Thunderbolt | |
---|---|
Written by | A. Joseph Ambrose Pratt |
Based on | Three Years with Thunderbolt by William Monckton |
Characters | Captain Thunderbolt |
Date premiered | 14 October 1905 [1] |
Place premiered | Theatre Royal, Sydney |
Original language | English |
Thunderbolt is a 1905 Australian play about the bushranger Captain Thunderbolt, based on the book Three Years with Thunderbolt by William Monckton. [2]
Monckton's narrative was serialised in The Argus newspaper. It was popular and was adapted by Ambrose Pratt and A. Joseph for the stage in 1905. [3] [4]
Producer William Anderson said "This production is absolutely Australian. It has been written by Australian playwrights. The characters are Australian notabilities. The scenery has been painted by Australian painters. It will be acted by Australian artists, and played before Australian audiences. Advance Australia!" [5]
The Bulletin said "the house most obviously liked it. No howling London melodrama of the last two Anderson seasons has been better received. As a piece of entertainment it answered its purpose. The Andersonian audience wants plenty of action, and “Thunderbolt” supplies that... You get an evening of Thunderbolt with an interesting and reasonably sober plot thrown in, and a menagerie of wallabies, kookaburras, mail coaches, and cockatoos to add more local color to Reg Robins’ New England (N.S.W.) scenery." [6]
The Evening News said "Thunderbolt was imaginatively drawn, his opinions and his method of moralising being struck in too intellectual a key. " [7]
The Sydney Morning Herald said "In the plot, Thunderbolt...is depicted as an outlaw who robs the rich but spares the poor, and who, indeed, generously assists the latter from funds nefariously acquired from other people. He has a high opinion of his own virtue, and mentions the fact in verbose language, couched in terms refined enough to make the wallabies in his vicinity sit up with admiration, and subdue the desire of the kookaburras to laugh as they listen to his glowing rhetoric." [8]
The Age called it "a good, honest and thoroughly workmanlike melodrama on more or less conventional lines, in which a sentimental interest is handled judiciously and the sensational element plays a smaller part than in many of Mr. Anderson's imported pieces. There are several admirably planned situations and tableaus, a story that runs evenly and plausibly, a really humorous comic relief, and above all things an application of local" color to the scenes and a local idiom to the dialogue which make a direct and immediate appeal to an Australian audience." [9]
The play was structured as follows: [10]
The play was produced by William Anderson and starred Eugenie Duggan. [11]
Cast of the original production: [12]
A cast list from a 1910 production was:
The play was turned into the 1910 film Thunderbolt .
Thunderbolt is a 1910 Australian feature film based on the life of the bushranger Captain Thunderbolt. It was the directorial debut of John Gavin who later claimed it was the first "four-reel movie" made in Australia. It has also been called the first film made in New South Wales.
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Eugenie Marian Duggan was a popular Australian stage actress. She was the sister of the actors Edmund, P.J. and Kathleen Duggan. She began studying acting, won a number of elocution competitions and made her professional debut in 1890 in Romeo and Juliet.
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