THE UNWRITTEN LAW: AT THE GARRICK THEATRE
... does not seem to me to have the makings of a popular success. Jingle Sketched at the Comedy Theatre Sketched at the Comedy Theatre Sketched at the Comedy Theatre ...
... does not seem to me to have the makings of a popular success. Jingle Sketched at the Comedy Theatre Sketched at the Comedy Theatre Sketched at the Comedy Theatre ...
... London Mights Entertainments BY JINGLE. I DECORATING CLEMENTINE AT THE GLOBE THEATRE THIS play is beyond all question the most important event of the week. Beside such a production the very much over-advertised General Election sinks into insignificance ...
... OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC. FOfllSNTRIC LOUD GOMBERDENE, AT THE ST. JAMES S THEATRE. JUDGING from the first-night notices, opinions seem to have been divided as to the merits of Mr. Carton's play at the St. James's. Of course, it is the public which eventually ...
... ROUND THE THEATRES. By Vedette. ABOUT the first of the Christmas programmes was, I suppose, that given at the Gaiety on the withdrawal of Our Miss Gibbs last week, by way of an intercalary season previously to the production of another Gaiety novelty ...
... OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC. GRACE, AT THE DUKE OF YORK'S THEATRE. Grace has proved for awhile one of the few successes of the season, although I should not care to insist upon its being a very great one. I should feel surer in express ing the opinion that ...
... and also Mazzini, whom he came to love and revere. (j Y\7hen in London Mario stood in the queue outside the pit door of a theatre, and next to him stood Prince Louis Napoleon, afterwards Emperor of the French. Both were compelled at the time to practise ...
... LATE THEATRES. THE PLAYHOUSE AND THE ST. JAMES'S. IT would be difficult to imagine a contrast greater than that between the entertainments provided for the after noons of the Christmas holidays at the Playhouse and the St. James's. At the former theatre ...
... ROUND THE THEATRES. fc By Vedette. I AM afraid that The Princess Clementina cannot be honestly said to have quite hit the mark at the Queen's Theatre. I see that one enthusiastic commentator roundly asserts it to be not much less than the finest story ...
... CRITIC. DECORATING CLEMENTINE. WHAT with the weather and what with the elections things have not been at their best with the theatres of late. It is, I suppose, therefore not much to be won dered at that the public did not scramble for places at the Globe ...
... ROUND THE THEATRES. By Vedette. My round oi tip theatres this week has. of course, meant a round of pantomimes and of other more or less pantomimic entertainments. It has disclosed a high level of average attainment, if no specially striking feature ...
... OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC. THE CAPTAIN OF THE SCHOOL AT THE GAIETY THEATRE. The Captain of the School, by Judge Parry, who has written good things, and Frederick Mouillot, whose writ ings are not familiar to me, did very well at, Manchester. It is now filling ...
... ROUND THE THEATRES. By Vedette. IT is often difficult even for the author of a play, whether comedy or romance, to trace the root idea whence it sprang. W as it a character which suggested itself for inter, sting development, a period which seemed promising ...