"Their Majesties' Servants": Annals of the English Stage from Thomas Betterton to Edmund KeanAllen, 1865 - 459 pages |
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... Foote · 38. Of Authors , and particularly of Condemned Authors 283 · 296 Charles Macklin 39. Audiences of the Last Half of the Eighteenth Century 40 . 304 . • • 310 41. A Bevy of Ladies , but chiefly Mrs. Bellamy , Miss Farren , Mrs ...
... Foote · 38. Of Authors , and particularly of Condemned Authors 283 · 296 Charles Macklin 39. Audiences of the Last Half of the Eighteenth Century 40 . 304 . • • 310 41. A Bevy of Ladies , but chiefly Mrs. Bellamy , Miss Farren , Mrs ...
Page 176
... Foote , with his characteristic ill - nature , " Davy lived , with three quarts of vinegar in the cellar , calling himself a wine - merchant . " Had the father of David been at home , instead of on service at Gibraltar , the latter ...
... Foote , with his characteristic ill - nature , " Davy lived , with three quarts of vinegar in the cellar , calling himself a wine - merchant . " Had the father of David been at home , instead of on service at Gibraltar , the latter ...
Page 179
... Foote commenced his career at the Haymarket , February 6 , 1744 , as Othello , ( " new dressed , after the manner of his country , " ) to the Iago of Macklin , who had opened that house with a " scratch company , " including " pupils ...
... Foote commenced his career at the Haymarket , February 6 , 1744 , as Othello , ( " new dressed , after the manner of his country , " ) to the Iago of Macklin , who had opened that house with a " scratch company , " including " pupils ...
Page 188
... Foote's farce , - " Taste , " and " Eugenia , " a tragedy , by the Rev. Dr. Francis , the father of Sir Philip , in which there was the coarseness of sentiment , but none of the beauty of language or tenderness of feeling , of Otway ...
... Foote's farce , - " Taste , " and " Eugenia , " a tragedy , by the Rev. Dr. Francis , the father of Sir Philip , in which there was the coarseness of sentiment , but none of the beauty of language or tenderness of feeling , of Otway ...
Page 201
... Foote's portrait of Quin is so well drawn as to merit an extract : - " Mr. Quin's deportment through the whole cast of his characters is natural and unaffected , his countenance expressive without the assistance of grimace , and he is ...
... Foote's portrait of Quin is so well drawn as to merit an extract : - " Mr. Quin's deportment through the whole cast of his characters is natural and unaffected , his countenance expressive without the assistance of grimace , and he is ...
Other editions - View all
Their Majesties' Servants. Annals of the English Stage (Volume 3 of 3) John Doran Limited preview - 2021 |
Their Majesties' Servants. Annals of the English Stage (Volume 2 of 3) John Doran Limited preview - 2021 |
Common terms and phrases
acted actor actress admiration appeared applause audience Barry beauty Bellamy Betterton Booth boxes Cato character Charles Charles Kemble charmed Cibber Clive Colley Colley Cibber comedy comic Covent Garden critics daughter died dramatic dress Drury Lane Dryden Dublin Duke Earl Edmund Kean effect excellent Falstaff father Foote fortune Garrick gave gentleman George grace Hamlet Haymarket honour humour husband Iago Irish Jane Shore John Kemble Juliet King Kitty Clive Lady latter laughed Lear Lincoln's Inn Fields London looked Lord lover Macbeth Macklin manager Margaret Woffington married Miss never night Oldfield once opera original Othello Pepys performance piece played player poet poor Pope Pritchard Queen Quin remarked rendered Richard Romeo says scene season Shakspeare Shylock Siddons Spranger Barry stage Street success theatre theatrical Theophilus Cibber thought took town tragedy triumph voice Walpole wife Wilks Woffington words writes wrote young
Popular passages
Page 43 - Hotspur) when the Betterton Brutus was provoked, in his dispute with Cassius, his spirit flew only to his eye; his steady look alone supplied that terror, which he disdained an intemperance in his voice should rise to.
Page 307 - such stuff as great part of Shakespeare? only one must not say so! But what think you? — What? — Is there not sad stuff? What?— what?
Page 66 - The Humourous Lovers ;" the most silly thing that ever came upon a stage. I was sick to see it, but yet would not but have seen it, that I might the better understand her.
Page 40 - I have hardly a notion, that any performer of antiquity could surpass the action of Mr. Betterton in any of the occasions in which he has appeared on our stage. The wonderful agony which he appeared in, when he examined the circumstance of the handkerchief in Othello; the mixture of love that intruded upon his mind, upon the innocent answers Desdemona makes, betrayed in his gesture such a variety and vicissitude of passions, as would admonish a man to be afraid of his own heart...
Page 43 - ... might wish or enjoin a sorrowful son to execute, towards his future quiet in the grave.
Page 17 - To the Theatre, where was acted 'Beggar's Bush,' it being very well done ; and here the first time that ever I saw women come upon the stage.
Page 43 - I never heard a line in tragedy come from Betterton, wherein my judgment, my ear, and my imagination, were not fully satisfied; which, since his time, I cannot equally say of any one actor whatsoever...
Page 93 - from one play-house to the other play-house ; and if they like neither the play nor the women, they seldom stay any longer than the combing of their perriwigs, or a whisper or two with a friend, and then they cock their caps, and out they strut again.
Page 459 - This is a really valuable work. A book which will long remain the standard authority on the subject. No one who has been to the Channel Islands, or who purposes going there will be insensible of its value.
Page 35 - Oh, brother ! Here lies your sister slain ; you lose yourself In sorrow there. Mel. Why, Diphilus, it is A thing to laugh at in respect of this : Here was my sister, father, brother, son : All that I had ! Speak once again : What youth Lies slain there by thee ? Amin.