This one-act pantomime, adapted from James Robinson Planché's extravaganza The Yellow Dwarf and the King of the Gold Mines (1854), contained numerous topical references and local allusions (including unruly MLAs, John Long Innes's pending Sharebrokers' Bill, the Sydney scene, and local personalities) and a burlesque of Shakespeare's tragedy Richard III.
Set to operatic and other music, the pantomime begins in the Hawkins' Hill gold mine, where the Yellow Dwarf Gambogie makes a pact with the mine manager to swindle the owner. Each resolves, however, to swindle the other. The Fairy Queen Indulgenta, en route to the Desert of Lyons, crosses paths with the dwarf, who forces her to promise him Princess Allfair (who has refused all suitors). The princess decides, upon meeting the dwarf, that she is now willing to marry Meliodorus, but the two young lovers are kidnapped. Meliodorus is given a magic sword by the Mermaid Syrena, but is nevertheless killed. Princess Allfair suicides, but Syrena is still able to procure a happy ending.
One song known to have been incorporated into the pantomime the duet 'What Will it Go to the Ton?' (sung by S. H. Banks and W. B. Gill).
1872: Royal Victoria Theatre, Sydney, 26 December 1872 - 26 January 1873
This entry has been sourced from research undertaken by Dr Clay Djubal into Australian-written popular music theatre (ca. 1850-1930). See also the Australian Variety Theatre Archive
Details have also been derived in part from the Annotated Calendar of Plays Premiered in Australia: 1870-1890.