Players of a Century: A Record of the Albany Stage |
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Page 13
... ( September 5 , 1752 ) the capital of Virginia ; that the play was the " Merchant of Venice , " followed by " Lethe , " a farce by Garrick . Since Mr. Dunlap's book was written , however , it has been ascertained beyond question , that ...
... ( September 5 , 1752 ) the capital of Virginia ; that the play was the " Merchant of Venice , " followed by " Lethe , " a farce by Garrick . Since Mr. Dunlap's book was written , however , it has been ascertained beyond question , that ...
Page 14
... September , when they played to crowded houses . It is thought by some ( but this is merely surmise ) , that Murray and Kean may have been the two young Englishmen who , about this time , shocked all New England by playing , with the ...
... September , when they played to crowded houses . It is thought by some ( but this is merely surmise ) , that Murray and Kean may have been the two young Englishmen who , about this time , shocked all New England by playing , with the ...
Page 18
... , save that they played in the south , and as far north as New York . The Hallam company's record is more fully written . They had played first at Will- iamsburgh , Va . , in September , 1752 ; 18 PLAYERS OF A CENTURY .
... , save that they played in the south , and as far north as New York . The Hallam company's record is more fully written . They had played first at Will- iamsburgh , Va . , in September , 1752 ; 18 PLAYERS OF A CENTURY .
Page 19
... September , 1752 ; in Annapolis , and in New York at the Nassau street theatre , in the fall of 1753. They had gone subsequently to the West Indies , where Lewis Hallam , their first manager , had died , and his widow had married David ...
... September , 1752 ; in Annapolis , and in New York at the Nassau street theatre , in the fall of 1753. They had gone subsequently to the West Indies , where Lewis Hallam , their first manager , had died , and his widow had married David ...
Page 22
... September 20th they came out boldly with a play and produced " The Citizen , " the first drama played in New York after the revolution . The season closed November 1 , and Hallam being encouraged to bring on his main body of artists ...
... September 20th they came out boldly with a play and produced " The Citizen , " the first drama played in New York after the revolution . The season closed November 1 , and Hallam being encouraged to bring on his main body of artists ...
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Common terms and phrases
acting actor actress afterwards Albany theatre Albaugh America appearance in Albany April Arch street theatre audience August Barnes Barney Williams beautiful became began an engagement benefit Booth born Boston Bowery Bowery theatre boxes Burke character Charles Charley Charley Taylor Charlotte Charlotte Cushman circus comedian comedy Cushman daughter debut December died drama Duffy E. L. Davenport Eddy Edwin Forrest England Fanny Fanny Kemble father favorite February George Gilfert Green street theatre Hamlet Irish James January John Brougham July June Kean Kemble lady Macbeth Macready March married Mary Menken ment Metamora Miss Museum never night November October opened opera house Othello Park theatre Pearl street theatre performance Philadelphia receipts retired says scene season closed September sister Smith South Pearl Street stage manager star stock company success theatrical took tragedian tragedy troupe Troy Wallack week wife William William Duffy York young
Popular passages
Page 78 - I'll sweeten thy sad grave : thou shalt not lack The flower that's like thy face, pale primrose ; nor The azured hare-bell, like thy veins ; no, nor The leaf of eglantine, whom not to slander, Out-sweeten'd not thy breath...
Page 91 - Yes, as rocks are, When foamy billows split themselves against Their flinty ribs ; or as the moon is moved, When wolves, with hunger pined, howl at her brightness.
Page 104 - Who made a nation purer through their art. Thine is it that our drama did not die, Nor flicker down to brainless pantomime, And those gilt gauds men-children swarm to see. Farewell, Macready; moral, grave, sublime; Our Shakespeare's bland and universal eye Dwells pleased, through twice a hundred years, on thee.
Page 119 - Were less ethereally light: the brightness Of her divinest presence trembles through Her limbs, as underneath a cloud of dew Embodied in the windless Heaven of June, Amid the splendour-winged stars, the Moon Burns, inextinguishably beautiful...
Page 166 - I was married in Philadelphia, on the 7th of June, 1834, to Mr. Pierce Butler, of that city." And with that the book ends, an exquisite book, written by a real poet, in places a little too romantic and exhortatory for our taste; but that is a matter of epoch and education. A single point offends us, and that is the conceited tone, intensely English, in which the actress on several occasions...
Page 91 - I pen this passage ; now composed, now grand as the foamy billows ; so flutelike on the word " moon," creating a scene with the sound ; and anon sharp, harsh, fierce in the last line, with a look upward from those matchless eyes, that rendered the troop visible, and their howl perceptible to the ear ; — the whole serenity of the man, and the solidity of his temper, being illustrated less by the assurance in the succeeding words than by the exquisite music in the tone with which he uttered the word...
Page 90 - I have met one actor in this country, a young man named Edwin Forrest, who gave proofs of a decided genius for his profession, and will, I believe, rise to ;\ great eminence.
Page 137 - Navy Department. . . . And the parties of the second part hereby agree to pay to the party of the first part for said piles, delivered at said Naval Academy, after approval by said architect or his representative and said engineer in charge, at the prices set forth in the attached schedule, which forms a part of this agreement. . . . And it is further agreed that in the event of the...
Page 103 - ... he stole into the sleeping-chamber of Duncan like a man going to purloin a purse, not like a warrior going to snatch a crown.
Page 202 - ... power to embody the highest ideals of majesty, pathos, and appalling anguish. She was not a great actress merely, but she was a great woman. She did not possess the dramatic faculty apart from other faculties, and conquer by that alone; but, having that faculty in almost unlimited...
References to this book
Wearing the Breeches: Gender on the Antebellum Stage Elizabeth Reitz Mullenix No preview available - 2000 |