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January 29, 2019

Nellie Stewart - Australia's first star of the stage and screen

Sweet Nell of Old Drury

NELLIE STEWART, the darling of the Australian stage in the Victorian era, was born on November 28, 1858, in Woolloomooloo, Sydney. She came from a long line of theatre folk and it was as a member of her father's travelling company that she made her debut, aged only two or three, at Coppin's Haymarket Theatre, Melbourne. Her role was that of a child in a five-act drama titled The Little Stranger.

"I can remember quite distinctly," she wrote, "being dressed in a black velvet pelisse and a pork pie hat. After I'd been on stage a few minutes father whispered to me, 'Go back to mother.' I trotted off and she gave me a big piece of toffee."

She was, even as a young girl, an all-round performer. She learnt to fence, to dance and to sing, her education was never neglected and there was no doubt whatever about her acting talent. Her big chance came in 1880.

From small character parts, she had graduated to a musical medley called Rainbow Revels, specially written for Richard Stewart and his family. This production took her to India, Europe and the USA, and it was while playing in the latter country that she received an urgent call to return to Melbourne. She was wanted there as principal boy in George Coppin's pantomime, Sinbad the Sailor. A record run resulted and after that she was cast in her first really big success - the role of Griolet, the drummer boy, in the musical La Fille du Tambour Major. She had become the toast of the eighties, the idol of Australian theatre.

Comic opera followed, and from La Mascotte, one of her most memorable triumphs, she graduated to exacting roles in Gilbert and Sullivan operas. Now under the patronage of producer George Musgrove, whom she described as her "great and good man" she made regular appearances in them here and abroad and it was said of her that "... even in England, the home of Gilbert and Sullivan, they have never seen a better Mabel in Pirates of Penzance or a more appealing Elsie in The Yeoman of the Guard. Outstanding too was her performance of Yum Yum in The Mikado.

In 13 years of touring she sang the leading role in 35 different comic operas. Physically she was tough and she had an unfaitering belief in the legend that "the play must go on". Once when playing Jack in the pantomime. Jack and the Beanstalk she fell from the beanstalk and broke her arm. Despite the not inconsiderable pain she simply had the arm strapped up, refused the suggestion that she should hand over to her understudy and went on with the show.

She seems to have possessed the gift of eternal youth - at least when she was made up and on the stage. At the age of 41 she repeated her success as principal boy in Sinbad the Sailor and 10 years later looked stunning as the voung heroine in When Knighthood Was In Flower. During her lifetime, her age was a well-kept secret. And in her autobiography she wrote, "... the date? No, I'm not going to tell you. You must keep on guessing and I shall keep on growing younger.”

Then in 1902 came the play most surely associated with her name - Sweet Nell of Old Drury. She was 44 when J. C. Williamson starred her in the production at the Melbourne Princess Theatre and although her singing voice had gone audiences still loved her, still flocked in their hundreds to see her.
Talma & Co., photographers. Nellie Stewart. ca. 1910.
Gelatin silver photograph with hand colouring.
Elsie Thorp postcard collection of
theatrical and literary portraits. H37081/29.
La Trobe Picture Collection.

The role, after her long career in comic opera, established her as a straight actress. Her popularity was at its height; and when, in 1909, Sweet Nell was revived in Melbourne the management, says Hal Porter in his book Stars of Australian Stage and Screen, "served afternoon tea and scones to the playgoers who had been in line since eleven in the morning."

Nellie had married Richard Row in 1884. The marriage was a failure and with the directness and commonsense that characterised this woman in an age of male dominance, she packed her bags and left the matrimonial home. She never married again but for 30 years she was "the friend" of George Musgrove, long associated with J. C. Williamson and Arthur Garner in the birthpangs of the modern Australian commercial theatre. He was with her on tour in San Francisco when the great earthquake brought them close to financial disaster and later, in 1911, starred with Nellie in pioneer film-maker Raymond Longford's screen version of Sweet Nell of Old Drury. He died in 1916.

Nellie made her final stage appearance at the Melbourne Comedy Theatre as Cavallani in the play Romance. That was in July, 1930 and, according to those who remember, she looked from the stalls like a young and attractive woman. Her fans were still legion when, in 1931, death brought to an end the remarkable career of a remarkable woman.

Theatre was in the blood of those Victorian stage charmers; at least half a dozen who come to mind began their careers when little more than babies. Ada Reeve, the Gaiety girl and one of our best-loved musical and revue entertainers, made her first appearance in pantomime at the age of five. Tittell Brune, Australia's Peter Pan and a dramatic actress of considerable ability was starting out for stardom when only four and a half.

Carrie Moore, of Merry Widow fame, knew the smell of grease paint when only a child, while her earlier namesake, Maggie Moore, who came to Australia with J. C. Williamson. was seven when she made her stage debut. It is a formidable list that goes back through an era of great talent.

Source: Australia Album - The Past in Pictures. Edited by Ailsa Craig
Sungravure Pty Ltd. 1974.

January 27, 2019

Tripura – the last of India's secret destinations revealed

Neermahal Palace

Sandip Hor explores the hidden enclave in India's Northeast.

January 25, 2019

World's largest flower auction in Holland






SELLING FLOWERS BY THE FOOTIE FIELD

David Ellis

THE next time you're worrying about what flower, rose or maybe potted plant to buy for that special someone, give a thought to those in the floral industry charged with going along and buying at the daily Aalsmeer Flower Auction in the Netherlands.

Because here is the biggest flower auction in the world, and held in a building with one of the largest floor areas on earth – an amazing twenty-million flowers and decorative plants being sold here to commercial buyers every day, in a building whose floor area of 518,000 square metres is 52 hectares, or around the equivalent of 100-plus football fields.




The first Aalsmeer flower auction was held way back in 1911 in a simple local eatery – the CafĂ© Welcome – and after that, auctions moved around various sites as they grew in size over the next 60-odd years, until the current gigantic purpose-built market was opened in 1972 near Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport as the-then world's biggest building by floor area.

Flowers now sold here come from across Europe, and such diversely far-flung countries as Australia, Ecuador, Colombia, Ethiopia and Kenya, with roses (live and cut) the biggest sellers at twenty-eight per cent of all sales, three times as many, in fact, as tulips sold.

Some E4.6-billion (AU$7.3-billion) worth of flowers sell here annually using the Dutch Auction system, in which the price starts high and works its way down, with daily trading starting at 7am and being all over by 11am (Thursdays 9am.) Something like 280 battery-powered "scooters" hauling shuttles of trolleys, plus a form of miniature railway, are used to move each day's 20-million flowers around the vast building.

An elevated Visitors' Walking Gallery for viewing the flowers on display and the auctions in progress has information panels in four languages... and be prepared for a long walk to take-in as much as you can, for remember this building has a floor area of 52 hectares.


PHOTO CAPTION:

[] BUSY on the ground, some 280 battery-powered trolleys and a complete miniature-railway-like system shuttle 20-million flowers and decorative plants around the vast 52ha Aalsmeer Flower Auction building near Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport daily.








January 21, 2019

Is this the world's smallest castle?


HOW SMALL IS MY CASTLE?

David Ellis

MENTION castles and immediately to mind spring images of vast and picturesque affairs set in fairy-tale English or European countrysides…

But near Long Compton village in England's Cotswolds a couple of hours out of London, is an officially recognised castle that rather than being famed for its vastness, is renowned instead for just how small it is.

Because with a floor area of a mere 73 square metres it is England's smallest castle, and actually more tiny than many of its neighbouring country bungalows and cottages.

And although it is called a castle, and recognised by many official authorities as a castle, to most locals it is known simply as Molly's Lodge, and comes with just one bedroom, a modest living room and dining room, compact kitchen and a little bathroom – and despite its moniker as a castle, served for a time as gatehouse to the opulent once deer-hunting property, Weston Park Estate.

But importantly it's still officially a castle as far as the British government is concerned, because it has corner turrets, mullion windows (fashionable in Romanesque architecture,) and a crenelated parapet from which arrows could be unleashed in days of yore at anyone foolish enough to try to attack.

This little castle was built in the 1830s by famed architect Edward Blore, who completed extensions to Buckingham Palace for Queen Victoria in the 1840s, and also designed Government House in far-off Sydney, Australia – and with his love of castles, created that in Gothic Revival style.

And while his smallest of English castles in the picturesque Cotswolds may be tiny, it also has a separate 1-bedroom mews house that was added later from the conversion of original stables, the castle and mews last changing hands in 2017 for 550,000 pounds sterling (approximately AU$968,000.)


[] TINY as it is, because of its design this is still recognised as a castle… and officially England's smallest, with a floor area of just 73 square metres.