Poster advertising Cinderella, 1895
Poster
1895 (made)
1895 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
The brothers-in-law James Pryde and William Nicholson set up their design business in 1894 and worked together until 1899, creating large, pared-down posters that owed an influence to the French poster work of artists including Alphonse Mucha and Toulouse Lautrec. They took their partnership name of 'Beggarstaff Brothers' from the name they saw on a bag of animal food in a stable. As Nicholson said: 'It is a good, hearty, old English name and it appealed to us, so we adopted it immediately.'
Tradition relates that Pryde & Nicholson carried their enormous poster design for this Cinderella poster to Drury Lane theatre and unfurled it in onstage during the rehearsal of the 1895 pantomime. Augustus Harris was about to reject it when Phil May, the Beggarstaffs' enthusiastic supporter, appeared and congratulated Harris on his perspicacity in commissioning the poster. It was accepted.
Tradition relates that Pryde & Nicholson carried their enormous poster design for this Cinderella poster to Drury Lane theatre and unfurled it in onstage during the rehearsal of the 1895 pantomime. Augustus Harris was about to reject it when Phil May, the Beggarstaffs' enthusiastic supporter, appeared and congratulated Harris on his perspicacity in commissioning the poster. It was accepted.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Poster advertising Cinderella, 1895 (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Lithograph on paper |
Brief description | Poster advertising Cinderella, Theatre Royal, Drury Lane. J. & W. Beggarstaff (pseudonym of William Nicholson and James Pryde), London, 1895 |
Physical description | Pictorial and typographic. Cinderella, broom in hand, stands in the foreground with her back to the viewer, looking at a coach. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions | Signed in print 'Beggarstaffs'. |
Object history | Associated Production: Cinderella. Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London. 26.12.1895. Performance category: pantomime. |
Production | Amberley House |
Summary | The brothers-in-law James Pryde and William Nicholson set up their design business in 1894 and worked together until 1899, creating large, pared-down posters that owed an influence to the French poster work of artists including Alphonse Mucha and Toulouse Lautrec. They took their partnership name of 'Beggarstaff Brothers' from the name they saw on a bag of animal food in a stable. As Nicholson said: 'It is a good, hearty, old English name and it appealed to us, so we adopted it immediately.' Tradition relates that Pryde & Nicholson carried their enormous poster design for this Cinderella poster to Drury Lane theatre and unfurled it in onstage during the rehearsal of the 1895 pantomime. Augustus Harris was about to reject it when Phil May, the Beggarstaffs' enthusiastic supporter, appeared and congratulated Harris on his perspicacity in commissioning the poster. It was accepted. |
Collection | |
Accession number | S.4-1991 |
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Record created | July 23, 2010 |
Record URL |
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