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Courtesy of The University of Queensland
Richard Fotheringham Richard Fotheringham i(A31205 works by) (a.k.a. Richard Allen Fotheringham)
Born: Established: 1947 Roma, Roma - Mitchell - Morven area, Roma - Charleville - Quilpie area, South West Queensland, Queensland, ;
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 y separately published work icon A World Without Hunger? Richard Fotheringham , (Manuscript version)x401270 Z1006539 single work screenplay
1 Screening Live Performance : Australia's Major Theatre Companies in the Age of Digital Transmission Richard Fotheringham , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australasian Drama Studies , April no. 68 2016; (p. 3-33)
'This article is in four parts. First, I discuss the emerging worldwide phenomenon of commercial cinema screenings of live stage performances. Second, I chart some attempts by Australia's major performing arts organisations to do likewise. Third, I examine more closely one simultaneous satellite relay screening to nine regional cities: a performance of a Queensland Theatre Company (QTC) production of Tom Wright's Black Diggers, directed by Wesley Enoch, on Wednesday 8 October 2014. Finally, I attempt some brief thoughts on where this new area of work could be heading.' (Publication abstract)
1 Script of Louis XI Pat Hanna , Richard Fotheringham , 2016 single work
— Appears in: Queensland Review , vol. 23 no. 2 2016; (p. 143-150)
'The script of Louis XI used as the basis for this edition is the only known surviving version, a typescript on lined foolscap held in the National Archives of Australia, Canberra, in the Copyright Applications Series CRS A1336/1 item 14,222. It appears to have been typed from an earlier script that has not survived — probably a much-amended manuscript given numerous transcription errors, and was not subsequently corrected. As a consequence, it retains traces of that earlier version. Its title, typed in caps at the top of each page, is ‘SHELL SHOCK’, but on the first page this has been crossed through and ‘Louis XI’ written in heavy black ink, followed by ‘written and produced by GP Hanna at Cremorne Theatre Brisbane/1924’.' (Introduction)
1 The Great War and Popular Modernism : Pat Hanna's Louis XI Richard Fotheringham , 2016 single work criticism
— Appears in: Queensland Review , vol. 23 no. 2 2016; (p. 133-142)
'Pat Hanna's Famous Diggers, a professional vaudeville theatre troupe comprising ex-Great War Anzac soldiers (initially, mainly New Zealanders, as Hanna was himself) played for nearly two years (1923–24) at the old Cremorne Theatre in Brisbane. One item Hanna premiered at the Cremorne was Louis XI, a short (ten-minute) comic sketch he wrote himself. Modernism in the inter-war years, given its usual location within avant-garde aesthetics, high culture, internationalism and radical politics, is not — with the notable exception of Brecht's cabaret work in the 1920s — usually associated with popular theatre. While one comic playlet hardly challenges that positioning, Louis XI was a direct result of the Great War's profound reshaping of modern life. Many of the dramatised sketches performed by Hanna's company, including Louis XI, were structured around a contrast between events as they had occurred in the trenches and as they were portrayed in a utopian or dystopian fantasy, sometimes triggered by shell shock or a dream. Several, again including Louis XI, involve the past, and express the curiosity and cultural dislocation Australian- and New Zealand-born soldiers felt as they moved for the first time through real-life landscapes and architecture they had known only from popular history and romance.' (Introduction)
1 y separately published work icon The Diary of Philip Thomas Smith on Board the Royal Admiral en route for Van Diemen's Land : 27 November 1831- 8 April 1832 Philip Thomas Smith , Richard Fotheringham (editor), North Melbourne : Australian Scholarly Publishing , 2016 10681055 2016 single work diary

'Philip Smith (1800–1880), one of Tasmania’s earliest settlers and later one of its best known, doesn’t tell us why in 1831 he left his career as a London lawyer, except (ambiguously) that he had been ‘a wicked wight’. Racked with sea-sickness and contemptuous of the miserly and hot-tempered Captain with his incomprehensible Scots accent, he hated almost every minute of the 4½ month journey.

'Partly to keep himself sane, Smith kept detailed day-by-day notes and then rewrote them as a witty, acerbic and entertaining account of his adventures. He chronicles everything from obsessing about the wind and their progress (or lack of it) to diversions to pass the time: a ceremony to mark crossing the Equator; catching and eating shark; a sudden enthusiasm for chess amongst both those accommodated in the cabin and those in the steerage. He rejoices in dawns and sunsets, is exhilarated by lightning and wild weather, vividly describes a terrifying hurricane with the ‘sea running mountains high and white as a field of snow’ and occasionally helps the sailors pump out the ship which has sprung a small leak.

'Smith clearly thought himself much superior to his fellow travellers and grumbles that most of what he recorded about them was ‘petty squabbling & disputes & pitiful sayings’ but it is his close attention to the emotional complexity of everyone from the Captain to individual sailors, cabin passengers to steerage servants, that, today, makes his diary so rich and interesting.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

2 5 y separately published work icon White Australia, or, The Empty North White Australia - The White Man's Land, or, For Australia Randolph Bedford , 1909 Fortitude Valley : Playlab , 2014 Z850065 1909 single work drama

Melodrama.

Billed as a 'patriotic drama,' White Australia tells of an attempted invasion by Japan, with help from some Northern Territory Aborigines and a white traitor, which is thwarted by a Northern Territory squatter.

The first two acts deal with the descent of Japanese troops on Port Darwin, together with the spying and treachery of their leading officer, Yamamoto. The opening scene is set on the station owned by Geoffrey Pearse, the squatter who has invented and is currently building an airship capable of carrying enough explosives to destroy an invading navy. Although rumours about dissent among Japanese workers on the coast have begun to circulate, they are not taken seriously by those on the station or around the district. An enthusiastic toast to Australia is followed shortly afterwards, however, by new rumours of outright warfare and a spirited fight outside the station house as tension mounts. The drama then shifts to the centre of the continent and where two telegraph workers sit in their hut discussing the year Malua won the cup while their mate goes about his work outside unaware that death is creeping up behind him in the shape of a coloured man. The second act is set in Port Darwin, where the airship's project manager and chief engineer Jack Macquarie and his sweetheart, 'a more than usually reckless heroine' are involved in a situation inside an opium house. When Macquarie carelessly loses the cryptic key which allows the airship's delicate machinery to work, the Japanese spy leader gains possession of it. Meanwhile the land invasion continues, with this act culminating in the defence of Port Darwin. As the streets are swept by machine gun fire defenders and assailants fall in heaps. 'Among the slain being one of the cheerful young Australian girls... whom the author does not hesitate to sacrifice in his fine frenzy for the flag' (Age 28 June 1909, p9).

Although the Yamamoto now has the key he does not have the password that makes it effective. Knowing that if he fails to get the information the Japanese fleet will very likely be destroyed, he captures and tortures the young engineer inventor. Macquarie refuses to divulge the password, however, and Yamamoto subsequently orders his sweetheart to also be tortured. She is then given to Geoffrey Pearse's nephew, the traitorous and degenerate Cedric, to be 'outraged' (Table Talk 1 July 1909, p24).

In the remaining two acts Bedford threads together his incidents in a manner which the Age describes has little regard for ordered sequence. In the critic's opinion it is not Bedford's invention, but rather 'his arrangement that is at fault.'

One of the feature incidents reported by the paper's theatre critic was the sensation scene in which Macquarie's airship travels at an indefinite height through clouds above Sydney while 'hurling missiles of destruction upon the enemy's fleet' (Age 28 June 1909, p9).

The Age's review of the King's Theatre production suggests that Bedford had bestowed much thought in developing the important character of Yamamoto. 'This man,' writes the critic, 'is really the crown and centrepiece of the elaborate scheme that has evolved for the capture of Australia. The character is in no sense burlesqued; in fact he possess all the brains and resources that Mr Bedford would presumably bestow upon a clever white man, while the Japanese possess a devotion to national duty that the white man in these latitudes does not often recognise' (Age 28 June 1909, p9).

The comedic elements in the play were largely provided in the King's Theatre season by Bert Bailey in the role of Aboriginal tracker, Terrabit, and Temple Harrison, as a comic swagman with a memory of Sir 'Enery Parkes. Other leading characters were Bill Pearse '(Walter Dalgleish), as the one-time drunken young Australian who rises finely to a crisis;' his cousin Cedric Pearse (Lawrence Dunbar) the villain who sides with the enemy; and Jim Tennant (Max Clifton) as 'a stockman who becomes warlike when the enemy's guns are heard' (Age 28 June 1909, p9).

1 'Gallipoli Bill' : A Comedy of the Great War Richard Fotheringham , 2013 single work criticism
— Appears in: Gallipoli Bill : A Comedy in Three Acts 2013; (p. 5-11)
1 y separately published work icon Catching Australian Theatre in the 2000s Richard Fotheringham (editor), James Smith (editor), New York (City) : Rodopi , 2013 27206075 2013 anthology criticism

'Whether catching Australian theatre during the 2000s or catching up now, this volume provides the reader with an overview of the decade. It reveals how Australian theatre continues to reflect the major political and social concerns of our time. Each contribution explores an important area of Australian performance so that the volume provides crucial background and insightful analysis for current theatre practice. The contributions cover political theatre, Indigenous theatre, playwrights concerned with cultural identity, key Shakespearean productions, the impact of funding and arts policy on theatre, dramaturgy and innovative projects, leading directors on rehearsal processes, theatre for young people, regional theatre including the Northern Territory, and physical theatre and Circus Oz. The book confirms the consolidation of previous artistic achievement over the decade and identifies the emergence of new trends and creative practices.' (Publication summary)

1 ADS at Thirty : Three Decades of Australasian Drama, Theatre, Performance and Scholarly Research Richard Fotheringham , Rachel Forgasz , Laura Ginters , Mary Ann Hunter , Lisa Warrington , 2012 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australasian Drama Studies , April no. 60 2012; (p. 6-19)
'Australasian Drama Studies was first published in October 1982, so this year, 2012, it celebrates its thirtieth birthday with this, its sixtieth issue. To celebrate this milestone, we decided to ask some Australasian theatre scholars - a couple of old hands and mid-career scholars and an early career researcher - to reflect on trends in theatre and performance in Australasia over the lifetime of the journal, developments in the reception of and scholarship about those trends, and the ways in which the journal has reflected them. This article begins with founding co-editor Richard Fotheringham's personal reminiscence of co-editing the journal in earlier days. It is followed by a conversation among four other scholars, contributors and readers with general editor, Geoffrey Milne.

Contributors refer several times to 'ADSA'; this is the acronym of the principal learned society for Australasian scholars of Drama, Theatre and Performance Studies. ADSA was begun in 1977 as the Australasian Drama Studies Association but - increasingly reflecting changes in the breadth of interests of its membership - the full name of the association was changed several years ago to the Australasian Association for Theatre, Drama and Performance Studies. ADSA remains a generous and loyal sponsor of this journal and we are extremely grateful for its support and proud of our ongoing association with it.' Richard Fotheringham, Rachel Forgasz, Laura Ginters, Mary Ann Hunter, Lisa Warrington and Geoffrey Milne.
1 The Globetrotters Richard Fotheringham , 2011 single work biography
— Appears in: Australian Variety Theatre Archive : Popular Culture Entertainment: 1850-1930

'Comprising comedian/manager Dick Norton, two former Smart Set Diggers female impersonators, Charles Holt and Ralph Sawyer, singer Florence “Bobby” Broadhurst, comedienne Leila Forbes, soubrette Dorothy Drew, comedian Jack Creighton, and pianist/comedian Wallingford Tate, the Globetrotters were put together for a tour of Asia (then referred to as the East). The itinerary included Java, Singapore, Malaya, Thailand and India, Hong Kong, China and Japan. Presenting a standard variety entertainment, the repertoire included sketches, songs (both comic and popular), light classical piano instrumentals, dances (especially featuring Ralph Sawyer), comedy routines and patter' (overview).

1 Laughing at the Front Jennifer Bowen (interviewer), Richard Fotheringham , Clay Djubal , Graham Seal , Lisa Trahair , 2011 2011 single work interview
— Appears in: Hindsight 1999-;

The First World War had a major presence on the Australian stage, particularly in vaudeville theatre, before and after 1918; and following the Armistice, many variety shows were performed by diggers themselves.

The extent of their popularity surprised historians, who have been investigating the phenomenon since a bequest to the Melbourne Arts Centre in 2001 brought to light a collection of original comedy scripts from one of the leading companies, Pat Hanna's Famous Diggers.

Vaudeville was performed to large audiences right across Australia, and the persistence of its war-related material throws an intriguing light on community response to the war. There were jokes about the Kaiser, the officers, the mud and the rain, as well as challenging portrayals of ex-servicemen's difficulties in adapting to civilian life. The theatrical material joins the growing knowledge of soldiers' often ironic responses in song and verse to the experiences of war.

On the battlefront, and back in the music halls and theatres in Australia, humour and satire emerged as a powerful tool for both soldiers and civilians who had experienced one of longest and most violent conflicts in modern history, and its enduring consequences.

1 Bert Bailey's Copy of On Our Selection Richard Fotheringham , 2010 single work criticism
— Appears in: Found in Fryer : Stories from the Fryer Library Collection 2010; (p. 68-69)
1 Untitled Richard Fotheringham , 2010 single work review
— Appears in: Australasian Drama Studies , October no. 57 2010; (p. 231-233)

— Review of Tivoli King : Life of Harry Rickards Vaudeville Showman Gae Anderson , 2009 single work biography
1 Rudd's Stories Gave Face to the Bush Battlers Richard Fotheringham , 2010 single work column
— Appears in: The Australian Literary Review , October vol. 5 no. 9 2010; (p. 13)
1 Inside the Killing Fields of Queensland Richard Fotheringham , 2010 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Australian Literary Review , October vol. 5 no. 9 2010; (p. 12-13)
1 Laughing It Off : Australian Stage Comedy after World War I Richard Fotheringham , 2010 single work criticism
— Appears in: History Australia , April vol. 7 no. 1 2010; (p. 3.1-3.20)
This article investigates the extensive use of Great War material on the variety stage in Australia, particularly in the decade of the 1920s. It surveys jokes reported in newspapers or surviving in scripts; examines in detail the work of the best known of the ‘diggers’ companies of returned servicemen, Pat Hanna’s Famous Diggers, as well as the work of other performers including the acclaimed comedian Jim Gerald and several ex-soldier drag artists; and reports on the reasons these entertainers themselves gave to explain their use of comedy and pathos to represent traumatic events from their war experiences.
1 Speaking a New World : Language in Early Australian Plays Richard Fotheringham , 2009 single work criticism
— Appears in: Aumla , no. 111 2009; (p. 1-20)
Based on onver 40 surviving playscripts, the article discusses the dialogue that was used in plays performed in Australia prior to 1930. Specific topics that are discussed in the article include the range of words that were used in plays and the reasons why the dialogue was spoken in the manner in which it was. The author states that the dialogue broke away from existing speech structures.
1 y separately published work icon Australian Popular Theatre Richard Fotheringham (lead researcher), Clay Djubal (researcher), St Lucia : AustLit: The Australian Literature Resource , 2006- Z1798366 2006- website bibliography biography This work contains details about live theatre activities offered as popular entertainment, including short and not necessarily story-based stage acts (i.e. sketches, comic performances, vaudeville turns). The AustLit records cover revues, revusicals, pantomimes, musicals, burlesques, extravaganzas and other forms of theatrical entertainment. Biographical information on performers, writers/librettists, composers/songwriters, entrepreneurs, and other industry practitioners is also provided where known.
1 7 y separately published work icon Australian Plays for the Colonial Stage : 1834-1899 Richard Fotheringham (editor), St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 2006 Z1238215 2006 anthology drama (taught in 3 units)
1 Untitled Richard Fotheringham , 2003 single work review
— Appears in: Australasian Drama Studies , October no. 43 2003; (p. 189-192)

— Review of Dames, Principal Boys... And All That : A History of Pantomime Viola Tait , 2001 single work criticism
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