Pantomime A comic sketch published in 1818 has a character expostulate: "Is it not ridiculous for us grown people to be going to see Mother Goose, Tom Thumb, Old Mother Hubbard, and suchlike infantile fooleries; or to misspend our time at pantomimes and at rope dancings?" What kind of show contained those characters is not explained. It was not until a decade later that there was mention of a Christmas
pantomime, at the
Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, that was "founded on the familiar nursery-tale of Old Mother Hubbard and her dog". Thereafter, as many familiar characters as possible were packed into the same production, which was given a composite title.
Mother Hubbard and Her Dog or Harlequin & Tales of the Nursery, by
Thomas John Dibdin and
Charles Farley, was put on in 1833 at the
Theatre Royal, Covent Garden. And for the 1861–2 season at Drury Lane there was
Harlequin and the House that Jack Built or Old Mother Hubbard and her Wonderful Dog by
E.L.Blanchard. In this the scene opened in Mother Hubbard's cottage, where she and her dog were joined by her former rivals, Dame Trot with her cat and Dame Wiggins of Lee. The custom of cross referencing has persisted: as in
David Wood's 1975 script, where Mother Hubbard is reunited, as she was two centuries before, with the old woman who lived in a shoe. More recently still, Paul Reakes has provided a twist to the genre with his
Old Mother Hubbard – A Wild West Pantomime Adventure (1993).
Comic parodies In 1837,
John Hannah, then an undergraduate at
Corpus Christi College, Oxford, published a spoof
textual criticism of "Old Mother Hubbord", supposedly written in A.D. 3211 by a
New Zealand academic who tries to relate the poem to the nearly forgotten 19th-century civilisation which produced it. Another very popular parody was the sermon "illustrating the method upon which some parsons construct their discourses", with the rhyme's first stanza as text, that appeared anonymously in newspapers between the 1870s and 1880s. Beginning from Britain, the item spread under such titles as "A Model Sermon", "Modern Sermon" or "A sermon of the olden times", as far as the United States and New Zealand. In Britain it was incorporated into a chapter of
the Earl of Desart's novel,
Children of Nature (1878). In the United States it was provided with a refutation and appeared as a pamphlet under the title
Who was Old Mother Hubbard? (1882/5). Later parodies centred largely on the bareness of the cupboard in the first stanza. A postcard advertisement for
Dr. Swett's Root Beer concludes that Mother Hubbard was unable to quench her thirst because “The kiddies had been there first”. Another postcard implied that it was the dog had been there before. In a newspaper cartoon of "Mother Hubbard up to date" from 1904, she phones the butcher to get the poor dog a bone. Two more
sexually suggestive postcards from 1910 play with the concept of bareness. In one, Mother Hubbard has gone Alternatively she went "to get her poor daughter a dress", but "the cupboard was bare, and so was her daughter, I guess." Parodies have continued into the musical sphere too. There was a comic quartet by the Australian clergyman
Alfred Wheeler, first performed during the 1920s. This consisted of a reworking of the rhyme's opening stanza in which the principal effects are variations on "Bow-wow". It was shortly followed by
Victor Hely-Hutchinson's "Old Mother Hubbard set in the manner of Handel" (1932), where the rhyme's opening stanza is treated in the style of an oratorio.
Political use In the
Elizabethan era there had been a much earlier ''
Mother Hubberd's Tale'' by
Edmund Spenser published in 1591, but that was quite different from the nursery rhyme, being a satirical beast fable concerning an ape and a fox. It was followed in 1604 by
Thomas Middleton's ''Father Hubburd's Tales'', which contained the equally political fable of "The Nightingale and the Ant". It has also been claimed that Martin's rhyme was mistakenly thought by some to have a political meaning at first, although there is no reliable evidence that this was so. However, it was soon given various political contexts. In one parliamentary debate,
George Canning compared the vitality of the
British constitution, then declared to be under threat, to the swift revival of Mother Hubbard's dog when she bought him a coffin. And at a later date her bare cupboard was introduced into several political cartoons, generally dealing with financial deficits. These included items in the American publications
The Wasp (1881),
Judge (1897), and
Spokesman Review, titled "Mother Hubbard up to date". There was also a British poster of 1905 titled "The Cupboard Still Bare". ==Bibliography==