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COVENT GARDEN

... COVENT GARDEN There were some English hot-house crapes at market 10-day, at two guineas per pound ; Strawberries. 2s 6d per ounce ' French Beans, to per hundred ; Rhubarb, 9d to Is 6d per bundle ; Frame Cucumbers, Is to 3s each.—lo other respect. there ...

COVENT GARDEN

... COVENT GARDEN. Mr. Mac ready re-appeaicd at this Theatre on Wednesday night, after an absence of many years, in the character Mncheth. circumstances which caused Mr. Mac ready’s retirement from Drury-Lane, arc generally known, the extraordinary demonstrations ...

Published: Saturday 21 May 1836
Newspaper: Waterford Chronicle
County: Waterford, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1249 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

COVENT GARDEN

... COVENT GARDEN. The new pantomime was completely successful. It is called Harlequin and the Merrie Devil of Edmonton; or the Great Bed of Ware, and is assigned to Mr. H. Younge, who, it seems, has composed more than 50 petfininances of the kind. It possesses ...

Published: Saturday 28 December 1839
Newspaper: Saint James's Chronicle
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 440 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

COVENT GARDEN

... COVENT GARDEN. A new play, in three acts, entitled The Novice, was on Wednesday produced at this theatre. It turns upon the contrivance, by a licentious Elector of Bavaria (Warde), of a marriage of convenience between Clotilda (Miss Faucitt), a young ...

Published: Sunday 15 October 1837
Newspaper: Weekly True Sun
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 335 | Page: 14 | Tags: none

COVENT GARDEN

... COVENT GARDEN. The theatrical campaign of this theatre opened on Monday with the Merchant aj' Venice, and a new after* piece entitled Hit h'irtl Campaign. The part Shylock was undertaken by a gentleman, hia fint appearance,'' Ac. Theatrical fame had spoken ...

Published: Sunday 07 October 1832
Newspaper: Bell's Weekly Messenger
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 507 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

COVENT GARDEN

... COVENT GARDEN. . _ A new Musical Drama, entitled the Gipsey Father, W as brought out at this Theatre on Tuesday evening. It is from the pen of the lion. Mrs. Norton, author of the Undying One. The Gipsey Father displays much merit of a distillgnished ...

Published: Sunday 05 June 1831
Newspaper: Radical 1831
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2892 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

COVENT GARDEN

... COVENT GARDEN. Monday night this Theatre was literally crammed to its remotest corner, with an audience that gave unequivocal symptoms of a higher degree of intelligence and taste than is usual in such assemblages. Mr. Macready, whose night it was, has ...

Published: Sunday 07 May 1837
Newspaper: Weekly True Sun
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 380 | Page: 13 | Tags: none

COVENT GARDEN

... COVENT GARDEN. Mr. VANnixxxoFr and Miss CLIFTON have both been hurried into new parts with rather questionable haste. On Monday they appeared in Macbeth, and on Wednesday in King Henry the Eighth. Mr. VANDENHOPF is decidedly an actor of niuch . ability;but ...

Published: Saturday 18 October 1834
Newspaper: Old England
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 727 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

COVENT GARDEN

... COVENT GARDEN. •ml IOOt, clom 60 to Ioot •ml I lit, ttraw 37t to per ImA Po.tham Ma.kkt Old Bwadow hay 00, to lOii. utm ful ditto MM to IOOt, old elora, 90t to l&t. Wbut ttrav ao, 455. per load trumes. LTVERPOOL COTTON MARKET, Mar 11. Th. trad, continoet ...

COVENT GARDEN,

... COVENT GARDEN, All Lindt uf and frail in season were very plentiful to day at market, particularly peas, which were eery abundant. Neat Saturday will, it is expected, be a great day for strawberries. Trade generally was good erery department, and it would ...

COVENT GARDEN

... COVENT GARDEN. This theatre (how fallen from its once high and palmy state!) re-opened on Monday with Macbeth, and the last year's pantomime, presented to a crowded audience, bywhich of the two pieces attracted it is hard to determine. The manager ...

COVENT GARDEN

... COVENT GARDEN. Pantomimes being as naturally looked for at Christmas as plum-pudding and’ pastime, this theatre is always foremost in catering for the public appetite in this very important particu[ir. This year, expectation was rather on tiptoe on this ...