MR. OSCAR WILDE ON FASHION
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... !t!-Al ?? ??iiti , SATURDAY, DEC. 1, 1894. OSCAR WILDE AS A DRAMATIST. Mr OSCAR WILDE'S present position as a playwright is a deeply interesting one; and our anxiety is intensified by the approach of the production of his new play at the Haymarket. There ...
... oSCAR WILDE ON DRESS ANDAt A ffabiomable Sind crowded audience, chiefly of ?? ?? the Victoria rooen 'dailftervoon to welcome i, Of ce Wilde OA viiit io Clifton to leoture on IDres, and th V Art in Modern Life, So far AO his ovn dress u cerned,1there ...
... MR. OSCAR WILDE ON AUBICA +. TEA l P-u - -A - At the rrince's Hall, Piccadilly, on Tuesday i Oscar Wilde lectured on his Person'al Impresin evnh~ Ar ieb before a large and fashionable audience. lrs5in Anteriu6, , that he had very little useful information ...
... MR. OSCAR WILDE IN THE I THEATRE ROYAL. Too hear the famous apostle of art deliver his second lecture yesterday afternoon a very large audience was present in the Theatre Royal. The subject of the lecture was Personal Impressions of America, and ...
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... MR. OSCAR WILDE'S FAIR Y TALES.* IT Would seem to be a very difficult task to be original in fairy tales- harder, even, than in most walks of literature, where, as Emerson reminded us, everything has been said before. To write an original story for ...
... Allonby, you will remember, thought there couldn't be such a thing and wandered into objectionable flippancy. And Mr. Oscar Wilde, having, we more than suspect, a lingering sympathy with Mrs. Allonby, has written a whole play to demonscrate this imp ...
... and sometimes Mr Kellie's compositions were sung by others. He was particularly fortunate in one of these, written by Mr Oscar Wilde. Some may not be aware that the author who is so cynical in A Woman of No Importance can be, when he likes, especially tender ...
... descends on three happy couples. For Mr. Oscar Wilde, with a commendable regard for dramatic customs, has supplied the Rev. Canon Chasuble, D.D., for the excellent Miss Prism. It is all very funny, and Mr. Oscar Wilde has decorated a humour that is Gilbertian ...
... r'll A IT-p91? ST. JAMES'S THEA'Tl't. Last evening Mr. George Alexander produced a new p]ay in four acts, writtell by Mr. Oscar Wilde. entitled Lady Windermere's Fan. The play bears a strongF resemblance to plays with which one is familiar, yet this is ...