pjj'iTrtirTfHrty-rfJfJill Z ' ' l ' T )i i i -amm Mn iii ' ' mmam wmmtm MWtM 4 THE COURIER. I THEATRICAL NOTES -cTi . ,v.-s.s. I-Wk2 tZtiSrvtiP Rombel Morrison in the drama of Carmen, played at the Funke on Mon day night to only moderate business. The drama of Carmen differs from the opera as prose from poetry. Without song and music Carmen is a coarse, mercenary minx wno uistn- butes her favors to the highest bidder, In the opera Carmen is still a devil, but a beautiful, capricious, fascinating gypsy too. Carmen in the opera i femininity. perverse, wicked, even devilish, but charming still. In the drama she is a coarse female whom tho audience re- joicestohavo stabbed in its presence, The lilt of the Carmen music obscures the character of Carmen, makes it less repulsive. Isabel Morrison plays it as it is written, anl although from begin ning to end the interest is well sus tained, and even at times becomes sus pense, Carmen has the fatal defect of lickleness. A lick of constancy in the heroine dissipates the iuterest the audi ence should feel in her. And in this case there is no one to transfer the in terest to; Don Jose is tiresome. Ho is full of reproaches, deserted poses and appeals which make him about as in teresting as a month of Sundays. Mar tyrs make racy reading, but it is a ter rible bore to live with them. Rosabel Moirison is spirited. She conveys her conception of the character with clearness. Edward Eisner is graceful and plays his ungrateful part sympathetically. Tho scenery was rich in color ad Span ish in effect, which is moio than can be said of the operas which have presented Carmen in days gone by. The Lincoln Light Infantry played to very good business at tho Lansing on Monday night 1 he dotirg audience re ceived the local hits and the sjwrtive gambols of their brothers, beaux and acquaintances with delight that was not unmerited. It was the best annual per formance the infantry Las yet given, which is saying much. Bancroft, the prcstidigitateur, played to a much smaller house than he deserv ed at the Lansing on Tuesday evening. Mr. Bancroft is that anomaly, a young wizard. Graceful, svelte, suave, clad in black small clothes, the curtain rises, disclosing a noble marble staircase, in laid floors and flowerenwreathed pil lars. At whose base stand two lackeys as motionless as the marble. The hall furniture is ivory; tables with elephant's tusks, other tables and stands with the carved heads of jungle beasts project ing. The effect is charming and in a moment when a young man, the heir to all this beauty, clad in black with a wizard's cloak fluttering about him de scends the 6ta:rcase from what were once flies, the effect is dramatic It is not for the unprofessional to say that Bancroft's tricks and passes are as clever as Hermann's, but I can see no differ- encc. Although the basis of his tricks is old: firing handkerchiefs, oranges and pigeons into EoDmsky, Bancroft has in- troduced a few flourishing details which are new. The last years of his life Her- mann appeared to do most of his tricks with elaborate machinery, which less- ened the mystery. This young man appears not to have much machinery. The original and only Satsuma, whom the playbill says is the leading exponent men,"? A game cock, out crowing and of his art, and royal juggler by appoint- out-fighting everything in sight. Gal ment to his Imperial majes'y, the Iant, thinking of nothing, but doing all Mikado of Japan, is a wonder, and the the time. Hamlet is morbid and tire mikado is generous to let him travel in some in comparison. I think these America. His feet are like four hands and his bands are inspired. With the solemnity and ease of hi i race he bal ances and catches balls and sticks or kicks boxe3 and Japanned cots into the air as another man kicks a football. I only envy me miKaao nis juggler, u i were it, this little yellow mummy in the gold flower garden dress should toss ball for me every afternoon. The Lansing was full on Wednesday night to near "A Black bheep.' This farce is like "A TexaB Steer," only better. "Hot Stuff." tho happy pennjleschampion of "Under Dog" in Tombstone, Arizona, laughs, drinks and fights with tho abandon of the prodigal son. When the New York lawyer dis covers in him the heir to two millions, rccr-r-rc-crrrc. C c ? THOMAS px ' . M i- '.KSr'fK Hot Stuff invites all the crowd to drink. "El Capitan" was the best thing, music The basis of enjoyment in Arizona that ally of the evening. is, storybook and dramatic Arizona, is not money, except that it takes money to get liquor. A man with leather breeches, a red shirt, strength and bra very is a king in Tombstone. And "Hot Stuff" knows it. New York, Europe and an heiress are nothiDg to him if he must lose Tombstone's unconventional ity and the adoration of a mining cmp to obtain them. Whatever there is of fascination in the hero of "She Stoops to Conquer," "The Three Guardsmen,' or Shakespeare's Prince Hal before he is crowned "Hot Stuff' has. The de scription of 6uch heroes has no particu- lar charm. To drink, to swear, to make love, to fight, all at the drop of the hat, is not admirable in itself. Yet these four characters a;e most beloved of men ana women. Who can ever forget the younger Salvini, id "The Three Guards- heroes conquer by their manishnef s. It is the eternal masculine that slays its tens ot thousands while better, more constant, aspiring souls sit in their study and write down lofty thoughts together with their opinion of girls who adore swashbuckling squires, sailors and sol diers better than men of thought and high emprise, who write eweet things but whose action is meditation. Otis Harlan, "Hot Stuff," enjoys bis work and the friends he makes by it. Life to him is uot "one grand sweet song," but "one grand long racket ' He beams his humour on tho audience as May Irwin does, or as the sun shines. He has temperament in large quanti ties. Its lucky he is an actor with all that temperament; he would bust ir he had not the opportunity for expression. Win. DeVere, Goodfellow Gunning, the Arizona editor who went for sub- scriptions with a gun and got 'em, is of the same typo with the addition of the shrewdness that his calling develops. Mr. DiVere is a very good actor, and his laughing song ia famous. He could, if he would, play "Pudd'n Head Wilson" as well as the great original. Tne company was very good in chorus and in acting. Young Mr. Lut ketone's xcvoovooooorsooo 9 3 3 9 J j J j i j J W. KEENE. Mr. Hoyt himself has a prejudice against Lincoln because we don't like "A Contented Woman," and especially Caroline Miekel Hoyt. The latter is too beautiful to send so far west. I hear New York likes her, in which case Mr. Hoyt can forget Lincoln's poor taste. c The Eunice Goodrich company plajed to standing room only at the Funke last week, and the Holden Comedy company has plajed to large houses all tho week, It is a frequent cause of complaint that both theatres are not heated enough this winter. I really think it would pay to heat up the furnaces, Amusement seekers are frequently kept at home by the thoughts of a freezing auditorium. Few plays of modern authorship are of stronger interest than "Louis XI," to be presented by Thomas W. Keene, Charles B. Hanford and campany at the Lansing Monday evening. This is a dramatization of Sir Walter Scott's novel, "Quentin Durward,' with new scenes andt situations written expressly for Mr. Keen-, and found in no other acting version. The story of Louis XI is the hit to y of France of the early part of the fifteenth century, touching upon tho incidents marking tho closing days of one of the most remarkab'o men that ever dis graced a throve. Louis' rule was a con tinuous fight against the feudal power on he nobles of France. It was also a struggle for supremacy between tho Orleanists, represented by Louis, and the Burgundians under Charles tho Bold. Louis, like Richard III of Eng land, was no timid ruler. In natures alike they defended their crowns w th all the red-hande 1 power of their me dieval training Crafty, erne', treacher erous, loving ny one, not even the Dau phin, Louis' life was a struggle against cringing supers ition and an abject fear of death. Piisons swarmed with the victims of his hatred and his iolicy; tho ax of the headsman was ever busy: he trusted none, for none trus ed him; tho mea.est tools or his will chosen from tho dregs of life were the trusted officers of his council; he was a slate to his physi cian to whom he ascribed the iowers of life and death; he was a constant prey to dread of assassination; and the ond spark of affection flashing at times for his son only, was always marred by a distrust that the son might cot spire to remove him from the throne, as he him self had been moro than suspected of acting towards his own father. 'J he plot of the play is unique and intensely dramatic. The young Duke de Nemours, whose father had been be headed by Louis, arrives at the French court held for the time in the casfe of lMessis les Tours. He comes as envoy from Burgundy, his identity as Nemours being alone known to Coitier, De Com ynos and h s daughter Marie. '1 here is an old love between Nemours and Marie, and from the confiding g rl, Louis elicits tho fact of the presence of his deter mined enemy. Asemoy Nemours' per son is supposed to be sacred, but Louis who was never known to regard an obli ga ion, plans with one of hi s minions to assassinate him. Circumstances con nec ed with the envoy, however, release Louis from all further hypocrisy of pur pose, and Nemours is arrested and doomed to death. Prices, 1.00, T."i, 50 and 2T. Sea's now on sale at theatre Xox office. C. B. Jefferson, KIjw fc Erlanger's gorgeous spectacular production of "Palmer Cox's Brownies,' which has had long and successful seasons in New York. Philadelphia, Boston and Chicago, will be the notable attraction at tLo Lansing theatre on Wednesday and Thursday nights of the coming week, with a special Thursday matinee. Seats for the great attraction go on sale Mon day morning at 10 o'clock. J n scenery, costum p, properties, mechanical and electrical effects "Tho Brownies" is tho most successful spectacle now befcre tho public, 'lhe play open's with a prologue, in which Dingonfal, an evil tnchanter, is pledged the assistance of Vulcan in his plan to frustrate the marriage ot Princo Florim 1, heir, by adoption, to the Brow nie King, and Titania, Queen of tho Fays. '1 he next scene reveals the palace courtyard of Queen 1 itania, where tho wedding is about to be celebrated in a shower of roses. Dragonfel succeeds in abducting the Queen and her ladies in wai'ing. 'J ho scene changes, showing a mountainous sea coast, where Dragonfel is seen bearing away the helpless Queen, with tho Brownies in pursuit 'lho 6cene again shifts, disclosing tho Brow nies adrift on a raft in mid-ocean. A terrible storm overtakes them, and they are wrecked. 1 he dude Brownie falls overboard in the excitem nt, and is picked up by a colossal sea-bird, while fffcgswgg tZrlJX&t J