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8 - Romantic melodrama

from Part II - Genres

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2009

Daniel O'Quinn
Affiliation:
University of Guelph, Ontario
Jane Moody
Affiliation:
University of York
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Summary

I remember being taken somewhere and there was a large rock with a door in it and a handsome lady was outside fastened with a chain to a stake, by the door or entrance to the cave. Her long black hair, refined and yet withal a pronounced Semitic face, showed to me Aunt Eliza. While spell-bound to see her under such extraordinary circumstances, a huge reptile, hideous in green scales and large fiery eyes, made its appearance over the brow of the rock, flapped its wings and swung its tail. My scream of terror, my shout for Aunt Eliza's assistance, my puny efforts to go to her assistance made, it seems, quite a sensation, and the hero spoiled tragic effect, and caused much laughter. Thus early I made a melodramatic comedian's success

Thus James Frowde (1831-99), whose mother had been one of the famous Hengler family of pyrotechnists, rope-dancers, tragedians and circus proprietors, recalls his first memory of performance, some time around 1835. As he himself recognises, what he describes is an archetypal melodramatic moment. The play would seem to be one of the many stage versions of the heroic fable of St George and the Dragon, whose 1833-4 enactment on the classic boards of Drury Lane by Andrew Ducrow and his famous horses from Astley's Amphitheatre caused critical disgust. The drama clothed nationalist mythologising in gothic fairytale, spectacular horsemanship and special effects (Ducrow had a flying dragon that lifted him bodily from his saddle during the climactic combat). In little James's primal scene, evil - embodied in the scaly, tale-swinging beast of nightmare - menaces feminine innocence embodied in his handsome aunt. His telling of the story invokes the trope of the naïve theatregoer carried away by the fiction, overlaid with the intertheatrical joke of the boy's family relation to the stage: he not only took the dragon for real, but really knew and wished to protect the human performer.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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