Cathcart vs Brooke: a Touring Actress and a Trial of Public Private Identity in the Australian Colonies
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Flaherty, Kate
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Volume Title
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Cambridge University Press
Abstract
In this article Kate Flaherty examines the sensational contractual dispute that arose
between Gustavus Vaughan Brooke and Mary Fanny Cathcart during their Australian
colonial tour in 1855. She follows Brooke’s attempt to use his theatrical repertoire to
achieve and consolidate a legal victory over Cathcart, but argues that this strategy
ultimately backfired and elicited a form of judgement by the theatregoing public that
countered the judgement handed down by the Supreme Court. Conversely, coverage of
the case in Australian newspapers is identified as shaping reviews and sharpening the
edge of the stage dramas. The article provides a focused instance of the complex interplay
of dramatic works, cultural politics, gendered power, and publicity that characterized
nineteenth-century theatrical touring. Kate Flaherty is a lecturer in English and Drama at
the Australian National University, a member of the International Shakespeare Conference,
and a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. She is author of Ours as We Play
It: Australia Plays Shakespeare (University of Western Australia Press, 2011), as well as
numerous essays on how Shakespeare’s works play on the stage of public culture.
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New Theatre Quarterly
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Restricted until
2099-12-31