The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Drama as stamp used on theatre publicity poster

- By Norman Watson

Here’s a rarity – a Penny Black stamp used on the outside of a Newcastle Theatre publicity poster, which I show to mark the 180th birthday of the world’s first stamp later this week.

The anniversar­y will resonate with supporters of Arbroathbo­rn, Dundee-adopted James Chalmers, arguably the originator of the adhesive stamp.

The folded poster was sent in April 1841 from Newcastle and addressed to

J L Pritchard Esq, Edinburgh.

It is further endorsed ‘Theatre Royal’.

The ‘letter’ unfolds into a long flyer for a benefit evening for the North Staffordsh­ire Infirmary, revealing a list of the acts in the concert, including the Mock Doctor, subtitled The Dumb Lady Cured, and a nautical drama called The Norwegian Wreckers!

The acts are proclaimed to be on ‘For One Night Only’ and under the patronage of no less a local celebrity than Newcastle’s mayor.

Edinburgh’s Theatre Royal was located, appropriat­ely, in Shakespear­e Square, at the east end of Princes Street.

It had opened in December 1769.

The addressee, John Langford Pritchard, was a Victorian actor and eccentric.

He was honorary secretary of the Edinburgh Theatrical Fund Associatio­n and was a steward at the associatio­n dinner in 1827 when Walter Scott announced himself to be the author of Waverley.

The use of a Penny Black stamp on a theatre poster is highly unusual.

When Dr Pichai Buranasomb­ati’s awardwinni­ng collection of Penny Black stamps was sold by Shreeves in London in 2001, raising a vast seven-figure sum, it was stated that only two Penny Blacks were known attached to newspapers.

It is likely that the world’s first stamp on a poster is equally uncommon.

Theatre poster posted with a Penny Black (private collection).

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom