THB COURIER. m il Clay Clement has signed a contract with Ira LaMotte of the Schiller thea tre, Chicago, to remain under his man agement for Ave years. Mr. LaMotte has arranged for a winter season in New York at a good Broadway theatre. Mr. Clement has enlarged his reper toire. He will Play Mathlas in 'The Bells" and he will produce his own dramatization of Maarten Maartens' story. "God's Fool." Clay Clement has a Hans Andersen "Bllderbuch Ohne Bilder" style and Maarten Maartens' romantic simplicity and refinement can be moved from the novel to the stage without breaking the plastering by a playwright who knows his business. John Drew, who will play June 1 at the Lansing, is one of the best and most polished of the younger school of actors. For a number of years he was Daly's leading man. Four years ago when he left Daly to star he was over shadowed by predictions of failure. He has a temperament, rare among artists, commendation or adverse criticism af fect him not at all. It is strange that he makes so fascinating a lover. He goes about the one occupation that all mankind is Interested in with such icy indifference yet with such success that every girl in the room thinks the hero ine a fool if she takes a little time to consider his proposal. An impertinent and useless race of critics has made fun of the matinee girls darling without reason. The modern matinee girl of New York city is not to be despised. She goes to the theatre constantly. She has reached that point in her dramatic education by strict attention to the course in comparative matinees where mere good looks, including grace and technical exceilence.have no effect upon her judgment. She recognizes talent as quickly and more generously than the critics do. Her appreciation has no newspaper reservations connected with advertising or with prearranged puffing of any other actor. It is genuine and very rarely undeserved. Occasionally especially if she Is alone and has no one to express her admiration to, she writes a letter to her hero. If the actor had less vanity he would perceive that, in spite of what the foolishly honest girl says. It Is not himself, but his ability to act certain parts that she admires, he would accept the letters with a bow as he does bouquets over the footlights, 1. e., as a tribute from the dumb to one who has the gift of tongues. John Drew has been the matinee girls' Idol for some years. Idolatry has only hardened his heart and iced his blood. In congealing, however, he has only gained in fascination. Mrs. John Drew, his mother, has made her Mrs. Malaprop a classic. It will hardly be played by anyone hereafter without careful reference to her reading and if any change is introduced there must needs be shown good reasons for It. Her son John's first success was in "Butterflies," which was written for film by Henry Guy Carleton. The part that was given to Olive May, who af terwards became Mrs. Carleton, over shadowed Drew's part and he got into something else as soon as the public would let him. The light comedy and mitigated tragedy parts that Mr. Drew has confined himself to cannot be said to show versatility, which Is not saying that he has it not he has been sure of himself in the characters he has pre sented. For this reserve many thanks to lighten hearts not to weight them is a task In the sunshine. It lacks the strong lime light and black shadows of tragedy. Heroic proportions built foi tragedy are much rarer than tragedi ans or than actors, who like Mr. Drew know their place. His acting has fin ish, delicacy, refinement. He Is the product of two generations of actors and of half a life time's discriminating study. Mr. M. B. Curtiss. who will play this afternoon and evening at the Funke.has played "Sam'I of Posen" for sixteen years. The Jewish race is easily cari catured and the stage has shown it no mercy. "Sam'l of Posen" is a penni less Jew boy who arrives in New York and begins to earn his living as a street peddler. It is as novel to see a Jewish character presented without prejudice as it is pleasant. The popularity of "Sam'I of Posen" is a rebuke to the Impossible nasal monstrosity that ap pears in nearly every play. People laugh because they have always laughed at the caricature of a Jew and because they like to get even with him in some way. It Is not a type. It is grossly unjust and it is worked to death. In Utopia where the stage Is said to be reformed the stage Jew is not. Happi ness to the world, weary Is not so much the presence of bliss, creating particles as It Is the absence of agonizing instru ments. The modern drama has the heavy female In tights, the comedian whose only funny expedient is to play drunk, the sad man with the heaving chest and cork leg walk and the stage Jew on the stage and the girl with the large hat and the man who chews to bacco In the audience to arrest devel opment The Methodist church and the drama are further behind the procession than any other two institutions. If they would get together the blind man might loose the bound man's hands and then the man who can walk could lead his poor blind brother to a celebrated oc culist. Perhaps It is only cataract that threatens the future usefulness of our Methodist brother. An operation as severe as the one called "The Protest ant Reformation" might restore his sight. Mr. Curtiss' Jew Is a Jew sOIl. He wears flashy clothes; he Is an oriental; he has a heavy unmusical voice, a big nose. Egyptian gestures (you can see them cut on the reliefs in the temples), and a love of money, the result of eighteen hundred years, at least, of In breeding. He also has tldelity. honesty, and a warm heart and he carries the sympathy of the audience with him from the first. Mr. Curtiss has been In Lincoln for several days on account of some miscarriage of his plans. He has used the time to rehearse his new play, "The Alchemist." which he in tends to put on In a few weeks. The all-star caste of 'The Rivals" was of course a disappointment. A star cannot blend himself with others into a streak of light like the milky way after doing his own illuminating for aeons. "The Rivals" by Jefferson. Mrs. Drew, Francis Wilson, the Hol land brothers. Julia Marlowe Taber and other planets lacked perspective, at mosphere, composition. The stage was a picture made up of the middle cen tres of a lot of other pictures, held in place by paste. There was no back ground and no air behind and around the figures. The following is a New York critic's estimate of the performance: Every actor in the Rivals cast the other day worked with honest zeal to get the most out of his part. The re sult, as may be imagined, was incon gruous and unsatisfying. The ripe method of Mrs. John Drew contrasted glaringly with Mr. Crane's modern sense of art. The finesse and equipoise of Joseph Jefferson were jarringly off set by the grotesquery of Francis Wil son. Such a classic as "The Rivals" can only be made enjoyable when It Is acted, as it was conceived, in a spirit of refined ultra-idealism. That spirit was palpably lacking In the perform ance of three members of the cast the other day. There was a discordant clash between the mellow and the modern. Mr. Jefferson's Bob Acres Indeed held the whole thing together. It was tho same exquisite, delicate personation that has come to be regarded as a chef d oeuvre of the comedian's art. Never once realizing Sheridan's conception, it Is, however, so infinitely delightful, so humanly comlo and pathetic that the actor cannot be blunted for his Irreverent trampling upon tradition. To eee Joseph Jefferson as Hob Acres la to see the rarest and finest exemplification of the comedian's nrt that the stage of this country has produced for a score of years. Mrs. John Drew's Mrs. Malaprop Is. what it always was. qunint. finished and In the very spirit of the author's conception. Nat Goodwin was not at his happiest as Sir Lucius OTrlgger. His brogue was hard and forced, and of the will-o'-the-wisp variety now you heard it and now you didn't. Mr. Crane's Sir Anthony Absolute had the merit of absolute sincerity. Robert Taber balanced the cynicism and hypocrisy of Jack Absolute with Just the right amount of earnestness nnd force. It was one of the satisfying performances of the day. Mrs. Taber's Lydla Languish was charmingly na tural. In the thankless parts of Falkland and Fag, the Holland brothers "fed" their comrades so unobstruslvely that they deserve a very large meed of warm praise. They kept the parts where they belonged In the back ground. As much cannot be said for Francis "Wilson's David. He evidently did not believe in abnegation. In his one "bit of fat" he elaborated and over-elaborated so extravagantly that he stood wholly out of the picture. His self assertlveness neverthelesss pleased the audience, and he was rewarded with two vociferous scene calls. His dialect, by the way, would ha'e puzzled a philologist. Fanny Rice plucked as many laurels as came within her reach. She played Lucy with refreshing snnp and Intelligence. Fregoli is doing the wonderful for New Yorkers by assuming all the char acters In a play. He carries a com pany of eleven people, who are sta tioned in the wings and render him si lent assistance. He changes his char acter at the same time that he does his costumt Those who have seen him say it Is Impossible to believe that the same person Is before you who a mo ment before left the stage. His larynx has been removed and he can sing so prano, alto, tenor and bass with ease. If he comes this way let's go to see him. ROYS DRUG STORE Corner 10 and P ss LRR6EST DRUG STORE IMT STOCK LOWEST PRICES Fine soaps, perfumes, stationery and cigars. Heavy drugs; lubricating oils, paints, glass, etc. You receive the best of attention, the best of goods, and tho best of prices. Pres cription work carefully and honestly performed. Garden seeds, bulk. Specially low prices for the balance of the season. bots i it i j 8PS IVl 3 mil p iL r jl mm &I$'vilv' jTya, -j X-Vm. t5!E"" AND IP YOU EXPECT TO PUR CHASE A NEW WHEEL COME AND SEE US. THE GLADIATOR (5) H & tjSjvjSBfCT -552? Tk07M8T V7 ?dS && :5SxgS($i H. H. Ward, manager in charge. The oldest repair man in the city. 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