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The son of British
Naval Commander Miles Keith Loweth and a Chinese milliner’s
daughter – magnate, adventurer, scientist, wordsmith - Dr. Althos
Jepthal Low’s unofficial biographer, Sir Nelson Cardiff, attributes
his extraordinary life span to experimental herbal treatments his mother
received at Shanghai’s May-In Chu Institute in 1874.
Whatever the catalyst, Dr. Low’s age is speculated to be nearing
an unprecedented 129 years - if he is, in fact, as many believe, still
alive. This is but one of the legends that swirl about this singular,
reclusive figure – last seen publicly on film, during an archeological
dig in the southern Philippines, summer of 1936.
The student of Dr. Low’s phenomenal career, his feats of acumen in
the development of worldwide financial markets, and his acquisition of
the world’s largest private fortune, need look no further than Cardiff’s
Pulitzer and National Book Award-winning, three-volume chronicle, SUNDERED
HEART: THE CENTURIES OF SHANGHAI LOW – details of which remain
too formidable in number to relate at this time.
Our focus, for the purpose of this introduction, however, centers on
what has come to be called the Boy’s Own Play Debate:
Scholars - Cardiff among them – have explored, at length, Dr. Low’s
lifelong fondness for tales from the Victorian popular culture of his
youth, as well as his efforts to propagate the legacy of such authors
as Kipling,
Alcott, Doyle, Wells, Haggard, and Orczy.
Few also question his love of the theatre and its history, citing his oftentimes-Byzantine
efforts to attend thousands of performances worldwide, without being seen
or recognized.
What is furiously debated is the assertion by American theatre actor/director
Steve Pickering that, sometime during the summer of 2000, he was summoned
and met by Dr. Low, himself, in the steam room of the West Side YMCA,
Manhattan, and was, at that time, given a mandate by the reclusive
billionaire, along
with a key to a small storage locker located at the New York Port Authority’s
bus terminal.
Contained in the locker was a metal box filled with over forty manuscripts
in various states of completion - theatrical adaptations of, for the most
part, Victorian popular fiction.
Pickering claims the old man’s mandate was simple: complete,
edit, and produce the scripts in as many public venues as possible,
and in
as theatrical a way imaginable. Never philanthropic, Dr. Low supposedly
provided
only the smallest of stipends to meet this goal, with the promise of
more, should the venture prove successful.
Pickering asserts that he was chosen for this duty based on similar
theatre work of his own that Dr. Low must have seen – a claim
roundly hooted at in Chicago theatre circles.
Regardless, struck by the quality of the drafts, and being a lifelong aficionado
of the genres himself, Pickering immediately enlisted the help of two longtime
collaborators: critically acclaimed writer/actor/director Kevin Theis,
and nationally-recognized computer graphics designer, Charlie Athanas.
The three, in turn, formed an umbrella not-for-profit Arts Organization
in order to research and finish the work needed. And, in 2003, Shanghai
Low Theatricals’ first effort, THE SIGN OF THE FOUR, was produced
by the Apple Tree Theatre in Highland Park, Illinois.
But, despite critical acceptance of the production itself, the opening
set off a maelstrom of angry comment – led by Sir Nelson - denouncing
the trio’s claim as to the identity of the primary adaptor. So much
so, that British director Charley Sherman – formerly a writing partner
of the others in the 1990’s - was summoned back from sabbatical
in England, in the hope that his participation would purchase some
much-needed public credibility.
And so, shaken, but fortified and undeterred, it seems Shanghai Low
Theatricals, for the present, will continue with their next adaptation,
Sax Rohmer’s
THE INSIDIOUS DR. FU MANCHU, and beyond, standing on it’s own interpretation
of origins – fact or whimsy, naysayers be damned.
Dr. Catherine
Walter, PhD
Chair – Theatre History
Rutgers University
January, 2005 |