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Our Captious Critic

... to know her way about the stage, and to have had an amount of training that does not exhibit itself in our opera-bouffe actresses as a rule, who generally act more like transplanted music-hall artistes than aught else. She has the fortune of a very w ...

OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC

... with valour as they dashed at the enemy. This may be excusable in warfare of ages ago, but the use of portraits of a dead actress to adver tise the performance of a company which lives after her, is inde cent in the nineteenth century. Madame Dolaro has ...

OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC

... matters f He knows everybody to speak to, yet every body enquires of everybody else who and what he is. He talks of actors and actresses familiarly as Bob, Kate, and the like truly he is a first-night mystery. Give me the man wot pays for his entertainment ...

CIRCULAR NOTES

... expressed about Miss Anderson, yet the fact remains that the house is filled nightly, and I am told that people go to see this actress who would consider it wrong to go to any other theatre. Tho tide of fortune has sot towards the Lyceum of late years, and ...

MAINLY ABOUT PEOPLE: The Flower Girl

... told me, it's like this. We're such shocking bad reckoners. We're alius makin' mistakes- in the bills. The Minor Actress Minor Actresses generally have a mass of;' beautiful golden hair-- though cases have been known where they have had to pawn it. And ...

Published: Wednesday 05 November 1902
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 670 | Page: 31 | Tags: Cartoons 

Celebrities I have Wiģged: Honi Soit

... before. Mrs. Langtry. T always recall with particular pleasure a little interview I had with Mrs. Langtry when that celebrated actress was on the point of producing The Royal Necklace at the Imperial Theatre. As I was entrusted with the making of the wigs for ...

Published: Wednesday 08 August 1906
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1246 | Page: 14 | Tags: Cartoons 

The HIGHWAY of FASHION: The Glories of the East

... else could wear her dresses in The Pacifists at St. James's and make them appealing. It is the first time that this clever actress has assumed a character part. She is first seen in a white piqu6 skirt with a tunic bodice of blue floral voile drawn in at ...

Published: Wednesday 12 September 1917
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1995 | Page: 40 | Tags: Cartoons 

THE LADIES' CUP

... Cal cutta Saturday Night Club, the leading social establish ment of its kind a sort of glorified Ciro's minus the lovely actresses, put up a most appalling barrage of black balls the moment Cardozo made the slightest effort to advance. One lady, Mrs. ...

The Letters of Eve

... with Percy Macquoid frocks and Harker scenes, and as the typically sweet-English-girl type Miss Lohr is just the sort of actress who ought to take lead in Love in a Cottage. 'T'he world of clever, charming women is, by the way, a big lot the poorer by ...

Published: Wednesday 16 January 1918
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3233 | Page: 6 | Tags: Cartoons 

Priscilla in Paris

... the Theatre de Paris Regina Camier turned up in a frock that was really either a souvenir or a promise. Paulette Pax, the actress whose adventures with the Bolshies in Russia, after the Revolution closed down the famous Thedtre Michel, were recorded in ...

Published: Wednesday 15 October 1919
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1148 | Page: 12 | Tags: Cartoons 

PRISCILLA IN PARIS

... not conscientious, heroically eats and drinks her way through that dinner every evening. The life of a clever and popular actress is not and young stage-struck damsels take heed entirely, one sees a life of lobster salad and champagne suppers, no, nor ...

Published: Wednesday 21 January 1920
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1018 | Page: 10 | Tags: Cartoons 

A LONDON NEWSLETTER

... she was kept under remand, a letter written in terms so indecently frivolous that she must indeed have been a remarkable actress to have succeeded in retaining through out the trial her nun-like air of innocence. No woman was ever more cool in the dock ...

Published: Saturday 28 April 1928
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2382 | Page: 12 | Tags: Cartoons