Not currently on display at the V&A

Drury Lane Design Collection

Costume Design
1910 (designed)
Artist/Maker

Costume design by Comelli for Puck in Scene V of Jack and the Beanstalk, Theatre Royal Drury Lane, 1910.

Jack and the Beanstalk Jack & the Beanstalk is thought to have originated as Jack the Giant Killer. The first performance of Jack the Giant Killer, as a Christmas play at Drury Lane in 1773, was written by David Garrick and introduced the character of Jack as a lazy but clever hero. The first recorded pantomime of Jack and the Beanstalk; or Harlequin and the Ogre was performed in 1819 in which a famous young actress called Eliza Povey played the first ever principal boy, Idle Jack. The basic plot of this pantomime was taken from the English fairy tale, in which Jack trades his cow for magic beans and then seeks adventure and good fortune at the top of the beanstalk. Jack & the Beanstalk also introduced one of the most famous Dames to the English stage in 1886 when Dan Leno made his debut at Drury Lane as Dame Trot, Jack's nagging mother. By the early twentieth century pantomimes were growing increasingly long and elaborate and often included grand processions, huge sets and elaborate ballet sequences in which hundreds of acrobats, dancers, and children took part.

In the 1910 production (produced by Arthur Collins, Frank Dix and J.Hickory Wood) Jack Halleybut was played by Miss Dolly Castles, Princess Dorothy was played by Miss Julia James, Titania was played by Miss Hilda Playfair and Puck was played by Miss Anita Edis. The music was composed and arranged by J.M.Glover. The character of Puck appeared in an interlude set in Titania's Bower.

Comelli (1858-1925) was the house designer of the Royal Opera House from the late 1880s to the early 1920s. During this period he also worked for the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane and also designed costumes from a number of Gilbert&Sullivan productions.

This design comes from a collection of costume designs, some of which are costumier's copies, which were originally part of the Archives of the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane.


Object details

Category
Object type
TitleDrury Lane Design Collection (named collection)
Materials and techniques
Brief description
Costume design by Comelli for Puck in Scene V of Jack and the Beanstalk Theatre Royal Drury Lane, 1910. Drury Lane Design Collection.
Physical description
Costume design by Comelli for Puck in Jack and the Beanstalk, Theatre Royal Drury Lane, 1910. A watercolour costume sketch showing a young woman dressed in a pale white smock with a flat pale blue collar, worn over a white tunic with tight elbow length sleeves. Both smock and tunic are decorated with pale blue motifs. The tunic has checked bands around the sleeveheads whilst the smock has a diamond motif around the hem and further blue decoration around the four pockets (two at the bodice and two at the waist).She is also wearing knee high stockings in black and pale blue and a wide brimmed black hat worn far on the back of her head. Her hair is short and curled and exposes the women's high pointed elf-like ears. This design is signed and dated Comelli, 1910. There is a further pencil sketch revealing further details of what appears to be the undertunic.
Dimensions
  • Height: 36.2cm
  • Width: 26.2cm
Marks and inscriptions
  • Puck (Handwritten annotation in pen on the bottom right hand corner of the design)
  • Comelli 1910 (Handwritten signature in pen at the left hand side of the design)
  • PI Sc V (Handwritten annotation in pen at the bottom right hand corner of the design)
  • Transliteration
Subject depicted
Place depicted
Literary referenceJack and the Beanstalk
Summary
Costume design by Comelli for Puck in Scene V of Jack and the Beanstalk, Theatre Royal Drury Lane, 1910.

Jack and the Beanstalk Jack & the Beanstalk is thought to have originated as Jack the Giant Killer. The first performance of Jack the Giant Killer, as a Christmas play at Drury Lane in 1773, was written by David Garrick and introduced the character of Jack as a lazy but clever hero. The first recorded pantomime of Jack and the Beanstalk; or Harlequin and the Ogre was performed in 1819 in which a famous young actress called Eliza Povey played the first ever principal boy, Idle Jack. The basic plot of this pantomime was taken from the English fairy tale, in which Jack trades his cow for magic beans and then seeks adventure and good fortune at the top of the beanstalk. Jack & the Beanstalk also introduced one of the most famous Dames to the English stage in 1886 when Dan Leno made his debut at Drury Lane as Dame Trot, Jack's nagging mother. By the early twentieth century pantomimes were growing increasingly long and elaborate and often included grand processions, huge sets and elaborate ballet sequences in which hundreds of acrobats, dancers, and children took part.

In the 1910 production (produced by Arthur Collins, Frank Dix and J.Hickory Wood) Jack Halleybut was played by Miss Dolly Castles, Princess Dorothy was played by Miss Julia James, Titania was played by Miss Hilda Playfair and Puck was played by Miss Anita Edis. The music was composed and arranged by J.M.Glover. The character of Puck appeared in an interlude set in Titania's Bower.

Comelli (1858-1925) was the house designer of the Royal Opera House from the late 1880s to the early 1920s. During this period he also worked for the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane and also designed costumes from a number of Gilbert&Sullivan productions.

This design comes from a collection of costume designs, some of which are costumier's copies, which were originally part of the Archives of the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane.
Other number
Jack and the Beanstalk File
Collection
Accession number
S.2011-2010

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Record createdSeptember 16, 2010
Record URL
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