St Helena (play)
St Helena: a play in twelve scenes is a play by the English author R. C. Sherriff and Jeanne de Casalis. It deals with the exile of Napoleon I on Saint Helena. In a production by Henry Cass, it premiered at the Old Vic on 4 February 1936 to poor reviews, but was rescued by a letter to The Times by Winston Churchill, calling it "a remarkable play" and "a work of art of a very high order"; though a West End transfer also proved unsuccessful.
Original cast
- General Count Bertrand - Ion Swinley
- General Count Montholon - Leo Genn
- General Baron Gourgaud - Clement McCallin
- Napoleon - Kenneth Kent
- Admiral Sir George Cockburn - Raymond Huntley
- Captain Nicholls - Robert Craven
- Count Las Cases - Alan Wheatley
- Sir Hudson Lowe - Cecil Trouncer
- Dr. O'Meara - William Devlin
- Dr. Antommarchi, Ship's Carpenter - Alec Clunes
- Marine - Eric Wynn-Owen
- St. Denis - Anthony Quayle
- Marchand - Richard Warner
- Cipriani - Alwyn Whatsley
- French Servants - Phillip Bowen
- English Sailors - John Franklyn
- Novarrez - George Woodbridge
- Officer, Trooper - Guy Haslewood
- Subaltern - John Franklyn
- Napoleon Bertrand - Tony Wickham
- Tristan - Eric Sutton
- Abe Buonavita - Charles Doe
- Abbe Vignali - Christopher Casson
- Chinese Gardeners - Alan Foss
John Jameson
- Countess Montholon - Vivienne Bennett
- Countess Bertrand - Ursula Granville
- Hortense Bertrand - Glynis Johns
- Mulatto Maid - Fredericka Allen