Stage property
Stage Property
late 19th century (made)
late 19th century (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Painted wooden egg, late 19th century.
This wooden egg was a stage property used by the comedian Harry Tate. Tate (1872-1940) was born Ronald McDonald Hutchinson and assumed his stage name from the company, Henry Tate & Sons, Sugar Refiners, for which he worked before becoming a professional performer. He first appeared as Tate at the Oxford Music-Hall on 13 April 1895, his early act consisting of sketches in which he mimicked music-hall stars of the day, using clip-on paper costumes to allow as many as forty-two changes in one act. He went on to develop various sketches based on middle-class leisure pursuits such as fishing, golfing and gardening which he performed with a small company.
This wooden egg was a stage property used by the comedian Harry Tate. Tate (1872-1940) was born Ronald McDonald Hutchinson and assumed his stage name from the company, Henry Tate & Sons, Sugar Refiners, for which he worked before becoming a professional performer. He first appeared as Tate at the Oxford Music-Hall on 13 April 1895, his early act consisting of sketches in which he mimicked music-hall stars of the day, using clip-on paper costumes to allow as many as forty-two changes in one act. He went on to develop various sketches based on middle-class leisure pursuits such as fishing, golfing and gardening which he performed with a small company.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | Stage property (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Painted wood |
Brief description | Wooden egg, used as a stage property by the comedian Harry Tate (1872-1940), late 19th century |
Physical description | Wooden egg, painted in dark blue and red, the blue stripe running horizontally from top to just below centre, the red running from the base up to meet the blue stripe. A hole has been drilled from the centre top, through to the centre base. |
Dimensions |
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Summary | Painted wooden egg, late 19th century. This wooden egg was a stage property used by the comedian Harry Tate. Tate (1872-1940) was born Ronald McDonald Hutchinson and assumed his stage name from the company, Henry Tate & Sons, Sugar Refiners, for which he worked before becoming a professional performer. He first appeared as Tate at the Oxford Music-Hall on 13 April 1895, his early act consisting of sketches in which he mimicked music-hall stars of the day, using clip-on paper costumes to allow as many as forty-two changes in one act. He went on to develop various sketches based on middle-class leisure pursuits such as fishing, golfing and gardening which he performed with a small company. |
Associated object | S.3470-2013 (Object) |
Collection | |
Accession number | S.4121-2013 |
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Record created | October 25, 2013 |
Record URL |
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