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DUBLIN MARKETS

... foot that Cliar'.ee Ditiden, (sont).' ce'ebi lyrist,) whom Grimaldi was indebted for altn'Wt all the auegs with often provoked 'the mirth the metro; o vast number the pantomimes in tvliifh Grimaldi appt arid were invented also hy poor Charles, and now-acttrllDd ...

BUSINESS OF PARLIAMENT

... churchyard, and amul them only two professional friends of poor Grimaldi. His grave was'execedii deep, and is just the foot of that of Charles Dibden (son'of the celebrated lyrist), to whom Grimaldi was indebted for almost all the songs with which often provoked ...

Published: Friday 09 June 1837
Newspaper: Dublin Morning Register
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1643 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

Advertisements & Notices

... he did not appear. Grimaldi was once D asked to a dinner party at the house of a clergyman, and )when the cloth had been removed was requested to sing, lbut persisted in declining ; on which his rev. host said, Why. Mr. Grimaldi, I invited you on purpose ...

SPORTING INTELLIGENCE

... Job Gumaldl— Poor Joe Grimaldi is no morel Who does not remember the name of Joe Grimaldi. Those who too young to have seen him must have heard of him. and those who are old enough to have seen him can never forget him. Grimaldi was not a mere grinning ...

Published: Saturday 10 June 1837
Newspaper: Warder and Dublin Weekly Mail
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 494 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

tiieatuicals

... occasion. Mr. Seymours’ company, with Mr. Rice and Mr. Weeks, came out the Cork theatre Thursday night. A London paper says, Grimaldi has left h's shares in Sadler’s Wells to Mr. Hughes; his plate the daughter that gentleman, whom had not seen from infancy ...

Published: Saturday 10 June 1837
Newspaper: Dublin Weekly Register
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 634 | Page: 3 | Tags: none