"Their Majesties' Servants.": Annals of the English Stage, from Betterton to Edmund Kean. Actors-Authors--Audiences, Volume 2 |
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Page 16
... equal in song . Colley was satisfied with his glory , and treated his young adversaries with all the mingled good - nature and audacity with which he subsequently treated his better armed enemy , Mr. Pope . When he " met the Revolution ...
... equal in song . Colley was satisfied with his glory , and treated his young adversaries with all the mingled good - nature and audacity with which he subsequently treated his better armed enemy , Mr. Pope . When he " met the Revolution ...
Page 23
... equal to it . ” Colley admirably explains this , by adding , " I say , for applause only ; -but applause does not always stay for , nor always follow , intrinsic merit . Applause will frequently open , like a young hound upon a wrong ...
... equal to it . ” Colley admirably explains this , by adding , " I say , for applause only ; -but applause does not always stay for , nor always follow , intrinsic merit . Applause will frequently open , like a young hound upon a wrong ...
Page 34
... equal there scarce is ; His farces are physic , his physic a farce is ! " So wrote Garrick of Hill , who was a clever man , but one who lacked tact and judgment , and got buffeted by men who had not a tithe of his zeal and industry ...
... equal there scarce is ; His farces are physic , his physic a farce is ! " So wrote Garrick of Hill , who was a clever man , but one who lacked tact and judgment , and got buffeted by men who had not a tithe of his zeal and industry ...
Page 48
... with contempt . " Let me remark here , that in " blood " young O'Brien was the equal of Lady Susan . In the days of Charles I. , Stephen Fox , her ancestor , was bailiff to Sir Edward Nicolas , the 48 DORAN'S ANNALS OF THE STAGE .
... with contempt . " Let me remark here , that in " blood " young O'Brien was the equal of Lady Susan . In the days of Charles I. , Stephen Fox , her ancestor , was bailiff to Sir Edward Nicolas , the 48 DORAN'S ANNALS OF THE STAGE .
Page 75
... equal to Colley Cibber's Sir John Brute , Lord Foppington , Sir Courtly Nice , or Justice Shallow . " This was said , not out of justice to Cibber , but out of ill - will against Garrick . How he affected the town may be seen in the ...
... equal to Colley Cibber's Sir John Brute , Lord Foppington , Sir Courtly Nice , or Justice Shallow . " This was said , not out of justice to Cibber , but out of ill - will against Garrick . How he affected the town may be seen in the ...
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Common terms and phrases
acted actor actress admiration appearance applause audience Bannister Barry beauty benefit Betterton called century character Charles Kemble Cibber Clive Colley Colley Cibber Colman comedy comic Cooke Coriolanus Covent Garden critics daughter dramatic dress Drury Lane Dublin Duke Edmund Kean Elliston Falstaff father followed Foote Foote's fortune friends Garrick gave gentleman George graceful Hamlet Harlequin Haymarket heart Henderson hissed honor humor husband Iago Irish Jane Shore John Kemble Kemble's King Kitty Clive Lady latter laughed Lewis Lincoln's Inn Fields London looked Lord Macbeth Macklin manager Margaret Woffington married Miss Farren Miss Pope Mossop never night once original Othello performance piece played player poet poor Prince Pritchard prologue Quin remarked rendered Richard says scene season Shakspeare Shakspeare's Sheridan Shylock Siddons Spranger Barry stage success theatre theatrical Theophilus Cibber thought took town tragedy triumph voice Walpole wife Woffington Woodward writes Yates young
Popular passages
Page 15 - Resolved, &c., nemine contradicente, that in all aids given to the king by the Commons the rate or tax ought not to be altered by the Lords.
Page 53 - ild you! They say the owl was a baker's daughter. Lord! we know what we are, but know not what we may be.
Page 20 - I had rather not suppress, viz. that it was the best first play that any author in his memory had produced ; and that for a young fellow to show himself such an actor and such a writer in one day, was something extraordinary.
Page 134 - He expressed himself to the same purpose concerning another law-lord 2, who, it seems, once took a fancy to associate with the wits of London ; but with so little success, that Foote said, " What can he mean by coming among us ? He is not only dull himself, but the cause of dulness in others.
Page 80 - When Lothario gave Horatio the challenge Quin, instead of accepting it instantaneously, with the determined and unembarrassed brow of superior bravery, made a long pause, and dragged out the words, ' I'll meet thee there !' in such a manner as to make it appear absolutely ludicrous.
Page 80 - Horatio — heavens, what a transition! — it seemed as if a whole century had been swept over in the transition of a single scene; old things were done away and a new order at once brought forward, bright and luminous, and clearly destined to dispel the barbarisms and bigotry of a...
Page 135 - Sincerity ! Thou first of virtues, let no mortal leave Thy onward path! although the earth should gape, And from the gulf of hell destruction cry To take dissimulation's winding way.
Page 270 - Death ! Who hast for thy domain this world immense. Churchyards and charnel-houses are thy haunts, And hospitals thy sumptuous palaces. And when thou wouldst be merry, thou dost choose The gaudy chamber of a dying king. O then thou dost ope wide thy hideous jaws, And with rude laughter and fantastic tricks Thou clapp'st thy rattling fingers to thy sides.
Page 76 - Garrick reckoned a tolerable author, though he has proved how little sense is necessary to form a great actor! His Cymon, his prologues and epilogues, and forty such pieces of trash, are below mediocrity, and yet delight the mob in the boxes, as well as in the footman's gallery. I do not mention the things written in his praise, because he writes most of them himself.
Page 357 - your fame shall last during the empire of vice and misery, in the extension of which you have acted so great a part ! " We make no apology for our sentiments, unfashionable as they are. Feeling the importance of the condition of man as a moral agent, accountable not merely for the direct...