it several times. In a 1972 unpublished letter, Hewett thought the play was "by far the best thing I have done" while describing the public hostility as violent, pathological and heartbreaking. Reactions included pornographic letters to the theatre, destruction of posters, the photographs in the foyer tom up and shoved down the toilet, and cancellations of season tickets. [13]

The negative audience reaction seems to have been partly the result of confusing publicity. "Far from being a nostalgic trip into local history with overtones of contemporary relevance, it was an expressionist mosaic of time, past and time present, rendered in poetic shorthand and punctuated with songs." There were elements of sexual chauvinism in the negative response, in that the "blue" elements consisted of "women's business" – abortion, menstrual flooding and female orgasm. The predominantly middle-class suburban audience was confused by the explosive expressionism of the action. There was considerable uncertainty as to what was real and what was imaginary (for example, it is not clear in Act II if Dolly actually becomes a star or whether this is a dream). Act III is a powerful tour-de-force separated in style from the rest of the play, which Margot Luke believes is "diffracting and diffusing of understanding rather than aiding it." [14]

The second production in Sydney in 1973 starred Wendy Blacklock as Dolly, Maggie Dence as Ollie, Max Phipps as Ned, Babs McMillan as Mary, and Mervyn Drake as Ortabee. The play was very well received and the season was extended. [15]

However, Harry Kippax, the drama critic of the Sydney Morning Herald, who was mostly hostile to Hewett's work, got up and left the theatre during the "flooding" scene and gave the play a withering review. A lollipop of hopeful entertainment … dress this unarticulated skeleton of a piece in pseudo-poetry, garnish heavily with symbolism and self-pity… In even the lightest trifle in the theatre, making-it-up-as-you go is no substitute for a beginning, a middle and an end.” [16] According to the director Aubrey Mellor, Kippax subsequently led a "real vendetta" against Hewett. [17]

Awards

The script shared an AWGIE Award for Stage in 1974.

Related Research Articles

<i>Hello, Dolly!</i> (musical) 1964 Broadway musical

Hello, Dolly! is a 1964 musical with lyrics and music by Jerry Herman and a book by Michael Stewart, based on Thornton Wilder's 1938 farce The Merchant of Yonkers, which Wilder revised and retitled The Matchmaker in 1955. The musical follows the story of Dolly Gallagher Levi, a strong-willed matchmaker, as she travels to Yonkers, New York, to find a match for the miserly "well-known unmarried half-a-millionaire" Horace Vandergelder.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dorothy Lamour</span> American actress and singer (1914–1996)

Dorothy Lamour was an American actress and singer. She is best remembered for having appeared in the Road to... movies, a series of successful comedies starring Bing Crosby and Bob Hope.

<i>Annie Get Your Gun</i> (musical) 1946 musical by Irving Berlin

Annie Get Your Gun is a musical with lyrics and music by Irving Berlin and a book by Dorothy Fields and her brother Herbert Fields. The story is a fictionalized version of the life of Annie Oakley (1860–1926), a sharpshooter who starred in Buffalo Bill's Wild West, and her romance with sharpshooter Frank E. Butler (1847–1926).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maddy Prior</span> English singer

Madelaine Edith Prior MBE is an English folk rock singer, best known as the lead vocalist of Steeleye Span. She was born in Blackpool and moved to St Albans in her teens. Her father, Allan Prior, was co-creator of the police drama Z-Cars. She was married to Steeleye bass guitarist Rick Kemp, and their daughter, Rose Kemp, is also a singer. Their son, Alex Kemp, is, like his father, a guitarist and has deputised for his father playing bass guitar for Steeleye Span. She was part of the singing duo 'Mac & Maddy', with Mac MacLeod. She then performed with Tim Hart and recorded two albums with him, before they helped to found the group Steeleye Span, in 1969. She left Steeleye Span in 1997, but returned in 2002, and has toured with them since. With June Tabor she was the singing duo Silly Sisters. She toured with the Carnival Band, in 2007, and with Giles Lewin and Hannah James, in 2012 and 2013. She has released singles and albums as a solo artist, with these bands and in several collaborations. She runs an Arts Centre called Stones Barn, in Bewcastle, in Cumbria, which offers residential courses.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dorothy Hewett</span> Australian feminist poet, playwright and novelist

Dorothy Coade Hewett was an Australian playwright, poet and author, and a romantic feminist icon. In writing and in her life, Hewett was an experimenter. As her circumstances and beliefs changed, she progressed through different literary styles: modernism, socialist realism, expressionism and avant garde. She was a member of the Australian Communist Party in the 1950s and 1960s, which informed her work during that period.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Binnie Hale</span> English actress, singer and dancer

Beatrice "Binnie" Mary Hale-Monro was an English actress, singer and dancer. She was one of the most successful musical theatre stars in London in the 1920s and 1930s, able to sing leading roles in operetta as well as musicals, and she was popular as a principal boy in pantomime. Her best-remembered roles were in the musicals No, No, Nanette (1925) and Mr. Cinders (1929), in which she sang "Spread a Little Happiness".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Herschend Family Entertainment</span> Private entertainment company

Herschend Family Entertainment (HFE) is a privately owned themed-entertainment company that operates several theme parks and tourist attractions within the United States, and as of 2021, one aquarium in Vancouver, Canada.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Leonora Braham</span> English singer and actress (1853–1931)

Leonora Braham was an English opera singer and actress primarily known as the creator of principal soprano roles in the Gilbert and Sullivan comic operas.

Rachel York is an American actress and singer. She is known for stage roles in City of Angels, The Scarlet Pimpernel, Les Misérables, Victor/Victoria, Kiss Me, Kate, Sly Fox, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels and Anything Goes. She also has many film and television credits, including her portrayal of Lucille Ball in the CBS biographical film Lucy.

Miss Dolly Dollars is a musical comedy written in two acts with the book and lyrics by Harry B. Smith and music by Victor Herbert. The musical concerns a wealthy American girl in Europe, who is sought after by bankrupt aristocrats. Its score includes a few famous songs such as "A Woman is Only a Woman ".

<i>Houp La!</i>

Houp La! is an Edwardian musical comedy extravaganza, with music by Nat D. Ayer and Howard Talbot, lyrics by Percy Greenbank and Hugh E. Wright, and a book by Fred Thompson and Hugh E. Wright. The story combines the comic financial troubles of a circus owner with a love triangle.

<i>The Star Maker</i> (1939 film) 1939 film by Roy Del Ruth

The Star Maker is a 1939 American musical film directed by Roy Del Ruth, written by Frank Butler, Don Hartman and Arthur Caesar, and starring Bing Crosby, Louise Campbell, Linda Ware, Ned Sparks, Laura Hope Crews, Janet Waldo and Walter Damrosch. Filming started in Hollywood on April 17, 1939 and was finished in June. The film was released on August 25, 1939, by Paramount Pictures, and had its New York premiere on August 30, 1939. It was the only film in which Crosby played a happily married man.

<i>You Will Remember</i> 1941 film

You Will Remember is a 1941 British musical drama film directed by Jack Raymond and starring Robert Morley, Emlyn Williams and Dorothy Hyson. It portrays the life of the composer Leslie Stuart. Featured songs include, Tell Me Pretty Maiden, Sue, Florodora, Lily of Laguna, Soldiers of the King and Dolly Daydream.

<i>Sweet Adeline</i> (1934 film) 1934 film by Mervyn LeRoy

Sweet Adeline is a 1934 musical film adaptation of the 1929 Jerome Kern/Oscar Hammerstein II Broadway play of the same title. It stars Irene Dunne and Donald Woods and was directed by Mervyn LeRoy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shaun Glenville</span> Irish actor (1884–1968)

Shaun Glenville was an Irish actor who specialised in pantomime performances - he would play the dame while his wife Dorothy Ward would play the principal boy. The music hall historian Christopher Pulling called him one of the 'grand comedians of the music-halls'. He had a successful 62-year career and played in over 40 pantomimes.

This Old Man Comes Rolling Home, Dorothy Hewett's first full-length play, was written in 1965. It captures the spirit and character of Redfern, an inner-city suburb of Sydney sometimes called "Australia's last slum". The play is ‘slice of life', following about six months in the life of the Dockertys, an extended family of seven children and partners, during the early 1950s. The family is subject to various stresses: most significantly because the mother is an alcoholic, largely lost in dreams of her youth.

The Chapel Perilous, Dorothy Hewett's third full-length play, was written in 1970. The play is Expressionist in style, where the theatrical spectacle dominates the plot. It introduces Sally Banner, a picaresque heroine moving without success through a search for love and freedom, while oppressed by authority figures and disappointed by unsatisfactory lovers. She is, in brief succession, a defiant schoolgirl, a promiscuous wartime student, a Communist, a suburban de facto, and a well-known poet. It is recognised as Hewett's best play.

The Man from Mukinupin is a musical play by Dorothy Hewett. It was commissioned in 1978 to mark Western Australia's sesquicentenary, and is her most popular and successful play. It is a romantic comedy in two acts covering the periods 1912 to 1914 and 1918 to 1920. The play involves the principles of celebration and reconciliation, providing a "rich theatrical experience with song, dance, humour, and powerful incident."

The Tatty Hollow Story, Dorothy Hewett's fifth full-length play, and last of a series of expressionist plays, was written in 1974 after Hewett's move from Perth to Sydney.

Pandora's Cross is a rock musical by Dorothy Hewett with original music by Ralph Tyrrell, set in Sydney's red light district King's Cross, and incorporating various mythical characters or characters loosely based on colourful identities.

References

  1. "State Library of Western Australia". 3 April 2020. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  2. "Alexander Hay". IMDb. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  3. "Mervyn Drake". kodiapps.com. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
  4. "Hunter Living Histories". University of Newcastle. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  5. "Heidelberg Theatre Company collection". Victorian Collections.
  6. "Amateur". The Age. 26 August 1988. p. 38.
  7. "Australian Live Performance Database". AusStage. Retrieved 10 August 2022.
  8. Flood, Joe (2013). "Dorothy Hewett and her forbears". Unravelling the Code: The Coads and Coodes of Cornwall and Devon. Melbourne: Deluge. pp. 362–369, 668–671. ISBN   9780992328108.
  9. Sykes, Alrenc (1 April 1978). "Dorothy Hewett: Playwright of splendid moments". Journal of Postcolonial Writing. 17 (1): 106–113. doi:10.1080/17449857808588510. ISSN   0093-1705 via Taylor and Francis online.
  10. Hewett, Dorothy (2012). Wild Card: An Autobiography 1923-1958. UWA Publishing. ISBN   978-1-74258-395-2.
  11. Hurwitt, Robert (9 February 2012). "Professor, NEA theater chief Arthur Ballet dies". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
  12. Ballet, Arthur (1976). "All loonies together". Dorothy Hewett. Bon-bons and roses for Dolly; The Tatty Hollow story: two plays. Currency Press. pp. v–ix. ISBN   978-0-86937-047-6.
  13. National Library. Dorothy Hewett Correspondence, 1967-73. Unpublished letter dated 18 July 1972.
  14. Luke, Margot (1972). "Insight and outrage: Dorothy Hewett's new play". Westerly. 4: 37–40.
  15. G.B. (26 July 1973). "Theatre: "Bon bons"". Australian Jewish Times. p. 6. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
  16. Kippax, H. G. (30 June 1973). "Presenting first, middle and last picture show". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 19.
  17. "Dorothy Hewett and The Chapel Perilous | Double Dialogues". doubledialogues.com. Retrieved 19 September 2023.

Resources

Dorothy Hewett (1976). Bon-bons and roses for Dolly; The Tatty Hollow story: two plays . Currency Press.

Margot Luke (1972). Insight and outrage: Dorothy Hewett's new play. Westerly 4: 37-40