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The Whip (play)

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The Whip is a melodrama by Henry Hamilton and Cecil Raleigh, first performed in 1909 at the Drury Lane Theatre in London. The play's original production had intricate scenery and spectacular stage effects, including a horse race and a train crash. There were later productions in the United States and Australia, and the play inspired two silent films.

Reception

Tallulah Bankhead offers a reminiscence of attending The Whip at the Manhattan Opera House as a child:

The Whip was a blood-and-thunder melodrama in four acts and fourteen scenes imported from London's Drury Lane Theatre. It boiled with villainy and violence. Its plot embraced a twelve-horse race on a treadmill (for the Gold Cup at Newmarket), a Hunt Breakfast embellished by fifteen dogs, an auto-smash-up, the Chamber of Horrors at Madame Tussaud's Waxworks, and a train wreck with a locomotive hissing real steam. It boasted a dissolute earl and a wicked marquis, and a heroine whose hand was sought by both knave and hero. It was a tremendous emotional dose for anyone as stage-struck and impressionable as our heroine.

The heroine, "Lady Di" Sartoris, created by Jessie Bateman, was referenced in P. G. Wodehouse's Heavy Weather (1933).

Adaptations

A novelization by Richard Parker was published in 1913. The play was adapted into films of the same name in 1917 and again in 1928.

Sources

References

  1. Bankhead, Tallulah (1952). Tallulah:My Autobiography. London: V. Gollancz. p. 42.
  2. "Heavy Weather by P. G. Wodehouse Literary and Cultural References". Madame Eulalie. Archived from the original on 29 June 2022.
  3. Parker, Richard; Raleigh, Cecil (1913). "The Whip". The Macaulay company. Retrieved 14 March 2023.

External links


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