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J. C. Williamson J. C. Williamson i(A13604 works by) (a.k.a. James Cassius Williamson)
Born: Established: 26 Aug 1845 Pennsylvania,
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United States of America (USA),
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Americas,
; Died: Ceased: 6 Jul 1913 Paris,
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France,
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Western Europe, Europe,

Gender: Male
Heritage: Scottish ; Irish ; American
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Works By

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1 y separately published work icon J. C. Williamson's Life-Story Told In His Own Words : with valedictory messages from George Tallis ... J. C. Williamson , Alfred George Stephens , Sydney : N.S.W. Bookstall Company , 1913 Z218421 1913 single work autobiography
1 y separately published work icon Peter Pan : The Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up Annie R. Rentoul , Melbourne : J. C. Williamson , 1908 Z1404642 1908 single work children's fiction children's 'The material which accompanied the Christmas pantomime productions of J.C. Williamson, The Story of the Pantomime Humpty Dumpty : Specially Written for Little Ones (1907) and The Story of Peter Pan (1908), illustrated with photographs from the stage production and her sister's illustrations, were developed by Annie Rentoul. ' (Source : Oxford Companion to Australian Children's Literature (1993). )
1 7 y separately published work icon Tapu; The Tale of a Maori Pahli Arthur H. Adams , D. H. Souter , J. C. Williamson , Bert Royle , Alfred Hill (composer), 1903 (Manuscript version)x401988 Z1248515 1903 single work musical theatre opera

The 1904 revised libretto deals with the adventures of John Smith, an Australian politician in New Zealand who tangles with a Maori tohunga (priest). The romantic interest, and indeed the focus of the narrative action, comes about through Mara, a 'Katisha' who has been declared 'tapu' or sacred. 'Any man who touches her must either marry her or die - and apparently many have been prepared to meet death cheerfully' (The Sydney Morning Herald 11 July 1904, p10).

New Zealand newspaper The Free Lance provides insight into the principal characters originally conceived by Adams and Hill:

Miss Gertie Campion (Fay Chrysaha) and Mr. D. O'Connor (John Smith) have leading parts as two operatic stars whose civilian dress has been seized by distrustful creditors while they were on the backblocks stage, and who, therefore, in their fancy dress, find refuge in the Maori pah. Smith is mistaken for the Commonwealth delegate, and is honoured accordingly. He also captures the fancy of Mara, a Maori maiden, whose lover (Tonga), in jealous retaliation, makes love to Chrysalia ('Footlight,' p.21).

Arias and ballet music known to have been written for the opera are : 'Hail, Mighty Politician,' 'Poi Dance' 'Bicycle Song,' 'Bedelia,' 'A Woman's Wistful Heart,' 'No Love Like the Old Love' and 'A Happy Family,' "Nobody Takes the Chances,' 'The Terrible Law of Tapu,' and 'O Mara, Your Heart is a Garden.' One particular highlight was the Maori 'Haka,' of which on critic wrote: 'an almost indescribable savage outburst; an ethnologist rather than mere musical critic should be turned on to do justice to so typical and 'nationalistic' a performance' (Age 22 Aug. 1904, p6).

1 5 y separately published work icon Australis; Or, The City of Zero : A Spectacle of a Hundred Years Hence The City of Zero J. C. Williamson , Bernard Espinasse , Leon Caron (composer), Frederick Weierter (composer), Sydney : J. Andrew , 1900 Z859896 1900 single work musical theatre science fiction fantasy Written especially for Federation, the story is a fantasy set 100 years in the future - the year 2000 - after a war of the world has wreaked havoc on the planet. Only Australia has escaped the devastation. The country is being run badly by an ex-Trade Union leader, however. The Boss, as he likes to be called, is about to annex the City of Zero, which is located at the South Pole, and ruled by an evil wizard, Azeemath. The play begins as the Queen of Antarctica, Dione, arises from one hundred years sleep in a petrified condition. A legend has foretold that when she loves a mortal that the wizard's powers must forever pass away. The wizard of course has his own plan to counter this.... But this is doomed to fail when Dione drinks from the magic pool, and true to its legend falls in love with the first person she sees - Valentine.

[Source: Australian Variety Theatre Archive]
1 1 y separately published work icon Sinbad the Sailor, Or, Tinbad the Tailor, and the Wicked Ogres, the Good Fairy, and the Little Old Man of the Sea (To Say Nothing of the Bold, Bad Wreckeroo) Sinbad The Sailor: An Up to Date Version of a Good Old English Xmas Pantomime Bert Royle , J. C. Williamson , George F. Pack (composer), Sydney : Williamson and Musgrove , 1896 Z861466 1896 single work musical theatre pantomime fantasy

Based on the popular pantomime story of Sinbad the Sialor, the narrative was played out in three acts, comprising the following scenes:


Act 1 Scene 1. Davey Jones' Locker. Cavern under the Sea;

Scene 2. Port of Balasora. A village Carnival. Hornpipe in Fetters. Sinbad's Departure;

Scene 3. Saloon of the Bobstay;

Scene 4. Wreck of the Vessel. Storm at Sea. Breakers Ahead. Neptune to the Rescue.

Act 2 Scene 1. The Royal Bath at Nowayer Patiklar. The Nautch Dance and the Ballet of the Harem;

Scene 2. The Mountain Pass. Topical duets;

Scene 3. The Diamond Valley. Ballet of thr Night Elves and the Grand Amazonian March. Starting Trap Scenes. Flight of the Fairy Rock and Escape of Sinbad.

Act 3 Scene 1. The King's Palace. Grand Variety and Specialty Scene;

Scene 2. The Palace Gardens. Recovery of the Koh-i-Noor;

Transformation Scene

Harlequinade


The production's music elements included the following songs and dances: 'Didn't I Run, Run, Run' (sung by Will Crackles), 'Rosie O'Grady' (Ada Baker), 'Il Bacio' and 'Canary Polka' (Frank Lawton), 'Darling Mabel' (Eva Clements), 'We'll Just Have Another and Then' (Crackles and Stanfield), 'Mary Used to Go to Sunday School' (Stella Esdaile), 'Remedies' (Stanfield), 'Love's Duet' (Phillips and Esdaile), and the 'Magnificent Trio Dance' (performed by Misses E. and A. Hooper and Frank Lawton).

1 16 y separately published work icon Matsa, Queen of Fire ; Or, The Apples of Isis, the Dates of Osiris, and the Little People of the Mountains of the Moon, Onn and Oph Bert Royle , J. C. Williamson , Leon Caron (composer), George F. Pack (composer), Williamson and Musgrove , Melbourne : Williamson and Musgrove , 1896 Z861416 1896 single work musical theatre pantomime fantasy

Although set mostly in Egypt (with scenes of the pyramids, Cairo, and Ancient Memphis), this original fairytale nevertheless concludes with a scene set in Australia: Melbourne or Sydney, depending on where it was being produced.

The story concerns a beautiful young princess's rescue (by her beloved prince) from a sacrifice at the hands of Matsa, the evil Queen of Fire (who demands the life of a maiden every hundred years). The Fates point to Zelica as the victim and dispatch Pentaur (a revived mummy) to modern Cairo to seize her. Pentaur's attempt is foiled by Colonel Boomley (an American speculator) and Prince Simbal (Captain of the Khedive's Guard), but he manages to trick them into eating the magic apples of Isis the Great, which somehow send them back to Memphis of 3000 years ago, a time when Rameses III ruled Egypt. Zelica is eventually saved, but not before several grand adventures occur, including the group's capture by pygmies. Secondary characters incorporated into the narrative include an ugly Irish spinster and an American heiress, along with warriors, priests, and others. The Sydney Morning Herald critic notes that although 'the comic element in Matsa is not strong... there are some clever lyrics in the libretto... Much [of the production's success, however] is due to the grace and gaiety of the music' (29 February 1897, p.7).

The production included the usual Williamson spectacles: grand marches, sumptuous ballets, and elaborate and striking costumes. Some notable features of the production were 'The Mist of Past Ages', 'Ancient Memphis Restored', 'The Tomb of the Kings', 'The Triumphant Return of Rameses III', 'The Great Martial Procession' (comprising some 250 people), 'The Land of the Pygmies', 'Matsa's Cyclopian Guards', 'March of the Elephants, Lions and Tigers and Other Animals', 'The Home of the Queen of Fire', 'Sensational Fire Ballet', 'On a P and O Steamer in the Suez', 'The Court of the Queen of Air', and the 'Astounding Ariel Ballet.'

The visual highlight of the production, according to one review, were George Gordon's scenes 'The Rising of the Nile' and the 'Startling Inundation Scene', which show the destruction of Matsa's temple by an inundation of the Nile. 'The priestesses,' records one critic, 'are seen dancing in the fire, until overwhelmed by the water. The massive temple sinks bit by bit, the Nile rises higher and higher, and at last the stage 'looks like a vast extent of water shimmering under a full moon' (Sydney Morning Herald 2 January 1897, p.4).

2 32 y separately published work icon Djin-Djin, the Japanese Bogie Man ; Or, The Great Shogun Who Lost his Son and the Little Princess Who Found Him : A Fairy Tale of Old Japan Bert Royle , J. C. Williamson , Leon Caron (composer), George F. Pack (composer), Williamson and Musgrove , Melbourne : Williamson and Musgrove , 1895 Z861413 1895 single work musical theatre pantomime fantasy

Described by its creators as a 'Fairy Tale of Old Japan', and with echoes of The Mikado throughout, the story concerns Djin Djin, an evil demon who holds the talisman that can save the life of Princess Iris. She will die unless someone defeats Djin Djin and liberates the talisman. To do this, they must risk entering the ruined temple where the demon and his horde of followers are based.

The pantomime was advertised as a 'grand spectacular extravaganza,' and indeed it had no fewer than thirty-eight named performers, with a host of other actors and dancers playing roles such as Mousinées, Flower Fairies, Snow Elves, Japanese Ladies, Samurai, Councillors, Officials, Courtiers, Coolies, Guards, Jinrikishamen, Spirits, Demons and Monkeys etc. The principal characters were Prince Omi (a Japanese feudal prince), Prince Eucalyptus (a suitor from the sunny south whose yacht is wrecked on the shores of Japan), Hojo-no-Kami (Diamio, a feudal prince), Princess Iris (a daughter of the Diamio), Cheekee (the Diamio's other daughter), Okiama (the Diamio's maiden sister of uncertain age), Djin Djin (the Bogie-man), Oda Nobunga (the Great Shogun), Prince Omi (the Shogun's son turned into a baboon by Djin Djin), Chrysantheme (the Fairy Queen), Dede, Maid to Princess Iris), Gay-Jay (the Grand Vizier), Fli-qui-Sami (Japan's astrologer), and Tom Wallaby (Prince Eucalyptus' faithful valet and friend).

The scene breakdown for the 1895 Melbourne premiere production was:

Act 1: Scene 1. The Shrine of the Soothsayer;

Scene 2. A Street in Nagasaki;

Scene 3. Palace Gardens of Hojo No Kami. Grand Procession and Fan ballet, Brilliant Illumination of Nagasaki.

Act 2: Scene1 Courtyard of Damio's Palace;

Scene 2. Enchanted Bamboo Grove;

Scene 3. The Frozen Forest. A Novel and Beautiful Transformation. Dance of Snow Elves and Chrysanthemum Ballet;

Scene 4. Exterior of the Haunted Temple;

Scene 5. Interior of the Temple. Grand Demon Trap Scene. The Earthquake. The Eruption of Fuji San.

Act 3: Scene 1. The Shogun's Court; Grand Specialty Entertainment by John Coleman, the Banvards, the Ridgeways, Ivy Scott and Carrie Moore. Off to Fairy Land;

Scene 2. The Golden City; Grand Ballet - Dazzling Scene of Electric Splendour. Grand Harlequinade and old English Comic Scenes by the Ridgeway Family.

[Source: Australian Variety Theatre Archive]

1 4 Struck Oil (International) assertion Clay Greene , J. C. Williamson , 1873 single work drama

John Stofel, a Dutch shoemaker has settled in America with his daughter, Lizzie. During the US Civil War, he goes off to fight in the place of a cowardly deacon who gives him the title deed of a farm. Not long after Stofel returns from the war wounded and insane, oil is discovered on the farm and the deacon tries to take the land back. Stofel eventually regains his memory, however, and finds the hidden title deed forcing the deacon to give up his land.

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