The Ballad of Angel's Alley
The Ballad of Angel's Alley: A Pocket Opera | |
---|---|
Written by | Jeff Underhill |
Music by | Bruce George |
Lyrics by | Jeff Underhill |
Date premiered | December 1958 |
Place premiered | New Theatre, Melbourne |
Original language | English |
Genre | musical |
The Ballad of Angel's Alley: A Pocket Opera is an Australian musical set in Melbourne's "push" wars of the 1890s, with book and lyrics by Jeff Underhill and music by Bruce George.[1]
Production History
1958 Production
It was first seen at Melbourne's New Theatre in 1958, because no commercial management would take it on. “Most managements in this country can’t even read a score”, said Underhill at the time. “They have to go to New York or London to find a musical that they can put on here.”[2][3]
1962 Union Theatre Production
The Ballad of Angel's Alley received a professional premiere in July 1962 at the Russell St Theatre in Melbourne presented by the Union Theatre Repertory Company, featuring Kevin Colson, Mary Hardy, Reg Livermore, Marion Edward and Bob Hornery.[4] It was part of a season of Australian works at the Union Theatre, the others being revivals of The Shifting Heart, The One Day of the Year and Summer of the Seventeenth Doll.
Reviewing the 1962 Melbourne production, The Bulletin said it was "a loud, fast and funny musical" and "a brilliant success - at least as good as the average imported musical, and the best thing of local origin we have seen for years".[5] The script was published by Yackandandah Playscripts in 1989.[4]
Other Productions
It was also performed by NIDA students at Sydney's Old Tote Theatre in September 1963. This production relocated the action to the Sydney Rocks. The Sydney morning Herald called it "unequivocal entertainment."[6]
The play was presented by the New Theatre in Sydney in 1965. The Viaduct Theatre in Melbourne produced it in 1967.
It was revived professionally by Melbourne's St Martin's Theatre in April 1973.[7][4]
Premise
The rivalry between two street gangs, one led by Tiddler and the other by Bill Fiddler. Tiddler dies from influenza rather than in battle, but his daughter Maria takes over the gang.
References
- ^ Pinne, Peter (2010). "The Ballad of Angel's Alley" (PDF). On Stage. Spring 2010: 8–11.
- ^ A Million Miles From Broadway. 2012. p. 164.
- ^ "news of the day". The Age. 22 December 1958. p. 2.
- ^ a b c "The Ballad of Angel's Alley : A Pocket Opera". AustLit. 24 June 2021. Retrieved 21 November 2022.
- ^ Murphy, James (21 July 1962). "HEROIC INTEGRITY". The Bulletin. 84 (4301): 33–32 – via Trove.
- ^ "Angel's Alley". The Sydney Morning Herald. 26 September 1963. p. 9.
- ^ "AusStage - The Ballad of Angel's Alley". www.ausstage.edu.au. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
External links
- Ballad of Angel's Alley at AustLit