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Thomas Carrington Thomas Carrington i(A42173 works by) (a.k.a. Carrington, T; Francis Thomas Dean Carrington; Tom Carrington)
Also writes as: Leonardo ; Ixion (fl.1843-1918)
Born: Established: 17 Nov 1843 London,
c
England,
c
c
United Kingdom (UK),
c
Western Europe, Europe,
; Died: Ceased: 9 Oct 1918 Toorak, South Yarra - Glen Iris area, Melbourne - Inner South, Melbourne, Victoria,
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 The Man and the Law : In Three Pictures Thomas Carrington (illustrator), Francis Myers , 1882 single work short story
1 Two Wives N. Walter Swan , 1879-1880 single work novella thriller Dawson remarries, having been led to believe that his first wife is dead. Blackmail, intrigue, murder - virtue triumphs.
1 3 y separately published work icon Humpty-Dumpty (Who Sat on the Wall) ; Or, Harlequin King Arthur, His Three Sons, the Princess Roseleaf, the Knights of the Round Table, and the Fairies of the Fern Tree Gully Thomas Carrington , James Eville , Melbourne : Harwood, Stewart, Hennings and Coppin , 1874 Z810418 1874 single work musical theatre pantomime fantasy

Adapted from John Strachan's Humpty Dumpty (1873, Prince of Wales Theatre, Birmingham, England), with songs to operatic and other music, the Age proposed that this localised version by Messrs Carrington and J. Eville 'received an Australian complexion that adds to its native cleverness. Thanks to the labours of these gentlemen', wrote the paper's theatre critic, 'several leading incidents of the past year have been turned to merry account, and folly and fraud are held up to ridicule and contempt' (28 December 1874, p.3).

The story concerns Flameau the Fire King, who attempts to increase his power by forcing Princess Roseleaf to marry his close ally, the evil and ugly Humpty Dumpty. With the aid of Fairy Fern, queen of the fairies, Prince Prettyboy overcomes their dire intentions and wins the hand of the princess. A review of the premiere production notes that, as the pantomime progressed, the growth of Humpty Dumpty's head was 'cultivated at the expense of the other portions of his body, and he [came] on stage looking like a goblin that [had] just stepped out of an illustrated children's fairy book' (28 December 1874, p.3).

Numerous references to the Melbourne scene, politics, theatre (including J. C. Williamson's Struck Oil and Trollope's Bogus Clarke productions) were incorporated into the storyline. One of the topical hits saw J. R. Greville dressed as an overgrown boy dressed in knickerbockers and socks singing 'the song of the lively larrikin, in which an altogether groundless aspersion [was] cast upon a recent decision given in the Melbourne General Sessions' (28 December 1874, p.3).

5 14 y separately published work icon Long Odds : A Novel Marcus Clarke , George A. Walstab , Melbourne : Clarson, Massina & Co. , 1869 Z1117962 1868-1869 single work novel Bob Calverly, Australian nephew of Squire Valentine Yoricks, is visiting England when he falls in love with Kate French, niece of Saville whom she loves. As the story opens Cyril secretly marries his landlady's daughter, Carry Manton - just as his brother's death in a steeplechase makes him heir to his father's estate. The machinations of Rupert Dacre enmesh both Cyril and Bob on the paths of ruin - one through denying his marriage and the other through gambling debts and money-lenders ... Enlivened by the portraits of poet/grocer Binns and literary man/reporter Bland, heroes of the humble working man's sphere and mediocrity ... (PB)
1 23 y separately published work icon Melbourne Punch Punch (Melbourne); New Punch Charles Bright (editor), James Smith (editor), Frederick Sinnett (editor), William Jardine Smith (editor), Thomas Carrington (editor), 1855 East Melbourne : Melbourne Punch , 1855-1925 Z993213 1855 periodical (526 issues)

Melbourne Punch was an illustrated magazine founded by Edgar Ray and Frederick Sinnett in 1855. Modelled closely on London's Punch, which had been founded fifteen years earlier, the magazine was known simply as Punch from 1900 onwards.

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