PANTOMIME AT DRURY LANE
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... in London, his opinion was not formed without considerable labour and difficulty: but now, with only Covent Garden and Drury Lane to choose from, he cannot go very far wrong in taking his young charges to either, and he is still more likely to go right ...
... peep behind the scenes in print will find two papers to suit their taste-a sketch of Dyk-wyn-kyn in his mask-room at Drury Lane, and an account of the Ballet Girls of Paris. Besides a couple of serial fictions, Tinsley treats us- we presume in honour ...
... or realism of details, has been found sufficient to attract large audiences; but if we turn to the National Theatre, Drury Lane, where the poetical drama has been tried and found wanting, or to the Holborn, where standard comedy an(l drama have led ...
... \'entadour. Mdllc. Nilsson and M. I'aure ac rcheicrsin- (in Italian), under the direction of Signocl' r I - i. viewv to Drury Lane. The part of Mlign -n it . . unsuited to Mdlle. Nilsson, as that of .largai . 1, ?? and unsuited to Madame l'atti. 'bl'is ...
... seems to have settled down into a sort of Chelsea Hospital for the benefit of veteran dramas. I'r1mosai, after enjoying at Drury Lane a glory like Sylla's, of combining good fortune with bad reputa- tion, has been revived in Oxford Street. The sensational ...
... Oftfn- bach's vorks: and it is, we presume, the Fantaisics l'ari- siennes version of the piece which is to be played at Drury Lane. TIIE following,, according to the PaIl Mall Ga_,ett, is the exact composition of the Italian Opera Company at St. letersburg ...
... of the Hall, xi.: Admission IS, Stall entrance in 7,Iortiimer ?? REtEVES SltitirI, Manager. Italian Opera.-Theatre Royal, DRURY LANE. Season, 1870. Full Particulars will be duly announced. Royal Olympic Theatre.-At , _ LTTLE EMLY. Y Messrs. R~ow~e asnd ...
... whose success at Pisa in great dramatic parts has recently attracted much atten- tion, has been engaged by Mr. Wood for Drury Lane. The permission lately given to the managers of music halls at Berlin to give dramatic representations has been attended ...
... Cheapside. The Bells Mazurka. By W. C. LEVEY. is. 6d. net. Received nightly with the utmost enthusiasm at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane. One of the dansante nature, which Mr. Levey may expect to find pounded on every piano and ground on every organ within ...
... for no remaks. With the oratorio were given Cherubini's overture to the opera about to be promised (says rumour) by the Drury Lane manage- ment, Les Deux 7ourndes, and two movements from a Suite in C by Herr Raff, a German composer of sonie (German) fame ...
... as can well be imagined. The Royal Italian is first of the rival operas in the field with its advertisement. Probably the Drury Lane manage- ment is of opinion that not much can be done in the way of operatic enterprise until after Easter. In the mean- ...