[ill] [ill]

... TIATRIGOALs. ETC. DRURY LANE. -On Monday night, Mr. Ander, SOlo produced a judicinuisly curtailed version of John Fletcatir's comedy of The lditer Brother. The les- see had undertaken the task of adaptation himself, and succeetied in preserving all ...

THE ROYAL ITALIAN OPERA

... conspiniles, ,and got up, isow and then, Sir with maimed and mutilated rites as an afterpiece, at slifferent .)r periods, when Drury Lane and Covent Carden were devoted ;itto Englilsh opera. The exquisite melodieus scattered through er- the wvork, and now becolse ...

THEATRES, &c

... 1821, its success was triumphant ; in 1824, after having been offered to Covent-garden and refused as unsuitable, then to Drury-lane with similar ill success, Mr. Hawes's English version was produced at the old Lyceum, then under the management of Mr. Arnold ...

Published: Sunday 24 March 1850
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 5353 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

DRURY LANE THEATRE AND ITS Management

... and several others of his con) par.y are capable of acting very respectably in serious characters ; but who is there at Drury-lane, its manager inclusive, so attractive as to make the public rush thither tu see Shakspere's plays, or any other revivals ...

Published: Sunday 24 March 1850
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 607 | Page: 9 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THEATRES, &c

... storm, and stamped himself as the first English tenor of the age, by his embodiment of the arduous character of Edgardo at Drury-lane, on the night that it opened under the management of M. Jullien, when, from the performance of that evening, we prog- nosticated ...

Published: Sunday 31 March 1850
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2857 | Page: 12 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

HOLIDAY AMUSEMENTS

... HOLIDAY AMUSEMENTS. d DRURY-LANE. ?? of the old stock pieces, which used to be produced in n the orthodox days of the stage. for the edification of holiday e audiences, as regularly as the pantomime and spectacle at ,f their proper seasons-RowE'S tragedy ...

Public Amusements

... joublic. auluotmato id- 1d- DRURY LANE. tice Ce The tragedy of Jane Shore was played on Monday nut L night innte dumb show until the last act, when the siv I excellent performance of Miss Vandenboff in the. bee edeath: sene arrested a moment's. attention ...

THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... aquatic wonders, and its docile monsters of the deep, was as pretty to see as anything ever seen by Mr Pepys. In short, the Drury-Lane Easter piece is thoroughly well worth a visit, and Miss Huddart's performance of the young hero (to say nothing of her wondrous ...

DRAMA

... This 10ay is not now to the English publit, having b oi already performed at this theatre, ant it haa a cenhiderablo run at Drury lane some years nsao, in an Eng!ish dress, under the title of 4 The minister and the Maerer. It is a sterling comedy, and gives ...

PROVINCIAL THEATRICALS

... ne d Sl eesfly fleedb hp~ ever. Tor.QOAY.-The popular' melodramatic actors, TMr. T. Fredericks and Mr. R. Frazer (now of Drury-lane), appeared: here for three. nights last week to excellent hnuses, ir, M1acbel/i, Stranger, Honeymoons, Eugene Arama, M1iller's ...

Published: Sunday 07 April 1850
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1743 | Page: 12 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THEATRES, &c

... and'frequently recalled. Mr. Sims Reeves't Edgordo is currept'coin with the musical world, with whom his English varsioni at Drury- lane- first stamped him;' since that time be hs'frequentlyl given selections, both iii Italian and English, of thel choicest ...

Published: Sunday 07 April 1850
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 9551 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE EASTER AMUSEMENTS

... establish a poetical appropriateness whichmwe have never observed at. any other house, excepting when Stanfield was at Drury- lane Theatre, during the governance of Mr. Macready. The piece was received throughout eith the greatest ap- plause:, at its ...