| Author: |
Irving, Sir Henry
>>
(John Henry Brodribb),
1838-1905 |
| Address: |
15A, Grafton Street, Bond Street (Garrick Club printed) |
| Recipient: |
Tennyson, Hallam
>>
2nd Baron Tennyson, 1852-1928 |
| Address: |
- |
| Date: |
[1875] |
| Document Type: |
Letter (2 p.) |
| Content Summary: |
Irving has made an enquiry at [Josh- -?] but Dixon's book only embraces the lives of Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn and goes no further. He has sent, in case Alfred Tennyson does not have them, Miss Strickland's 'Mary & Elizabeth' which contains a lot of stuff which may be of use. Remember Irving most kindly to his father. |
| Published: |
- |
| Notes: |
On Garrick Club paper with address handwritten. 'Queen Mary' the first play written in what Alfred, Lord Tennyson called his "historical trilogy " ('Harold', 'Becket' and 'Queen Mary') was published in 1875. Irving played King Philip and Kate Bateman, Queen Mary on the opening night at the Lyceum, 18th April, 1876. William Hepworth Dixon wrote 'History of Two Queens' in 1873.
By courtesy of the Tennyson Research Centre, Lincolnshire County Council. |
| Document Holder: |
TRC (Reference: 3789) |
| Ref.No: |
5510 |
|
|
| Author: |
Irving, Sir Henry
>>
(John Henry Brodribb),
1838-1905 |
| Address: |
15a, Grafton Street, Bond Street, W |
| Recipient: |
Fitzgerald, Percy Hetherington
>>
1834-1925 biographer, theatre historian |
| Address: |
- |
| Date: |
1875, Feb., 2 |
| Document Type: |
Letter (2 p.) |
| Content Summary: |
Regrets his Sundays that month are full. Could they do a Garrick supper one night? Free 4th, 6th, 10th, and 11th. |
| Published: |
- |
| Notes: |
|
| Document Holder: |
GAR (Reference: Fitzgerald, vol. 1, p.77.) |
| Ref.No: |
1441 |
|
|
| Author: |
Moore, Henry Reginald
>>
1838/39-1880 playwright, actor |
| Address: |
Verulam Club, 54 St James St, S.W. |
| Recipient: |
Irving, Sir Henry
>>
(John Henry Brodribb), 1838-1905 |
| Address: |
- |
| Date: |
1875, Feb, 2 |
| Document Type: |
Letter (2 p.) |
| Content Summary: |
As a humble member of the profession he thanks Irving for his Hamlet "the most intellectual in conception and absorbing in rendition impersonation I ever was privileged to enjoy". |
| Published: |
- |
| Notes: |
|
| Document Holder: |
THM (Reference: THM/37/7/32) |
| Ref.No: |
2314 |
|
|
| Author: |
Irving, Sir Henry
>>
(John Henry Brodribb),
1838-1905 |
| Address: |
15A, Grafton Street, Bond Street, W |
| Recipient: |
Saunders, John
>>
from Bristol |
| Address: |
- |
| Date: |
1875, Feb., 5 |
| Document Type: |
Letter (3 p.) |
| Content Summary: |
Thanks for the loan of the relics of the late Mr Young, which he is returning. |
| Published: |
- |
| Notes: |
Irving's signature cut out, also removing a word on front page. Probably relics of the actor Charles Mayne Young, 1777-1856, rather than the American actor Charles Young, who died in 1874. |
| Document Holder: |
P |
| Ref.No: |
6076 |
|
|
| Author: |
Burnand, Sir Francis Cowley
>>
1836-1917 editor of “Punch”, dramatist |
| Address: |
38 Gt Marlborough Street |
| Recipient: |
Irving, Sir Henry
>>
(John Henry Brodribb), 1838-1905 |
| Address: |
- |
| Date: |
1875, Feb., 7 |
| Document Type: |
Letter (3 p.) |
| Content Summary: |
He praises Irvng's Hamlet, only to be compared for greatness with Ristori's Lady Macbeth. Burnand cried in the Ghost scene and at the Yorick speech. He regrets having to write a criticism, as criticism is out of the question. |
| Published: |
- |
| Notes: |
|
| Document Holder: |
THM (Reference: THM/37/7/19) |
| Ref.No: |
985 |
|
|
Records
-
301 to 305 of 9303