Thememoriesofroseeytinge 10081858.Pdf

Thememoriesofroseeytinge 10081858.Pdf

C O N TEN TS CHAPTER I — PAGE The Stage and Its In flue n ce s My First Engagement — — The Installment System A Sabbatarian —“ Boarding- House Bread Eaten in Secret ' “ ” M Fi rst . y Heavy Part , and My First Train CHAPTER l l — The Green Street Theatre , Albany The Dignity of — — Leading Woman Dressm aking An Acrid but Kindly Landlady CHAPTER Il l — — Old -Time Stars Julia De an Charlotte Crampton Ada Clare—Bohemia CHAPTER lV Abraham Lincoln—The Prince of Wales—Fernando — — — Wood Thurlow Weed Hugh Hastings D aniel S . Dickinson and Mrs . Dickinson CHAPTER V — Edwin Booth The Crime of j ohn Wilkes Booth an d the Disposition of His Remains V CONTENTS CHAPTER VI PAGE Glimpses of Royalty—The Prince of Wales—Chinese Diplomats The Boston Theatre Old -Tim e Theatrical Salaries CHAPTER VI I —E My First Row with a Manager . L . Davenport W — A . and J . W . allack Realistic De sde mon a CHAPTER VI I I — — Mrs . Davenport Edward House Poetry at Short Notice — “ Enoch Arden The Man in the Iron Mask CHAPTER IX — O B ulfin ch Fanny Davenport The ld House in Place , — Boston An Assemblage of Notables CHAPTER X — — The New England Circuit A Put -Up j o b Misad ventures in New Bedford CHAPTER X I — “ Washington in War-Tim e Contrabands Defined ’ — —Uncle Sam s Soldiers—Patriotic Songs Tom — PlacidHWallack and Davenport Distinguished Guests v i CONTENTS CHAPTER X I I PAGE Abraham Lincoln—William Henry Seward—Pla cide ’ s Humour— “ Still Waters Run Deep Assassination of the President—A Night of Terror CHAPTER X I I I — ’ — — New York Wallack s Theatre Nancy Syke s Lead — in g Woman with Lester Wallack Perfect The — — atri cal Management Mary Gannon Charles — Dickens Love for the Stage . CHAPTER X IV First Sea Voyage— Captain Judkins and the — — — Scotia Sea- Sickness Goodwood Races The — ’ Prince of Wales Again In the Q ueen s B o x — — N Y O . at the pera Smuggling Rochester, A Leading Woman in a Sad Predicament CHAPTER XV Toronto The Heart of Midlothian - A Minister — ' — ing Angel j aam a De an s A Co nverted Presby —“ ” — terian She Stoops to Con quer George Hol land as Ton y Lu mpki n vii CONTENTS CHAPTER XVI PAGE Augustin Daly and the New York Theatre Under the Gaslight ”—Davenport in Mischief Caste” - W — — . J . Florence Mrs . Gilbert Starring N N — ewark, . J . Washington CHAPTER XVI I — — London Paris Longcham ps and the Gr an d P r i nt Napoleon III and the Em press Eugenie— Prin — N — cess Metternich Prince Pierre apoleon Dr . Evans — Nubar Pasha — Auber and Verdi Americans in Paris— Cora Pearl CHAPTER XVI I I Royalty and Rank— Fontainebleau and The Black ” — — — Eagle Across the Alps Italy Alexandria The Am erican Traveller— Ram leh — Cleopatra — The B awau b A Masculine Cham bermaid CHAPTER X I X — n Love , the Great Leveller The Serva t Problem in Egypt—How the Grocer Imported His Bride — — Wom en in the East The Harem s An Oriental ’ — Lady s Call Upon an American Woman The — Man in the Case Human Nature . viii CONTENTS CHAPTER X X American Patriotism—Woman ’ s Status in America — and the East Co ntrasted Eunuchs European Wives of Mohammedan Magnates CHAPTER XX I — ’ Egyptian Dancing- Girls The Viceroy s Mother — ' Oriental Splendour A Noblem an with an Hallu cin ation CHAPTER XX I I — — Tragedies of the Harems Sulym an Pasha From a French Cloister to an Egyptian Prison—Cherif Pasha and His Unhappy Wife CHAPTER XX I I I ’ “ ” — Verdi s Aida in the Cairo Opera House A Bla ze — of Jewels A Cosmopolitan Audience CHAPTER XX IV Egypt ian Antiquities- A Remarkable Co in cide n ck — “ A Greek Dog A Prese nt of Mutton On the Hoof ” —A Berber Prince—The Restoration of a Long- Lost Child ix CONTENTS CHAPTER XXV — PAGE Henry Bulwer American Offi cers in the Khe ’ — — v Thom as W di e s Service Stone Pasha Colonel . Rhett General Sherm an Patriotism Mo llifie d — by Old Associations A Meeting of One -Tim e Enemies CHAPTER XXVI — F e llabe m of Egypt Taxation How the Other ” — Half Li ves in the East A Bedouin Fam ily at — — Ramleh An Arab Mother-in - Law Marriage ala Mode CHAPTER XXVI I — Back to the Stage Shook Palmer and the Union N Y — Square Theatre , ew ork Charles Thorne Dion Boucicault— “ Led Astray Blow for Blow —Marie Wilkins CHAPTER XXVI I I The Two Orphans “ The Lady of Lyons ” — George Rign o ld Rose Michel Steele Mack — — aye j ohn Parse lle and Charles Thorn e To m Taylor CHAPTER XX I X — — — Starring Buying Experience The West Ben De s— — Bar Bob Mile Mrs . John Drew The Lith — o graph Q uestion A Sandwich Man CONTENTS CHAPTER XXX PAGE a — The California Theatre, San Fr ncisco John Mc ' ' Cullo ugh j u lza L ady M d e bai b Camzlle Mary Anderson East Lynne ” CHAPTER XXX I — — Virginia City Ah Audience of Miners A Midnight — Ride with a Guard of Honour Down in a Silver Mine CHAPTER X XX I I Reno—A Western Hotel—The Reno Theatre—Puri fication CHAPTER XXX I I I ’ Seeking Rest and Finding None Why Don t Yo u ” — go into Some Decent Business! New-Mown — Hay The Properties of the Reno Theatre . CHAPTER XXX IV Salt Lake City—The Guest of Brigham Young — The King of Utah Polygamy CHAPTER X XXV ’ Playing a Boy s Part for the Only Time - Cle opatr a Henry Bergh ’ s Eulogy xi CONTENTS CHAPTER XXXVI — — PAGE Lo ndon and Its Notables Tom Taylor The Olym — — pic Theatre Beerbohm Tree The Effect of Too Realistic Acting—A Noble Lord ’ s Criticism “ Annie Thom as ” CHAPTER XXXVI I Wilkie Collins—Charles Reade—The Influence of — Charles Dickens Nan cy Syke s Converts a Bap tist CHAPTER XXXVI I I Y — — Edmund ates Robert Buchanan Mrs . W . E . Gladstone—Professor Blackie—Palgrave Simp SOD CHAPTER XXX I X Changes in the Profession— Lucille Western—Louis — — m . 0 Aldrich James A . He e Adah Isaacs Menken . 3 7 THE M EM O R I ES O F R O SE EV T IN G E CHAPTER I — THE STAGE AND ITS IN F L U ENC Es M Y FIRST ENGAGE — — MENT THE INSTALLMENT SYSTEM A SABBATARIAN “ ” BOARDING- HOUSE BREAD EATEN IN SECRET “ MY FIRST HEAVY PART, AND MY FIRST TRAIN WOND ER Wh - I y it is that stage folk , both men and women , always think it a fine thing to decry stage - life to the young man o r woman who of thinks entering that life . They must know that their attempt at depreciation is not just ; n that the life which they decry is a good o e . The stage brings pleasure and brightness to many Whose lives would be Without any in flu e n ce s more elevating than workaday inter ests . It brings quick returns in recognition of talent , and , in a thousand ways makes apparent as kin dli its superiority a vocation . And for ROSE EY TINGE o - ness , g od fellowship , a willing heart , and a he l ready hand to p each other , where will these virtues be found developed as they are among the players ! When I was a slip of a girl I went upon the stage . At that time !a happy time !) there was in New York and , I believe , in the whole United on e States but dramatic agent . This was Charle s Parsloe !father of the late Charle s Pars The He athe n Chi m e loe , better known as ), f who had an o fice in Chambers Street . To m him I went and asked for an engage ent . Evidently I impressed him favourably , for with ou t any difficulty and with very little delay he Y . found me a chance to go to Syracuse , N . , the re to join a dramatic stock company under f M r H . the management o . Geary ough On my arrival the question o f wardrobe promptly presented itself, and at first it seemed a very serious and troublesome problem ; but M r H of diffi e . ough spe dily found a solution the f . H e o culty was a widower recent date , and his late wife h ad been his leading woman . As THE INSTALLM ENT SYSTEM as he still had her stage wardrobe intact , and tailor- made gowns and wrinkleless robes were f not then the vogue , I had very little di ficulty Ac in adapting this wardrobe to my needs . cordin gly I bought the garments and paid for “ ” r H on ll M . them the insta ment plan , ough m deductin g from my salary a small weekly su . M r H n d a I have often wondered Since if . ough f I were the pioneers o the installment system . so ! If , may we be forgiven In this , my first engagement , I was drawing l a salary of seven do lars a week , and it might be considered that my life was on e o f har dshi p and M Not . privation . at all oney was worth much more then than it is now , and on this apparently small salary I could live in mod est comfort . I - lived in a boarding house , in which also dwelt M r M r . H s . and Frank umphreys , the leading a d o f man n leading woman the company , to gether with several others of its members .

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    322 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us