Stage property
Stage Property
late 19th century (made)
late 19th century (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Slim length of bamboo, Bound with thread at one end, with leather at the other.
This 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 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
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Stage property (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Wood |
Brief description | Length of bamboo, used as a stage property by the comedian Harry Tate (1872-1940), late 19th century |
Physical description | Slim length of bamboo. Bound with thread at one end, cut into a ‘notch’ and bound with leather (cracking) at the other. Decorated with hand painted geometric patterns in tones of black and red at one end. |
Dimensions |
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Summary | Slim length of bamboo, Bound with thread at one end, with leather at the other. This 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.4126-2013 |
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Record created | October 25, 2013 |
Record URL |
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