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            <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>
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            <publisher>University of Nebraska&#8211;Lincoln</publisher>
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                  <addrLine>University of Nebraska&#8211;Lincoln</addrLine>
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               <title level="a">Amusements</title>
               <title level="j">Nebraska State Journal</title>
               <author>Willa Cather</author>
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               <date when="1894-03-16">March 16, 1894</date>
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         <head type="main">AMUSEMENTS.</head>
         <p>There was a good audience at the <ref type="doc" target="n00066">Lansing</ref> last night.  They went to see <ref type="doc" target="n00544">
               <name type="playTitle" key="White Squadron, The">"The White Squadron,"</name>
            </ref> the "big patriotic and
spectacular drama," with "four carloads of scenery" and the "handsomest men in America."  Of these attractions the only thing that materialized was the patriotism and
possibly a carload or so of the scenery.  Of plot there was enough and to
spare, so much indeed that the average hearer occasionally wondered if the hero
himself had not got the two girls mixed.  He, the hero, was a good, substantial
fellow, very unsailorlike for a naval officer, able, however, under all
circumstances to call down the gallery by a spirited appeal to the "star
spangled flag."  There was an abused slave, two villains (both foiled) and a
number of brigands, not to mention the very dingy and disreputable persons who
posed as the admirals of various fleets.  The story set all these people at
work with kisses and curses and pistols and cutlasses and denunciations and explanations,
till finally everything cleared up and things went universally well to the tune
of <ref type="doc" target="n00545">
               <name type="musicTitle" key="Hail Columbia">"Hail Columbia."</name>
            </ref>
         </p>
         <p>There was, of course, little acting worthy of
serious criticism.  <ref type="doc" target="n00546">
               <persName key="Whitecar, W. A.">W. A. Whitecar</persName>
            </ref> as <ref type="doc" target="n00547">
               <name type="role" key="Staunton, Victor" n="White Squadron, The">Victor Staunton</name>
            </ref> was all that one can
expect a melodrama soldier to be.  He had a good voice and a fairly imposing
presence; he made love stiffly, but defied and threatened quite effectively. 
<ref type="doc" target="n00548">
               <persName key="Julian, Frederic">Frederic Julian</persName>
            </ref> as <ref type="doc" target="n00549">
               <name type="role" key="de Romancio, Demetrio" n="White Squadron, The">Demetrio de Romancio</name>
            </ref> was the best actor in the company.  He
was silently and delicately villainous, "slick" somebody called him, and, when
he was called before the curtain, the gallery showed their approval by
enthusiastic hisses.</p>
         <p>
            <ref type="doc" target="n00550">
               <persName key="Neil, Robert">Robert Neil</persName>
            </ref> as <ref type="doc" target="n00551">
               <name type="role" key="Fraincisco" n="White Squadron, The">Fraincisco</name>
            </ref>, the nephew, evidently
had read in <persName key="Shakespeare, William">Shakespeare</persName> that a man <ref type="doc" target="n01772">"may smile and smile and be a villain;"</ref> so,
being a villain, he smiled and smiled, and grinned when he should have looked
grieved.  <ref type="doc" target="n00552">
               <persName key="Forrest, Miss">Miss Forrest</persName>
            </ref> as <ref type="doc" target="n00553">
               <name type="role" key="Onesta" n="White Squadron, The">Onesta</name>
            </ref> was fairly pretty and clung well, and <ref type="doc" target="n00554">
               <persName key="Deagle, Miss">Miss
Deagle</persName>
            </ref> as <ref type="doc" target="n00555">
               <name type="role" key="Theresa" n="White Squadron, The">Theresa</name>
            </ref> might have done well were it not that her voice had a twang
that was unfortunately most prominent just when she wished to be most pathetic.</p>
         <p>Other noticeable characters were <ref type="doc" target="n00556">
               <name type="role" key="Santo" n="White Squadron, The">Santo</name>
            </ref>, who was
like his picture on the bill boards, <ref type="doc" target="n00557">
               <name type="role" key="Martha, Miss" n="White Squadron, The">Miss Martha</name>
            </ref>, an elderly but amorous
Quakeress, and <ref type="doc" target="n00558">
               <name type="role" key="Staunton, Hope" n="White Squadron, The">Hope Staunton</name>
            </ref>, a sort of suppressed soubrette, who got little
chance in the confusion of uniforms, guns, brigands and men-of-war.</p>
         <p>Of course
the scenery should have been the chief thing in the play.  But it wasn't. 
There was no marine scene at all, except a back-drop representing a dislocated
ship, and a so-called tableau which took a long time dawning out of darkness
and then showed only a fair enlargement of a very familiar painting of the
squadron at sea.</p>
         <p>There was a grand parade of some rather draggled
soldiers who couldn't drill, and there was talk about "decks" and "riding at
anchor."  Beyond this there was, in the whole play, nothing nautical&#8212;except
the name.</p>
         <p>The llama didn't turn up, though the ox did, but oxen are easier to get than llamas, any day.</p>
         <p>The only good thing in the way of scenery was
the ruined monastery, that was not a marine scene.  The name <name type="playTitle" key="White Squadron, The">"White Squadron"</name>
is misleading, but then so are the names of most melodramas.  They are like the
wines that some of our dealers sell, all under different labels, but all from the
same barrel.</p>
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