The Bandit on the Rhine | |
---|---|
![]() The Independent 24 Sept 1834 | |
Written by | Evan Henry Thomas |
Date premiered | October 14, 1835[1] |
Place premiered | Launceston |
Original language | English |
The Bandit on the Rhine is a 1835 Australian play by Evan Henry Thomas. It was once considered the first play written and published in Australia although it seems to have been preceded by The Bushrangers and The Tragedy of Donohoe. [2] [3] [4]
An October 1834 advertisement asked for subscriptions so the play could be published. [5] [6]
It debuted in Launceston in 1835. One review said "We cannot do justice to ourselves, if we omit to notice the very little anxiety shewn on the part of the performers generally, to the success of the piece. It is not a production of Shakespeare, certainly, but, with so careless a performance, Shakespeare's best piece must have failed in effect." [7]
The play was performed again in Hobart in 1836. [8]
No copy of the play has been located. [9]
Thomas announced he would publish a romantic drama in five acts, entitled The Rose of the Wilderness, or Emily the Maniac but this does not seem to have happened. [10]
The Bandit on the Rhine | |
---|---|
![]() The Independent 24 Sept 1834 | |
Written by | Evan Henry Thomas |
Date premiered | October 14, 1835[1] |
Place premiered | Launceston |
Original language | English |
The Bandit on the Rhine is a 1835 Australian play by Evan Henry Thomas. It was once considered the first play written and published in Australia although it seems to have been preceded by The Bushrangers and The Tragedy of Donohoe. [2] [3] [4]
An October 1834 advertisement asked for subscriptions so the play could be published. [5] [6]
It debuted in Launceston in 1835. One review said "We cannot do justice to ourselves, if we omit to notice the very little anxiety shewn on the part of the performers generally, to the success of the piece. It is not a production of Shakespeare, certainly, but, with so careless a performance, Shakespeare's best piece must have failed in effect." [7]
The play was performed again in Hobart in 1836. [8]
No copy of the play has been located. [9]
Thomas announced he would publish a romantic drama in five acts, entitled The Rose of the Wilderness, or Emily the Maniac but this does not seem to have happened. [10]