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Index
TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE.
PUNCH LIBRARY OF HUMOUR
MR. PUNCH AT THE PLAY
MR. PUNCH AT THE PLAY
HUMOURS OF MUSIC AND THE DRAMA
THE EDUCATIONAL BOOK CO. LTD
THE PUNCH LIBRARY OF HUMOUR
BEFORE THE CURTAIN MR. PUNCH AT THE PLAY SOMETHING FOR THE MONEY
The Drama. TRUE APPRECIATION ON A DRAMATIC AUTHOR
THE MANAGER'S COMPLAINT
A First Night. "The Desire of the Moth for the Star. The Counter-Check Quarrelsome. Sweeping Assertion.
DRAMATIC NOTES OF THE FUTURE
MODERN IMPRESSIONIST ART. A MUSICAL COMEDY AT THE PREMIÈRE THE BILL OF THE PLAY Amenities of the Profession. THE HIGHER EDUCATION OF WOMEN Private Theatricals. An Infant Roscius. A Soliloquy. "Shakspeare and the first Quart O" "Shakspeare and the last Quart O" The Music-hall Screaming Farcical Comedy. A Melodrama at the "Surrey". A pathetic "Comedy-Drama." Another. The Opera. A patriotic Drama at the "National Theatre". And Three acts of Henrik Ibsen. The deplorable issue. "MOST MUSICAL, MOST MELANCHOLY" MUSIC OF THE FUTURE. SENSATION OPERA. "Cross Old Thing!" Our Theatricals. Technical. A Double Disappointment. Modest Appeal.
A MODERN REHEARSAL NEO-DRAMATIC NURSERY RHYME HINTS TO AMATEUR PLAYWRIGHTS.
QUITE OF HER OPINION
THE DECLINE OF THE DRAMA CONTRIBUTION TOWARDS NURSERY RHYMES
IN THE STALLS IN THE STALLS MITIGATING CIRCUMSTANCES A Studied Insult. "The Sleeping Beauty." Collaborateurs.
WHY I DON'T WRITE PLAYS
Her First Play. Mellow drammer First Night of an Unappreciated Melodrama. THE COMMISSARIAT A NOTE AND QUERY MR. PUNCH'S OPERA BOX SIC VOS NON VOBIS DRAMATISATIS, WRITERS!
MEM. BY A MANAGER REVISED VERSION OF SHAKSPEARE
A solo on the horn After the Performance. SCENES FROM MR. PUNCH'S PANTOMIME. Scene I.—The Tragic Mews SCENES FROM MR. PUNCH'S PANTOMIME. Scene II.—The Comic Mews Ambiguous. Our Theatricals. Mazeppa. "Again he urges on his wild career!!!" Distinguished Amateurs. The Actor. Distinguished Amateurs. The Jeune Premier. Music by handle. THE SWING OF THE PENDULUM Turning a Phrase. Scene— A Booth in the Wild West "Men Were Deceivers Ever" The Commentators. A Disenchantment "JUST HINT A FAULT" Little Tommy Bodkin takes his cousins to the gallery of the Opera
THE MOAN OF A THEATRE-MANAGER
Ibsen in Brixton. A five bar rest LESSONS LEARNED AT A PANTOMIME THE NEW PLAY A quick movement with an obligato accompaniment. TERRIFIC SITUATION! APPRECIATIVE! SCENE FROM SHAKSPEARIAN PANTOMIME A Disenchantment. The Problem Play. CHURCH THEATRES FOR COUNTRY VILLAGES—THE BLAMELESS BALLET Confrères. A PROP OF THE DRAMA SHOWING THAT SOMETIMES IT IS GOOD FOR A COBBLER NOT TO STICK TO HIS LAST An Unkind Cut. A CROWDED HOUSE THE PROVINCIAL DRAMA A CONDUCTOR OF HEAT "STARTLING EFFECTS!" EX NIHILO NIHIL FIT HOW HE OUGHT NOT TO LOOK PREHISTORIC SHAKSPEARE.—"MACBETH" MUSIC-HALL INANITIES.—I.
MUSIC-HALL INANITIES.—II. The Illustrative Method. ATTENTION AT THE PLAY.
Melodrama in the Suburbs. The Ruling Passion.
HIS FIRST AND LAST PLAY
Paradoxical. FORM PROPERTY HAS ITS RIGHTS The Point of View. THE FORTHCOMING PANTOMIME MR. PUNCH'S PATENT MATINEE HAT. Heard at a Provincial Circus. The Amateurs. CAUSE AND EFFECT "EXCLUSIVE" The Drama. The Maiden's Point of View. A COMEDIE FRANÇAISE "Those Who Live in Glass Houses," Etc. A very cold audience. A CASE OF "NO COMPRENNY"
BETWEEN THE ACTS; OR, THE DRAMA IN LIQUOR
An Irresistible Appeal. What our Dramatist has to put up with. OVERHEARD OUTSIDE A THEATRE STUDY COLOURED CLERGY SUPEREROGATION After the Theatricals. A DOMESTIC DRAMA PROGRESS
"HAMLET" A LA SAUCE DUMB-CRAMBO
"Oh, that this too, too solid flesh would melt!"—Act I., Sc. 2. "I could a tail unfold!"—Ibid. "What a falling off was there!"—Ibid. "Methinks I scent the morning hair!"—Ibid. "Brief let me be!"—Ibid. "Lend thy serious ear-ring to what I shall unfold!"—Act I., Sc. 5. "Toby, or not Toby? that is the question."—Act II., Sc. 2. "The King, sir."—"Ay, sir, what of him?"—"Is in his retirement marvellous distempered."—"With drink, sir!"—"No, my lord, rather with collar!"—Act III., Sc. 2. "Oh, my offence is rank!"—Act III., Sc. 3. "Put your bonnet to his right use—'tis for the head."—Act V., Sc. 2. "Coming Events cast their Shadows before them." A SENSITIVE EAR.
DUMB-CRAMBO'S GUIDE TO THE LONDON THEATRES
Drew wry lane Cove in garden Cry-teary 'un Prints of whales "A—mark it!" Gay at tea Princesses and royal tea Globe "Scent, James?" Strand and "save, hoi!" Only in play! The actor who has his head turned with applause CURTAIN-RAISERS MUSIC HALL TYPES MUSIC HALL TYPES MUSIC HALL TYPES On Tour. Art and Nature. CONVINCING
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