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Wikipedia

Pantomime

Pantomime (/ˈpæntəˌmm/;[1] informally panto)[2] is a type of musical comedy stage production designed for family entertainment. It was developed in England and is performed throughout the United Kingdom, Ireland and (to a lesser extent) in other English-speaking countries, especially during the Christmas and New Year season. Modern pantomime includes songs, gags, slapstick comedy and dancing. It generally combines gender-crossing actors and topical humour with a story more or less based on a well-known fairy tale, fable or folk tale.[3][4] Pantomime is a participatory form of theatre, in which the audience is encouraged and expected to sing along with certain parts of the music and shout out phrases to the performers.

The Christmas Pantomime colour lithograph book cover, 1890, showing harlequinade characters

Pantomime has a long theatrical history in Western culture dating back to the era of classical theatre. It developed partly from the 16th century commedia dell'arte tradition of Italy and other European and British stage traditions, such as 17th-century masques and music hall.[3] An important part of the pantomime, until the late 19th century, was the harlequinade.[5]

Outside Britain, the word "pantomime" is often understood to mean miming, rather than the theatrical form described here.[6]

Ancient Rome

 
2nd-century Macedonian theatrical sculpture, thought to represent a pantomime's mask

The word pantomime was adopted from the Latin word pantomimus,[7] which in turn derives from the Greek word παντόμιμος (pantomimos), consisting of παντο- (panto-) meaning "all", and μῖμος (mimos), meaning a dancer who acted all the roles or all the story.[8][9][10] The Roman pantomime drew upon the Greek tragedy and other Greek genres from its inception, although the art was instituted in Ancient Rome and little is known of it in pre-Roman Greece.[11][12] The English word came to be applied to the performance itself.[citation needed] According to a lost oration by Aelius Aristides, the pantomime was known for its erotic content and the effeminacy of its dancing;[13] Aristides's work was responded to by Libanius, in his oration "On Behalf of the Dancers", written probably around 361 AD.[citation needed]

Roman pantomime was a production, usually based upon myth or legend, for a solo male dancer—clad in a long silk tunic and a short mantle (pallium) that was often used as a "prop"—accompanied by a sung libretto (called the fabula saltica or "dance-story") rendered by a singer or chorus (though Lucian states that originally the pantomime himself was the singer).[14] Music was supplied by flute and the pulse of an iron-shod shoe called a scabellum. Performances might be in a private household, with minimal personnel, or else lavish theatrical productions involving a large orchestra and chorus and sometimes an ancillary actor. The dancer danced all the roles, relying on masks, stock poses and gestures and a hand-language (cheironomy) so complex and expressive that the pantomime's hands were commonly compared to an eloquent mouth.[15] Pantomime differed from mime by its more artistic nature and relative lack of farce and coarse humour,[9] though these were not absent from some productions.[citation needed]

Roman pantomime was immensely popular from the end of the first century BC until the end of the sixth century AD,[15] a form of entertainment that spread throughout the empire where, because of its wordless nature, it did more than any other art to foster knowledge of the myths and Roman legends that formed its subject-matter – tales such as those of the love of Venus and Mars and of Dido and Aeneas – while in Italy its chief exponents were celebrities, often the protegés of influential citizens, whose followers wore badges proclaiming their allegiance and engaged in street-fights with rival groups, while its accompanying songs became widely known.[failed verification] Yet, because of the limits imposed upon Roman citizens' dance, the populism of its song-texts and other factors, the art was as much despised as adored,[15] and its practitioners were usually slaves or freedmen.[citation needed]

Because of the low status and the disappearance of its libretti, the Roman pantomime received little modern scholarly attention until the late 20th century, despite its great influence upon Roman culture as perceived in Roman art, in statues of famous dancers, graffiti, objects and literature.[8] After the renaissance of classical culture, Roman pantomime was a decisive influence upon modern European concert dance, helping to transform ballet from a mere entertainment, a display of technical virtuosity, into the dramatic ballet d'action. It became an antecedent which, through writers and ballet-masters of the 17th and 18th centuries such as Claude-François Ménestrier (1631–1705), John Weaver (1673–1760), Jean-Georges Noverre (1727–1810) and Gasparo Angiolini (1731–1803), earned it respectability and attested to the capability of dance to render complex stories and express human emotion.[15]

Development in Britain

In the Middle Ages, the Mummers Play was a traditional English folk play, based loosely on the Saint George and the Dragon legend, usually performed during Christmas gatherings, which contained the origin of many of the archetypal elements of the pantomime, such as stage fights, coarse humour and fantastic creatures,[16] gender role reversal, and good defeating evil.[17] Precursors of pantomime also included the masque, which grew in pomp and spectacle from the 15th to the 17th centuries.[3][18]

Commedia dell'arte and early English adaptation

 
John Rich as Harlequin, c. 1720

The development of English pantomime was also strongly influenced by the continental commedia dell'arte, a form of popular theatre that arose in Italy in the Early Modern Period. This was a "comedy of professional artists" travelling from province to province in Italy and then France, who improvised and told comic stories that held lessons for the crowd, changing the main character depending on where they were performing. Each "scenario" used some of the same stock characters. These included the innamorati (young lovers); the vecchi (old men) such as Pantalone; and zanni (servants) such as Arlecchino, Colombina, Scaramouche and Pierrot.[3][19][20] Italian masque performances in the 17th century sometimes included the Harlequin character.[21]

In the 17th century, adaptations of the commedia characters became familiar in English entertainments.[22] From these, the standard English harlequinade developed, depicting the eloping lovers Harlequin and Columbine, pursued by the girl's father Pantaloon and his comic servants Clown and Pierrot.[22][23] In English versions, by the 18th century, Harlequin became the central figure and romantic lead.[24] The basic plot of the harlequinade remained essentially the same for more than 150 years, except that a bumbling policeman was added to the chase.[22]

In the first two decades of the 18th century, two rival London theatres, Lincoln's Inn Fields Theatre and the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane (the patent theatres) presented productions that began seriously with classical stories that contained elements of opera and ballet and ended with a comic "night scene". Tavern Bilkers, by John Weaver, the dancing master at Drury Lane, is cited as the first pantomime produced on the English stage.[25] This production was not a success, and Weaver waited until 1716 to produce his next pantomimes, including The Loves of Mars and Venus – a new Entertainment in Dancing after the manner of the Antient Pantomimes.[19] The same year he produced a pantomime on the subject of Perseus and Andromeda. After this, pantomime was regular feature at Drury Lane.[26] In 1717 at Lincoln's Inn, actor and manager John Rich introduced Harlequin into the theatres' pantomimes under the name of "Lun" (for "lunatic").[27][28] He gained great popularity for his pantomimes, especially beginning with his 1724 production of The Necromancer; or, History of Dr. Faustus.[29]

 
Playbill of an English circus and pantomime performance, 1803

These early pantomimes were silent, or "dumb show", performances consisting of only dancing and gestures. Spoken drama was allowed in London only in the two (later three) patent theatres until Parliament changed this restriction in 1843.[30] A large number of French performers played in London following the suppression of unlicensed theatres in Paris.[19] Although this constraint was only temporary, English pantomimes remained primarily visual for some decades before dialogue was introduced. An 18th-century author wrote of David Garrick: "He formed a kind of harlequinade, very different from that which is seen at the Opéra-Comique in Paris, where harlequin and all the characters speak."[31] The majority of these early pantomimes were re-tellings of a story from ancient Greek or Roman literature, with a break between the two acts during which the harlequinade's zany comic business was performed. The theatre historian David Mayer explains the use of the "batte" or slapstick and the transformation scene that led to the harlequinade:

Rich gave his Harlequin the power to create stage magic in league with offstage craftsmen who operated trick scenery. Armed with a magic sword or bat (actually a slapstick), Rich's Harlequin treated his weapon as a wand, striking the scenery to sustain the illusion of changing the setting from one locale to another. Objects, too, were transformed by Harlequin's magic bat.[19]

Pantomime gradually became more topical and comic, often involving spectacular and elaborate theatrical effects as far as possible. Colley Cibber, David Garrick and others competed with Rich and produced their own pantomimes, and pantomime continued to grow in popularity.[32]

1806–1836

By the early 1800s, the pantomime's classical stories were often supplanted by stories adapted from European fairy tales, fables, folk tales, classic English literature or nursery rhymes.[19][33] Also, the harlequinade grew in importance until it often was the longest and most important part of the entertainment. Pantomimes usually had dual titles that gave an often humorous idea of both the pantomime story and the harlequinade. "Harlequin and ________", or "Harlequin _______; or, the ________". In the second case, harlequin was used as an adjective, followed by words that described the pantomime "opening", for example: Harlequin Cock Robin and Jenny Wren; or, Fortunatus and the Water of Life, the Three Bears, the Three Gifts, the Three Wishes, and the Little Man who Woo'd the Little Maid. Harlequin was the first word (or the first word after the "or") because Harlequin was initially the most important character. The titles continued to include the word Harlequin even after the first decade of the 1800s, when Joseph Grimaldi came to dominate London pantomime and made the character, Clown, a colourful agent of chaos, as important in the entertainment as Harlequin. At the same time, Harlequin began to be portrayed in a more romantic and stylised way.[34]

 
Grimaldi (right) performing the comic dance during a pantomime

Grimaldi's performances elevated the role by "acute observation upon the foibles and absurdities of society, and his happy talent of holding them up to ridicule. He is the finest practical satyrist that ever existed. ... He was so extravagantly natural, that the most saturnine looker-on acknowledged his sway; and neither the wise, the proud, or the fair, the young nor the old, were ashamed to laugh till tears coursed down their cheeks at Joe and his comicalities."[35] Grimaldi's performances were important in expanding the importance of the harlequinade until it dominated the pantomime entertainment.[36]

By the 1800s, therefore, children went to the theatre around the Christmas and New Year holiday (and often at Easter or other times) primarily to witness the craziness of the harlequinade chase scene. It was the most exciting part of the "panto", because it was fast-paced and included spectacular scenic magic as well as slapstick comedy, dancing and acrobatics. The presence of slapstick in this part of the show evolved from the characters found in Italian commedia dell'arte.[19] The plot of the harlequinade was relatively simple; the star-crossed lovers, Harlequin and Columbine, run away from Columbine's foolish father, Pantaloon, who is being slowed down in his pursuit of them by his servant, Clown, and by a bumbling policeman. After the time of Grimaldi, Clown became the principal schemer trying to thwart the lovers, and Pantaloon was merely his assistant.[36]

The opening "fairy story" was often blended with a story about a love triangle: a "cross-grained" old father who owns a business and whose pretty daughter is pursued by two suitors. The one she loves is poor but worthy, while the father prefers the other, a wealthy fop. Another character is a servant in the father's establishment. Just as the daughter is to be forcibly wed to the fop, or just as she was about to elope with her lover, the good fairy arrives.[35] This was followed by what was often the most spectacular part of the production, the magical transformation scene.[37] In early pantomimes, Harlequin possessed magical powers that he used to help himself and his love interest escape. He would tap his wooden sword (a derivative of the Commedia dell'arte slapstick or "batte") on the floor or scenery to make a grand transition of the world around him take place. The scene would switch from being inside some house or castle to, generally speaking, the streets of the town with storefronts as the backdrop. The transformation sequence was presided over by a Fairy Queen or Fairy Godmother character.[19] The good fairy magically transformed the leads from the opening fairy story into their new identities as the harlequinade characters. Following is an example of the speech that the fairy would give during this transformation:

Lovers stand forth. With you we shall begin.
You will be fair Columbine – you Harlequin.
King Jamie there, the bonnie Scottish loon,
Will be a famous cheild for Pantaloon.
Though Guy Fawkes now is saved from rocks and axe,
I think he should pay the powder-tax.
His guyish plots blown up – nay, do not frown;
You've always been a guy – now be a Clown.[37]

This passage is from a pantomime adaptation of the Guy Fawkes story. The fairy creates the characters of the harlequinade in the most typical fashion of simply telling the characters what they will change into. The principal male and female characters from the beginning plotline, often both played by young women,[30] became the lovers Columbine and Harlequin, the mother or father of Columbine became Pantaloon, and the servant or other comic character became Clown. They would transition into the new characters as the scenery around them changed and would proceed in the "zany fun" section of the performance.[37] From the time of Grimaldi, Clown would see the transformed setting and cry: "Here We Are Again!"[36] The harlequinade began with various chase scenes, in which Harlequin and Columbine manage to escape from the clutches of Clown and Pantaloon, despite the acrobatic leaps of the former through windows, atop ladders, often because of well-meaning but misguided actions of the policeman. Eventually, there was a "dark scene", such as a cave or forest, in which the lovers were caught, and Harlequin's magic wand was seized from his grasp by Clown, who would flourish it in triumph. The good fairy would then reappear, and once the father agreed to the marriage of the young lovers, she would transport the whole company to a grand final scene.[35]

1837 to the end of the harlequinade

Despite its visible decline by 1836, the pantomime still fought to stay alive.[38] After 1843, when theatres other than the original patent theatres were permitted to perform spoken dialogue, the importance of the silent harlequinade began to decrease, while the importance of the fairy-tale part of the pantomime increased.[33] Two writers who helped to elevate the importance and popularity of the fairy-tale portion of the pantomime were James Planché and Henry James Byron. They emphasized puns and humorous word play, a tradition that continues in pantomime today.[33] As manager of Drury Lane in the 1870s, Augustus Harris produced and co-wrote a series of extraordinarily popular pantomimes, focusing on the spectacle of the productions, that pushed this transition by emphasizing comic business in the pantomime opening and grand processionals.[39] By the end of the 19th century, the harlequinade had become merely a brief epilogue to the pantomime, dwindling into a brief display of dancing and acrobatics.[40] It lingered for a few decades longer but finally disappeared, although a few of its comic elements had been incorporated into the pantomime stories.[24] The last harlequinade was played at the Lyceum Theatre in 1939.[41] Well-known pantomime artists of this era included William Payne,[42] his sons, the Payne Brothers,[43] Vesta Tilley, Dan Leno, Herbert Campbell, Little Tich,[39] Clarice Mayne, Dorothy Ward[44] and Cullen and Carthy.[45]

Modern traditions and conventions

Traditionally performed at Christmas and afterwards, with family audiences, British pantomime continues as a popular form of theatre, incorporating song, dance, buffoonery, slapstick, cross-dressing, in-jokes, topical references, audience participation, and mild sexual innuendo.[46] Scottish comedian Craig Ferguson, in his 2020 memoir, summarizes contemporary pantomime as classic folklore and fairy tales loosely retold in a slapstick theatrical comedy-musical, writing: "Think Mamma Mia! featuring the Three Stooges but with everyone's back catalogue, not just ABBA's", and furthermore including audience participation reminiscent of showings of the film The Rocky Horror Picture Show.[47]

Stories

Pantomime story lines and scripts usually make no direct reference to Christmas and are almost always based on traditional children's stories, particularly the fairy tales of Charles Perrault, Joseph Jacobs, Hans Christian Andersen and the Grimm Brothers. Some of the most popular pantomime stories include Cinderella, Aladdin, Dick Whittington and His Cat and Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,[5] as well as Jack and the Beanstalk, Peter Pan, Puss in Boots and Sleeping Beauty.[48] Other traditional stories include Mother Goose, Beauty and the Beast, Robinson Crusoe, The Wizard of Oz, Babes in the Wood (combined with elements of Robin Hood), Little Red Riding Hood, Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Sinbad, St. George and the Dragon, Bluebeard, The Little Mermaid and Thumbelina.[28][49] Prior to about 1870, many other stories were made into pantomimes.[33][50]

While the familiarity of the audience with the original children's story is generally assumed, plot lines are almost always adapted for comic or satirical effect, and characters and situations from other stories are often interpolated into the plot. For instance "panto" versions of Aladdin may include elements from Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves or other Arabian Nights tales; while Jack and the Beanstalk might include references to nursery rhymes and other children's stories involving characters called "Jack", such as Jack and Jill. Certain familiar scenes tend to recur, regardless of plot relevance, and highly unlikely resolution of the plot is common. Straight retellings of the original stories are rare.[51]

Performance conventions

The form has a number of conventions, some of which have changed or weakened a little over the years, and by no means all of which are obligatory. Some of these conventions were once common to other genres of popular theatre such as melodrama.[52]

  • The leading male juvenile character (the principal boy) is traditionally played by a young woman in male garments (such as breeches). Her romantic partner is usually the principal girl, a female ingénue.
 
Pantomime dames
  • An older woman (the pantomime dame – often the hero's mother) is usually played by a man in drag.[53]
  • Risqué double entendre, often wringing innuendo out of perfectly innocent phrases. This is not intended to be understood by children in the audience and is for the entertainment of the adults.
  • Audience participation, including calls of "He's behind you!" (or "Look behind you!"), and "Oh, yes it is!" and "Oh, no it isn't!" The audience is always encouraged to hiss or jeer at the villain and "awwwww" the poor victims, such as the rejected dame, who is usually enamoured with one of the male characters.[54]
  • Music may be original but is more likely to combine well-known tunes with re-written lyrics. At least one "audience participation" song is traditional: one half of the audience may be challenged to sing "their" chorus louder than the other half. Children in the audience may even be invited on stage to sing along with members of the cast.
  • The animal, played by an actor in "animal skin" or animal costume. It is often a pantomime horse or cow (though could even be a camel if appropriate to the setting), played by two actors in a single costume, one as the head and front legs, the other as the body and back legs.
  • The good fairy enters from stage right (left from the audience's perspective) and the villain enters from stage left (right from the audience's perspective). This convention goes back to the medieval mystery plays, where the right side of the stage symbolised Heaven and the left side symbolised Hell.
  • A slapstick comedy routine may be performed, often a decorating or baking scene, with humour based on throwing messy substances. Until the 20th century, British pantomimes often concluded with a harlequinade, a free-standing entertainment of slapstick. Since then, the slapstick has been incorporated into the main body of the show.
  • In the 19th century, until the 1880s, pantomimes typically included a transformation scene in which a Fairy Queen magically transformed the pantomime characters into the characters of the harlequinade, who then performed the harlequinade.[40][53]
  • The Chorus, who can be considered extras on-stage, and often appear in multiple scenes (but as different characters) and who perform a variety of songs and dances throughout the show. Because of their multiple roles, they may have as much stage-time as the lead characters themselves.
  • At some point during the performance, characters including the Dame and the comic will sit on a bench and sing a cheerful song to forget their fears. The thing they fear, often a ghost, appears behind them, but at first the characters ignore the audience's warnings of danger. The characters soon circle the bench, followed by the ghost, as the audience cries "It's behind you!" One by one, the characters see the ghost and run off, until at last the Dame and the ghost come face to face, whereupon the ghost, frightened by the visage of the Dame, runs away.[54]

Guest stars

Another pantomime tradition is to engage celebrity guest stars, a practice that dates back to the late 19th century, when Augustus Harris was proprietor of the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, and hired well-known variety artists for his pantomimes. Contemporary pantomime productions are often adapted to allow the star to showcase their well-known act, even when such a spot has little relation to the pantomime's plot. Critic Michael Billington has argued that if the star enters into the spirit of the entertainment, he or she likely adds to its overall effect, while if it becomes a "showcase for a star" who "stands outside the action", the celebrity's presence likely detracts, notwithstanding the marketing advantage that the star brings to the piece.[55] Billington said that Ian McKellen in a 2004 Aladdin "lets down his hair and lifts up his skirt to reveal a nifty pair of legs and an appetite for double entendre: when told by decorators that 'your front porch could do with a good lick', McKellen adopts a suitable look of mock-outrage. ... At least we can tell our grandchildren that we saw McKellen's Twankey and it was huge."[55]

Roles

Major

The main roles within pantomime are usually as follows:[56]

Role Role description Played by
Principal boy Main character in the pantomime, a hero or charismatic rogue Traditionally a young woman in men's clothing
Panto dame Normally the hero's mother Traditionally a middle-aged man in drag
Principal girl Normally the hero's love interest Young woman
Comic lead or good fairy Does physical comedy and relates to children in the audience. Sometimes plays an animal. Man or woman
Villain The pantomime antagonist. Often a wicked wizard, witch or demon. Man or woman

Minor

Role Role description Played by
Good fairy or wise woman Usual role is to help (traditionally silly) hero defeat (much more intelligent) villain. Often has a role in the resolution of the plot Woman (or man in drag)
Animals, etc. e.g. Jack's cow "Pantomime horse" or puppet(s)
Chorus Members often have several minor roles
Dancers Usually a group of young boys and girls

Venues

 
Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret in a Windsor Castle wartime performance of Aladdin

Pantomime is performed in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Switzerland, Australasia, Canada, Jamaica, South Africa, Malta and Andorra, among other places. It is performed mostly during the Christmas and New Year season.[57][58]

United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland

Many theatres in cities and towns throughout the United Kingdom and Ireland continue to present an annual professional pantomime. Pantomime is also popular with amateur dramatics societies throughout the UK and Ireland, and the pantomime season (roughly speaking, late November to February) will see pantomime productions in many village halls and similar venues across the country.

Andorra

It was first produced annually in Andorra by the English-speaking Mums’ group, from the British expatriate community, in the Teatre de les Fontetes in the parish of La Massana. Now it is produced by English and English-speaking international volunteers as part of the Advent celebrations supported by the Comú de La Massana,[59] the local businesses[60] the Club International d'Andorra[61] and Vallnord ski station[62] to raise money, most recently, for the less privileged children of Andorra.[63]

Australia

 
Performers at a pantomime in Victoria, Australia

Pantomimes in Australia at Christmas were once very popular, but the genre has declined greatly since the middle of the 20th century. Several later professional productions did not recover their costs.[64]

Canada

Christmas pantomimes are performed yearly at the Hudson Village Theatre in Quebec.[65] Since 1996, Ross Petty Productions has staged pantomimes at Toronto's Elgin Theatre each Christmas season.[66] Pantomimes imported from England were produced at the Royal Alexandra Theatre in the 1980s.[67][68] The White Rock Players Club in White Rock, BC have presented an annual pantomime in the Christmas season since 1954.[69] The Royal Canadian Theatre Company produces pantomimes in British Columbia, written by Ellie King.[70] Since 2013, Theatre Replacement has been producing East Van Panto in partnership with The Cultch in Vancouver.[71][72]

Jamaica

The National Pantomime of Jamaica was started in 1941 by educators Henry Fowler and Greta Fowler, pioneers of the Little Theatre Movement in Jamaica. Among the first players was Louise Bennett-Coverley. Other notable players have included Oliver Samuels, Charles Hyatt, Willard White, Rita Marley and Dawn Penn. The annual pantomime opens on Boxing Day at the Little Theatre in Kingston and is strongly influenced by aspects of Jamaican culture, folklore and history.[73][74]

Malta

Pantomime was imported[when?] for a British expatriate audience and later adapted by Maltese producers for Maltese audiences. While in many former territories of the British empire, pantomime declined in popularity after independence, as it was seen as a symbol of colonial rule, studies have shown that this genre remains strong in Malta.[75]

Switzerland

Pantomime was brought to Switzerland by British immigrants and is performed regularly in Basel, where the first British-style pantomime was performed in 1994 in a hangar at Basel Airport. In 2009 the Basel English Panto Group was formed,[76] which performs at the Scala Basel each December.[77]

United Arab Emirates

Annual pantomimes have been running at Christmas in the UAE (and elsewhere in the GCC) since 2007.[78] They are mainly performed by Dubai Panto[79] (a trade name of h2 Productions.ae[80]) in conjunction with Outside the Box Events LLC.[81] They increased to three pantomimes at Christmas since 2021 – 2 in Dubai and 1 in Abu Dhabi.[82][83][84] One of the locations for Dubai Pantomimes is at the theatre on the Queen Elizabeth 2 cruise ship[85] The other is in the theatre at the Erth Hotel, Abu Dhabi (formerly the Armed Forces Officers Club and Hotel).[86]

United States

 
Styles of Lucy, Lady Duff-Gordon, used in a vaudeville circuit pantomime; sketched by Marguerite Martyn of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, April 1918

Pantomime as described in this article was seldom performed in the United States until recent decades. As a consequence, Americans commonly understand the word "pantomime" to refer to the art of mime as it is practised by mime artists.[6]

According to Professor Russell A. Peck of the University of Rochester, the earliest pantomime productions in the US were Cinderella pantomime productions in New York in March 1808, New York again in August 1808, Philadelphia in 1824, and Baltimore in 1839.[87] A production at Olympic Theatre in New York of Humpty Dumpty ran for at least 943 performances between 1868 and 1873,[88] (one source says 1,200 performances),[5] becoming the longest-running pantomime in history.[5]

In 1993, there was a production of Cinderella at the UCLA Freud Theatre, starring Zsa Zsa Gabor.[89] Since 2004, People's Light and Theatre Company, in Malvern, Pennsylvania, has been presenting an annual Christmas pantomime season.[90] Stages Repertory Theatre in Houston, Texas, has been performing original pantomime-style musicals during the Christmas holidays since 2008.[91] Lythgoe Family Productions has produced Christmas pantomimes since 2010 in California.[92]

See also

References

Citations

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  2. ^ Lawner, p. 16.
  3. ^ a b c d Reid-Walsh, Jacqueline. "Pantomime", The Oxford Encyclopedia of Children's Literature, Jack Zipes (ed.), Oxford University Press (2006), ISBN 9780195146561
  4. ^ Mayer (1969), p. 6.
  5. ^ a b c d "The History of Pantomime", It's-Behind-You.com, 2002, accessed 10 February 2013
  6. ^ a b Webster's New World Dictionary, World Publishing Company, 2nd College Edition, 1980, p. 1027.
  7. ^ Oxford English Dictionary s.v. pantomime
  8. ^ a b Hall, p. 3.
  9. ^ a b Pantomimus, Encyclopædia Britannica
  10. ^ Liddell, Henry George and Robert Scott. παντόμιμος, A Greek–English Lexicon, Perseus Digital Library, accessed 16 November 2013
  11. ^ Lincoln Kirstein, Dance, Dance Horizons Incorporated, New York, 1969, pp. 40-42, 48
  12. ^ Broadbent, pp. 21–34.
  13. ^ Mesk, J., Des Aelius Aristides Rede gegen die Tänzer, WS 30 (1908)
  14. ^ Quoted in Lincoln Kirstein, Dance, Dance Horizons Incorporated, New York, 1969, p. 50.
  15. ^ a b c d Alessandra Zanobi. Ancient Pantomime and its Reception, Oxford University Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama
  16. ^ Barrow, Mandy. "Mummers' Plays", Project Britain, 2013, accessed 21 April 2016.
  17. ^ Barrow, Mandy. "Christmas Pantomimes", Project Britain, 2013, accessed 21 April 2016
  18. ^ Burden, Michael. "The English Pantomime Masque" 2016-04-26 at the Wayback Machine, Abstract of symposium paper for French and English Pantomime (2007), University of Oxford, accessed 21 April 2016.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g Mayer, David. "Pantomime, British", Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance, Oxford University Press, 2003, accessed 21 October 2011 (subscription required)
  20. ^ Broadbent, chapter 12.
  21. ^ Broadbent, chapter 10.
  22. ^ a b c "Early pantomime", Victoria and Albert Museum, accessed 21 October 2011
  23. ^ Smith, p. 228
  24. ^ a b Hartnoll, Phyllis and Peter Found (eds). "Harlequinade", The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre, Oxford Reference Online, Oxford University Press, 1996, accessed 21 October 2011. (subscription required)
  25. ^ Broadbent, chapter 14. Broadbent spends the first half of his book tracing the ancient and European origins of pantomime.
  26. ^ Broadbent, chapter 14.
  27. ^ Dircks, Phyllis T. "Rich, John (1692–1761)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edition, May 2011, accessed 21 October 2011
  28. ^ a b Chaffee and Crick, p. 278
  29. ^ Broadbent, chapter 15.
  30. ^ a b Haill, Catherine. Pantomime 2011-11-08 at the Wayback Machine, University of East London, accessed 17 January 2012
  31. ^ Davies, Thomas. Memoirs of the life of David Garrick, New edition, 1780, I. x. 129, quoted in the Oxford English Dictionary.
  32. ^ Broadbent, chapters 14 and 15.
  33. ^ a b c d "The Origin of Popular Pantomime Stories", Victoria and Albert Museum, accessed January 8, 2016.
  34. ^ McConnell Stott, pp. 95–100.
  35. ^ a b c Broadbent, chapter 16
  36. ^ a b c Moody, Jane. "Grimaldi, Joseph (1778–1837)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edition, January 2008, accessed 21 October 2011.
  37. ^ a b c Wilson, p.?.
  38. ^ Mayer, p. 309.
  39. ^ a b Mayer, p. 324
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Sources

  • Broadbent, R.J. (1901). A History of Pantomime. London.
  • Chaffee, Judith and Olly Crick, The Routledge Companion to Commedia dell'Arte (Routledge, 2015) ISBN 978-0-415-74506-2
  • Hall, E. and R. Wyles, eds., New Directions in Ancient Pantomime (Oxford, 2008).
  • Lawner, Lynne (1998). Harlequin on the Moon. New York: Harry N. Abrams.
  • Mayer, David III (1969). Harlequin in His Element: The English Pantomime, 1806–1836. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-37275-1.
  • McConnell Stott, Andrew (2009). The Pantomime Life of Joseph Grimaldi. Edinburgh: Canongate Books. ISBN 978-1-84767-295-7.
  • Richards, Jeffrey. The Golden Age of Pantomime: Slapstick, Spectacle and Subversion in Victorian England (I. B. Tauris, 2014). ISBN 1780762933
  • Smith, Winifred (1964). The Commedia dell'Arte. New York: Benjamin Blom.
  • Wilson, A. E. (1949). The Story of Pantomime. London: Home & Van Thal.

External links

  • discussing British pantomime, its origins and traditions.
  • Geneva Amateur Operatic Society
  • Pantomime Shows in UK
  • The Secret Pantomime Society
  • Theatre Britain
  • Madrid Players
  • Panto in Wales seen through American eyes
  • "Pantomime" 2011-11-08 at the Wayback Machine by Catherine Haill, V & A
  • "The Rise and Fall of the Pantomime Harlequinade"

pantomime, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, unclear, citation, style, references, used, made, clearer, with, different, consistent, style, citation, footnoting, june, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, informally, panto, type, music. For other uses see Pantomime disambiguation This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Pantomime ˈ p ae n t e ˌ m aɪ m 1 informally panto 2 is a type of musical comedy stage production designed for family entertainment It was developed in England and is performed throughout the United Kingdom Ireland and to a lesser extent in other English speaking countries especially during the Christmas and New Year season Modern pantomime includes songs gags slapstick comedy and dancing It generally combines gender crossing actors and topical humour with a story more or less based on a well known fairy tale fable or folk tale 3 4 Pantomime is a participatory form of theatre in which the audience is encouraged and expected to sing along with certain parts of the music and shout out phrases to the performers The Christmas Pantomime colour lithograph book cover 1890 showing harlequinade characters Pantomime has a long theatrical history in Western culture dating back to the era of classical theatre It developed partly from the 16th century commedia dell arte tradition of Italy and other European and British stage traditions such as 17th century masques and music hall 3 An important part of the pantomime until the late 19th century was the harlequinade 5 Outside Britain the word pantomime is often understood to mean miming rather than the theatrical form described here 6 Contents 1 Ancient Rome 2 Development in Britain 2 1 Commedia dell arte and early English adaptation 2 2 1806 1836 2 3 1837 to the end of the harlequinade 3 Modern traditions and conventions 3 1 Stories 3 2 Performance conventions 3 3 Guest stars 4 Roles 4 1 Major 4 2 Minor 5 Venues 5 1 United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland 5 2 Andorra 5 3 Australia 5 4 Canada 5 5 Jamaica 5 6 Malta 5 7 Switzerland 5 8 United Arab Emirates 5 9 United States 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 External linksAncient Rome Edit 2nd century Macedonian theatrical sculpture thought to represent a pantomime s mask The word pantomime was adopted from the Latin word pantomimus 7 which in turn derives from the Greek word pantomimos pantomimos consisting of panto panto meaning all and mῖmos mimos meaning a dancer who acted all the roles or all the story 8 9 10 The Roman pantomime drew upon the Greek tragedy and other Greek genres from its inception although the art was instituted in Ancient Rome and little is known of it in pre Roman Greece 11 12 The English word came to be applied to the performance itself citation needed According to a lost oration by Aelius Aristides the pantomime was known for its erotic content and the effeminacy of its dancing 13 Aristides s work was responded to by Libanius in his oration On Behalf of the Dancers written probably around 361 AD citation needed Roman pantomime was a production usually based upon myth or legend for a solo male dancer clad in a long silk tunic and a short mantle pallium that was often used as a prop accompanied by a sung libretto called the fabula saltica or dance story rendered by a singer or chorus though Lucian states that originally the pantomime himself was the singer 14 Music was supplied by flute and the pulse of an iron shod shoe called a scabellum Performances might be in a private household with minimal personnel or else lavish theatrical productions involving a large orchestra and chorus and sometimes an ancillary actor The dancer danced all the roles relying on masks stock poses and gestures and a hand language cheironomy so complex and expressive that the pantomime s hands were commonly compared to an eloquent mouth 15 Pantomime differed from mime by its more artistic nature and relative lack of farce and coarse humour 9 though these were not absent from some productions citation needed Roman pantomime was immensely popular from the end of the first century BC until the end of the sixth century AD 15 a form of entertainment that spread throughout the empire where because of its wordless nature it did more than any other art to foster knowledge of the myths and Roman legends that formed its subject matter tales such as those of the love of Venus and Mars and of Dido and Aeneas while in Italy its chief exponents were celebrities often the proteges of influential citizens whose followers wore badges proclaiming their allegiance and engaged in street fights with rival groups while its accompanying songs became widely known failed verification Yet because of the limits imposed upon Roman citizens dance the populism of its song texts and other factors the art was as much despised as adored 15 and its practitioners were usually slaves or freedmen citation needed Because of the low status and the disappearance of its libretti the Roman pantomime received little modern scholarly attention until the late 20th century despite its great influence upon Roman culture as perceived in Roman art in statues of famous dancers graffiti objects and literature 8 After the renaissance of classical culture Roman pantomime was a decisive influence upon modern European concert dance helping to transform ballet from a mere entertainment a display of technical virtuosity into the dramatic ballet d action It became an antecedent which through writers and ballet masters of the 17th and 18th centuries such as Claude Francois Menestrier 1631 1705 John Weaver 1673 1760 Jean Georges Noverre 1727 1810 and Gasparo Angiolini 1731 1803 earned it respectability and attested to the capability of dance to render complex stories and express human emotion 15 Development in Britain EditIn the Middle Ages the Mummers Play was a traditional English folk play based loosely on the Saint George and the Dragon legend usually performed during Christmas gatherings which contained the origin of many of the archetypal elements of the pantomime such as stage fights coarse humour and fantastic creatures 16 gender role reversal and good defeating evil 17 Precursors of pantomime also included the masque which grew in pomp and spectacle from the 15th to the 17th centuries 3 18 Commedia dell arte and early English adaptation Edit John Rich as Harlequin c 1720 The development of English pantomime was also strongly influenced by the continental commedia dell arte a form of popular theatre that arose in Italy in the Early Modern Period This was a comedy of professional artists travelling from province to province in Italy and then France who improvised and told comic stories that held lessons for the crowd changing the main character depending on where they were performing Each scenario used some of the same stock characters These included the innamorati young lovers the vecchi old men such as Pantalone and zanni servants such as Arlecchino Colombina Scaramouche and Pierrot 3 19 20 Italian masque performances in the 17th century sometimes included the Harlequin character 21 In the 17th century adaptations of the commedia characters became familiar in English entertainments 22 From these the standard English harlequinade developed depicting the eloping lovers Harlequin and Columbine pursued by the girl s father Pantaloon and his comic servants Clown and Pierrot 22 23 In English versions by the 18th century Harlequin became the central figure and romantic lead 24 The basic plot of the harlequinade remained essentially the same for more than 150 years except that a bumbling policeman was added to the chase 22 In the first two decades of the 18th century two rival London theatres Lincoln s Inn Fields Theatre and the Theatre Royal Drury Lane the patent theatres presented productions that began seriously with classical stories that contained elements of opera and ballet and ended with a comic night scene Tavern Bilkers by John Weaver the dancing master at Drury Lane is cited as the first pantomime produced on the English stage 25 This production was not a success and Weaver waited until 1716 to produce his next pantomimes including The Loves of Mars and Venus a new Entertainment in Dancing after the manner of the Antient Pantomimes 19 The same year he produced a pantomime on the subject of Perseus and Andromeda After this pantomime was regular feature at Drury Lane 26 In 1717 at Lincoln s Inn actor and manager John Rich introduced Harlequin into the theatres pantomimes under the name of Lun for lunatic 27 28 He gained great popularity for his pantomimes especially beginning with his 1724 production of The Necromancer or History of Dr Faustus 29 Playbill of an English circus and pantomime performance 1803 These early pantomimes were silent or dumb show performances consisting of only dancing and gestures Spoken drama was allowed in London only in the two later three patent theatres until Parliament changed this restriction in 1843 30 A large number of French performers played in London following the suppression of unlicensed theatres in Paris 19 Although this constraint was only temporary English pantomimes remained primarily visual for some decades before dialogue was introduced An 18th century author wrote of David Garrick He formed a kind of harlequinade very different from that which is seen at the Opera Comique in Paris where harlequin and all the characters speak 31 The majority of these early pantomimes were re tellings of a story from ancient Greek or Roman literature with a break between the two acts during which the harlequinade s zany comic business was performed The theatre historian David Mayer explains the use of the batte or slapstick and the transformation scene that led to the harlequinade Rich gave his Harlequin the power to create stage magic in league with offstage craftsmen who operated trick scenery Armed with a magic sword or bat actually a slapstick Rich s Harlequin treated his weapon as a wand striking the scenery to sustain the illusion of changing the setting from one locale to another Objects too were transformed by Harlequin s magic bat 19 Pantomime gradually became more topical and comic often involving spectacular and elaborate theatrical effects as far as possible Colley Cibber David Garrick and others competed with Rich and produced their own pantomimes and pantomime continued to grow in popularity 32 1806 1836 Edit By the early 1800s the pantomime s classical stories were often supplanted by stories adapted from European fairy tales fables folk tales classic English literature or nursery rhymes 19 33 Also the harlequinade grew in importance until it often was the longest and most important part of the entertainment Pantomimes usually had dual titles that gave an often humorous idea of both the pantomime story and the harlequinade Harlequin and or Harlequin or the In the second case harlequin was used as an adjective followed by words that described the pantomime opening for example Harlequin Cock Robin and Jenny Wren or Fortunatus and the Water of Life the Three Bears the Three Gifts the Three Wishes and the Little Man who Woo d the Little Maid Harlequin was the first word or the first word after the or because Harlequin was initially the most important character The titles continued to include the word Harlequin even after the first decade of the 1800s when Joseph Grimaldi came to dominate London pantomime and made the character Clown a colourful agent of chaos as important in the entertainment as Harlequin At the same time Harlequin began to be portrayed in a more romantic and stylised way 34 Grimaldi right performing the comic dance during a pantomime Grimaldi s performances elevated the role by acute observation upon the foibles and absurdities of society and his happy talent of holding them up to ridicule He is the finest practical satyrist that ever existed He was so extravagantly natural that the most saturnine looker on acknowledged his sway and neither the wise the proud or the fair the young nor the old were ashamed to laugh till tears coursed down their cheeks at Joe and his comicalities 35 Grimaldi s performances were important in expanding the importance of the harlequinade until it dominated the pantomime entertainment 36 By the 1800s therefore children went to the theatre around the Christmas and New Year holiday and often at Easter or other times primarily to witness the craziness of the harlequinade chase scene It was the most exciting part of the panto because it was fast paced and included spectacular scenic magic as well as slapstick comedy dancing and acrobatics The presence of slapstick in this part of the show evolved from the characters found in Italian commedia dell arte 19 The plot of the harlequinade was relatively simple the star crossed lovers Harlequin and Columbine run away from Columbine s foolish father Pantaloon who is being slowed down in his pursuit of them by his servant Clown and by a bumbling policeman After the time of Grimaldi Clown became the principal schemer trying to thwart the lovers and Pantaloon was merely his assistant 36 The opening fairy story was often blended with a story about a love triangle a cross grained old father who owns a business and whose pretty daughter is pursued by two suitors The one she loves is poor but worthy while the father prefers the other a wealthy fop Another character is a servant in the father s establishment Just as the daughter is to be forcibly wed to the fop or just as she was about to elope with her lover the good fairy arrives 35 This was followed by what was often the most spectacular part of the production the magical transformation scene 37 In early pantomimes Harlequin possessed magical powers that he used to help himself and his love interest escape He would tap his wooden sword a derivative of the Commedia dell arte slapstick or batte on the floor or scenery to make a grand transition of the world around him take place The scene would switch from being inside some house or castle to generally speaking the streets of the town with storefronts as the backdrop The transformation sequence was presided over by a Fairy Queen or Fairy Godmother character 19 The good fairy magically transformed the leads from the opening fairy story into their new identities as the harlequinade characters Following is an example of the speech that the fairy would give during this transformation Lovers stand forth With you we shall begin You will be fair Columbine you Harlequin King Jamie there the bonnie Scottish loon Will be a famous cheild for Pantaloon Though Guy Fawkes now is saved from rocks and axe I think he should pay the powder tax His guyish plots blown up nay do not frown You ve always been a guy now be a Clown 37 Dan Leno and Herbert Campbell in Babes in the Wood 1897 at the Drury Lane Theatre in London s West End This passage is from a pantomime adaptation of the Guy Fawkes story The fairy creates the characters of the harlequinade in the most typical fashion of simply telling the characters what they will change into The principal male and female characters from the beginning plotline often both played by young women 30 became the lovers Columbine and Harlequin the mother or father of Columbine became Pantaloon and the servant or other comic character became Clown They would transition into the new characters as the scenery around them changed and would proceed in the zany fun section of the performance 37 From the time of Grimaldi Clown would see the transformed setting and cry Here We Are Again 36 The harlequinade began with various chase scenes in which Harlequin and Columbine manage to escape from the clutches of Clown and Pantaloon despite the acrobatic leaps of the former through windows atop ladders often because of well meaning but misguided actions of the policeman Eventually there was a dark scene such as a cave or forest in which the lovers were caught and Harlequin s magic wand was seized from his grasp by Clown who would flourish it in triumph The good fairy would then reappear and once the father agreed to the marriage of the young lovers she would transport the whole company to a grand final scene 35 1837 to the end of the harlequinade Edit Despite its visible decline by 1836 the pantomime still fought to stay alive 38 After 1843 when theatres other than the original patent theatres were permitted to perform spoken dialogue the importance of the silent harlequinade began to decrease while the importance of the fairy tale part of the pantomime increased 33 Two writers who helped to elevate the importance and popularity of the fairy tale portion of the pantomime were James Planche and Henry James Byron They emphasized puns and humorous word play a tradition that continues in pantomime today 33 As manager of Drury Lane in the 1870s Augustus Harris produced and co wrote a series of extraordinarily popular pantomimes focusing on the spectacle of the productions that pushed this transition by emphasizing comic business in the pantomime opening and grand processionals 39 By the end of the 19th century the harlequinade had become merely a brief epilogue to the pantomime dwindling into a brief display of dancing and acrobatics 40 It lingered for a few decades longer but finally disappeared although a few of its comic elements had been incorporated into the pantomime stories 24 The last harlequinade was played at the Lyceum Theatre in 1939 41 Well known pantomime artists of this era included William Payne 42 his sons the Payne Brothers 43 Vesta Tilley Dan Leno Herbert Campbell Little Tich 39 Clarice Mayne Dorothy Ward 44 and Cullen and Carthy 45 Modern traditions and conventions EditTraditionally performed at Christmas and afterwards with family audiences British pantomime continues as a popular form of theatre incorporating song dance buffoonery slapstick cross dressing in jokes topical references audience participation and mild sexual innuendo 46 Scottish comedian Craig Ferguson in his 2020 memoir summarizes contemporary pantomime as classic folklore and fairy tales loosely retold in a slapstick theatrical comedy musical writing Think Mamma Mia featuring the Three Stooges but with everyone s back catalogue not just ABBA s and furthermore including audience participation reminiscent of showings of the film The Rocky Horror Picture Show 47 Stories Edit Aladdin at Nottingham Playhouse 2008 Pantomime story lines and scripts usually make no direct reference to Christmas and are almost always based on traditional children s stories particularly the fairy tales of Charles Perrault Joseph Jacobs Hans Christian Andersen and the Grimm Brothers Some of the most popular pantomime stories include Cinderella Aladdin Dick Whittington and His Cat and Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs 5 as well as Jack and the Beanstalk Peter Pan Puss in Boots and Sleeping Beauty 48 Other traditional stories include Mother Goose Beauty and the Beast Robinson Crusoe The Wizard of Oz Babes in the Wood combined with elements of Robin Hood Little Red Riding Hood Goldilocks and the Three Bears Sinbad St George and the Dragon Bluebeard The Little Mermaid and Thumbelina 28 49 Prior to about 1870 many other stories were made into pantomimes 33 50 While the familiarity of the audience with the original children s story is generally assumed plot lines are almost always adapted for comic or satirical effect and characters and situations from other stories are often interpolated into the plot For instance panto versions of Aladdin may include elements from Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves or other Arabian Nights tales while Jack and the Beanstalk might include references to nursery rhymes and other children s stories involving characters called Jack such as Jack and Jill Certain familiar scenes tend to recur regardless of plot relevance and highly unlikely resolution of the plot is common Straight retellings of the original stories are rare 51 Performance conventions Edit The form has a number of conventions some of which have changed or weakened a little over the years and by no means all of which are obligatory Some of these conventions were once common to other genres of popular theatre such as melodrama 52 The leading male juvenile character the principal boy is traditionally played by a young woman in male garments such as breeches Her romantic partner is usually the principal girl a female ingenue Pantomime dames An older woman the pantomime dame often the hero s mother is usually played by a man in drag 53 Risque double entendre often wringing innuendo out of perfectly innocent phrases This is not intended to be understood by children in the audience and is for the entertainment of the adults Audience participation including calls of He s behind you or Look behind you and Oh yes it is and Oh no it isn t The audience is always encouraged to hiss or jeer at the villain and awwwww the poor victims such as the rejected dame who is usually enamoured with one of the male characters 54 Music may be original but is more likely to combine well known tunes with re written lyrics At least one audience participation song is traditional one half of the audience may be challenged to sing their chorus louder than the other half Children in the audience may even be invited on stage to sing along with members of the cast The animal played by an actor in animal skin or animal costume It is often a pantomime horse or cow though could even be a camel if appropriate to the setting played by two actors in a single costume one as the head and front legs the other as the body and back legs The good fairy enters from stage right left from the audience s perspective and the villain enters from stage left right from the audience s perspective This convention goes back to the medieval mystery plays where the right side of the stage symbolised Heaven and the left side symbolised Hell A slapstick comedy routine may be performed often a decorating or baking scene with humour based on throwing messy substances Until the 20th century British pantomimes often concluded with a harlequinade a free standing entertainment of slapstick Since then the slapstick has been incorporated into the main body of the show In the 19th century until the 1880s pantomimes typically included a transformation scene in which a Fairy Queen magically transformed the pantomime characters into the characters of the harlequinade who then performed the harlequinade 40 53 The Chorus who can be considered extras on stage and often appear in multiple scenes but as different characters and who perform a variety of songs and dances throughout the show Because of their multiple roles they may have as much stage time as the lead characters themselves At some point during the performance characters including the Dame and the comic will sit on a bench and sing a cheerful song to forget their fears The thing they fear often a ghost appears behind them but at first the characters ignore the audience s warnings of danger The characters soon circle the bench followed by the ghost as the audience cries It s behind you One by one the characters see the ghost and run off until at last the Dame and the ghost come face to face whereupon the ghost frightened by the visage of the Dame runs away 54 Guest stars Edit Another pantomime tradition is to engage celebrity guest stars a practice that dates back to the late 19th century when Augustus Harris was proprietor of the Theatre Royal Drury Lane and hired well known variety artists for his pantomimes Contemporary pantomime productions are often adapted to allow the star to showcase their well known act even when such a spot has little relation to the pantomime s plot Critic Michael Billington has argued that if the star enters into the spirit of the entertainment he or she likely adds to its overall effect while if it becomes a showcase for a star who stands outside the action the celebrity s presence likely detracts notwithstanding the marketing advantage that the star brings to the piece 55 Billington said that Ian McKellen in a 2004 Aladdin lets down his hair and lifts up his skirt to reveal a nifty pair of legs and an appetite for double entendre when told by decorators that your front porch could do with a good lick McKellen adopts a suitable look of mock outrage At least we can tell our grandchildren that we saw McKellen s Twankey and it was huge 55 Roles EditMajor Edit The main roles within pantomime are usually as follows 56 Role Role description Played byPrincipal boy Main character in the pantomime a hero or charismatic rogue Traditionally a young woman in men s clothingPanto dame Normally the hero s mother Traditionally a middle aged man in dragPrincipal girl Normally the hero s love interest Young womanComic lead or good fairy Does physical comedy and relates to children in the audience Sometimes plays an animal Man or womanVillain The pantomime antagonist Often a wicked wizard witch or demon Man or womanMinor Edit Role Role description Played byGood fairy or wise woman Usual role is to help traditionally silly hero defeat much more intelligent villain Often has a role in the resolution of the plot Woman or man in drag Animals etc e g Jack s cow Pantomime horse or puppet s Chorus Members often have several minor rolesDancers Usually a group of young boys and girlsVenues Edit Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret in a Windsor Castle wartime performance of Aladdin Pantomime is performed in the United Kingdom Ireland Switzerland Australasia Canada Jamaica South Africa Malta and Andorra among other places It is performed mostly during the Christmas and New Year season 57 58 United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland Edit Many theatres in cities and towns throughout the United Kingdom and Ireland continue to present an annual professional pantomime Pantomime is also popular with amateur dramatics societies throughout the UK and Ireland and the pantomime season roughly speaking late November to February will see pantomime productions in many village halls and similar venues across the country Andorra Edit It was first produced annually in Andorra by the English speaking Mums group from the British expatriate community in the Teatre de les Fontetes in the parish of La Massana Now it is produced by English and English speaking international volunteers as part of the Advent celebrations supported by the Comu de La Massana 59 the local businesses 60 the Club International d Andorra 61 and Vallnord ski station 62 to raise money most recently for the less privileged children of Andorra 63 Australia Edit Performers at a pantomime in Victoria Australia Pantomimes in Australia at Christmas were once very popular but the genre has declined greatly since the middle of the 20th century Several later professional productions did not recover their costs 64 Canada Edit Christmas pantomimes are performed yearly at the Hudson Village Theatre in Quebec 65 Since 1996 Ross Petty Productions has staged pantomimes at Toronto s Elgin Theatre each Christmas season 66 Pantomimes imported from England were produced at the Royal Alexandra Theatre in the 1980s 67 68 The White Rock Players Club in White Rock BC have presented an annual pantomime in the Christmas season since 1954 69 The Royal Canadian Theatre Company produces pantomimes in British Columbia written by Ellie King 70 Since 2013 Theatre Replacement has been producing East Van Panto in partnership with The Cultch in Vancouver 71 72 Jamaica Edit The National Pantomime of Jamaica was started in 1941 by educators Henry Fowler and Greta Fowler pioneers of the Little Theatre Movement in Jamaica Among the first players was Louise Bennett Coverley Other notable players have included Oliver Samuels Charles Hyatt Willard White Rita Marley and Dawn Penn The annual pantomime opens on Boxing Day at the Little Theatre in Kingston and is strongly influenced by aspects of Jamaican culture folklore and history 73 74 Malta Edit Pantomime was imported when for a British expatriate audience and later adapted by Maltese producers for Maltese audiences While in many former territories of the British empire pantomime declined in popularity after independence as it was seen as a symbol of colonial rule studies have shown that this genre remains strong in Malta 75 Switzerland Edit Pantomime was brought to Switzerland by British immigrants and is performed regularly in Basel where the first British style pantomime was performed in 1994 in a hangar at Basel Airport In 2009 the Basel English Panto Group was formed 76 which performs at the Scala Basel each December 77 United Arab Emirates Edit Annual pantomimes have been running at Christmas in the UAE and elsewhere in the GCC since 2007 78 They are mainly performed by Dubai Panto 79 a trade name of h2 Productions ae 80 in conjunction with Outside the Box Events LLC 81 They increased to three pantomimes at Christmas since 2021 2 in Dubai and 1 in Abu Dhabi 82 83 84 One of the locations for Dubai Pantomimes is at the theatre on the Queen Elizabeth 2 cruise ship 85 The other is in the theatre at the Erth Hotel Abu Dhabi formerly the Armed Forces Officers Club and Hotel 86 United States Edit Main article American pantomime Styles of Lucy Lady Duff Gordon used in a vaudeville circuit pantomime sketched by Marguerite Martyn of the St Louis Post Dispatch April 1918 Pantomime as described in this article was seldom performed in the United States until recent decades As a consequence Americans commonly understand the word pantomime to refer to the art of mime as it is practised by mime artists 6 According to Professor Russell A Peck of the University of Rochester the earliest pantomime productions in the US were Cinderella pantomime productions in New York in March 1808 New York again in August 1808 Philadelphia in 1824 and Baltimore in 1839 87 A production at Olympic Theatre in New York of Humpty Dumpty ran for at least 943 performances between 1868 and 1873 88 one source says 1 200 performances 5 becoming the longest running pantomime in history 5 In 1993 there was a production of Cinderella at the UCLA Freud Theatre starring Zsa Zsa Gabor 89 Since 2004 People s Light and Theatre Company in Malvern Pennsylvania has been presenting an annual Christmas pantomime season 90 Stages Repertory Theatre in Houston Texas has been performing original pantomime style musicals during the Christmas holidays since 2008 91 Lythgoe Family Productions has produced Christmas pantomimes since 2010 in California 92 See also EditITV Panto Victorian burlesque Weihnachtsmarchen Christmas fairy tale References EditCitations Edit pantomime Merriam Webster Dictionary Lawner p 16 a b c d Reid Walsh Jacqueline Pantomime The Oxford Encyclopedia of Children s Literature Jack Zipes ed Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 9780195146561 Mayer 1969 p 6 a b c d The History of Pantomime It s Behind You com 2002 accessed 10 February 2013 a b Webster s New World Dictionary World Publishing Company 2nd College Edition 1980 p 1027 Oxford English Dictionary s v pantomime a b Hall p 3 a b Pantomimus Encyclopaedia Britannica Liddell Henry George and Robert Scott pantomimos A Greek English Lexicon Perseus Digital Library accessed 16 November 2013 Lincoln Kirstein Dance Dance Horizons Incorporated New York 1969 pp 40 42 48 Broadbent pp 21 34 Mesk J Des Aelius Aristides Rede gegen die Tanzer WS 30 1908 Quoted in Lincoln Kirstein Dance Dance Horizons Incorporated New York 1969 p 50 a b c d Alessandra Zanobi Ancient Pantomime and its Reception Oxford University Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama Barrow Mandy Mummers Plays Project Britain 2013 accessed 21 April 2016 Barrow Mandy Christmas Pantomimes Project Britain 2013 accessed 21 April 2016 Burden Michael The English Pantomime Masque Archived 2016 04 26 at the Wayback Machine Abstract of symposium paper for French and English Pantomime 2007 University of Oxford accessed 21 April 2016 a b c d e f g Mayer David Pantomime British Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance Oxford University Press 2003 accessed 21 October 2011 subscription required Broadbent chapter 12 Broadbent chapter 10 a b c Early pantomime Victoria and Albert Museum accessed 21 October 2011 Smith p 228 a b Hartnoll Phyllis and Peter Found eds Harlequinade The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre Oxford Reference Online Oxford University Press 1996 accessed 21 October 2011 subscription required Broadbent chapter 14 Broadbent spends the first half of his book tracing the ancient and European origins of pantomime Broadbent chapter 14 Dircks Phyllis T Rich John 1692 1761 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edition May 2011 accessed 21 October 2011 a b Chaffee and Crick p 278 Broadbent chapter 15 a b Haill Catherine Pantomime Archived 2011 11 08 at the Wayback Machine University of East London accessed 17 January 2012 Davies Thomas Memoirs of the life of David Garrick New edition 1780 I x 129 quoted in the Oxford English Dictionary Broadbent chapters 14 and 15 a b c d The Origin of Popular Pantomime Stories Victoria and Albert Museum accessed January 8 2016 McConnell Stott pp 95 100 a b c Broadbent chapter 16 a b c Moody Jane Grimaldi Joseph 1778 1837 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edition January 2008 accessed 21 October 2011 a b c Wilson p Mayer p 309 a b Mayer p 324 a b Crowther Andrew Clown and Harlequin W S Gilbert Society Journal vol 3 issue 23 Summer 2008 pp 710 12 The Development of Pantomime Its Behind You com accessed 3 January 2014 Boase G C Payne William Henry Schofield 1803 1878 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edition May 2007 accessed 22 October 2011 The Olio 4 September 1871 p 41 quoted in Rees p 16 W MacQueen Pope The Melodies Linger On The Story of Music Hall London W H Allen 1950 p 340 Gleams from the spotlight Sporting Chronicle 27 September 1916 p 1 Christopher David 2002 British Culture An Introduction p 74 Routledge and It s Behind You The Economist 20 December 2014 Ferguson Craig 2020 Riding the Elephant A Memoir of Altercations Humiliations Hallucinations and Observations New York Penguin pp 89 91 ISBN 9780525533924 Bowie Sell Daisy Top ten pantomimes for Christmas The Daily Telegraph 17 December 2010 accessed January 8 2016 Broadbent chapter 19 Jeffrey Richards 2015 The Golden Age of Pantomime Slapstick Spectacle and Subversion in Victorian England I B Tauris p 27 ISBN 978 1 78076 293 7 Origins of Panto Stories Limelight scripts retrieved 2018 08 19 Smith p 200 a b Serck Linda Oh yes it is Why pantomime is such a British affair BBC News 3 January 2016 a b Taylor Millie Audience Participation Community and Ritual British Pantomime Performance p 130 Intellect Books 2007 ISBN 1841501743 Another bench scene is described in the same source at pp 44 45 a b Billington Michael Aladdin Old Vic London The Guardian 20 December 2004 Retrieved 26 April 2018 Lipton Martina Localism and Modern British Pantomime A World of Popular Entertainments Gillian Arrighi and Victor Emeljanow eds Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2012 ISBN 1443838047 p 56 Roberts Chris Heavy Words Lightly Thrown The Reason Behind Rhyme Thorndike Press 2006 ISBN 0786285176 Smith p 287 https www lamassana ad butlletins web AD400 desembre 2018 AF 20butlleti 20AD400 20baixa pdf dead link English Language School la Massana Pantomime Theatre Group International Club of Andorra Estacio d Esqui i Bike a Andorra Servei Especialitzat d Atencio a la Infancia i l Adolescencia SEAIA Blake Elissa 24 June 2014 British pantomime ready to take Sydney by storm Sydney Morning Herald Cinderella Archived from the original on 22 December 2013 Retrieved 29 December 2013 Flowers Ellen Pim Gordon September 2013 Ontario s theatrical heritage in the spotlight PDF Heritage Matters Ontario Heritage Trust p 6 Mum s not the word with theatre genie s pantomimes National Post accessed 24 November 2014 Goldilocks and the Three Bears Royal Alexandra Theatre Toronto Its behind you com accessed 24 November 2014 Past Productions Archived 2014 12 21 at the Wayback Machine White Rock Players Club retrieved 26 April 2018 Alexandra Kristi Sleeping Beauty brings King s panto history to Surrey Surrey Now 18 December 2014 Retrieved 26 April 2018 EAST VAN PANTO Theatre Replacement theatrereplacement org Retrieved 2020 12 27 How a Vancouver theatre company turned a small holiday panto into one of the city s hottest tickets CBC Radio CBC Retrieved 2020 12 27 History Little Theatre Movement 2004 accessed 24 December 2013 Heap Brian Theatre National Pantomime Skywritings No 90 pp 64 66 December 1993 accessed 24 December 2013 Spiteri Stephanie The history and development of Pantomime in Malta Masters Thesis University of Malta 2014 Basel English Panto Group accessed 24 August 2019 Baumhofer Emma Taking centre stage English live shows Hello Switzerland 11 May 2015 Family Theatre Shows in Dubai Time Out Dubai 7 September 2021 Retrieved 11 July 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link The Dubai Pantomime www dubaipanto com Retrieved 2022 07 11 H2 Productions Middle East www h2productions ae Retrieved 2022 07 11 Events Company Outside The Box Events otbe Retrieved 2022 07 11 Christmas 2019 Family Fun Watching A Pantomime timeout dubai 29 October 2019 Retrieved 11 July 2022 A Family Friendly Pantomime is Coming to Dubai for Christmas Time Out Dubai 27 October 2020 Retrieved 11 July 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Buckridge Miles 2 November 2021 All The Christmas Shows Coming to this Abu Dhabi Theatre What s On Abu Dhabi a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link QE2 com 11 July 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link See also Theatre by QE2 Dubai Theatre by QE2 v2 Retrieved 2022 07 11 Google Travel www google com Retrieved 2022 07 11 See also Erth Abu Dhabi Theatre By Erth Retrieved 2022 07 11 Peck Russell A Pantomime Burlesque and Children s Drama Lib rochester edu accessed 10 June 2010 Broadbent p 215 Zsa Zsa Gabor in Panto Cinderella Los Angeles Times 14 December 1993 Cantell Mary People s Light amp Theatre presents 10th Holiday Panto Cinderella A Musical Panto Montgomery News November 15 2013 Stages Panto Mother Goose broadwayworld com 27 November 2012 Retrieved 26 April 2018 Preview Panto Cinderella is a British Tradition Houston Chronicle 8 December 2008 Retrieved 26 April 2018 Panto Bring Texas Laughs to British Genre Houston Chronicle 9 November 2009 Retrieved 26 April 2018 Panto Mine A New Holiday Tradition Takes Hold in Houston CultureMap 10 December 2009 Retrieved 26 April 2018 Lythgoe Family Productions Presents CINDERELLA 11 27 12 19 broadwayworld com 28 September 2010 Panto Baby A Snow White Christmas opens Nov 30th British Weekly 26 November 2011 Retrieved 26 April 2018 Theater review Cinderella Christmas at the El Portal Los Angeles Times 23 December 2011 Retrieved 26 April 2018 A Snow White Christmas puts Southern California imprint on British theater tradition Los Angeles Times 11 December 2012 Retrieved 26 April 2018 and Pasadena Playhouse Mike Stoller and wife gave crucial 1 million Los Angeles Times 23 January 2013 Retrieved 26 April 2018 Sources Edit Broadbent R J 1901 A History of Pantomime London Chaffee Judith and Olly Crick The Routledge Companion to Commedia dell Arte Routledge 2015 ISBN 978 0 415 74506 2 Hall E and R Wyles eds New Directions in Ancient Pantomime Oxford 2008 Lawner Lynne 1998 Harlequin on the Moon New York Harry N Abrams Mayer David III 1969 Harlequin in His Element The English Pantomime 1806 1836 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 37275 1 McConnell Stott Andrew 2009 The Pantomime Life of Joseph Grimaldi Edinburgh Canongate Books ISBN 978 1 84767 295 7 Richards Jeffrey The Golden Age of Pantomime Slapstick Spectacle and Subversion in Victorian England I B Tauris 2014 ISBN 1780762933 Smith Winifred 1964 The Commedia dell Arte New York Benjamin Blom Wilson A E 1949 The Story of Pantomime London Home amp Van Thal External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pantomime MusicalTalk Podcast discussing British pantomime its origins and traditions Geneva Amateur Operatic Society Pantomime Shows in UK The Secret Pantomime Society Theatre Britain Madrid Players Panto in Wales seen through American eyes Pantomime Archived 2011 11 08 at the Wayback Machine by Catherine Haill V amp A The Rise and Fall of the Pantomime Harlequinade Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pantomime amp oldid 1162900456, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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