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ROYAL ITALIAN OPERA

... . MR. MAPLESON has this season set a good example to operatic managers in general by faithfully keeping the promises con tained in his prospectus, so far as fidelity was practicable. Gluck's Orfeo would have been given, had not the Euridice on whom he relied proved false to her troth. Of Leila we have already spoken, and have now to congratulate Mr. Mapleson on his successful revival of ...

ROYALTY THEATRE

... . WHEN a husband attempts to keep from his wife and from his mother-in-law such a secret as that in which the hero of A Tragedy involves himself, he ought to know pretty well how heavy will be the penalty of failure. This, however, is what Mr. Gregory Grayson never seems to realise until he is in the thick of the troubles resulting from the discovery of his theatrical freak. He writes a ...

CRITERION THEATRE

... . IT is a pity that Mr. Mortimer did not see his way to giving more dramatic interest to his last adaptation from the French. A Parisian audience is satisfied with much less of story and situation than is demanded by English playgoers, and it would allow the cleverness of MM. BarriƩre and Capendu's character- isation and the wit of their dialogue to compensate for many deficiencies. The merit ...

SIGNOR LAGO'S OPERA SEASON

... . Signor Lago returned last week from a long tour through Russia, Poland, Italy, Spain, Portugal, and France, in quest of first-class operatic artists. The opening of his grand season at the Royal Italian Opera; originally fixed for Tuesday, May 17, is postponed, owirg to the dirty state of the theatre, which will require at least a fortnight's hard work to rendei1 it fit for its de-tined ...

OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC: THE RED LAMP AT THE COMEDY

... OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC. THE RED LAMP AT THE COMEDY. THERE is an old gossipy tradition that used to be put forward to account for the success of The Times newspaper. This was alleged to be mainly due to a clergyman engaged on the staff. He never wrote a line, but he had a wonderful knack of divin ing the drift of popular opinion. He used, it was said, to pass the day in going to and fro amongst ...

REVIEWS: Charles Reade; Dramatist, Novelist, Journalist

... REVIEWS. Charles Reade Dramatist, Novelist, Journalist. A Memoir. Compiled chiefly from his Literary Remains. By Charles L. Reade and the Rev. Compton Reade. London Chap man and Hall (Limited). 1887. IMPARTIAL biography is almost unknown. As a rule memoirs are written by friends or relatives of the personage under dis- cussion, and their views are powerfully biassed. The man has been a great ...

CARL ROSA OPERA

... . UNDER the joint management of MM. Carl Rosa and Augustus Harris, Drury Lane Theatre reopened last Saturday, when the English opera season commenced with a performance of Carmen, conducted by Mr. Rosa, who was enthusiastically applauded when he entered the orchestra, and at the close of the opera. The fine quality and numerical strength of the chorus were evidenced in the National Anthem, ...

CRITERION THEATRE

... . IN every sense save one Mr. Maurice Noel's Tea proved, at the Criterion, to be an extremely weak brew. It is undeniably a strong measure for a lady to put a strong drug into the afternoon stimulant of her troublesome old brother in order that the may make him out to be a violent lunatic. is strong simply because Oculus Persicus, the imaginary herb in question, is powerful in its effects ...

THE LAND OF THE FAR WEST. (BROMPTON): OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC; BUFFALO BILL'S WILD WEST

... Tn||jJj|A^D or THE FAK WE ST. \j/j (BROMPTON-) OUR CAPTIOUS ORITIO. BUFFALO BILL'S WILD WEST. LAND of the West, fair land of the Wild West Brompton, I salute thee. Land of the Star-spangled Banner (Vexillum stellatum), and the Bald-headed Eigle Aquila calro), of the Big Boom (Mains ingens) and the Al mighty Dollar (Obolus omnipotens); land of Buffalo Bill (Bubalus syngraphus) and Buck Taylor ...

SANGER'S AMPHITHEATRE

... . IN The Right Man, by Messrs. George Comer and Mr. Lionel Ellis, the present manager of Sanger's has secured a melo drama of the good old-crusted kind. There is a good deal too much of it, or at any rate there was on its first night; and one, at any rate, of its five acts might advantageously be sacrificed. On the other hand, there is plenty in it to interest and even excite a moderately ...

MUSIC: ROYAL ITALIAN OPERA; SIGNOR LAGO'S PROSPECTUS

... MUSICJ. ROYAL ITALIAN OPERA. THE series of Italian operatic performances, at popnlar prices, given at the Royal Italian Opera by Mr. Mapleson closed on Saturday last with a medley of selections from various works produced earlier in the season, and one selection of a more novel character: Act 4-- or rather a considerable portion of Act 4-- of L'Africaine. In this excerpt from Meyerbeer's ...

STRAND THEATRE

... . THE English Comedy Company began its season at the Strand Theatre on Monday last with a satisfactory per formance of a very interesting play. We are not quite sure whether, as a matter of fact, London playgoers have not of late had a little more old comedy than they want; and this may perhaps prevent Messrs. Conway and Farren from obtain ing the full encouragement that they deserve. But ...