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Alice in Wonderland (musical)

Alice in Wonderland is a musical by Henry Savile Clarke[1] (book and lyrics), Walter Slaughter (music) and Aubrey Hopwood (lyrics), based on Lewis Carroll's books Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking-Glass (1871).[2] It debuted at the Prince of Wales Theatre in the West End in 1886.

Alice in Wonderland
Programme for the original production of Alice in Wonderland (1886)
MusicWalter Slaughter
LyricsLewis Carroll, Henry Savile Clarke and Aubrey Hopwood
BookH. Savile Clarke
BasisLewis Carroll's novels
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass
Productions1886 West End
West End revivals in 1888, 1898, 1900, 1906, 1908, 1910, 1914, 1915, 1916, 1921, and 1927

The piece, billed as "A musical dream play in two acts", achieved considerable popularity. At Carroll's request, Slaughter retained the old tunes in the parodies such as "Bonny Dundee".[3]

Background

There were several amateur productions of Alice after the book's publication, and Carroll himself considered dramatizing the story for the professional stage. In 1877 he wrote to Arthur Sullivan (of Gilbert and Sullivan) in an attempt to persuade him to write the songs for a musical production. Sullivan was interested in the idea and proposed that he would compose a score to Carroll's libretto. Carroll hesitated, partly at the high fee Sullivan suggested for his work. Wanting to know what he would get for his money, Carroll suggested that Sullivan first score a song or two. After this the proposed collaboration fizzled out.[4]

 
Phoebe Carlo as Alice, Edgar Norton as Hare, Dorothy D'Alcourt as Dormouse and Sydney Harcourt as Hatter in the original production (1886)

In August 1886 the dramatist and critic Henry Savile Clarke wrote to Carroll asking to adapt Alice in Wonderland for the stage.[4] Carroll gave permission but with several stipulations:

There are one or two wishes on the subject, which I will name for your consideration: but the only essential consideration is that I should have your written guarantee that, neither in the libretto nor in any of the stage business, should any coarseness, or anything suggestive of coarseness, be admitted. ... This piece ought to be an Operetta (like The Mikado) and not a Pantomime.[5]

Carroll was involved completely in the production from beginning to end, offering advice on everything from the adaptation of the novel to choosing the cast.[6][7] He chose the child actress Phoebe Carlo for the title role, bought her costumes at his own expense and sent her to the actress Kate Terry for lessons in elocution.[8] Dorothy D'Alcourt, who played the Dormouse, was aged 6+12.[9]

The production opened on 23 December 1886 at the Prince of Wales Theatre in London. The Theatre described the piece as a pantomime but wrote in its review,[10] "Alice in Wonderland will not appeal to the children alone. ... Mr. Savile Clarke has done wonders. ... The play is beautifully mounted, and splendidly acted, Miss Phœbe Carlo being very successful as the little heroine... she played in a delightful and thoroughly artistic fashion, and in this respect she was closely followed by a tiny mite, Miss Dorothy D'Alcort, who plays first the Dormouse. ... Mr. Edgar Bruce, Mr. Walter Slaughter (who has written some charming music for the piece), and Mr. Savile Clarke, all deserve unstinted praise."[11] The piece was frequently revived over the next four decades.

Synopsis

 
1898 revival: Rose Hersee talking to the White Rabbit

Act I, "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland", is in two scenes: "A Forest in Autumn" and "A Glade in Wonderland".[12] Act II, "Through the Looking Glass", consists of four scenes: "Through the Looking Glass"; "The Garden of Live Flowers"; "A Sea-Shore"; and "The Banqueting Hall – The Forest Again."[12] A review in The Theatre summarised the story as follows:

The story runs glibly, opening with a chorus of fairies surrounding Alice asleep in a chair beneath a tree, from there we progress splendidly, making a new acquaintance with all our old friends, the White Rabbit, the Caterpillar, the duchess with her Baby, the Cook with her reckless use of pepper, the Cheshire Cat with his remarkable smile, the Hatter, the Hare, and the Dormouse, who have their perpetual tea party, and treat Alice to conundrums and unconventional rudeness. Then comes a long and brilliant procession, which should fill Alice's heart with awe, if not with admiration, but our heroine is nothing daunted by this large crowd. "Why, they're only a pack of cards," she says, "I needn't be afraid of them?" and so she answers the sanguinary-minded queen of Hearts, in a reckless manner, and refuses to see heads knocked off in such profusion. She then dances with the Cards in a graceful gavotte, and afterwards protects her old friend, the Cheshire Cat, from an undeserved execution. The Gryphon and Mock Turtle then appear, and Alice receives some hints as to a sea education, and the first act of the dream play for children ends with the trial of the Knave of Hearts for eating the tarts, in which Alice's verdict of acquittal is unanimously passed.
In the second act, Mr. Savile Clarke takes us to another book, Through the Looking-Glass, and Alice is introduced to the chessmen and Chorus, who dance stiffly for her delectation, then the Red Queen gives her some advice after she has spoken to the live flowers, and Tweedledum and Tweedledee appear. She soon makes friends with these massive twins, and pleads hard when they determine to have a mortal combat, but all to no purpose, and so after she has witnessed the greedy Carpenter and Walrus devour their daily portion of oysters, she assists in arming Tweedledum and Tweedledee for the fray. The arrival of a Crow sends the warriors to speedy flight, and Humpty Dumpty appears on his wall, and so the play goes on until we see Alice once more asleep in her chair, and hear her wake to say, "Oh! I've had such a curious dream!"[11]

Songs

 
Score for Alice in Wonderland (1906)

Act I – In Wonderland

  • No. 1 - Chorus - "Sleep, Alice, sleep as we circle around thee"
  • No. 2 - Alice - "How doth the little crocodile improve his shining tail"
  • No. 3 - Alice - "'You are old, Father William,' the young man said"
  • No. 4 - Duchess - "Speak roughly to your little boy and beat him when he sneezes"
  • No. 5 - Alice & Cheshire Cat - "Cheshire Pussy thanks to thee"
  • No. 6 - Hare, Hatter and Alice - "The poor Hatter's very mad, so they say, so they say"
  • No. 6a - March
  • No. 7 - Gavotte of Cards - "King, Queen and Knave, here we are seen, dancing."
  • No. 7a - Entrance of Executioner - "Here comes the Executioner!"
  • No. 8 - Executioner's Chorus, with Queen and King - "He is the executioner"
  • No. 9 - Mock-Turtle - "Beautiful soup, so rich and green"
  • No. 10 - Gryphon - "'Will you walk a little faster,' said a whiting to a snail"
  • No. 11 - Alice - "'Tis the voice of the lobster I hear him declare"
  • No. 12 - Finale Act I - "'Not guilty,' I declare"[13]

Act II – Through the Looking-Glass

 
Libretto for the original production (1886)
  • No. 1 - Chorus - "Here ranged in due order of battle we stand with Red King and White King and Queens on each hand"
  • No. 2 - Red Queen - "'Twas brillig and the slithy toves did gyre and gimble in the wabe"
  • No. 2a - Entrance of Lily and Rose
  • No. 2b - Entrance
  • No. 2c - Exit
  • No. 2d - Waltz - Alice and Flowers
  • No. 2e - Hatter's Entrance
  • No. 2f - Alice - "Tell me why you look so wild and strange"
  • No. 3 - "Tweedle-Dum and Tweedle-Dee agreed to have a battle"
  • No. 4 - Chorus - "Here we go round the Mulberry bush"
  • No. 4a - Entrance of Walrus and Carpenter
  • Nos. 5 & 6 - Oyster Scene - "The Carpenter is sleeping, the butter's on his face"
  • No. 7 - Alice - "Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall, Humpty Dumpty had a great fall"
  • No. 8 - Chorus of Children - "Humpty Dumpty's fallen down, Humpty Dumpty, Humpty Dumpty's broke his crown"
  • No. 9 - Chorus - "The Lion and the Unicorn were fighting for the Crown"
  • No. 10 - Hatter - "When the wind is in the East, on new-laid eggs I always feast!"
  • No. 10a - Change of Scene
  • No. 11 - Chorus - "Sound the festal trumpets, set the bells a-ringing"
  • No. 12 - Finale - "Alice's health, long life and wealth, never a monarch so mighty was seen"[13]

Supplementary numbers

  • "Flowerland" - "Flow'rs awake from out your long repose, snowdrops peep from under Winter's snow"
  • "Naughty Little Bunny" - "When a rabbit's good as gold, always does what he is told"[13]

Original cast (1886)

Act I – Alice's Adventures in Wonderland / Act II – Through the Looking-Glass

  • Alice – Phoebe Carlo
  • White Rabbit/Red King – Master D. Abrahams
  • Caterpillar/ Unicorn – Master S. Solomon
  • Duchess/Lily – Florence Levey
  • Cook/White King – Anna Abrahams
  • Cheshire Cat/ Lion – Charles Adeson
  • Hatter/Tweedledum – Sidney Harcourt
  • Hare – Edgar Norton
  • Dormouse/Plum Pudding – Dorothy D'Alcourt
  • King of Hearts/White Knight – Stephen Adeson
  • Queen of Hearts/Red Queen – Mdlle. Rosa
  • Knave of Hearts/White Queen – Kitty Abrahams
  • Executioner/The Carpenter – Mr. H. H. H. Cameron
  • Gryphon/The Walrus – Charles Bowland
  • Mock Turtle/Humpty Dumpty – William Cheesman
 
Maidie Andrews as Alice in Alice Through the Looking-GlassThe Tatler (January 1904)
  • Rose – Mabel Love
  • Red Knight – C. Kitts
  • Tweedledee – John Ettinson
  • Leg of Mutton – Master Hood[13]

Subsequent productions

The musical was frequently revived during West End Christmas seasons during the four decades after its premiere. London productions were mounted at the Globe Theatre in 1888, with Isa Bowman as Alice;[14] the Opera Comique in 1898;[15] the Vaudeville Theatre in 1900, with some new additional music by Slaughter;[12][16] the Camberwell Theatre in 1902; the Prince of Wales's Theatre (1906);[17] the Savoy Theatre in 1908 produced by William Greet; the Savoy in 1910;[18] the Wimbledon Theatre in 1914;[19] the Savoy in 1914; the Duke of York's Theatre in 1915; the Savoy in 1916;[20] the Garrick Theatre in 1921;[21] and the Savoy in 1927.[22]

Adult actors who appeared along with the mainly juvenile casts included Irene Vanbrugh as the Knave of Hearts (1888);[23] Ellaline Terriss as Alice and Seymour Hicks as the Hatter (1900);[16] Marie Studholme as Alice, Alice Barth as the Duchess and the Red Queen, Stanley Brett as the Mad Hatter and J. C. Buckstone as Tweedledee at the Prince of Wales's Theatre (1906);[17] Dan Leno (1909, in a production conducted by Marjory Slaughter, the composer's daughter);[24][25] and C. Hayden Coffin as the Hatter (1913 and 1921).[26]

Notes

  1. ^ Other works by Savile Clarke include An Adamless Eden! and The Rose and the Ring. He also adapted the 1883 English adaptation of Gillette de Narbonne. "New Pieces", The Era Almanack (1884), p. 59
  2. ^ "At the Play", The Observer, 24 October 1886, p. 3
  3. ^ "At the Play", The Observer, 12 December 1886, p. 6
  4. ^ a b Cohen, Morton N. Lewis Carroll: A Biography, MacMillan (2015), Google Books, p. 434
  5. ^ Cohen, Morton N. (ed.)The Selected Letters of Lewis Carroll, Palgrave (1982) Google Books, p. 163
  6. ^ Biography of Henry Savile Clarke (1841–93), North Yorkshire History website.
  7. ^ Play adaptation of Alice in Wonderland, British Library website
  8. ^ Foulkes, Richard Lewis Carroll and the Victorian Stage: Theatricals in a Quiet Life, Routledge (2005) Google Books
  9. ^ Jaques, Zoe and Eugene Giddens. Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass: A Publishing History, Routledge (2016), Google Books, p. 79
  10. ^ The Theatre, London, 1 January 1887, pp. 48–50
  11. ^ a b "Footlight Notes, No. 371". Information about the 1886 production, including photos, a programme and a review from The Theatre, 1 January 1887, pp. 48-50
  12. ^ a b c The Morning Post, 20 December 1900, p. 5
  13. ^ a b c d Alice in Wonderland (1886), British Musical Theatre database
  14. ^ Moses, Belle (2009). Lewis Carroll in Wonderland and at Home: The Story of His Life. BiblioBazaar. pp. 244–247. ISBN 1-103-29348-6.
  15. ^ "Alice in Wonderland", The Pall Mall Gazette, 23 December 1898, p.1; and "Tonight's Entertainment's", The Pall Mall Gazette, 16 February 1899, p. 1
  16. ^ a b The Standard, 20 December 1900, p. 3
  17. ^ a b Johnson, Colin. Alice in Wonderland, the Gilbert and Sullivan Archive, 17 September 2016, accessed 30 September 2020
  18. ^ The Times, 27 December 1910, p. 7
  19. ^ information about the 1914 revival
  20. ^ "Alice in Wonderland," The Times, 27 December 1916, p. 9
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 September 2006. Retrieved 25 July 2007.
  22. ^ Information from Flyrope.com
  23. ^ The Era, 29 December 1888, p. 18
  24. ^ The Times, 17 December 1909, p. 8
  25. ^ "P. I. P. Playgoer," Penny Illustrated Paper and Illustrated Times, 18 December 1909, p. 411
  26. ^ The Times, 13 December 1913, p. 6; and 27 December 1921, p. 6

References

  • Davenport, William A Dictionary of Drama, Chatto & Windus, London (1904)

External links

  • Discussion of the musical in The Broadview Anthology of Nineteenth-Century British Performance

alice, wonderland, musical, alice, wonderland, musical, henry, savile, clarke, book, lyrics, walter, slaughter, music, aubrey, hopwood, lyrics, based, lewis, carroll, books, alice, adventures, wonderland, 1865, through, looking, glass, 1871, debuted, prince, w. Alice in Wonderland is a musical by Henry Savile Clarke 1 book and lyrics Walter Slaughter music and Aubrey Hopwood lyrics based on Lewis Carroll s books Alice s Adventures in Wonderland 1865 and Through the Looking Glass 1871 2 It debuted at the Prince of Wales Theatre in the West End in 1886 Alice in WonderlandProgramme for the original production of Alice in Wonderland 1886 MusicWalter SlaughterLyricsLewis Carroll Henry Savile Clarke and Aubrey HopwoodBookH Savile ClarkeBasisLewis Carroll s novelsAlice s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking GlassProductions1886 West End West End revivals in 1888 1898 1900 1906 1908 1910 1914 1915 1916 1921 and 1927The piece billed as A musical dream play in two acts achieved considerable popularity At Carroll s request Slaughter retained the old tunes in the parodies such as Bonny Dundee 3 Contents 1 Background 2 Synopsis 3 Songs 3 1 Act I In Wonderland 3 2 Act II Through the Looking Glass 3 3 Supplementary numbers 4 Original cast 1886 4 1 Act I Alice s Adventures in Wonderland Act II Through the Looking Glass 5 Subsequent productions 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground EditThere were several amateur productions of Alice after the book s publication and Carroll himself considered dramatizing the story for the professional stage In 1877 he wrote to Arthur Sullivan of Gilbert and Sullivan in an attempt to persuade him to write the songs for a musical production Sullivan was interested in the idea and proposed that he would compose a score to Carroll s libretto Carroll hesitated partly at the high fee Sullivan suggested for his work Wanting to know what he would get for his money Carroll suggested that Sullivan first score a song or two After this the proposed collaboration fizzled out 4 Phoebe Carlo as Alice Edgar Norton as Hare Dorothy D Alcourt as Dormouse and Sydney Harcourt as Hatter in the original production 1886 In August 1886 the dramatist and critic Henry Savile Clarke wrote to Carroll asking to adapt Alice in Wonderland for the stage 4 Carroll gave permission but with several stipulations There are one or two wishes on the subject which I will name for your consideration but the only essential consideration is that I should have your written guarantee that neither in the libretto nor in any of the stage business should any coarseness or anything suggestive of coarseness be admitted This piece ought to be an Operetta like The Mikado and not a Pantomime 5 Carroll was involved completely in the production from beginning to end offering advice on everything from the adaptation of the novel to choosing the cast 6 7 He chose the child actress Phoebe Carlo for the title role bought her costumes at his own expense and sent her to the actress Kate Terry for lessons in elocution 8 Dorothy D Alcourt who played the Dormouse was aged 6 1 2 9 The production opened on 23 December 1886 at the Prince of Wales Theatre in London The Theatre described the piece as a pantomime but wrote in its review 10 Alice in Wonderland will not appeal to the children alone Mr Savile Clarke has done wonders The play is beautifully mounted and splendidly acted Miss Phœbe Carlo being very successful as the little heroine she played in a delightful and thoroughly artistic fashion and in this respect she was closely followed by a tiny mite Miss Dorothy D Alcort who plays first the Dormouse Mr Edgar Bruce Mr Walter Slaughter who has written some charming music for the piece and Mr Savile Clarke all deserve unstinted praise 11 The piece was frequently revived over the next four decades Synopsis Edit 1898 revival Rose Hersee talking to the White Rabbit Act I Alice s Adventures in Wonderland is in two scenes A Forest in Autumn and A Glade in Wonderland 12 Act II Through the Looking Glass consists of four scenes Through the Looking Glass The Garden of Live Flowers A Sea Shore and The Banqueting Hall The Forest Again 12 A review in The Theatre summarised the story as follows The story runs glibly opening with a chorus of fairies surrounding Alice asleep in a chair beneath a tree from there we progress splendidly making a new acquaintance with all our old friends the White Rabbit the Caterpillar the duchess with her Baby the Cook with her reckless use of pepper the Cheshire Cat with his remarkable smile the Hatter the Hare and the Dormouse who have their perpetual tea party and treat Alice to conundrums and unconventional rudeness Then comes a long and brilliant procession which should fill Alice s heart with awe if not with admiration but our heroine is nothing daunted by this large crowd Why they re only a pack of cards she says I needn t be afraid of them and so she answers the sanguinary minded queen of Hearts in a reckless manner and refuses to see heads knocked off in such profusion She then dances with the Cards in a graceful gavotte and afterwards protects her old friend the Cheshire Cat from an undeserved execution The Gryphon and Mock Turtle then appear and Alice receives some hints as to a sea education and the first act of the dream play for children ends with the trial of the Knave of Hearts for eating the tarts in which Alice s verdict of acquittal is unanimously passed In the second act Mr Savile Clarke takes us to another book Through the Looking Glass and Alice is introduced to the chessmen and Chorus who dance stiffly for her delectation then the Red Queen gives her some advice after she has spoken to the live flowers and Tweedledum and Tweedledee appear She soon makes friends with these massive twins and pleads hard when they determine to have a mortal combat but all to no purpose and so after she has witnessed the greedy Carpenter and Walrus devour their daily portion of oysters she assists in arming Tweedledum and Tweedledee for the fray The arrival of a Crow sends the warriors to speedy flight and Humpty Dumpty appears on his wall and so the play goes on until we see Alice once more asleep in her chair and hear her wake to say Oh I ve had such a curious dream 11 Songs Edit Score for Alice in Wonderland 1906 Act I In Wonderland Edit No 1 Chorus Sleep Alice sleep as we circle around thee No 2 Alice How doth the little crocodile improve his shining tail No 3 Alice You are old Father William the young man said No 4 Duchess Speak roughly to your little boy and beat him when he sneezes No 5 Alice amp Cheshire Cat Cheshire Pussy thanks to thee No 6 Hare Hatter and Alice The poor Hatter s very mad so they say so they say No 6a March No 7 Gavotte of Cards King Queen and Knave here we are seen dancing No 7a Entrance of Executioner Here comes the Executioner No 8 Executioner s Chorus with Queen and King He is the executioner No 9 Mock Turtle Beautiful soup so rich and green No 10 Gryphon Will you walk a little faster said a whiting to a snail No 11 Alice Tis the voice of the lobster I hear him declare No 12 Finale Act I Not guilty I declare 13 Act II Through the Looking Glass Edit Libretto for the original production 1886 No 1 Chorus Here ranged in due order of battle we stand with Red King and White King and Queens on each hand No 2 Red Queen Twas brillig and the slithy toves did gyre and gimble in the wabe No 2a Entrance of Lily and Rose No 2b Entrance No 2c Exit No 2d Waltz Alice and Flowers No 2e Hatter s Entrance No 2f Alice Tell me why you look so wild and strange No 3 Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee agreed to have a battle No 4 Chorus Here we go round the Mulberry bush No 4a Entrance of Walrus and Carpenter Nos 5 amp 6 Oyster Scene The Carpenter is sleeping the butter s on his face No 7 Alice Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall Humpty Dumpty had a great fall No 8 Chorus of Children Humpty Dumpty s fallen down Humpty Dumpty Humpty Dumpty s broke his crown No 9 Chorus The Lion and the Unicorn were fighting for the Crown No 10 Hatter When the wind is in the East on new laid eggs I always feast No 10a Change of Scene No 11 Chorus Sound the festal trumpets set the bells a ringing No 12 Finale Alice s health long life and wealth never a monarch so mighty was seen 13 Supplementary numbers Edit Flowerland Flow rs awake from out your long repose snowdrops peep from under Winter s snow Naughty Little Bunny When a rabbit s good as gold always does what he is told 13 Original cast 1886 EditAct I Alice s Adventures in Wonderland Act II Through the Looking Glass Edit Alice Phoebe Carlo White Rabbit Red King Master D Abrahams Caterpillar Unicorn Master S Solomon Duchess Lily Florence Levey Cook White King Anna Abrahams Cheshire Cat Lion Charles Adeson Hatter Tweedledum Sidney Harcourt Hare Edgar Norton Dormouse Plum Pudding Dorothy D Alcourt King of Hearts White Knight Stephen Adeson Queen of Hearts Red Queen Mdlle Rosa Knave of Hearts White Queen Kitty Abrahams Executioner The Carpenter Mr H H H Cameron Gryphon The Walrus Charles Bowland Mock Turtle Humpty Dumpty William Cheesman Maidie Andrews as Alice in Alice Through the Looking Glass The Tatler January 1904 Rose Mabel Love Red Knight C Kitts Tweedledee John Ettinson Leg of Mutton Master Hood 13 Subsequent productions EditThe musical was frequently revived during West End Christmas seasons during the four decades after its premiere London productions were mounted at the Globe Theatre in 1888 with Isa Bowman as Alice 14 the Opera Comique in 1898 15 the Vaudeville Theatre in 1900 with some new additional music by Slaughter 12 16 the Camberwell Theatre in 1902 the Prince of Wales s Theatre 1906 17 the Savoy Theatre in 1908 produced by William Greet the Savoy in 1910 18 the Wimbledon Theatre in 1914 19 the Savoy in 1914 the Duke of York s Theatre in 1915 the Savoy in 1916 20 the Garrick Theatre in 1921 21 and the Savoy in 1927 22 Adult actors who appeared along with the mainly juvenile casts included Irene Vanbrugh as the Knave of Hearts 1888 23 Ellaline Terriss as Alice and Seymour Hicks as the Hatter 1900 16 Marie Studholme as Alice Alice Barth as the Duchess and the Red Queen Stanley Brett as the Mad Hatter and J C Buckstone as Tweedledee at the Prince of Wales s Theatre 1906 17 Dan Leno 1909 in a production conducted by Marjory Slaughter the composer s daughter 24 25 and C Hayden Coffin as the Hatter 1913 and 1921 26 Notes Edit Other works by Savile Clarke include An Adamless Eden and The Rose and the Ring He also adapted the 1883 English adaptation of Gillette de Narbonne New Pieces The Era Almanack 1884 p 59 At the Play The Observer 24 October 1886 p 3 At the Play The Observer 12 December 1886 p 6 a b Cohen Morton N Lewis Carroll A Biography MacMillan 2015 Google Books p 434 Cohen Morton N ed The Selected Letters of Lewis Carroll Palgrave 1982 Google Books p 163 Biography of Henry Savile Clarke 1841 93 North Yorkshire History website Play adaptation of Alice in Wonderland British Library website Foulkes Richard Lewis Carroll and the Victorian Stage Theatricals in a Quiet Life Routledge 2005 Google Books Jaques Zoe and Eugene Giddens Lewis Carroll s Alice s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass A Publishing History Routledge 2016 Google Books p 79 The Theatre London 1 January 1887 pp 48 50 a b Footlight Notes No 371 Information about the 1886 production including photos a programme and a review from The Theatre 1 January 1887 pp 48 50 a b c The Morning Post 20 December 1900 p 5 a b c d Alice in Wonderland 1886 British Musical Theatre database Moses Belle 2009 Lewis Carroll in Wonderland and at Home The Story of His Life BiblioBazaar pp 244 247 ISBN 1 103 29348 6 Alice in Wonderland The Pall Mall Gazette 23 December 1898 p 1 and Tonight s Entertainment s The Pall Mall Gazette 16 February 1899 p 1 a b The Standard 20 December 1900 p 3 a b Johnson Colin Alice in Wonderland the Gilbert and Sullivan Archive 17 September 2016 accessed 30 September 2020 The Times 27 December 1910 p 7 information about the 1914 revival Alice in Wonderland The Times 27 December 1916 p 9 Profile of Roy Lorraine who appeared in the latter three productions Archived from the original on 4 September 2006 Retrieved 25 July 2007 Information from Flyrope com The Era 29 December 1888 p 18 The Times 17 December 1909 p 8 P I P Playgoer Penny Illustrated Paper and Illustrated Times 18 December 1909 p 411 The Times 13 December 1913 p 6 and 27 December 1921 p 6References EditDavenport William A Dictionary of Drama Chatto amp Windus London 1904 External links EditDiscussion of the musical in The Broadview Anthology of Nineteenth Century British Performance Information about the show from Theatre Works Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alice in Wonderland musical amp oldid 1100181927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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