MISS FAUCIT AT DRURY [ill]

... should hear from Drury Lane of sudden suicides, of families abandoned for prairie solitudes by actors eager to hide their own detected imposture even from their children's eyes. No such tidings reach us, however; though how the Drury Lane company endures ...

DRAMA, MUSIC, &c

... E. T. Smith, the Drury Lane manager, future lessee of Her Majesty's Theatre, at a lease of seven, fourteen, or twenty-one years. The annual benefit of Madame Boleno, the graceful columbine and intelligent pantomimist of Drury Lane, will take place on ...

THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER. DRURY LANE. King John is brightly mounted by scene-painter and property-man, and the King John of Mr Phelps, which we described when he played the part at Sadler's Wells, is a good piece of acting. Some parts of it are, perhaps ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... P. as the thermometer rises. No novelty ~end managers are doing their best, ?? with the Easter entertainments. , ty at Drury Lane, has undergone con- 8t g en ud cnrtailment, and now glays far t 3ltsrthe first nights of its representation. The horse, ...

MUSIC

... MUSIC. HER MAJESTY'S OPERA. Mozart's celebrated work II Flaato 3lagico, which was produced at Drury Lane last week under some unexpected disadvantages, was repeated on Tuesday with a complete- ness of cast and scenic arrangement seldom equalled. Of the ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... PWBLIO AMUSSEIr T3 DRURY LANE THE&TRE. The winter season at Drury Lane has commenced with Macbeth and *Co nous. The former of these was the grand ' revival of the earlier par of ltst season, and will be played by Mr. Phelps in the principal character; ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... characters of the piece are suggestive of certain situations and persons in Mr. Hallidays Great City, now performing at Drury Lane Theatre In both we have rich, educated young ladies; constant lovers, and naughty papas, one being a returned convict, the ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. DRURY LANE THEATRE. Faithful to the promise made to the public by Mr. Chatterton, to the'&ffect-that during his lesseeship of Drury Lane the integrity of the legitimate drama should be upheld, the lessee of the great national theatre ...

THE THEATRICAL AND MUSICAL EXAMINER

... wherever there can be found, once in an opera, a reasonable excuse for its intro- duction. DR'URY LANE. When the lessee of Drury Lane opened Her Majesty's Theatre as an Italian opera, 'we expressed our opinion that a second opera house would probably find ...

THE THEATRICAL AND MUSICAL EXAMINER

... One great point has been gained in the declared allegiance of Messrs Edmund Falconer and F. B. Chatterton, the lessees of DRURY LANE, to the true English drama. Bat vigorous and well- directed as the efforts of these gentlemen have been, and are, they dig ...

THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER. DRURY LANE. We last week gave a general description of the materials out of which Mr Boucicault has constructed his drama of Formosa, or the Railroad to Ruin. It was evident to those who witnessed the first representation of the ...

THE DRAMA

... at the Lyceum; and in her interpretation of the lively little part, not a single point of the many it contains is lost. DRURY LANE. Is there no competent modern manager who will undet- take to re-cast Colley Cibber's version of King Richard the Third ...