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BLACKBERRIES

... skill displayed by Mr Mark Melford in Turned Up and other pieces receives fresh illustration in the little piece called Blackberries, which woas pr.)- duced on Monday evenillgat Miss Joseplls's theatre with no small amount of success. It is no secret that ...

Published: Saturday 19 June 1886
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 710 | Page: 16 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

COMEDY THEATRE

... challenged the verdict of the playgoing public at occa- sional morning performances. In a little introductory sketcb, entitled Blackberries, the author furnishes Miss Alice Atherton with one of those eccentric parts which this vivacious actress so much delights ...

LAST NIGHT'S THEATRICALS

... Mr. Mark Melford's success in fitting Mr. Willie Edouin and his clever company with such amusing pieces as Turned Up, Blackberries, and A Coming Clown has been so pronounced that it is not surprising the astute manager should again seek the same ...

AMUSEMENTS IN CROYDON

... Maggie May, who puts herself on good terms with the audience, and is both dramatically and musically commendable. A nut and blackberry dance by Kattie Lanner's trained children is sweetly pretty. Business is exceeding -11 expectations. PALACE.-General Manager ...

Published: Saturday 15 January 1898
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 449 | Page: 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

SIR A. SULLIVAN'S GOLDEN LEGEND

... Stage Frights, The Nightingale, One of Us, Sins of the Fathers, No Mercy, A Reign of Terror, No Rose Without a Thorn, Blackberries, Turned Up, Frivolity, and Ups and Downs. Of late years the author has appeared almost exclusively in his own productions ...

Published: Saturday 20 November 1886
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2019 | Page: 13 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

YESTERDAY'S THEATRICALS

... ivy- covered walls, and its blackberry hedrges, whilst thne group of damsels seen gathering the wild fruit as the curtain rises, strikes a rural key to the prettily con- ceived and crisply-written little play. Blackberries, althoegh new to London, has ...

THE READER

... of Paris and (Enone gathering it for lunch. Its brother, the blackberry, is successfully cultivated in America. Why not at home? for though Mr. Fish says Many of the New World blackberries are said to almost equal our raspberries in flavour, we think ...

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... kind : the tale of the Pioneer's Cottage, though somewhat dawdlingly treated, is original, graphic, and mildly tragic; Blackberry Farm (describing a site which Nature reclaims as her own) is naive and amusing. The fable about the narrator's Pegasus ...

YESTERDAY'S [ill]

... TROMMDAT'3 TNNLT391ATAS. OLYMPIC THEATRE. Hatislies, which have during the past Week been -s plentiful as blackberries in autumin, yesterday pro- duced yet another novelty in the shape of a new and orginal nautical dranma in four acts entitled Before ...

BACK IN TOWN

... gutter From cliff and cavern, field and moor and stream, To Cromwell-road and miles of tight-closed shutter; From junket, blackberries, and clotted cream To dubious eggs, blue milk, and pallid butter; From Rus, in short ('twould pall to make a proper list) ...

NEW NOVELS

... any superlative amount of casi, or I Ic stayed anl IuInconIsciously long time over the (labris of cold ?? kcy, are as blackberries I Finially a wvord of execra. tion is mluc to the illustrations, wvlicli arie ar, far ?? than those of ile I'rwii, I/cra/il ...

Fashions for December

... mature age was made ?? a new material, blackberry brocade. The foundation %xa.s of rich and lustrous black satin, with a tracery of white network suggestive of a spider's web, on which were raised blackberries and leaves. The gown was trimmed with rare ...

Published: Saturday 01 December 1894
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1445 | Page: 23 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture