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Date

1900 - 1949
810 1900-1909

Countries

England

Place

London, London, England

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564
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THE THEATRES

... Frincesss.: t a revival. Husabe not told u herself how she had d dto colue up through a trap at the end of a Le the last act to speak tL. final speech, ande how whenshe was performing at Manchester i the attendant below abutting the tip duor to o F hastily ...

JANUARY MAGAZINES

... in which the writer almost invariably refers to the dramatic profession. ' Just as some folks consider it per- nmssible to speak of a certain useful class of men aa counter-jumpers, Bo does Black- wood's contributor refer to actors and actresses on ...

REVIEWS

... primitive device whereby before the marriage, Giovanni's mind is. perturbed by the visions of a semi-clairvoyante old nurse. In speak- ing of these characters as The Brother, The Wife, and The Husband, we unintentionally illustrated the nature of their relation ...

REVIEWS

... almost continuously in the country because he preferred it, and there is not an allusion to him in her letters which does not speak of love and respect. His own Practerita are not very remarkable. They chiefly concern his foreign travel as a boy, and the ...

REVIEWS

... technique of his Wiork, the chapters that Professor Lee devotes to such subjects as Preparation for Public Speaking, Extem- poraneous -Speaking, and Debate are singularly lucid and informintlg. They are admiirable expositions of the great art of the ...

REVIEWS

... one- wheeled cycle, armed with a robust detestation of all womankind, andi vowin]lg that: he will, under no circumstances, speak to one of the sex until lie returns. He has scarcely commenced his journey when lie rescues what he takes to be a young boy ...

Books of the Season

... made during the age in which these books held sway to make of British children insufferable prigs and appalling pedants. It speaks volumes for the national characters that our grandfathers and grandmothers should have survived the ordeal so well. ALL HANDS ...

THE HUNTER OF THE DIDIMA

... all the others are dead-and, for myself, why, I am only an old man of no account who will soon be dead too. c In the days I speak of Makomo was Chief over all the country. I was a young man, and had only been married a few months. My father was one who ...

HISTORY OF THE GLOBE THEATRE

... transferred to the Aquarium Thu atre early in April. 0n March 27tb, 1876, however, MrV 1J. A. Cave took a benefit, when Who Speaks Fint.' A Lesson in Love, Craced, a scene from Thc Y1felw Dworf, with George Conquest: a song andl- dance by Jennie Lee; a ...

Published: Saturday 06 January 1900
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2454 | Page: 14 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

PROVINCIAL THEATRICALS

... Miss Annie Thomas are excellent in the humorous scenes, besides contributing a number of. songs, dances, &c. Miss Dora Price speaks her lines emphatically, and Mr E. F. Conway is admirable as Van Blumen. OXFORD MUSIC HALL.-General Manager,. Mr Bert Evans-The ...

Published: Saturday 06 January 1900
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 16619 | Page: 23 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE BOER REVOLT

... All are cheery.-Reitter's Special Servicc. In a message bearing the same date as Reuter's, the correspondent of the Tinics speaks of a considerable restlessness among the Boers investing I adysmith. They seem, he says, desirous of making some move to ...

REVIEWS

... fell off and though, like Shelley, he almost lived on air, yet starvation threatened and he perished in his pride, or, to speak more truly, in his vanity. The work which proves him a man of genius had apparently all been done before he left Bristol; nothing ...