THE COU t. aiiiiinimniiimiiiiiiiiigiiiniiimtiiinin The Passing Show. WILLA CATHER. IIIIIMIIIHMMmMIMIIH8IIIMIIIIMIMIIIMiniMlllMIIIMMIM flMMSMHIHMMMMIIHMOOOMMMMMtOOOlHMMIMMMMMHMMMf I have seen recently two old plays revived, "The Lady of Lyons," pro duced by E. II. Sothern, and ''The Country Girl," produced at Daly's theatre in New York, and I begin to wonder why managers put on pieces like "The Tree of Knowledge' and "The Conquerors " Now "The Lady of Lyons" is not a great play; Buhvcr was not a great nun. But it certainly discounts half the stuff that is put on the boards to day. The chief difficulty about pre senting such a piece is the fact that it has become hackneyed, weighted down with traditions and laden with mem ories of the fair lady stars who have ranted through the cottage scene. The more fact that Mr. Sothern himself occupies the centre of the stage in this particular production gives it a touch of variety. The piece has been preempted and dominated and tramp ed upon by the fair Pauline long enough; it is only fair that Claude should have a chance. Mr. Sothern has broken away from the old traditions of the piece almost entirely. In the first place his very personality makes his Melnotte essen tially different from those of the great men who have played it before him. For the lofty and semi-tragic conception of the part which has be come traditional, he has substituted an ardent, fervidly romantic one. Bul wer was not a sincere man, and the greatest fault of his plays is that they bear openly the mark of theatric in sincerity. Mr. Sothern' s forte is that in the most impossible situations ' he can make you believe in his sincerity. Nature has endowed him with a pair of soulful eyes which are capable of looking unspeakable anguish for hours together, and would deceive the elect themselves. He takes his caramel heroics and his amorous woes so seri ously that you have nothing left but to do likewise. He goes at the anti quated "Lady of Lyons' as if it were an altogether new play and one of vital importance, and for the time being it becomes such. The most remarkable thing about his Claude is the absolute freshness and firmness which he gives those well-known lines. His reading is really remarkable in its originality. In that famous speech about the palace by Lake Como he absolutely breaks away from every tradition, and the more pedantic critics have strenu ously objected to it. But be that as it may. his is the only probable or pos sible reading I have ever heard of those lines. He does not roll their long syllables about as a sweet morsel under his tongue; he does not expand with pride at his own eloquence, he shuns the very appearance of declama tion. This Melnotte is no orator, but a poet sighing to his lady. He sits a little behind Pauline, hovering over her. How that man can hover! ne is past master in the art. He begins to speak in a low tone, watching her face as she leans back, ne reads the lines almost brokenly, stopping short at times to look forward into his lady's eyes, watching only her face, caring only for the effect of his words on her, half forgetting himself that he is lying to her, seizing with all his yearn ing soul the opportunity to pour out all the impassioned dreams of his fancy to the woman who is mistress of them. "VcUfcavcaofrica Tiat were aot lovers; no ambition save To excel them all in love; we'd read no books That were not tales of love!" Why, those lines were written for Sothern! What other speech ever gave such golden opportunities for hovering and languishing! Of course he never gets much further than hovering and suffering: his leading ladies have to be content with that. I have seen Virginia Harried do some very clever and charming work in Anthony Hope's new play "Lady Ursula," but in the cottage scene of the "Lady of Lyons'' I must say she is disappointing. Her faults of elocu tion outnumber those of Margaret Mather in that lady's palmy days. She does not understand the first principles of reading blank verse. She rasps out the lines in a harsh, jagged, incoherent fashion, and her scream is like nothing so much as the squeal of an infuriated kitten. I prefer to see a lady remain a lady even when she is angry and thereby lift the vulgar pas sion of rage to a righteous indigna tion. But Miss Harned behaves very much like a cook who lias just re ceived her two weeks' notice. I should think Melnotte would have had dark forebodings of the future. I fear me that I do not appreciate Miss Har ned's beauty, l wish she would go to a boarding school and learn to hold her shoulders up, and I hope that the first thine Claude did after he finally got the willowy Lady of Lyons was to get her a pair of braces. Mr. Sothern, however, quite outdoes himself in the cottage scene. I did not believe that any human being could make those hackneyed remarks on pride impressive, but he did. After Pauline had finished her screeching and screaming and had bowed her head on the table, he turned a little away from her, his face quivering with emotion, his eyes looking their wonted woe at the furniture, and murmured slowly, to himself rather than to her: "Pauline, by pride Angels have fallen ere their time!" That line was a 1 riumph! The ending of the fourth act was splendidly worked up- When Claude. despite the protests of the fair Pau line, accepts a commission in the army, the Marseillaise is heard out side, the soldiers go marching by with the tri-color, and he tears himself from his clinging bride and rushes out to join them. A perfectly absurd and improbable thing of course, but he does it well. 1, for one, quite forgot that "The Lady of Lyons" was an old and a florid play, so near to our own time and feeling does this intense young man bring it. Caramel heroics, do you eay? Very well: for the time being I am quite willing to declare that all the world's a candy shop, men and women but confectioners, and that caramels are the best that life has to give. Surely the gravest sin William Winter has to answer for is the man ner in which he has prejudiced people against Ada Rehan. For ten years or more the dramatic columns of the Tribune have been devoted to tri umphal paeans on this lady's art, and the language has been drained dry of eulogistic adjectives to describe her beauty and charm. The object of such unmitigated adoration is necessarily JKe J"IigK Qrade Piarvo House Of Lincoln . . 1 I not only carry the finest line of I Pianos in the city, but also carry ? tne nnest line ot VIOLINS GUITARS, MANDOLINS, et&, to be found anywhere. Can sell you the world renowned Washburn instruments for $15.oo. Just think of it! When-looking lor a bargain in any musical in strument don't forget that the place is'at . ' . . D iiiiii Western Representatives, 130 So 13th st. j , . MI0MMMMMIMMMIMMOOOIMMMMMMMMMMMOOQ0 0iHMM0M0M0 made ridiculous. With what awful apprehension must Miss Rehan look forward to those rhythmic notices in the Tribune at which her good sense must revolt! Scxt to having written a play the greatest misfortune which can befall an actress is to own a critic. "The Country Girl'' is, of course, just doughty old Wycherley's "Coun try Wife," expurgated first by David Garrick and sterilized and refined by Augustin Daly. Now from the nature of William Winter's voluminous com mentaries upon Miss Rehan's inter pretation of the leading part I ex pected to see a proper and discreet and very "iady-like" Peggy Thrift,a Peggy who might have come into town from the green hills of Vermont. I found instead a broad and adequately vital piece of comedy work treated with absolute freedom and fearless ness. Mr. Daly has toned down and refined to his heart's content, but Miss Rehan has not. It was Wycher ley's Peggy Thrift that I saw, a hoy denish young romp without many fine sensibilities, quite in harmony with Wycherley's time and country. And yet in playing this broad conception the actress was never coarse. I think it is because of her very fearlessness that she never offends. Divest old English comedy of its objectionable language, and it is not so bad. One can not help wondering at Miss Rehan in boy's apparel. What a sturdy, manly, full-blooded chap she makes, how different from the poetic languorous youths of Julia Marlowe! And how eager for life and thirsty for experiences is this clumsy Peggy Thrift, this Peggy who is not afraid to sprawl ungracefully upon a sofa or to call things by their good old En glish napies, or to joyously remark, how different are the kisses of a Lon don gallant from those of her grouchy old guardian. 1 still laugh inconti nently at the memory of this Peggy's first experience of the divine flame, which Wycherleydid notthinkdivine. It was so entirely without sugar coating, and yet so utterly inoffensive. Next day when I was making the ac quaintance of that criminally happj-, Boston-banned bacchante of McMon nies at the Metropolitan museum, 1 bethought me of this gleeful Peggy Thrift in her love-making scene. Miss Rehan really gave the part that vigorous, spirited realism that robustness which is the saving grace of old English comedy. The lady gives one the impression of a very high and independent intelligence, of a flexible and wholesome tempera ment. I'll warrant she has a personal fondness for the stout old English classics and can read Fielding and Sterne by the hour and laugh over them. Everything considered, one cannot greatly blame William Win ter. It must mean a great deal to a man who has spent his life in thank less labor in a vineyard where the fairest blossoms fade short of fruition because the roots do not go deep enough to at last find a penetrating and discriminating intelligence like Miss Rehan's One cannot leave the performance without a passing regret for poor old William Wycherley, one of the first of the countless playwrights who have adapted French plots to English man ners, and it was not wholly his fault that the manners were bad. Match him against Francoise Villon aad there you have the history of the vice of two nations in a nutshell: Villon at his worst was picturesque, Wycherley at his best, was disgusting. A pot house brawler, the rival of a dissolute king in the affections of a dissolute woman, a scholar who gave himself over to folly, a poet who shrivelled his fancy at unhallowed fires, a genius who poured out his treasure into the filth of a London street and trampled upon it, calling for the world to look and laugh, forever strangling with bloody hands the creative spirit that would not die. He ended on a dung-heap-a better playwright, construct ively, than Monsieurs Paul Potter & Co.. will ever be. In New VorkI went to see Modjeska in "Mary Stuart." 1 had not seen her for six yea is and 1 was almost afraid to go afraid that she might YiQQK lHARPER'J I Magazine HARPER'S! . Bazaar J HARPER'S Weekly ( or any $4 Ssw magazine With THE COURIER One Year for $4.