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THE NEW DRURY LANE DRAMA

... I I L i TH E NIf DRR Ca l IASN E DRAKEA,I BY OUR PRIVATE WIRE. Losno% SucsDAY EVEaING.-Drury Lane has scored another triumph, and the success of the Prodigal Daughter, the new drama with which Sir Augustus Harris opened the season en Satur- day. may ...

THEATRE ROYAL—MR. SULLIVAN'S RICHARD III

... THEATRE ROYAL-MR. SULLIVAN'S ulnaRICHARD III. WEaN the lessee of Drury Lane Theatre detailed his experience of the production of the dramas of Shakspeare and Byron, summing up his conclusion in words with a ring of epigram about them, that with him Shakspeare ...

LITERARY NOTES

... merits. It ray be remcmbcre:I that attention was called some time ago to the pub- licatiun, by Mr. Chatterton, the lessee of Drury Lane, of a pamplict, vurittenl lv Mr. Reniley, set. ting forth an account of the profits and losses sus. tained by the production ...

THE THEATRE ROYAL

... THE. THEATRE ROYAL. TM- GEALT RUDBY.' Last night, before a large audiende, the Drury Lane 'drama by Cecil Raleigh ael Henry Hiamilton, entitled Ths Great* Ruby, was produced at tlhe Theatre Royal. As a spectacular piece, one presenting a per- fectly ...

THE MAGAZINES FOR OCTOBER

... ruling fates of Drury Lane playhouse. And so it happeiied one day that little Kitty Raftor, then in her seventeentli vear, stood in the august presence of Colley Gibber, Esq., poet-laureate, playwright, actor, and manager of Drury Lane Tlieatre. Inu Belgravia ...

MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC GOSSIP

... DRAMATIC GOSSIP. [Wxn'rxN MOB THE Il~iLAST NEWS LEVIEE.] The chief talk In theatrical circles is the prema. ture closing of Drury Lane Theatre. The panto. mimne season, owing greatly to the dulness of trade, woas far from being financially successful, sad ...

DRAMATIC AND MUSICAL INTELLIGENCE

... will be Mr. James Guiver. It is said that arrangements have been made for a series of representations in July next, at Drury Lane Theatre, in which Madame Ristori, the celebrated Italian trag-ediennewill act in Eng- lish. Since Madame Ristori acted the ...

LITERATURE AND ART

... se and business-like, if not very exalted spirit, it is known that Drury Lane has not Been a very profitable venture; hence the com- plimentary benefit to Mr. Chatterton at Drury Lane, which has this week put him in possession of a handsome present and ...

THE GENTLE ART OF MAKING A GOOSE OF ONESELF

... Under the above titie Mr. Augustus Moore, in this week's Hatok, thus describes Mr. Whistler's pert mn xce in the lobby of Drury Lane Theatre last Saturday- Degas, one of the greatest French artists, and one of the greatest admirers of Mr. NVhitler's art ...

MUSIC AND THE DRAMA

... is-what few could expect to hear-peculiarly graceful, and he manzagei his cloak with all the elegance of a Spanish orero. Drury Lane intends next week to make a wonder- ful hit in Macbeth ; and as Mr. Phelps and Miss Helen Faucit will appear, and the ...

DRAMATIC PERFORMANCE IN THE EXHIBITION HALL

... in three acts, ,entitled David Garrick, or, Only an Actor, in which the drarnatis persona were :-David , Garrick, of Drury Lane, Mr. CornawvlBarrington; . Alderman Gresham, of the East India Company, i .Mr. G. Martelli; the Honourable Tom Tallyhaut ...