Judge, 1885-02-07 · page 10 of 16
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Sovtnuwarp instead of westward the stars heir way, and New Orleans is, in its life, suffering from an embar- nt of busin the show line. k the Mapleson Opera T: rast Last. we ' with Patti and Nevada, Raymond, Aimee, G there. At this rate somebody will get left, be the her ever so mild. Hawthorne, and Buth Bill were all Bessie Bernard —Miss Hawthorne's female advance agent—telegraphs back that her star has scored a big success Annie Firmin, company. ‘They onville, Florida, on on isannounced to con- John Jack and his wife, have started out with were to open at Jack Monday. The tinue ten week. the to play nice ( damille * Pink Domi- * East: Lynne,” ¢ If they don’t come to grief around the Gulf of will proceed to the West Ind sti, Jamaica, and Porto Rico will ance to sce and hear Mr. Jot sus comedy a Great City,” have fallen upon San Francisco in the shape of Gerald Eyre and Molly Fuller. hese two people were pretty well shadowed before they got away from New York, and something more substantial than shadows would make it extremely unpleasant for Mr. Eyre were in to appear in our midst, Ifis wife and children are destitute and a ription has be ed in their behalf. his is Mr. Booth’s last week at the Fifth Avenue. — He has changed his programme frequently, and he has had crowded hot but his support is. . remarkably ba We were promise su he Merchant of Venice,” fit, and **Macbeth” without the are disappointi to say the least. However, Mr. Booth age- ment has proved profitable, as far as dollars und cents go, and it is to be presumed that with an apy the tragedian is quite sati The Third Avenue Theatre has been le: to Tony Pastor and M. B. Leavitt. — Itis to be run‘as a “ first class novelty and combi- amme is to "be first class nov- nation ” and the pre changed cz The elty” produced there was “An Adamles Eden,” with the original comedy cast. This may be ‘first cla but where does the novelty come in? At the Comedy the man at the wheel couldn’t get the wheel ready last week. This week it will probably commence to whirl. Various members of the Lyceum School, after much hard study and the payment of two hundred dollars apiece, have at last attained their desires, and have ‘ got on the stage.” They now appear as “sup where Mr, Barrett disports hims in “Julius Ca The * supes at the Star, elf as Cassius, draw well, for their sisters | the lofty height their relative and and their cousins and their aunts, proud of y have already attained in the profession, and anxious to them before the footlights, help to swell the box office receipts. ‘There was some little troub at first, for each and eve dressing room all to hei ) will doubtless soon succeed in supplying this long felt want in all theatres, and he will soon patenta portable, convenient and unique dressing room that every actress can carry to see n the ranks y female wanted a If, Mr. Mac 7 around with her wherever she goes. These Uressing rooms, when completed, will be supplied to the pupils of the Lyceum School at a trif lditional expense, and it is confidently hoped they will prove to be as comfortable as are the 8 Theatre, At Wallack’s probably run a s of Union Square will Durand” longer. It is “Victor we We that © Tmpu will follow Mr, Carleton’s | play. For a year and a half the Wallack management have been threatening to bring we shall believe they we see it on the boards, ort has it that Rose out © Impulse,” and mean business whe not before. not” of Miss Genevieve Ward. hlan made a hit in. this piece the few times she played it ac Wallack’s old theatre, and we hope she has indeed the right to play it here. Mr. Marsden’s se the Union Square has yet painte be produced. Carleton, nery for the new pla said to be the fin Mr. Nathal’s play will soon at with his opera troupe, is singing in “La Fille du Tambour Major” at the Four. teenth Street Theatr id ** May Blossom’ with it. iginal cast is a i Boucicanit has closed a successful eng ment in Boston, Boston papers have d canted at length on the respective merits of Mr. Boucicault’s son and his daughter Nina, who made her debut in the ‘Colleen Bawn. We should like to know how many debuts this pretty and very interc young lady is going to have. Last yea with her father in * the Park Theatre, but perhaps that eng ment doesn’t count. Macpetu hath murdered sle —may not ‘ Macbeth” b rint for “grimalkin,” a natne which occurs in the same play? Or were there no night-cats in Stratford-on-Avon three hundred years ago? A NARROW ESCAPE. t he | Query | | Ani's over now « | If Love e After The Amateur Play. It was a great suc honest Villain did the best he ¢ dl plodded throug! very good kedness— ak pains He's re And whe With darkly scowlin he drove the lad: s threats and Trusbed u: stage, detied him there, And ¢ in my arms' They called usback. ‘The laughing plandit To we The M. ne us, That moment was divine ja held ken of my t Jarling’s hand in mine ecmedl to feel her happy pulses beat < mine any joy and pride; nder It Since she was by my the whole world feet And then—why Ab Enou The IS WE pa: i, Loverheard sta meaning su ried whisper; eau; it was the Villain she preferred— all the while! Villain did not know with my w She th t Tacted well the part ne stealing through the ma: How should she find bim out? 1 God bless he to« of hw She did not kno (Aye, and the V Shall lend its tc When I woui ‘There will be other play When this is half f New « new dr But this old play for m * years 5 the new hoy will be sand fe —The Si : busy CULTURE Bostoxtax— BOSTON ON A BOUNCE. New York atreets are (hie) juat cver- An Evidence of Prospority. “Bangs is getting to be quite a man, isn’t he? Why, only yesterday he spoke to fifteen hundred people.” “Indeed! What did he say to them “He asked them if they couldn't come in just as well next week.” comicbooks.com