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A Winning Hazard

Three comediettas by J. P. Wooler

Press Info
sep-nov 2018
“Be assured if ever I should marry, I should do so simply to be revenged on your whole sex…”
9 - 25 Sept 2018
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A Winning Hazard is a comedic tale of two men who devise a fake duel to woo two young ladies amidst familial pressure regarding marriage.

About The Play

About The Play

Rediscovering and celebrating the work of Victorian playwright J. P. Wooler (who died in 1868, the year the Finborough Theatre building was constructed – the exact 150th anniversary of his death will occur during this run of performances), A Winning Hazard is an evening of three of his comediettas which combine insightful observations on the hypocrisy and vanity of the English ruling class, coupled with characters and situations that are both deeply Victorian, but also vividly progressive in their views on gender, money, and class.

A Winning Hazard (1865) centres on Dudley Croker and Jack Crawley who are unsuccessfully vying for the hands of two young ladies, Aurora and Coralie Blythe. When Dudley’s uncle Colonel Croker threatens to exclude both of them from his will unless they marry, they decide to win their respective partners by concocting a fake duel…
This was the very first play produced by Marie Wilton (one of London’s very earliest female theatre managers) at the Prince of Wales’ Theatre in 1865, starring both herself and her future husband, Sir Squire Bancroft. Both Sir Squire and Lady Bancroft are buried in Brompton Cemetery, close to the Finborough Theatre.

Allow Me to Apologise (1850s) sees Miss Fanny Fairlove get tangled in a cross dressing seduction intrigue with Mary Myrtle and Harriett Seymour. Taking on her ward Goliah Goth’s name and thus his male privileges, Miss Fairlove visits Harriett in Bath and rekindles the love they forged the previous summer, only to take it away with the arrival of Captain Seymour, the man who is hopelessly in love with Miss Fairlove and whom she decides to marry.

Orange Blossoms (1860s) – Septimus Symmetry is a famed woman-hater – until he is visited in his garden by his friends and relations who are determined to get him to face his greatest fear: marriage. When his guests arrive, they discover that they all have histories of unfulfilled love – with each other. And, to his horror, Septimus find himself besotted by Loo who is famed for her hatred of men. He decides to upset the apple cart by reigniting old flames and fanning jealousy to prove his point about the absurdity of marriage and society.

The run will be accompanied by the FINBOROUGHFORUM, a series of informal post-show discussions followed by a Q&A session, on Sunday evenings: 16 and 23 September 2018.

All events are free to ticket holders of the same evening’s performance.  FINBOROUGHFORUM events will all be Twitter friendly with live tweets from @FinboroughForum. Using the hashtag #finfor, the speakers will also answer questions posted on Twitter so everyone can be included, no matter where they are in the world.

The first event will feature a Q&A session with Sarah Richardson – Associate Professor of British History at the University of Warwick, and members of the cast and company.

More Detail

Cast

Crew

Director

Phillip James Rouse

Producer

Presented by The Hazard Project in association with Neil McPherson for the Finborough Theatre

Design

Martelle Hunt

Sound and Music

Julian Starr

Lighting

Euan Davis