Hop O' My Thumb was staged by the Famous Diggers a little over 12 months after the start of its two and a half year engagement at the Cremorne Theatre, Brisbane (1923-1925). It was also possibly the troupe's first ever pantomime.
Although advertising for this production indicates that it is an adaptation of the Grimm brothers fairytale (also known as Thumbling), the list of characters suggests that Middleton may have also been influenced by Charles Perrault's 1697 story. In that tale the tiny hero defeates an ogre thus saving his older siblings after they have all been abandoned by their parents. In the Grimms' story Hop O' My Thumb is an only child who is also abandoned by his parents but finds himself being swallowed by various animals until he finally escapes by tricking the final animal - a wolf.
One of the local settings was 'The Village of Humpybong' (formerly situated on the Redcliffe Peninsula). The The Brisbane Courier 1864 theatre critic records that the villages only residents were beer-hums and ballet girls (20 December 1924, p.16). A character referred to in a later review of the production but not named in advertising was Baron Bombastikulostikos (2 January 1925, p.7).
Among the songs incorporated into the production were 'I am a Wandering Troubadour Bold' and 'Humpybong' (sung by Iza Crossley), 'Dear, I Love You' (Ern Kopke), 'Slumber Song,' and 'Down in the Forrest' (Wynne Macoboy), and the quartettes 'Good Night Beloved' and 'There's a Rong Around the Moon' (Crossley, Macoboy, Kopke and Lawrence). Middleton's song "Coo-ee" was also performed during the course of the production.
Two of the features of the production were said to be the children's ballet and the final scene - 'The Giant Christmas Cake.'
[Source: Australian Variety Theatre Archive]