Nex' Town | |
---|---|
Music | Iris Mason Hal Saunders [1] |
Lyrics | Iris Mason Hal Saunders |
Book | Kylie Tennant Maurice Travers |
Setting | Youanmi, Western Australia |
Premiere | 30 October 1957: Independent Theatre, Sydney Australia |
Nex' Town is a 1957 Australian musical by Kylie Tennant and Maurice Travels with music and lyrics by Iris Mason and Hal Saunders. The original production premiered at the Independent Theatre in Sydney, [2] directed by Haydee Seldon and presented by Peter Scriven. [3]
In January 1957 it was reported Peter Scriven and Alan Burke were working on the book for an Australian musical comedy for the Elizabethan Theatre Trust. [4] In April 1957 Scriven returned to Australia after a six week trip overseas and announced the Trust would produce its first musical comedy soon. [5] In the final event the Trust would present Lola Montez , written by Burke, and Scriven's musical, Nex' Town, debuted at the Independent.
Scriven said he chose to do a show about travelling show people because "they are broad and typical. They are like the Diggers." [6]
He arranged for the show to be put together, financing it himself with a combination of his personal wealth and income from his puppet show The Tintookies . (The budget for the production was between £5,000-£6,000.) [7]
The musical was set in a real town, Youani in Western Australia. It was once a thriving town but by 1957 all that was left was a tin shed. [8]
"It's hard to be Australian without being obviously Australian," said Scriven. "I don't know whether one has it in Nex' Town. Perhaps it's a bit much to hope one has. To get a feeling that this is Australian singing, and Australian dancing, is very difficult." [6]
The story of a travelling road show who get stranded in Youanmi, a small Western Australia gold town.
The troupe's baritone knocks out a local and thinks he kills him.
The Sydney Morning Herald called it "probably the best Australian made musical yet staged here" although it felt "the determination to imitate oft-proven American tricks at the cost of any really deep Australian feeling was sometimes a little disheartening" and "it was hard to swallow whole several dreary stretches of dialogue and the long and straggling second act." [10]
The Jewish Times said "The Aussie flavor desperately weaves throughout like the illustrated smell from a freshly cooked pie in animated cartoon." [11]
The Bulletin called it "a delightful musical comedy... musically, the show has been remarkably well served by Iris Mason and Hal Saunders with a string of insistently tuneful ditties... a vigorous and highly entertaining musical, produced with skill and imagination." [12]
The Crime and the Criminal is a 1912 Australian silent film directed by Alfred Rolfe. It features the same railway collision as the climax in Do Men Love Women? (1912) which had come out only a few weeks prior. However the plots of the movies are different.
Painted Daughters is a 1925 Australian silent film directed F. Stuart-Whyte. Only part of it survives today.
Dope is a 1924 Australian silent film about a respected citizen who is blackmailed by someone from his past. It is considered a lost film.
The Fire on the Snow is a 1941 Australian verse play by Douglas Stewart about the Terra Nova Expedition to Antarctica by Robert Falcon Scott. It premiered on ABC radio on 6 June 1941 to great acclaim and inspired a series of Australian verse dramas on ABC radio.
The Little Sheep Run Fast is a 1940 Australian play by Sumner Locke Elliott. Being a drama, it was a change of pace from his first two stage plays which were both comedies.
Serpent in the Rainbow is an Australian mini series which first screened on the ABC in 1973. It was set in the late 19th century.
The Highwayman is an Australian musical comedy with book, music and lyrics by Edmond Samuels. Set in Bendigo during the Gold Rush in the 1860s, the story concerns the love of an innkeeper's daughter for a highwayman.
Down Under is a 1975 Australian play by Bob Ellis and Anne Brooksbank.
Little Fella Bindi is a 1958 Australian musical comedy play by Peter Scriven. Performed by marionettes, it is a sequel to his popular The Tintookies and like that was produced by the Elizabethan Theatre Trust.
The Tintookies is a 1956 Australian musical comedy from Peter Scriven. Produced with marionettes, it was produced by the Elizabethan Theatre Trust.
We Find the Bunyip is a 1955 Australian play by Ray Mathew. It is a comedy set in an Australian country pub.
Barbara is a 1966 Australian stage play by Mona Brand. The original production was sponsored by the Elizabethan Theatre Trust. The Sydney Morning Herald called it "divertingly unpredictable."
West of the Black Stump is a 1964 Australian musical with book and lyrics by Reg Livermore and music by Sandra McKenzie. Described as "a child's game of cowboys for adults", the action takes place in Witchety City around the 1850s, somewhere 'west of the Black Stump'. It was Livermore's second musical after The Good Ship Walter Raleigh.
Cornerstone is a 1956 Australian play by Gwen Meredith.
It All Takes Time is a 1952 Australian stage play by John Watson. It concerned immigration.
Ask No Questions is a 1940 Australian stage play by Gwen Meredith. It had an all-female cast. Meredith wrote it at the request of Doris Fitton who wanted some plays without no men, because male actors were hard to get with the war on.
These Positions Vacant is a 1945 Australian stage play by Gwen Meredith.
The Democrat, or Under the Southern Cross is a 1891 Australian stage play by Edmund Duggan about the Eureka Rebellion. It is the first known stage play on this conflict. It was revived in 1897 under the title Eureka Stockade.
Believe It or Not is a 1940 British play by Alec Coppel. It had a short run in Liverpool then London then Coppell directed the play in Australia in 1942 for Whitehall Productions.
Go West, Young Man is a 1952 Australian play by Maurice Francis.