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It ran for seven weeks then had an equally popular season in Sydney before touring around
Australia and New Zealand for the next three years. The producers later claimed during this time it grossed £70,000 and was seen by an estimated 1.5 million people, making it the most popular Australian
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The story is set in the 1860s and focuses on the rivalry between two neighbouring sheep stations in rural
Australia, "Enderby" and "Waratah". Enderby is owned by a woman, the feisty Violet Enderby, the "squatter's daughter". Waratah is owned by James Harrington, who is Violet's guardian.
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Violet is in love with Tom
Bathurst, an overseer employed on Waratah. While James Harrington is away, the property is being run by his son, the weak Dudley Harrington, who seeks to undermine Bathurst in the eyes of Violet and his father. Having failed in that he gets
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The play helped popularise the archetype of the "squatter's daughter", the feisty woman of the
Australian bush. This character appeared in many subsequent Australian books, plays, films and TV shows, including
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Bailey and Duggan received a per performance royalty for their writing rather than selling the play outright, which was a first for
Australian playwrights.
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The production featured real sheep, kookaburras, shearers, wood choppers, whip-cracking, sheep dogs, a waterfall and a fight between a man and a kangaroo.
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and his gang to abduct Violet and hold her for ransom. Matters are complicated by the presence of an
English "new chum", Archie McPherson.
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and made its debut at the
Theatre Royal in Melbourne on 9 February 1907, starring both Bailey and Duggan in supporting roles.
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259:. Melbourne: National Library of Australia. 5 February 1907. p. 10
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338:. No. 12, 463. New South Wales, Australia. 21 May 1907. p. 8
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Atkinson, Roslyn; Fotheringham, Richard (11 September 2006).
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1907 Australian play by Bert Bailey and Edmund Duggan
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305:'Standing on her head, Mamselle played a violin.'
98:The Squatter's Daughter or, The Land of the Wattle
22:The Squatter's Daughter or, The Land of the Wattle
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190:. It was also adapted into a novel in 1922 by
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171:Cooee, or Wild Days in the Australian Bush
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280:"Dramatic Copyright in Australia to 1912"
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293:Australasian Drama Studies
291:- originally published in
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332:"THE SQUATTER'S DAUGHTER"
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162:Edward William O'Sullivan
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287:University of Queensland
74:Theatre Royal, Melbourne
404:Plays about bushrangers
374:The Squatter's Daughter
362:The Squatter's Daughter
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188:a sound feature in 1933
166:The Squatter's Daughter
164:accused the writers of
399:1900s Australian plays
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414:Plays by Bert Bailey
224:The Picture Show Man
364:original production
184:silent film in 1910
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43:Bert Bailey
394:1907 plays
388:Categories
237:References
128:bushranger
53:Characters
39:Written by
256:The Argus
198:Influence
90:Melodrama
368:AusStage
213:, 1923,
131:Ben Hall
117:Synopsis
379:AustLit
342:4 April
82:English
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87:Genre
344:2024
265:2014
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