St Helena | |
---|---|
Written by | R.C. Sheriff |
Characters | Napoleon Bonaparte |
Date premiered | 4 February 1936 |
Place premiered | Old Vic London |
Original language | English |
Subject | Napoleon |
Genre | Biographical |
Setting | Longwood House, St. Helena, 1815 |
St Helena: a play in twelve scenes is a play by the English author R. C. Sherriff (notable as the author of the First World War drama Journey's End) and Jeanne de Casalis (who also researched it). It deals with the exile of Napoleon I on Saint Helena. In a production by Henry Cass, it premiered at the Old Vic on 4 February 1936 to poor reviews, but was rescued by a letter to The Times by Winston Churchill, calling it "a remarkable play" and "a work of art of a very high order"; though a West End transfer also proved unsuccessful.[1][2]
Original cast
- General Count Bertrand - Ion Swinley
- General Count Montholon - Leo Genn
- General Baron Gourgaud - Clement McCallin
- Napoleon - Kenneth Kent
- Admiral Sir George Cockburn - Raymond Huntley
- Captain Nicholls - Robert Craven
- Count Las Cases - Alan Wheatley
- Sir Hudson Lowe - Cecil Trouncer
- Dr. O'Meara - William Devlin
- Dr. Antommarchi, Ship's Carpenter - Alec Clunes
- Marine - Eric Wynn-Owen
- St. Denis - Anthony Quayle
- Marchand - Richard Warner
- Cipriani - Alwyn Whatsley
- French Servants - Phillip Bowen
Denis Carew - English Sailors - John Franklyn
John Jameson - Novarrez - George Woodbridge
- Officer, Trooper - Guy Haslewood
- Subaltern - John Franklyn
- Napoleon Bertrand - Tony Wickham
- Tristan - Eric Sutton
- Abe Buonavita - Charles Doe
- Abbe Vignali - Christopher Casson
- Chinese Gardeners - Alan Foss
John Kennedy
John Jameson - Countess Montholon - Vivienne Bennett
- Countess Bertrand - Ursula Granville
- Hortense Bertrand - Glynis Johns
- Mulatto Maid - Fredericka Allen
Broadway production
The play opened at Broadway's Lyceum Theatre in October 1936, with Maurice Evans as Napoleon, and ran for 63 performances.[3]
Adaptation
St Helena was presented as the February 27, 1949, episode of The Philco Television Playhouse on NBC. The trade publication Variety described Dennis King's portrayal of Napoleon as "an admirable characterization".[4]
Sources
- R. C. Sherriff, No Leading Lady (London: Victor Gollancz Ltd, 1968), pages 297 to 308
- A New Play About Napoleon - The Times, Thursday, Jan 30, 1936; pg. 12;
References
- ↑ Wearing, J. P. (15 May 2014). The London Stage 1930-1939: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780810893047 – via Google Books.
- ↑ "Production of St Helena | Theatricalia". theatricalia.com.
- ↑ "St. Helena – Broadway Play – Original | IBDB".
- ↑ "Tele Follow-up Comment". Variety. 2 March 1949. p. 34. Retrieved 4 February 2023.
External links
- St Helena at the Internet Broadway Database
- Openlibrary.org
- 1953 Broadcast of condensed version of play performed for Best Plays at Internet Archive