Table of Contents

Carcosa, or The Queen and the Stranger

A fantasy in two acts by Talbot Estus performed by 'The Group' at the Scala Theatre on the 17th of October 1928.

Cast

The Story

The main story threads of the 'Carcosa' play involve the following aspects:

Oddities at the Play

As the mysteries surrounding the Play, and its history were uncovered by the party, they were drawn further in the madness and insanity it offers all who see The Yellow Sign.

Reviews

Some people seem to have watched (or thought they have seen) different versions of scenes than others.

Avant-Garde Nonsense Causes a Riot - as appeared in Theatre Review

The theatre-going public of London should be thankful at the news that there are to be no more performances of “Carcosa – or the Queen and the Stranger”, a “Fantasy in two acts” which had its disastrous premiere last night at the Scala Theatre.

The play, written as a first foray into drama by popular novelist Talbot Estus, and performed by the well-regarded amateur theatre company known as ‘the Group’ was, in the opinion of this reviewer, tedious, confusing and extraordinarily pretentious. The audience seem to have agreed, and in some cases to have found its dreary demands upon their time quite intolerable, as upon the final curtain a riot broke out in the theatre, resulting in several arrests and at least one badly broken nose.

The play, for what it's worth, focussed on the royal family of an undefined alien city, their squabbles over the succession, and the arrival of a mysterious masked stranger who apparently was supposed to symbolise some concept or other. The work ‘climaxed’, if that is the word, with the ludicrous arrival of ’The King in Yellow’, a demon-king character, played (badly) by Estus himself, whose motives and significance were quite lost on the poor audience.

The cast, it must be said, did the best they could with the poor material, and special mention must be made of Hannah Keith, who in the role of Queen Cassilda managed to create a few moments of genuine interest in a sea of pointless dreariness.

There remains hope for ‘the Group’, but little for Estus. Let us hope he returns to fiction, and leaves drama for those more suited to the task.

“Carcosa” a haunting masterpiece by George Hall - reporting for On Stage

This reviewer was lucky enough to be present at the premiere of “Carcosa, or the Queen and the Stranger”, a two act play by Talbot Estus, the renowned novelist, performed by ‘the Group’ at the Scala Theatre in Charlotte Street.

Though short, and in many ways hard to describe, the play contained many momments of truly haunting beauty and deep insight into the nature of humanity and its relationship to the divine. Indeed it would not be hyperbole to say that the work contains truths so profound that they could be capable of changing ones view of life itself.

The performances, aside from the radiant Hannah Keith, as Queen Cassilda, are as good as can be expected by an amateur troupe, but they are magnified by the sheer depth and poetic vision of Estus’ script, whose vision of a city, trapped in stagnation, whose ennui is shattered by the arrival of a masked stranger, the herald of the great and terrible King In Yellow, will remain with this reviewer forever.

To quote Cassilda’s song, “songs that the Hyades shall sing, where flap the tatters of the King, must die unheard in dim Carcosa.”