Victoria Regina (play)
Victoria Regina is a 1934 play by Laurence Housman about Queen Victoria, staged privately in London in 1935, produced on Broadway in 1935, and given its British public premiere in 1937.
Victoria Regina | |
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Written by | Laurence Housman |
Characters | Queen Victoria Albert, Prince Consort Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld |
Original language | English |
Genre | biography |
Background
There was a ban on personations of Victoria in public theatres in Britain, and the play was first given at the Gate Theatre, London in May 1935. The Gate, being a theatre club, was technically private and therefore exempt from the prohibition. In 1936 Edward VIII had the ban revoked, and public performances of the play were possible. The first was in 1937 at the Lyric Theatre, London, where Pamela Stanley repeated her performance in the title role seen at the Gate two years earlier. The play ran at the Lyric for 337 performances.[1]
1937 cast
- Lord Conyngham – Allan Aynesworth
- Archbishop of Canterbury – Douglas Jefferies
- Duchess of Kent – Irma Cioba
- Victoria – Pamela Stanley
- Prince Albert – Carl Esmond
- Prince Ernest – Albert Lieven
- Mr Anson – John Garside
- Lady Muriel – Pamela Carme
- Lady Grace – Frances Clare
- Lady in Waiting – Enid Lindsey
- Duchess of Sutherland – Mabel Terry-Lewis
- Lady Jane – Penelope Dudley Ward
- General Grey – Douglas Jefferies
- John Brown – James Woodburn
- Earl of Beaconsfield – Ernest Milton
- Source: The Times.[2]
Broadway
The play was staged three times on Broadway, New York, between 1935 and 1938. All three productions featured Helen Hayes as Victoria.[3] Hayes as Victoria was recorded on radio on an episode of The Campbell Playhouse.
See also
- Victoria Regina (Hallmark Hall of Fame) - 1961 television adaptation
References
- Mander and Mitchenson, p. 115
- "Lyric Theatre", The Times, 22 June 1937, p. 14
- "Victoria Regina", IBDB. Retrieved 13 July 2020
External links
Sources
- Mander, Raymond; Joe Mitchenson (1963). The Theatres of London. London: Rupert Hart-Davis. OCLC 1151457675.