FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   263   264   265   266   267   268   269   270   271   272   273   274   275   276   277   278   279   280   281   282   283   284   285   286   287  
288   289   290   >>  
kneyed, was to his general manager, Alf Hayman. It was:_ Send me a thousand pounds to London. _To W. Lestocq, in 1914, regarding another manager:_ I notice that Mr. Z---- has a man who can sign for royalties I send him. I wonder why he can't find some one to sign for royalties that are due me! _Of a production waiting to come to New York:_ Broadway may throw things when we play the piece here, still I have failed before on Broadway. _To James B. Fagan, in London, December, 1912, referring to his production of "Bella Donna" in this country:_ Mr. Bryant is giving an exceptionally good performance of the part, and is so much taken with my theater and company that I have the newspapers' word that he married my star (Nazimova). _To Alfred Sutro, November, 1914:_ It seems to me that a strong human play, with good characters (and clean), is the thing over here; and now, my dear Sutro, I do believe that throughout the United States a play really requires a star artist, man or woman--woman for choice.... _To W. Lestocq, in November, 1914:_ I have just returned from Chicago, where Miss Adams has a very happy and delightful program in "Leonora" and "The Ladies' Shakespeare." "The Ladies' Shakespeare" is delightful, but very slight. The little scenes that Barrie has written that are spoken before the curtain are awfully well received, but the scenes from Shakespeare's play when they are acted are very short and the whole thing is played in less than an hour. Miss Adams, of course, is delightful in it, and it goes with a sparkle with her; and as it is so slight and so much Shakespeare and so little Barrie, although the Barrie part in front of the curtain is fine, I cannot say how it would go with your audiences [referring to the London public]. I am happy in the thought, however, that Barrie has furnished Miss Adams with a program that will last her all through the season and well into the summer. _To Haddon Chambers:_ Hubert Henry Davies's "Outcast" has made a hit, but he really has a wonderful woman--I should say the best young emotional actress on the stage--in Miss Ferguson. So he is in for a good thing. _To Cyril Maude, in Boston, November, 1914:_ Yours to Chicago has just reached me here in New York. As soon as I heard that you were goin
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   263   264   265   266   267   268   269   270   271   272   273   274   275   276   277   278   279   280   281   282   283   284   285   286   287  
288   289   290   >>  



Top keywords:

Barrie

 

Shakespeare

 
November
 

delightful

 
London
 

Broadway

 

referring

 

scenes

 

program

 

royalties


Lestocq

 
slight
 

manager

 

Ladies

 
Chicago
 
curtain
 
production
 

received

 

spoken

 
written

sparkle
 

played

 

actress

 

Ferguson

 
emotional
 
wonderful
 

Boston

 

reached

 

Outcast

 

thought


furnished
 

public

 

audiences

 

Chambers

 

Hubert

 

Davies

 

Haddon

 

summer

 

season

 
characters

waiting

 
things
 
December
 

failed

 

thousand

 
pounds
 

Hayman

 
kneyed
 

general

 
notice