Charley's Aunt souvenir box
Box
1895 (made)
1895 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
On 21 December 1895 a number of these trinket boxes were presented to ladies in the audience of a so-called 'souvenir night' of the farce Charley's Aunt at London's Globe Theatre. Ticket prices were raised on nights like this to facilitate the manufacture of commemorative souvenirs. This box was commissioned to mark the farce's third anniversary on the London stage. Men were presented with similarly-decorated vesta cases. Souvenir nights were only promoted for particularly successful productions.
Charley’s Aunt, one of the most successful productions of the 19th century, ensured fame and financial security for its author, Brandon Thomas (1848-1914), and W.S. Penley (1851-1912) who staged the original production that opened on 29 February 1892 in Bury St. Edmunds. Penley also originated the role of Lord Fancourt Babberley, who is persuaded by his friend Charley Wykeham to impersonate Charley's rich aunt from Brazil, Donna Lucia d'Alvadorez. The show’s London run began at the Royalty Theatre on 21 December 1892, and transferred to the Globe Theatre on 30 January 1893 where it ran for 1,466 performances, a record at the time. The play closed on 19 December 1896 but has been continually revived around the world and has inspired both film and musical adaptation.
Penley, whose image as Charley's aunt is die-stamped on the lid, was a trained singer and comedian whose early career saw him play the Foreman in the first revival of Gilbert and Sullivan's Trial By Jury at the Royalty Theatre in 1877, and Sir Joseph Porter in Richard D’Oyly Carte Carte’s touring production of HMS Pinafore in 1878. In 1884 Penley made a hit on the London stage as the innocent young clergyman Reverend Robert Spalding in Charles Hawtrey's play The Private Secretary at the Globe Theatre, a role originally created by the hugely successful actor-manager Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree. Spalding was the part with which Penley’s name was associated for years until eclipsed by his success in Charley's Aunt.
Walker & Hall, who made the trinket box and its companion vesta case, were important 19th-century manufacturing and retailing silversmiths who supplied national and international markets with inexpensive electroplated goods, including cutlery, tea ware, candlesticks and trophies. George Walker originally established his company in Sheffield in 1845 as Walker & Co., after securing the royalty for electroplating. Henry Hall joined the business in 1853, creating Walker & Hall, with a factory in Howard Street, Sheffield, and showrooms in London at 45 Holborn Viaduct. Branches were later opened in Liverpool, Manchester, Leeds, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Newcastle, Cardiff, Belfast, Hull, Bristol, Melbourne, Adelaide, Cape Town, Wellington and Auckland.
Charley’s Aunt, one of the most successful productions of the 19th century, ensured fame and financial security for its author, Brandon Thomas (1848-1914), and W.S. Penley (1851-1912) who staged the original production that opened on 29 February 1892 in Bury St. Edmunds. Penley also originated the role of Lord Fancourt Babberley, who is persuaded by his friend Charley Wykeham to impersonate Charley's rich aunt from Brazil, Donna Lucia d'Alvadorez. The show’s London run began at the Royalty Theatre on 21 December 1892, and transferred to the Globe Theatre on 30 January 1893 where it ran for 1,466 performances, a record at the time. The play closed on 19 December 1896 but has been continually revived around the world and has inspired both film and musical adaptation.
Penley, whose image as Charley's aunt is die-stamped on the lid, was a trained singer and comedian whose early career saw him play the Foreman in the first revival of Gilbert and Sullivan's Trial By Jury at the Royalty Theatre in 1877, and Sir Joseph Porter in Richard D’Oyly Carte Carte’s touring production of HMS Pinafore in 1878. In 1884 Penley made a hit on the London stage as the innocent young clergyman Reverend Robert Spalding in Charles Hawtrey's play The Private Secretary at the Globe Theatre, a role originally created by the hugely successful actor-manager Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree. Spalding was the part with which Penley’s name was associated for years until eclipsed by his success in Charley's Aunt.
Walker & Hall, who made the trinket box and its companion vesta case, were important 19th-century manufacturing and retailing silversmiths who supplied national and international markets with inexpensive electroplated goods, including cutlery, tea ware, candlesticks and trophies. George Walker originally established his company in Sheffield in 1845 as Walker & Co., after securing the royalty for electroplating. Henry Hall joined the business in 1853, creating Walker & Hall, with a factory in Howard Street, Sheffield, and showrooms in London at 45 Holborn Viaduct. Branches were later opened in Liverpool, Manchester, Leeds, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Newcastle, Cardiff, Belfast, Hull, Bristol, Melbourne, Adelaide, Cape Town, Wellington and Auckland.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Parts | This object consists of 2 parts. (Some alternative part names are also shown below)
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Title | Charley's Aunt souvenir box (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Silver box with die-stamped repoussé work and etched lettering |
Brief description | Heart-shaped souvenir trinket box, produced to commemorate the third anniversary of Brandon Thomas's farce Charley's Aunt on the London stage. Silver with silver-gilt interior. Walker & Hall, Sheffield, 1895 |
Physical description | Silver heart-shaped trinket box with removable lid and silver-gilt interior. S.101:1-2023 Heart-shaped silver box, the exterior of which is etched: 'From Charley's Aunt December 21st 1895' and the interior is silver-gilt S.101:2-2023 Heart-shaped silver lid decorated with a die-stamped repoussé head and shoulders' portrait of the actor W.S. Penley (1851-1912) as the character of Donna Lucia D'Alvadorez, Lord Fancourt Babberley's aunt. The interior is silver-gilt. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions | 'From Charley's Aunt December 21st 1895' |
Credit line | Given by Elaine Bennett |
Associations | |
Summary | On 21 December 1895 a number of these trinket boxes were presented to ladies in the audience of a so-called 'souvenir night' of the farce Charley's Aunt at London's Globe Theatre. Ticket prices were raised on nights like this to facilitate the manufacture of commemorative souvenirs. This box was commissioned to mark the farce's third anniversary on the London stage. Men were presented with similarly-decorated vesta cases. Souvenir nights were only promoted for particularly successful productions. Charley’s Aunt, one of the most successful productions of the 19th century, ensured fame and financial security for its author, Brandon Thomas (1848-1914), and W.S. Penley (1851-1912) who staged the original production that opened on 29 February 1892 in Bury St. Edmunds. Penley also originated the role of Lord Fancourt Babberley, who is persuaded by his friend Charley Wykeham to impersonate Charley's rich aunt from Brazil, Donna Lucia d'Alvadorez. The show’s London run began at the Royalty Theatre on 21 December 1892, and transferred to the Globe Theatre on 30 January 1893 where it ran for 1,466 performances, a record at the time. The play closed on 19 December 1896 but has been continually revived around the world and has inspired both film and musical adaptation. Penley, whose image as Charley's aunt is die-stamped on the lid, was a trained singer and comedian whose early career saw him play the Foreman in the first revival of Gilbert and Sullivan's Trial By Jury at the Royalty Theatre in 1877, and Sir Joseph Porter in Richard D’Oyly Carte Carte’s touring production of HMS Pinafore in 1878. In 1884 Penley made a hit on the London stage as the innocent young clergyman Reverend Robert Spalding in Charles Hawtrey's play The Private Secretary at the Globe Theatre, a role originally created by the hugely successful actor-manager Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree. Spalding was the part with which Penley’s name was associated for years until eclipsed by his success in Charley's Aunt. Walker & Hall, who made the trinket box and its companion vesta case, were important 19th-century manufacturing and retailing silversmiths who supplied national and international markets with inexpensive electroplated goods, including cutlery, tea ware, candlesticks and trophies. George Walker originally established his company in Sheffield in 1845 as Walker & Co., after securing the royalty for electroplating. Henry Hall joined the business in 1853, creating Walker & Hall, with a factory in Howard Street, Sheffield, and showrooms in London at 45 Holborn Viaduct. Branches were later opened in Liverpool, Manchester, Leeds, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Newcastle, Cardiff, Belfast, Hull, Bristol, Melbourne, Adelaide, Cape Town, Wellington and Auckland. |
Associated objects |
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Collection | |
Accession number | S.101:1, 2-2023 |
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Record created | December 15, 2022 |
Record URL |
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