<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><?oxygen RNGSchema="http://cather.unl.edu/cather.rng" type="xml"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0">
   <teiHeader>
      <fileDesc>
         <titleStmt>
            <title type="main">Amusements</title>
            <title type="sub">electronic edition</title>
            <author>Cather, Willa, 1873-1947</author>
            <principal xml:id="awj">Jewell, Andrew, 1975-</principal>
            <editor xml:id="ka_ron">Ronning, Kari, 1949-</editor>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Editorial Assistant</resp>
               <name xml:id="je_mo">Jennifer Moore</name>
            </respStmt>
         </titleStmt>
         <editionStmt>
            <edition>Revised edition, <date when="2010">2010</date>
            </edition>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Transformed TEI P4 encoding to TEI P5 encoding</resp>
               <name>Andrew Jewell</name>
            </respStmt>
         </editionStmt>
         <publicationStmt>
            <idno>cat.j00029</idno>
            <authority>The Willa Cather Archive</authority>
            <address>
               <addrLine>http://cather.unl.edu</addrLine>
            </address>
            <publisher>University of Nebraska&#8211;Lincoln</publisher>
            <distributor>
               <name>Center for Digital Research in the Humanities</name>
               <address>
                  <addrLine>319 Love Library</addrLine>
                  <addrLine>University of Nebraska&#8211;Lincoln</addrLine>
                  <addrLine>Lincoln, NE 68588-4100</addrLine>
                  <addrLine>http://cdrh.unl.edu</addrLine>
               </address>
            </distributor>
            <date>2010</date>
            <availability>
               <p>The Willa Cather Archive is freely distributed by the Center for
                                    Digital Research in the Humanities at the University of
                                    Nebraska-Lincoln and licensed under a Creative Commons
                                    Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States
                                    License</p>
            </availability>
         </publicationStmt>
         <notesStmt>
            <note type="project"><!-- THIS NOTE IS RESERVED TO DESCRIBE ANY IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT THE CREATION OF THE TRANSCRIPTION THAT DOESN'T FIT WITH THE OTHER TAGS. --></note>
         </notesStmt>
         <sourceDesc>
            <bibl>
               <title level="a">Amusements</title>
               <title level="j">Nebraska State Journal</title>
               <author>Willa Cather</author>
               <biblScope type="pages">3</biblScope>
               <date when="1894-01-20">January 20, 1894</date>
            </bibl>
         </sourceDesc>
      </fileDesc>
      <encodingDesc>
         <projectDesc>
            <p>Text created for online distribution on the Willa Cather Archive
                                (http://cather.unl.edu).</p>
         </projectDesc>
         <editorialDecl>
            <hyphenation eol="some">
               <p>End-of-line hyphenation silently removed where appropriate.</p>
            </hyphenation>
            <normalization method="markup">
               <p>Typographical or spelling irregularities in the orginal have been
                                    noted using markup.</p>
            </normalization>
         </editorialDecl>
         <classDecl>
            <taxonomy xml:id="lcsh">
               <bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl>
            </taxonomy>
         </classDecl>
      </encodingDesc>
      <profileDesc>
         <textClass>
            <keywords scheme="genre">
               <term>review</term>
            </keywords>
            <keywords scheme="#lcsh">
               <term>
                  <term>Hoyt, Charles Hale, 1859-1900</term>
               </term>
               <term>
                  <term>Trip to Chinatown--Drama</term>
               </term>
            </keywords>
         </textClass>
      </profileDesc>
      <revisionDesc>
         <change when="2010-06-30" who="#awj">Conversion of markup from TEI P4 to TEI
                            P5</change>
         <change when="2006-05-22" who="#awj">Checked and revised encoding</change>
         <change when="2005-06-15" who="#je_mo">Encoding</change>
         <change when="2005-05-09" who="#awj">Conversion of Word files to HTML then XML</change>
         <change when="2005-03-08" who="#awj">Initial Creation</change>
         <change when="2006-06-12" who="#awj">Entered Kari Ronning's revisions</change>
      </revisionDesc>
   </teiHeader>
   <text>
      <body>
         <head type="main">AMUSEMENTS.</head>
         <div type="section">
            <p>
               <ref type="doc" target="n00209">
                  <persName key="Hoyt, Charles">Hoyt's </persName>
               </ref>
               <ref type="doc" target="n00210">
                  <name type="playTitle" key="Trip to Chinatown, A">"Trip to Chinatown"</name>
               </ref> was presented last
night at the <ref type="doc" target="n00066">Lansing</ref> theatre.  The house was crowded from orchestra to gallery,
and long before the curtain rose an air of general merriment stole over the
audience and every one began smiling at the mere anticipation of <persName key="Hoyt, Charles">Hoyt</persName>.</p>
            <p>It seems almost paradoxical to say that a play
can be successful, and very successful which has neither plot nor purpose nor
seriousness of any kind, and yet <name type="playTitle" key="Trip to Chinatown, A">"A Trip to Chinatown"</name> is certainly innocent of
any and all of these and is a great, a howling success.  Of course the success
of the play is very largely due to the actors.  It is a great thing to have
seen the original <ref type="doc" target="n00212">
                  <name type="group" key="Madison Square Company">Madison Square company</name>
               </ref>, as those of us who saw it after having
seen a second rate company in the same play can testify.</p>
            <p>
               <ref type="doc" target="n00213">
                  <persName key="Conor, Harry">Harry Conor</persName>
               </ref> as <ref type="doc" target="n00214">
                  <name type="role" key="Strong, Welland" n="Trip to Chinatown, A">Welland Strong</name>
               </ref> gets very near the
top notch of comedy.  In his invalid state he was almost too much for us,
heaven help us if he were in sound health!  Of course <ref type="doc" target="n00215">
                  <persName key="Boyd, Anna">Miss Boyd</persName>
               </ref> as <ref type="doc" target="n00216">
                  <name type="role" key="Guyer, Mrs." n="Trip to Chinatown, A">the Widow</name>
               </ref>
was the great hit of the evening.  As a rule fat women can't act, but the widow
is just fat enough, if she loses or gains an ounce it will ruin her artistic
reputation.  She has the advantage of being exceedingly handsome, <ref type="doc" target="n00217">fair, fat,
and &#8212; probably &#8212; forty</ref>, and then that smile and those irresistibly wicked eyes
of hers.  She seems to enjoy herself immensely on the stage, flirting and all,
and naturally that adds to the enjoyment of the audience.  The support was
good, the <ref type="doc" target="n00218">
                  <name type="role" n="Trip to Chinatown, A" key="Premier Danseuse">danseuse</name>
               </ref> seemed to capture the masculine portion of the audience and
<ref type="doc" target="n00219">
                  <persName key="Gilfoil, Harry">Harry Gilfoil's</persName>
               </ref> novel soda and shingle specialties were loudly applauded.</p>
            <p>As to the play we have said almost everything
when we say that it was <persName key="Hoyt, Charles">Hoyt's</persName>.  No other man on earth would dare to write such
a play.  It rests upon nothing but <persName key="Hoyt, Charles">Mr. Hoyt's</persName> nerve and wit.  It is one long
series of delightful nothings and for the time being we like it every whit as
well as if it were profound.  No one cares a hang for dramatic art when he is
pleased.  <persName key="Hoyt, Charles">Mr. Hoyt</persName> didn't care for it, either, apparently.  If he had he would
never have dared introduce a sort of musical interlude, forty minutes in
length, in the middle of the second act.  The whole play depends on the
invalid's thermometer and the way the <name type="role" key="Guyer, Mrs." n="Trip to Chinatown, A">Widow</name> winks her eye.  <persName key="Hoyt, Charles">Mr. Hoyt</persName> doesn't
even have any trip to Chinatown occur.  He is always promising things that he
never does, and yet he promises so smoothly that we never mind at all that he
is fooling us all the time.  One can't say anything hard of him, for he stifles
his critics with laughter and crushes their criticism with popular <choice>
                  <sic>eavor</sic>
                  <corr>favor</corr>
               </choice>.  We
all like <persName key="Hoyt, Charles">Mr. Hoyt</persName>, because he dares to make dramas after his own heart and
after the unclassical tastes of his countrymen and <choice>
                  <sic>snap</sic>
                  <corr>snaps</corr>
               </choice> his fingers in the
face of the high gods of art, because he is so complacent and nervy and
so thoroughly American.</p>
         </div>
         <div type="section">
            <head type="main">
               <name type="playTitle" key="Count of Monte Cristo, The">"Monte Cristo."</name>
            </head>
            <p>
               <ref type="doc" target="n00158">
                  <persName key="O'Neill, James">James O'Neill</persName>
               </ref>, who has played the part of
<ref type="doc" target="n00222">
                  <name type="role" key="Dantes, Edmond" n="Count of Monte Cristo, The">Edmond Dantes</name>
               </ref> in <ref type="doc" target="n00220">
                  <name type="playTitle" key="Count of Monte Cristo, The">"Monte Cristo"</name>
               </ref> over three thousand times, has never missed a
performance.  He will be seen at the Lansing theatre Thursday, January 25.</p>
         </div>
         <div type="section">
            <head type="main">
               <persName key="Corinne">Corinne</persName> in <name type="playTitle" key="Hendrick Hudson">"Hendrick Hudson."</name>
            </head>
            <p>
               <ref type="doc" target="n00225">
                  <persName key="Simms, Willard">Willard Simms</persName>
               </ref>, who plays <ref type="doc" target="n00226">
                  <name type="role" key="von Kull, Kill">Kill von Kull</name>
               </ref>, the
original real estate agent, in <ref type="doc" target="n00227">
                  <name type="group" key="Kimball Opera Buffe Company">The Kimball Opera Bouffe company's</name>
               </ref> gorgeous
burlesque <ref type="doc" target="n00224">
                  <name type="playTitle" key="Hendrick Hudson">"Hendrick Hudson,"</name>
               </ref> makes his first appearance by being thrown bodily
from a second story window.  This is supposed to occur at New Amsterdam&#8212;now New York&#8212;in 1609. Since that time many a real estate agent has had a hard, hard, tumble
because he failed to "get in on the ground floor."  <ref type="doc" target="n00228">
                  <persName key="Corinne">Corinne</persName>
               </ref> comes to the Lansing theatre Monday and Tuesday, January 22 and 23.</p>
         </div>
         <div type="section">
            <head type="main">
               <persName key="Payton, Corse">Corse Payton.</persName>
            </head>
            <p>
               <ref type="doc" target="n00229">
                  <persName key="Payton, Corse">Corse Payton</persName>
               </ref> and his merry company commence a
week's engagement at <ref type="doc" target="n00132">Funke's opera house</ref> Monday, January 22, in the five-act
society comedy drama <ref type="doc" target="n00230">
                  <name type="playTitle" key="Parisian Princess, The">"The Parisian Princess,"</name>
               </ref>
               <ref type="doc" target="n00231">
                  <persName key="Reed, Etta"> Miss Etta Reed</persName>
               </ref> appearing in the
title role, a part that enables her to display her ability as an actress,
containing as it does the different moods of woman's nature, including love,
devotion, hatred and revenge.  Elegant stage settings and wardrobe are used in
the production and the prices are only 10, 20 and 30 cents.  Ladies are
admitted free Monday night if accompanied by a paid 30 cent ticket purchased
before 7 p.m.</p>
         </div>
      </body>
   </text>
</TEI>
