The Lorgnette, subtitled "Theatrical Journal and Programme" (later "A journal for Amusements"), was a weekly magazine in Melbourne, Australia, devoted to theatre, opera and the concert stage. The magazine was published Saturdays and sold for 2d (two pence) at the major entertainment venues (Theatre Royal, Opera House, Academy of Music, Princess' Theatre, St George's Hall and Town Hall) where it had exclusive rights, and elsewhere.
For much of its existence, a four-page supplement was issued with the Saturday two pence (from 1890 one penny) [1] paper. The supplement was available gratis as a separate publication every other day of the week. [2] This supplement was printed (and contents updated) daily, and datestamped.
In order to promote forthcoming productions as well as providing up-to-date theatre news and current programmes, a great deal of its content was reprinted from one issue to the next, perhaps a unique characteristic of this magazine, while some features changed with every issue, notably the illustrated biographies, a list of which forms a large part of this article.
A sheet called The Lorgnette made its first appearance in Melbourne in July 1865, "a local Punch" without pictures" [3] and was hailed by The Argus for its "considerable spirit". [4]
In April 1877, following a complaint from Joseph Alfred Hildreth, publisher of rival theatrical paper L'Entracte, [5] John J. Liddy, publisher of "The Lorgnette" at Royal lane, off 106 Bourke Street east, was fined £5 with £2 2s. costs for having an unregistered press and types in his possession. [6]
In 1878 William Marshall, of Melbourne's The Record and Emerald Hill and Sandridge Advertiser ("The Record") newspaper, with printing works at Emerald Hill, [7] purchased The Lorgnette and its printery, and continued running both businesses. [8] Marshall divested himself of The Record in 1881. [9]
The printing works was adjacent the Bijou Theatre, Melbourne, which was destroyed by fire in April 1889. Marshall suffered significant losses [10] as did the Brough-Boucicault Comedy Company, lessees of the theatre. Members of the acting community put on a benefit performance for Marshall, which raised £582. Those involved included George Coppin, the Majeronis, J. C. Williamson, Richard Stewart, Grattan Riggs, Fred Maccabe, Alfred Dampier, Henry Harwood, and Bland Holt. [11]
A feature of issues from 11 May 1889 to 6 December 1890 was a biography of a prominent artist, [12] accompanied by a photo-engraved (perhaps leggotype) portrait, a list of which appears below.
In January 1889 Marshall purchased Fred E. Patey's interest in the Theatrical Courier [13] and henceforth the Lorgnette was subtitled "With which is incorporated The Theatrical Courier".
11 May 1889 saw the first of the weekly series of biographies which continued to December 1890.
17 January 1891 was the last (Saturday) weekly issue at 1d. It was followed with an issue labelled "4th Series No. 1" dated 18 January, and was supplied gratis. It appears that, as with the Supplements mentioned above, fresh issues with updates could have been printed every day.
John Liddy, who maintained a personal (if not financial) interest in the paper, died in January 1891 [14]
In 1898 William Marshall & Co. moved from Royal Lane to new premises at 229 Little Collins Street (just above Swanston Street. [15] The old premises had been condemned as unfit in 1895 and again in 1896. [16] Marshall died on 12 June 1900, aged 55, fondly remembered by the theatre community. [17]
Date | Name | aka | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1889 05 11 | Miss Isabel Morris | UK actress [18] | ||
1889 05 11 | Dion Boucicault Jr. | IRE manager [19] | ||
1889 05 11 | Robert Brough | UK actor manager [20] | ||
1889 05 18 | Alfred Dampier | UK actor manager [21] | ||
1889 05 25 | Grattan Riggs | Thomas G. Riggs | US actor [22] | |
1889 06 01 | George S. Coppin | UK actor manager [23] | ||
1889 06 08 | Philip Beck [24] | Phil Beck | UK actor [25] | |
1889 06 15 | Miss Myra Kemble | Mrs J. H. White | AUS actress [26] | |
1889 06 22 | Fred Maccabe [24] | Fred McCabe | UK standup comic [27] Married Mdlle Minnia [28] | |
1889 06 29 | Eduardo Majeroni | ITA actor manager [29] | ||
1889 07 06 | Thomas P. Hudson | UK entertainer / manager [30] | ||
1889 07 13 | Miss Maggie Knight | AUS actress [31] Married H. R. Jewett [28] | ||
1889 07 20 | Harry Lynch | Lynch Family bellringers | AUS bellringer [32] | |
1889 07 27 | Miss Emma Chambers | Mrs Albert Marsh (1889–) | UK actress manager [33] | |
1889 08 03 | Arthur Garner | member, "The Triumvirate" | AUS manager [34] | |
1889 08 10 | G. H. Snazelle | UK entertainer [35] | ||
1889 08 17 | Miss Janet Achurch | UK actress [36] | ||
1889 08 24 | Miss Jennie Lee | UK actress [37] Married J. P. Burnett [28] | ||
1889 08 31 | Signora Majeroni | niece of Ristori | ITA actress [38] | |
1889 09 07 | George Fawcett Rowe | George Fawcett | AUS actor [39] | |
1889 09 14 | The Royal Midgets | General Mite; Mrs Mite Francis J. Flynn (died in Broken Hill November 1898) | entertainers [40] | |
1889 09 21 | Edward Armes Beaumont | Armes Beaumont | AUS operatic tenor [41] | |
1889 09 28 | Henry Edwards | UK actor [42] | ||
1889 10 05 | Wybert Reeve | UK actor playwright [43] | ||
1889 10 12 | Edwin F. Thorne | US actor [44] Note that a correction to the filename is pending at WM Commons | ||
1889 10 19 | Miss Edith Blande [24] | UK actress [45] married critic, stage biographer Austin Brereton (1862–1922) | ||
1889 10 26 | Miss Olive Berkley [24] | US child actress [46] born Olivia Venetia Berkley in New York, 1879, played Little Lord Fauntleroy | ||
1889 11 02 | Martin Simonsen | AUS violinist manager [47] | ||
1889 11 09 | Henry Bracy | UK light opera [48] | ||
1889 11 16 | Miss Elsa May | Elcia May | AUS operatic prima donna [49] Married Boothroyd Fairclough [28] | |
1889 11 23 | Frank Thornton | UK comedian [50] | ||
1889 11 30 | Miss Lilian Tree | UK operatic singer [51] | ||
1889 12 07 | Knight Aston | UK light opera [52] | ||
1889 12 14 | George Sutton Titheradge | UK actor [53] | ||
1889 12 21 | W. G. Carey | AUS actor [54] | ||
1889 12 28 | Miss Lily Dampier | daughter of Alfred | UK actress [55] | |
1890 01 04 | Madame Fanny Simonsen | FRA operatic prima donna [56] | ||
1890 01 11 | Charles Warner | UK actor [57] | ||
1890 01 18 | James Allison | AUS stage manager [58] | ||
1890 01 25 | Miss Fanny Wiseman | Mrs William South | UK actress [59] | |
1890 02 01 | James F. Cathcart | UK actor [60] | ||
1890 02 08 | Mrs Robert Brough | Florence Trevelyan | AUS actress [61] | |
1890 02 15 | George R. Ireland | AUS actor [62] | ||
1890 02 22 | Benjamin N. Jones | US stage manager [63] | ||
1890 03 01 | Mrs Brown-Potter | US actress [64] | ||
1890 03 08 | Miss Gracie Warner | UK actress [65] | ||
1890 03 15 | John Lawrence Toole | UK comedian [66] | ||
1890 03 22 | Madame Marian Burton | UK opera singer [67] | ||
1890 03 29 | George Darrell | AUS actor author [68] | ||
1890 04 05 | George William Anson | UK actor [69] | ||
1890 04 12 | Percy Lyndal | UK actor [70] | ||
1890 04 19 | Miss Pattie Browne | AUS actress [71] Married W. Baumann [28] | ||
1890 04 26 | John Billington | UK actor [72] | ||
1890 05 03 | Jules Simonsen | AUS light opera [73] | ||
1890 05 10 | Alexander Mayne | AUS manager recitations [74] | ||
1890 05 17 | Sir Charles Hallé | UK pianist [75] | ||
1890 05 24 | Henry R. Harwood | UK comedian [76] | ||
1890 05 31 | Dion Boucicault | IRE actor [77] | ||
1890 06 07 | Miss Jenny Watt-Tanner | AUS actress [78] | ||
1890 06 14 | Cecil Ward | AUS actor [79] | ||
1890 06 21 | Professor S. S. Baldwin | US entertainer [80] | ||
1890 06 28 | George Rignold | UK actor [81] | ||
1890 07 05 | Mrs Bland Holt | Florence Anderson | UK actress manager [82] | |
1890 07 12 | William Rignold | UK actor [83] | ||
1890 07 19 | Miss Maude Williamson | UK actress [84] | ||
1890 07 26 | Cecil Forrester | AUS actor [85] | ||
1890 08 02 | Miss Roland Watts-Phillips | UK actress [86] | ||
1890 08 09 | Edward Sass | UK actor [87] | ||
1890 08 16 | A. E. Greenaway | AUS actor [88] | ||
1890 08 23 | Kyrle Bellew | UK actor [89] Married Eugenie Le Grande [28] | ||
1890 08 30 | A. Litherland Cunard | UK stage manager [90] | ||
1890 09 06 | Christine Darrell | AUS actress [91] | ||
1890 09 13 | George Leopold | UK comedian [92] | ||
1890 09 20 | Hubert O'Grady | IRE comedian author [93] | ||
1890 09 27 | Miss Eloise Juno | SCO actress [94] | ||
1890 10 04 | Miss Olga Nethersole | UK actress [95] | ||
1890 10 11 | Miss Maggie Moore | Mrs J. C. Williamson | US actress [96] | |
1890 10 18 | Laurence Cautley | UK actor [97] | ||
1890 10 25 | J. R. Greville | AUS comedian manager [98] | ||
1890 11 01 | Madame Patey | UK singer [99] | ||
1890 11 08 | Mrs Walter Hill | AUS actress [100] | ||
1890 11 15 | Miss Fanny Enson | UK actress [101] | ||
1890 11 22 | Miss E. Romer | UK actress [102] | ||
1890 11 29 | William Elton | UK comedian [103] | ||
1890 12 06 | George Leitch | George Ralf Walker | UK comedian playwright [104] |
Photographic copies of The Lorgnette from 1 July 1878 to 1 December 1898 have been digitized by the National library of Australia and may be accessed via Trove. In the "4th Series" a representative issue from the first of each month has been digitized.
Dion Boucicault Jr. was an actor and stage director. A son of the well-known playwright Dion Boucicault and actress Agnes Robertson, he followed his father into the theatrical profession and made a career as a character actor and a director. In addition to extensive work in the West End of London, he spent considerable time in Australia, where he went into management in the 1880s.
Arthur Garner was a theatrical entrepreneur, active in Australia.
Frederick Hart Pollock was an actor and publican, remembered as the lessee-manager of the Theatre Royal, Adelaide, South Australia.
James Allison was a theatre manager in Sydney, Adelaide and Melbourne. He engaged and managed local and overseas opera, drama, circus, minstrel and variety companies throughout the Australasian colonies.
Fanny Simonsen, also written Fannie Simonsen, was a French soprano singer who had a substantial career on the Australian stage, later a concert manager with her violinist husband Martin Simonsen. Several daughters and one grand-daughter, Frances Alda, were first-rate singers.
The Record was a weekly newspaper published in Melbourne, Victoria, from 1869 to at least 1954, serving Port Melbourne, Albert Park, Middle Park, and Garden City.
The Academy of Music was a theatre in Bourke Street, Melbourne, built in 1876, renamed the Bijou Theatre in 1880, and in June 1884 purchased for £47,000 by John Alfred Wilson. Wilson was the owner of nearby Academy of Music Hotel and Gaiety Theatre, also on Bourke Street.
Robert Brough was born in England to a family prominent in literature and the theatre. He had a notable career as actor and manager in Australia.
Eduardo Majeroni, frequently mis-spelled "Edoardo", was an actor who toured the world with Adelaide Ristori, playing popular Italian dramas in their original language. He and his wife Giulia, a niece of Ristori, left the company in Australia and carved out a career playing the same repertoire in English translations. Giulia was an actress, and their two sons Mario and George had acting careers in America. The surname is pronounced "M'rony".
William John Wilson was a British actor and theatre scenery painter, who had a career in Australia that included theatre management.
Emma Chambers (1848–1933) was an English mezzo-soprano who was popular in Australia.
Boothroyd Fairclough was an American actor, known for playing Shakespearean tragedies.
Frank Towers (1835–1886) was an Australian actor, playwright and stage producer.
Henry Richard Roberts, generally known as "Harry Roberts" was an Australian actor, remembered as husband of actress Maggie Moore following her divorce from J. C. Williamson.
The Haymarket Theatre, or Royal Haymarket Theatre was a live theatre built by George Coppin in the Haymarket district of Melbourne, Australia in 1862 and was destroyed by fire in 1871.
William Hoskins was a Shakespearean actor from England whose later career was mostly in Australia and New Zealand, reputedly "one of the best actors who has ever trod our stage".
Thomas Smith Bellair was an English actor who moved to Australia, where he had his own dramatic company before managing various hotels, finally settling in Wagga Wagga, where his family became prominent citizens.
Robert James Heir was an actor in Australia, best known as the first husband of the great actress Fanny Cathcart.
Frederick George Younge was an English comic actor, in Australia for six years.
George Leitch was an English actor-manager and dramatist who had a substantial career in Australia.