Hurlothrumbo; or, The super-natural is an 18th-century English nonsense play written by the dancing-master Samuel Johnson of Cheshire, and published in 1729. The spectacle incorporates both musical and spoken elements. The play opened on March 29, 1729 at the Theatre Royal Haymarket.[1]
Writing in 1855, Frederick Lawrence says of the play:[2]
The extraordinary drama of Hurlothrumbo, above alluded to, was then (mirabiledictu!) the talk and admiration of the town. A more curious or a more insane production has seldom issued from human pen.
— The Life of Henry Fielding, p. 21.
The author himself performed as a principal in the play, with singing, dancing, playing fiddle, and walking on stilts. The novelist and playwright Henry Fielding mentions the play in his novel Tom Jones:
Thus the famous author of Hurlothrumbo told a learned bishop, that the reason his lordship could not taste the excellence of his piece was, that he did not read it with a fiddle in his hand; which instrument he himself had always had in his own, when he composed it.
Namesakes
editA significant early collection of graffiti was published under the pseudonym Hurlothrumbo in 1731. The book, titled The Merry-Thought: or, the Glass-Window and Bog-House Miscellany, transcribes graffiti found in public latrines in England, much of it humorous or sexual. The volume may have been attributed to Hurlothrumbo by the publisher or editor to benefit from the popularity of Johnson's play.[3]
Hurlothrumbo is said[4] to have been the name of the steamship on which Emperor Norton came to San Francisco. Norton then went into partnership with the ship's engineer to use the engine from the scrapped ship to power equipment for gold mining camps, an apparatus also called Hurlothrumbo.[4]
Notes
edit- ^ Rudolph, Valerie C. (May 1, 1973). "Hurlothrumbo: Sense and Nonsense". Restoration and Eighteenth Century Theatre Research. 12 (1): 28. Retrieved February 23, 2021.
- ^ Lawrence, Frederick. 1855 The life of Henry Fielding (A. Hall, Virtue & Co.)
- ^ Novak, Maximillian (April 16, 2019). "The Public Domain Review". The Public Domain Review.
- ^ a b Welcome to Hurlothrumbo.com History Lesson. Retrieved 27 July 2021.
External links
edit- Scanned copy of the 1729 printing of Hurlothrumbo
- Johnson, The Merry-Thought; the introduction includes a discussion of Hurlothrumbo.
- The Merrythought or Bog-House and Glass-Window Miscellany. Readable online or can be downloaded in various formats.