LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
... Dbab 8ib,-- Will yon, with your usual courtesy, kindly correct an error in your last impression. The part or Brabautio at the (*rosven*r Hall, on Saturday the 16th, was played by CHARLEL MOSBY. ...
... Dbab 8ib,-- Will yon, with your usual courtesy, kindly correct an error in your last impression. The part or Brabautio at the (*rosven*r Hall, on Saturday the 16th, was played by CHARLEL MOSBY. ...
... Bib,-- Mr. Old Theatre-goer has been kind enough to enlighten me so much of late that, like Oliver Taift, I would fain cry for more. A certain phase of acting has always appeared to me as a description of mental -.restitution-- that is to say, where the display of pathos or any kind of feeling is requisite. This view may be considered by some as morbid, though, as a matter of fact, I fail to ...
... . Diai Sie,-- The Hastings pantomime of P. in ll-Jt, fav.mrably criticisil by your roiresiwiident. was not entirely Mr. Collier's itnsluetiou, as the responsibility of the l>uok restcJ jointly wilh the mauaueinent and Yours oljedient) v. FRANK RUSSELL uaverlev llr)iise, hichmoml. Juiuaryll, imi. ...
... Deae Sib,-- Tho part of Girilde in tbe hurleeqne of that name, favourably criticised by your corroopoudeut for Shoroham, was not, as stated, impersonated by Miss Loga'i. Yours truly, LOTTIE RUSSELL, Swiss Gardens, May 21st. ...
... . SIR,--My attention has been called to the Scarborough notice to the earrent number of The Stage wherein it is stated that Maiame Herse's Opera Co. failed to put in an appearance at the Loudesboro Theate, much to the disappointment, &c.; &c. low m it Mcinw nrnqnuDi iwi^u. no ooaos. MtlMRoraltnctiaBOparaOo^aawmtoar, and of wariafc ?taoaaa* Henn laa taaltng aaambar bat, aa th* encac*- aaaa* ...
... . [All nmrnumctitiQim to thi Editor mutt bear l\t write, 't name and addre$A DEAR SIR,--I respectfully beg to contradict a notice which appeared in last week's Stage to the effect that I played the Countess Montressor in Miss Chester at the Imperial matinea on August 4. I was engaged for the part, but was prevented from appearing by unforeseen events--too late to withdraw the advertisement of ...
... Dear Sir, In your last week's issue of The Stage, I notice a paragraph referricg to the frequent comolaints of actors and actresses in Russia !*eing defrauded of their earnings by insolvent managers, and in consequence of which the authorities have taken the matter in hand. Now, as in this country also such cases are ever frequent, cannot some thing be done here to at leat lessen such affairs ...
... . T.aHt, week your Barnley corro|>ondcnt, in his rc- t, !i'T.R., narn Owine to the noL-appearar.ce of n ';'-v'e' />i*- o/ inw Ocjtnpany. Permit me to '??Lit omo week* since, owini? to domestio troubles, w* compelled to relino,nih my tour. I then to Mr. H1 him- Inreply.I received a letter I'tinu manager, complyinK with my kpl hi rotrrot. ...
... . Dib 8ii,-- Yonr Bradford correfponisnt tays in his critique of Men aui Women that tho piece was produced under the able direction of Mr. Fred B. Norton. Flattering but wrong. Mrs. R. Faironirn rehfnrsed every arttA(rl supervised every little detail, :ind is in every wuy i-mitled to the praise for so pronounced u succen as the druma achieved in I am. dear sir. verv railhfullv vr.nm. FRED B. ...
... Sib,-- In your notico of the Lesson of Love in last week's Stage, you mention Miss Rosa Hyde as having played in the pieco. This is from no fault of your corre spondent, but owing to the programme. I shall feel greatly obliged by your correcting this, as the part was played by-- Yours faithfully, Constance FETHERSTONHAUGH. Theatre Royal, Wolverhampton, July 5th. ...
... . THE CHURCH AND STAGS GUILD. Sir,--As a regular reader of The Stage I often see reports of meetings of the above guild, and amongst those which have arrested my attention mostly is that of the one held at Newcastle last Saturday week, in which the Rev. Mr. Forster is made to say:--If injurious plays were occasionally produced the fault lay with the public who demanded and supported them, and ...
... DYKWYNKYN SIR,--I venture to crava your permission to make an appeal for help on behalf of Mr. Richard Wynne Keene, professionally known as Dykwynkyn. .ia 7* y**n oT**> of great distress, and is Buffering from Paralysis, from which it is fetred he can never tl° u! profewion, and to mjst or the play, going public, his name is familiar as a household word. ,°r Pr,0 ...