The Admirable Bashville

April 29, 2013

This play is, in fact, based upon Shaw’s own highly unsuccessful novel, Cashel Byron’s Profession. The novel was written in 1882 and after rejection by several publishers it was published in serialized form in a magazine. Shaw wrote five novels early in his career and then moved on to pursue drama criticism and eventually playwriting.

The novel follows Cashel Byron, a world champion prizefighter, as he tries to woo wealthy aristocrat Lydia Carew without revealing his illegal profession. Meanwhile, she also has a secret admirer in her formidable footman, Bashville. He is handsome, smart, efficient and ever-watchful. Brains vs brawn.

The play follows much the same path. The novelty of this particular play is that Shaw wrote it as a parody of Shakespeare. The entire play is, in fact, written in blank verse. As the characters are all ‘contemporary’ this makes for unique comic lunacy in Shaw’s canon.

Written in 1901 and first performed the following year.

CAST

Lydia Ms. Heidi Armbruster
Cashel Byron – Mr. Jeremy Bobb
Mellish – Mr. Jim Brochu
Lucian Mr. Sean Dugan
Bashville – Mr. Howard McGillin
Cetewayo – Mr. Kevin Rennard
Paradise – Mr. Ian Gould
Lord Worthington – Mr. Warren Kelley
A Policeman – Mr. Arnie Burton
Adelaide Gisborne – Ms. Charlotte Moore
Narrator – Ms. Annie Golden

Evening hosted by Mr. Rob Weinert-Kendt of American Theatre Magazine

Produced and Directed by Mr. David Staller

(Back row): Sean Dugan, Jeremy Bobb, Heidi Armbruster, Ian Gould, Rob Weinert-Kendt, Howard McGillin,
(Front row): Kevin Rennard, Arnie Burton, Annie Golden, Warren Kelley, Charlotte Moore, Jim Brochu