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No best answer has yet been selected by david21. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Pantomime as we now know it is a VERY distant relation of the Italian Commedia dell'Arte of the 16th/17th centuries, and to all intents and purposes it is indeed uniquely British. Probably the most authentic survival of the Italian original is the Harlequinade theatre which is performed in the Tivoli Gardens in Copenhagen, though there are puppet survivals in more or less debased forms all over Europe - notably of course our own Punch and Judy.
And jno, I hoped that old canard had been laid to rest - Morris dancing is not only uniquely British, it is uniquely English, and the derivation of the name is something of a mystery; what it is not is anything at all to do with John of Gaunt or North African dances - unlike the Moresco, which was a court dance composed in imitation of what was imagined to be an Arab or Persian dance. Nowt to do wi' morris, however.......
I was once talking to the chap who runs the biggest theatre company in the country specialising in pantomime and asked him this question.
he said in its present form it is pretty much unique to britain. as has been said his company has staged productions in areas with a lot of ex-pats and it's gone down reasonably well. surprisingly, he said it's very popular in hong kong where as well as there being a lot of ex-pats, the locals love it as well. he thinks its because it's very simialr to chinese traditional theatre in many ways. apparently there's a lot of cross-dressing in chinese theatre and the acting style is very similar as well, exaggerated emotions, slapstick, audience participation etc
Sorry, jno, I'm afraid I can't; I spent a lot of time researching both the history of theatre and English traditional customs when I was doing my English degree years & years ago; I could probably furnish you with a comprehensive bibliography, but as much of the material is out of print and in obscure libraries that probably wouldn't help much!
And according to my sources, the earliest written reference to morris is in an English parish church account book of 1489, which records "4d for belles for the morres dauncers". Incidentally, the word "morris" or "morrice" was applied to all kinds of traditional or working-class entertainments - not only dancing, but sports, plays, feasts; any kind of a lower-class knees-up. Not to mention a range of working-class cars....!