What Women Suffer single work   drama   - Four acts
Issue Details: First known date: 1909... 1909 What Women Suffer
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Adaptations

form y separately published work icon What Women Suffer ( dir. Alfred Rolfe ) Australia : Australian Photo-play Company , 1911 6187486 1911 single work film/TV crime thriller

'The story hinges on the wonderful resemblance between Lieut. Alfred Coventry, who is married to Edith daughter of Mr. Norton, a wealthy merchant, and Jack Baxter, a common thief. Mr Norton has a nephew, Herbert Standish, who is in love with Mrs. Coventry, but she treats him with contempt. Standish some years earlier had betrayed Nance, the daughter of the old gardener, Meredith, leaving her to starve. Ashamed to go home, she married Baxter, who led her a terrible life. Mr. Norton never cared for Coventry, and when he heard of his return, after an absence of two years, he vowed that his roof would never shelter him, and tells his daughter to leave with her pauper husband. Obadiah Shakespeare, another thief, recognises Standish as the head of a gang of thieves, and while trying to extort money from him notices Baxter in the distance. Standish is struck by the great resemblance between Baxter and Coventry, and decides on a plan to get Coventry out of the way so that he may have a clear field to bring Mrs. Coventry to his way of thinking. He gets Baxter to dress in a uniform like Coventry's and break into Mr. Norton's mansion at Potts Point. In the carrying out of the plan Mr. Norton is shot dead by Baxter. Coventry's little boy, Cedric, runs in, and thinking he sees his father, gives evidence subsequently which sends Lieut. Coventry, to penal servitude for life. He escapes, and makes his way to an old saw-mill to hide. Standish forges a letter purporting to come from Coventry to Edith, and the latter, is lured to the mill, taking Cedric with her. Here she meets and repulses the foul proposals of Standish, who decides on a terrible revenge. He ties Edith to a post, knocks Cedric insensible and puts him on the traveller, starting the saw working. The remainder of the story must be described by the pictures. It is a terrible scene, as is also one in Edith's room into which Standish breaks, and where little Cedric, with a revolver protects his mother's honouri [sic] and the ending is in keeping with the line of the whole drama, pointing the moral, which adorns this very sensational tale'.

Source:

'What Women Suffer: A Picture Storyette', Cairns Post, 17 May 1912, p.8.

Production Details

  • The earliest known production of this melodrama is is at His Majesty's Moving Theatre in Rockhampton in 1909, presented by Philip Lytton. (See Morning Bulletin, 4 June 1909, p.5.)

    AusStage's earliest production information is for a production at the Palace Theatre in Sydney in 1912.

    Contemporary newspaper reports (such as in the Morning Bulletin above) suggest that the play began life at the Adelphi Theatre in London, but no such production has so far been traced.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 20 Dec 2013 14:44:55
Newspapers:
    Powered by Trove
    X