The Highway Man | |
---|---|
Music | Edmond Samuels |
Lyrics | Edmond Samuels |
Book | Edmond Samuels |
Productions | 1936 London 1950 Melbourne |
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.
Samuels wrote the play back in 1933. [1]
He travelled to England in 1935 to oversee a production of it in London. [2] [3] The work was retited At the Silver Swan and debuted in Glasgow in 1936. [4] [5]
The book and lyrics were rewritten in England by Guy Bolton and Clifford Gret. [6]
The musical was the first musical comedy with an Australian setting to debut in London. [7]
Smith's Weekly thought the music dated the show. [8] Other reviews were mixed. [9]
The musical was not considered a notable success. [10] However it did run for three months. [11] [12]
"Its Australian theme was unrecognisable by the time producers had finished with it," said Samuels. "They said Aus-tralia wouldn't interest London theatregoers." [13]
Samuels tried to get the play produced in Australia and ended up financing it himself. [14]
The Highwayman premiered at the King's Theatre in Melbourne in November 1950. [15] [16] The Age praised its "originality, snap and gusto." [17] The Bulletin said it was "all very bight and catchy." [18] ABC Weekly said "Samuels until a year or so ago was a very successful Sydney chemist but if he had mixed his drugs as recklessly as he mixes his periods in The Highwayman his customers would have been in a serious plight." [19] The show ran for over a hundred performances. [20]
It played a Sydney season at the Palace Theatre from March 1951. The Sydney Morning Herald said "in many ways the show is imitative and (a lesser fault) old-fashioned in style. It lacks the bold strokes of original invention and new discovery that distinguish great showmanship from ephemeral competence in show making." [21]
An album of songs from the musical was released in 1964.
Mary Brown is an innkeeper's daughter at Eaglehaw. Mervyn Smith is a bushranger.
Jim Steel is a guards officer.
Songs featured in the 1965 TV special Lola and the Highwayman . [22] [23]
The musical was also adapted for radio in 1951 [24] and 1954. [25] Reviewing the latter, the Daily Telegraph said "when Mr. S. uses words, either in dialogue or lyrics, I find the result extremel. depressing." [26]
In 1956 the ABC would broadcast Samuels' musical Song of the Snowy . [27]
The Hayseeds is a 1933 Australian musical comedy from Beaumont Smith. It centres on the rural family, the Hayseeds, about whom Smith had previously made six silent films, starting with Our Friends, the Hayseeds (1917). He retired from directing in 1925 but decided to revive the series in the wake of the box office success of On Our Selection (1932). It was the first starring role in a movie for stage actor Cecil Kellaway.
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 Beckoning Shore is a 1950 novel by E. V. Timms. It was the third in his Great South Land Saga of Australian historical novels, and shifts the action to New South Wales.
Ned Kelly is a 1942 radio play by Douglas Stewart about the outlaw Ned Kelly.
Awake My Love is a 1947 Australian stage play by Max Afford.
Red Sky at Morning is a 1935 Australian stage play by Dymphna Cusack. The play helped launch Cusack's writing career and was filmed in 1943.
Portrait of a Gentleman is a 1940 Australian radio play by George Farwell about Thomas Griffiths Wainewright. It was the first time Wainewright's life had been dramatised.
The Sundowner is an Australian radio series starring Chips Rafferty as a swagman.
A Rum Affair is a 1940 Australian radio play by Alec Coppel.
The Explorers is a 1952 Australian radio play about the Burke and Wills expedition by John Sandford. It was Sandford's first play.
Blood on His Hands is a 1936 Australian novel by Max Afford. It was his first novel and featured Jeffrey Blackburn his detective hero. It was set in Melbourne during that city's Centenary celebrations. Afford wrote the novel for a competition held by John Long a publishers in London, submitted it in December 1934, then while waiting to hear back wrote a sequelo. John Long accepted it and offered a contract for three books. The novel was published in London before Australia.
The Sacred Place is a 1912 Australian play by Louis Esson. It was set amongst Muslims in Melbourne. The play was based on a 1907 short story.
A Cat Across Their Path is a 1939 Australian radio play by Max Afford.
Tales of the Southern Cross is a 1940 Australian radio drama series by Joy Hollyer. It was a series of children's Sunday plays, based on Australian history and true adventure.
The Medea of Euripides is a 1954 Austraslian radio play by Ray Mathew. It was his adaptation of Medea by Euripides.
Nell Stirling was an Australian actor, producer and businesswoman best known for her association with George Edwards in the Sydney radio industry.
The Hunted One is a 1954 Australian radio serial by Ru Pullan. It was based on the Petrov Affair.
Ossie Wenban (1895–1978) was an Australian actor best known for his appearances in Cinesound's Dad Rudd films starring Bert Bailey.
Jean Blue (1906–1972) was an Australian actress, best known for The Overlanders. She worked extensively in theatre, particularly at the New Theatre in Sydney. Blue was also a trained nurse.
Song of the Snowy is an Australian musical by Edmond Samuels, best known for The Highwayman. It had a background of the Snowy Mountains Scheme.