Before the Footlights and Behind the Scenes: a Book about "the Show Business" in All Its Branches: from Puppet Shows to Grand Opera: From Mountebanks to Menageries; from Learned Pigs to Lecturers; from Burlesque Blondes to Actors and Actresses: with Some Observations and Reflections (original and Reflected) on Morality and Immorality in Amusements: Thus Exhibiting the "show World" as Seen from Within, Through the Eyes of the Former Actress, as Well as from Without, Through the Eyes of the Present Lecturer and Author |
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Page xiv
... Better Accom- modations for Players . - The Marked Changes which Theatres have Undergone of Late Years . Better Scenery and Costumes . - Better Music . The Reserved Seat System . - Early Introduction of Private Boxes . Opposition to ...
... Better Accom- modations for Players . - The Marked Changes which Theatres have Undergone of Late Years . Better Scenery and Costumes . - Better Music . The Reserved Seat System . - Early Introduction of Private Boxes . Opposition to ...
Page 23
... better things in store for them in this far - distant land . Soon after their arrival , my father was born . In ... better than the men he was writing about , he went on the stage , -and did act better . And in this way the theatrical ...
... better things in store for them in this far - distant land . Soon after their arrival , my father was born . In ... better than the men he was writing about , he went on the stage , -and did act better . And in this way the theatrical ...
Page 33
... better on the subject since . the time of Tacitus ; for one of the modern writers . of that nation ( Zingerman ) says , ' We are greatly a dramatic people . Nothing but good can result from the 34 VULNERABLE POINTS . widest indulgence ...
... better on the subject since . the time of Tacitus ; for one of the modern writers . of that nation ( Zingerman ) says , ' We are greatly a dramatic people . Nothing but good can result from the 34 VULNERABLE POINTS . widest indulgence ...
Page 54
... better to meet than to follow , for his aspect was serious , venerable and majestic - in his latter time a little paralytic . His voice was low and grumbling ; yet he could time it by an artful climax , which enforced THE STAGE BENEDICK ...
... better to meet than to follow , for his aspect was serious , venerable and majestic - in his latter time a little paralytic . His voice was low and grumbling ; yet he could time it by an artful climax , which enforced THE STAGE BENEDICK ...
Page 78
... better knowledge than she of the different peculiarities of the epochs in which her plays were laid . Her costumes in Marie Antoinette were copied from pictures taken from life ; and her court dress in Elizabeth was one which it was ...
... better knowledge than she of the different peculiarities of the epochs in which her plays were laid . Her costumes in Marie Antoinette were copied from pictures taken from life ; and her court dress in Elizabeth was one which it was ...
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actor actress American amusing animals appearance artists audience Barentin beasts beautiful boxes boxing the compass cage called Carrie Carrie Lee character child Cincinnati circus clown color costume course COVENT GARDEN cried critics curtain dear dollars drama dress Drury Lane Edwin Booth elephant engaged English eyes face father footlights French gentleman Gibeau girl give hand head heart hiss Jenny Lind Juliet lady laugh Leopoldine lion lioness London look Macbeth Mason menagerie ment mountebanks Nashville never night Ole Bull once opera painted pantomime Paris Pennyweight performance person piece play players poor pretty prompter rebel rehearsal Romeo Romeo and Juliet rushed salary scene seemed soldier stage manager stage-struck star street supe tell theatre theatrical thing thought tion told took town trapeze voice walk woman words York young
Popular passages
Page 55 - 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, and perfectly convince him, that it is to stab it, to admit that worst of daggers, jealousy. Whoever reads in his closet this admirable scene, will find that he cannot, except he has as warm an imagination as...
Page 58 - A distinguished theatrical performer, in consequence of the sudden illness of another actor, had occasion to prepare himself, on very short notice, for a part which was entirely new to him ; and the part was long and rather difficult. He acquired it in a very short time, and went through it with perfect accuracy, but immediately after the performance forgot every word of it. Characters which he had acquired in a more deliberate manner he never- forgets, but can perform them at any time without a...
Page 606 - His folly bears him. Boldly, I dare say, There has been more by us in some one play Laugh'd into wit and virtue, than hath been By twenty tedious lectures drawn from sin And foppish humours : hence the cause doth rise, Men are not won by th
Page 63 - Hamlet sitting down comfortably while talking to the ghost of his father ; or Macbeth inquiring — " Is this a dagger that I see before me, The handle towards my hand ?" from amidst the soft cushions of a parlor sofa ! A great many male tragic parts require the actor to fence, and that this is hard work for a slender man (or a stout one either, for that matter,) any one will testify who has seen Edwin Booth in Hamlet, or Romeo, or Richard the Third, or Forrest in \^QjGrladmtor or Jack Caglf.
Page 54 - Mr. Betterton (although a superlative good actor) labored under ill figure, being clumsily made, having a great head, a short thick neck, stooped in the shoulders, and had fat short arms, which he rarely lifted higher than his stomach. His left hand frequently lodged in his breast, between his coat and waistcoat, while, with his right he prepared his speech.
Page 532 - The Fine Gentleman in Garrick's little comedy of " Lethe " describes to jEsop his manner of spending his evenings : " I dress and go generally behind the scenes of both playhouses — not, you may imagine, to be diverted with the play, but to intrigue and show myself; I stand upon the stage, talk loud and stare about, which confounds the actors and disturbs the audience, upon which the galleries, who hate the appearance of one of us, begin to hiss and to cry, 'Off, off!
Page 59 - ... he has been obliged each time to prepare it anew, and has never acquired in regard to it that facility which is familiar to him in other instances.
Page 54 - He had little eyes, and a broad face, a little pock-fretten, a corpulent body, and thick legs, with large feet. He was better to meet, than to follow; for his aspect was serious, venerable, and majestic; in his latter time a little paralytic His voice was low and grumbling; yet he could time it by an artful climax, which enforced universal attention, even from the fops and orange-girls. He was incapable of dancing even in a country dance; as was Mrs. Barry: but their good qualities were more than...
Page 55 - Shakspeare himself, find any but dry, incoherent, and broken sentences : but a reader that has seen Betterton act it, observes, there could not be a word added ; that longer speeches had been unnatural, nay impossible, in Othello's circumstances. The charming passage in the same tragedy, where he tells the manner of winning the affection of his mistress, was urged with so moving and graceful an energy, that while I walked in the cloisters, I thought of him with the same concern as if I waited for...
Page 514 - And though now bent on this high embassy, Yet stoop we to take up our Cousin's glove...