hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
The Daily Dispatch: March 4, 1861., [Electronic resource] 9 1 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: March 2, 1861., [Electronic resource] 3 1 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 12 results in 2 document sections:

Miss Ellen Bateman. --We feel assured that every patron of the drama will welcome the announcement of the arrival of this young lady, who, we are informed, will commence an engagement at the Theatre on Monday night next. Many of us indulge in pleasant recollections of her inimitable performances when she was a child, and we are gratified to know that she has assumed that position in the dramatic world to which nature and education eminently entitle her. Miss Bateman will make her first aphe announcement of the arrival of this young lady, who, we are informed, will commence an engagement at the Theatre on Monday night next. Many of us indulge in pleasant recollections of her inimitable performances when she was a child, and we are gratified to know that she has assumed that position in the dramatic world to which nature and education eminently entitle her. Miss Bateman will make her first appearance as Juliet, a character in which she has achieved brilliant triumphs elsewhere.
Miss Bateman as Juliet. --Those who remember Miss Ellen Bateman's inimitable impersonation of difficult parts in her early childhood, will need no assurance of her ability to sustain the charactMiss Ellen Bateman's inimitable impersonation of difficult parts in her early childhood, will need no assurance of her ability to sustain the character of Juliet, in which she appears to-night; but in order to show how she is appreciated elsewhere in the South, we copy the following from a recent number of a leading Montgomery (Ala.) journal: "Now that Miss Bateman has closed her engagement here, we cannot refrain from printing a few 'last words,' in justice to her surpassing beauty, and her wonderful genius and accomplishments. So youn treat it as a first personation. Take it, if you choose, as the very acme of the ability of Miss Bateman; suppose that she never improves it ; yet, as it is, it must make her illustrious." "In -- but that false and flashy sort of point-making declamation, so grateful to Bowery tastes. Miss Bateman's style is simple and severe; and her enunciation remarkable for its purity and the variety a