MUSIC AND THE DRAMA

... I ?? 0 FOREIGN -CORRESPONDENCE AND MUSICAL INTELLIGENCE. (EXCLUSIVE FOR THIE ERA.) PARIS.-ITALIAN OPERA.-This theatre has at length made good its promise, and the reprise of La Beatrice has effectively taken place. The' reprise,' exclaims a Parisian critic, indignantly,` it is time that the manager should afford a new pourpointt.- How~ever just in truth way be (he reclama. tions of ...

Published: Sunday 05 January 1845
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 7977 | Page: Page 5, 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

MUSIC AND THE DRAMA

... FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE AND MUSICAL INTELLIGENCE. (EXCLUSIVE FOR TH5E ERAs.) PARis..The Thl6tre Fraunais has sustained a serious loss by the precipitate and unexpected departare of 11dle. Plessy, by far the best interpreter of the characters of high comody since the clays of Mdlle. Mars, for whose absence she offered-the best consolation This artist has sent in her formal resignation of ...

Published: Sunday 20 July 1845
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4667 | Page: Page 5, 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

SPORTING LITERATURE

... . - I7 'FEE SPrT.NrOx N AGAZGNE. ?? A. Pittman, Warwick. 1:are.)-'1e tluciber For the present month has a remarkably p relyv engraving of 1 ly Pack`, depicting the young heir apparent, in the plenitude of his glory, astride his favorite pony, with as miscellaneous an assemblage of canines as could be collected frlon the Newfoundland to the Blenheims-from the terrier to the lap-dog. There is ...

Published: Sunday 09 February 1845
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 816 | Page: Page 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

ADELPHI THEATRE

... ADEl,'fll THEATRE. 2'ltis thll~c a closed for the season lost night whit tire buoeic of cliv hivuagur,wo, iln ste Coartse of thle uereelg delivered Loettie4 AND G(ilT~Ltittti-l hare 'icet tees foe seerril yesers eoggrdlI, is 'dde d-wee~ttir Boo/oeou. aid, like oilier careful inefeerarero, beer, fenin Ieaon to Stasson, eridet- route1 ii to vry c tetrter'a of my WYinere end Summere Sieslo, Sof ...

LITERATURE

... LIT RI TUBe to THE ANNALS OF JRELANQ, TRANVSL !88 FRHOM THE IRISH OF THY FNR ISTERTf °0- No. I. By Owxre CONNELLAN, Q n. (Dublin: Bryan Geraghty.) t, What the learned Benedictines, with the resources of 1 I governments or Europe for their aid, did for general lit a ture among the continental libraries, the Poor friarL the Franciscan Convent of Donegal, sustained by the ha means of private ...

FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE

... I ? WI sDsoio, TDESDAY.-The Marqtis of Orrnonde has relieved Viscount Sydney froii Mei duties as the lord in waiting on tbe Queen. And Major-General Sir Frederick Stovin has succeeded the lion. Nelson Hood as the groom in waiting on her Majesty. Lord and Ladz John Russell and family arrived in Chielllam.plice, Lonidoii, onl Tuedaiy, froul lis ioldelip's villa, near Godalming. Her ladyship's ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... I On Saturday evening the play going folk of our city were treated to what was called a new play at the theatre. If the new repertory contain nothing better than the speci- men produced on that evening, we had as lief that the caterers for the public amusement should go on as before, and stick to the old and well-worn lot. A more dull, unconnected, incomprehensibleness of nonsense never taxed ...

EXTRAORDINARY THEATRICAL FRACAS

... A* -- - r n ?? ?? &_ . . . I At Worsuip-street, Police-office, on WednesdayMr.Jas, Elphinatone, principal performer at the Albert Theatrical Salooa, appeared before the magistrate to answer the charge of assaulting Mr. Henry Cousins, the leader of the band. Evidence at considerable length was taken. On Friday night they were performing Masanieilo, in which the defendant sustained the part of ...

FASHIONABLE INTLLIGENCE

... FASHIONABLE INTLLIGENCBE I Ttsz QuEaEN'S VISIT To GERDIANY-.Great prepara. tions sire being made In Coblarg and Gotha for the reception of Queen Victoria, who will arrive at Thuringen In July.- Towards thle end of this month all the members of the court, the royal chapel, and the theatre, will assemble in Gotha, the streets and houses of which will be put in good order. The palace will be ...

LITERATURE

... I I DUFFY'S LIBRARY OF IRELAND. TIlE IRISH VOLUNTEERS OF 1782, BY' T. M'Navii, ESQ. Published by Jame5s Duffy, Anglesea-Street, Dublin. (Second Edition.) We noticed, a few days back, the opening of what we firmly believe will form a new era in our literature-Mr. Duffy's ' LIBUAnRY Of IRELAND. The first volume, en- noninced for July 1st, is before us in its second edition, the first having ...

FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE

... FASHIONABLE INTIgLLIGENCE. I .,I The King of the Netherlands left London on Friday afternoon, to pay a visit to the Queen at Osborne House, Isle of Wight. His Majesty left Nlivart's Hotel in one of the Queen's carriages for the Nine Elms terminus of the South. Western railway. His Majesty and suite took their departure by a special train for Gosport, where they arrived at ten mi. nutes past ...

FINE ARTS

... If HOGAN'S ROMAN STUDIO-COLOSSAL STA. TUE OF O'CONNELL, &c. (aBOX A COBRESPONDENT.) Rome, June 18, 1845, Believing that at the present moment some account of Hogan's Colossal statue of the Liberator, and of the progress of the work, would not be unacceptable to the Irish public Isendyou the following particulars. which I state front a knowledge of the facts, and from my own judgment, what. ...