A View of the English Stage: Or, A Series of Dramatic CriticismsG. Bell & sons, 1906 - 358 pages |
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Page xv
... manners . While we are talking about them , we are thinking about our- selves . They " hold the mirror up to Nature ... manner can be mimicked , must have been remarked or felt by most of us . It is no wonder then , that we should feel ...
... manners . While we are talking about them , we are thinking about our- selves . They " hold the mirror up to Nature ... manner can be mimicked , must have been remarked or felt by most of us . It is no wonder then , that we should feel ...
Page xvi
... manner , the whole pit rose up , without uttering a syllable , and so that you might hear a pin drop . At another time , the crown of straw which he wore in the same character fell off , or was discomposed , which would have produced a ...
... manner , the whole pit rose up , without uttering a syllable , and so that you might hear a pin drop . At another time , the crown of straw which he wore in the same character fell off , or was discomposed , which would have produced a ...
Page xxi
... a pecuniary point of view ; but it has been forgotten , that public praise assists them in the same manner . Again , I never understood that the applauded actor thought himself personally obliged to the newspaper Author's Preface . xxi.
... a pecuniary point of view ; but it has been forgotten , that public praise assists them in the same manner . Again , I never understood that the applauded actor thought himself personally obliged to the newspaper Author's Preface . xxi.
Page 3
... manner of giving the part , fully sustained the reputation he had acquired by his former representation of it , though he laboured under the disadvantage of a con- siderable hoarseness . He assumed a greater appearance of age and ...
... manner of giving the part , fully sustained the reputation he had acquired by his former representation of it , though he laboured under the disadvantage of a con- siderable hoarseness . He assumed a greater appearance of age and ...
Page 4
... manner of acting this part1 has one peculiar advantage ; it is entirely his own , without any traces of imitation of any other actor [ except where his ear had caught in passages the tone of the late Mr. Cooke 2 ] . He stands upon his ...
... manner of acting this part1 has one peculiar advantage ; it is entirely his own , without any traces of imitation of any other actor [ except where his ear had caught in passages the tone of the late Mr. Cooke 2 ] . He stands upon his ...
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Common terms and phrases
acting action actor admirable allusion appearance applause audience Bartley beautiful Beggar's Opera better Bruges character Charles Kemble comedy comic Comus Coriolanus Covent Garden critics début delight display Dowton dramatic Drury Lane Drury-Lane Duke effect English equal excellent expression farce favour favourite feeling gaiety Garrick genius gentleman give grace Hamlet Haymarket Haymarket Theatre Hazlitt humour Iago Ibid imagination indifferent interest Kean Kean's Kemble Kemble's King Lady Liston look Lord lover Macbeth manner Mardyn mind Miss Kelly Miss O'Neill Miss Stephens Molière moral Munden nature never night O'Neill's October Othello pantomime passages passion perfect performance person piece play plot poet produced revived Richard Richard III Romeo scene seems sense sentiment Shakespeare Shylock Siddons singing Sir Giles song soul spirit stage sung Theatre theatrical thing thou thought tion tone tragedy voice whole Wife words young
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