Silk Programme
ca.1880 (printed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Silk and satin playbills and programmes were commonly produced in the 18th and 19th centuries to mark special evenings at the theatre, often lavishly fringed and sometimes even illustrated. This silk playbill, unfringed but neatly hemmed by hand, was produced for a three-night production by officers of the Royal Artillery at the Theatre Royal, Kirkee, a town in the Indian state of Maharashtra, which still has a large army base. Despite it being an amateur performance, a silk bill was produced, headed with the royal crest, perhaps because His Excellency the Governor was himself due to attend.
Kirkee was the site of the Battle of Kirkee, fought between the British East India Company and the Marathas in 1817 in which the Peshwa ruler was defeated. Soon after the war the British set up a cantonment here which became the base of the Royal Regiment of Artillery's 79 (Kirkee) Commando Battery. Their first offering of the evening, the farce The Rifle and How To Use It!,obviously of appeal to a military audience, was followed by Aladdin, in which even Princess Barioulbadour was played by a man. Producing Aladdin in September followed the earlier convention of pantomime not being restricted to Christmas time.
Kirkee was the site of the Battle of Kirkee, fought between the British East India Company and the Marathas in 1817 in which the Peshwa ruler was defeated. Soon after the war the British set up a cantonment here which became the base of the Royal Regiment of Artillery's 79 (Kirkee) Commando Battery. Their first offering of the evening, the farce The Rifle and How To Use It!,obviously of appeal to a military audience, was followed by Aladdin, in which even Princess Barioulbadour was played by a man. Producing Aladdin in September followed the earlier convention of pantomime not being restricted to Christmas time.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Printed silk |
Brief description | Silk programme for The Rifle, and How To Use It! and Aladdin, performed by the Officers of the Royal Artillery, Theatre Royal, Kirkee, India, late 19th century. Printed by the Deccan Herald. |
Physical description | Silk programme printed in black typography on cream silk with pink selvedges, the edges neatly hemmed on three sides in red cotton. Featuring a royal crest top centre, above the words: 'THE THEATRE ROYAL, KIRKEE. UNDER THE PATRONAGE OF HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR' Featuring a variety of typeface, including a decorative typeface. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions |
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Object history | Kirkee, a town in the Indian state of Maharashtra, on the Deccan plateau, was the site of the Battle of Kirkee, fought between the British East India Company and the Marathas in 1817 in which Baji Rao, the Peshwa ruler was defeated. Soon after the war, the British set up a cantonment here. It then became the base of the Royal Regiment of Artillery's 79 (Kirkee) Commando Battery. |
Subject depicted | |
Place depicted | |
Association | |
Summary | Silk and satin playbills and programmes were commonly produced in the 18th and 19th centuries to mark special evenings at the theatre, often lavishly fringed and sometimes even illustrated. This silk playbill, unfringed but neatly hemmed by hand, was produced for a three-night production by officers of the Royal Artillery at the Theatre Royal, Kirkee, a town in the Indian state of Maharashtra, which still has a large army base. Despite it being an amateur performance, a silk bill was produced, headed with the royal crest, perhaps because His Excellency the Governor was himself due to attend. Kirkee was the site of the Battle of Kirkee, fought between the British East India Company and the Marathas in 1817 in which the Peshwa ruler was defeated. Soon after the war the British set up a cantonment here which became the base of the Royal Regiment of Artillery's 79 (Kirkee) Commando Battery. Their first offering of the evening, the farce The Rifle and How To Use It!,obviously of appeal to a military audience, was followed by Aladdin, in which even Princess Barioulbadour was played by a man. Producing Aladdin in September followed the earlier convention of pantomime not being restricted to Christmas time. |
Collection | |
Accession number | S.1281-1982 |
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Record created | January 17, 2007 |
Record URL |
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