AMUSEMENTS. QUEEN’S THEATRE* Lessees ... Messrs O’Brien and Co. Stage Manager ... Mr Charles Borford. Glorious Success of CLARA STEPHENSON As Fcramory (the Troubadour). LALLLA RO; KH was received last night with the most unbounded enthusiasm. Come and see the BEAUTIFUL PANORAMA! 200 Yards of Canvas. Come and see the Georgeous Last Scene, with its Mechanical Wonders. Come and laugh at Johnny Hydes as the Stage Villain. TO-NIGHT! T O-N IG H T!! LALLA ROOKH; OR, THK PRINCESS, THE FAIRY, & THE TROUBADOUR. Clara Stephenson Johnny Hydes Jessie Raymond and Company. The performance will commence with a , Drama in which MR CHARLES BURPORD Will appear. CLARA STEPHENSON’S BENEFIT on Wednesday. Great Bill Q> UEEN’S THEATRE. WEDNESDAY, JUKE 4. COMPLIMENTARY BENEFIT TO MISS CLARA STEPHENSON. Under distinguished Patronage. The great French Drama of MAECELLINE; or, THE CHILD OF THE BATTLE-FIELD. The third aud fourth Acts of Sheridan’s SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL. Remember—Last Night but Three of her Engagement. A UEEN’S THEATRE. J MR FAir;CLOUGH. This distinguished artist, who, with Mdlle. EUGENE LEGRAND, was specially engaged in London, by Messrs Harwood and Coppin, for the new Theatre Royal, Melbourne, and whose recent petformances at that theatre in the Legitimate 1 rama, drew crowded and appreciative audiences, will have the honor of making their first appearance in New Zealand, on MONDAY SYEKIKG, JUNE 9, in Bulwer’s great play of RICHELIEU. The Cardinal * - - Mr Fairclough Julie - - - Mdlle. Eugene Legrand Supported by a full and efficient company. Further particulars speedily announced.
Qi UEEN’S THEATRE. The Partnership hitherto existing between Messrs O’Brien, J P. Hydes, and Jamea South has this day been dissolved by mutual consent. Queen’s Theatre, June 2, 1873, The Partnership henceforth will be Messrs C. O’Brien and J, P. Hydes. MASONIC HAIL. QHAELES’S DIORAMAS. OPENING NIGHT, THIS (TUESDAY) EVENING. CHARLES’S MAMMOTH DIORAMAS. The Dioramas have been painted by the following London Artists Messrs James, Burgess, Mason, Roberts, and Pearse, and M. Renaud, of Paris, assisted by Messrs A thins, Jarnold, Bacon, and Phillips. The Dioramas from sketches taken on the spot by E. 0 ray, Erq. The Nile Scenery from Sketches by David Roberts, R.A. The largest Dioramas and most perfect Exhibition of its kind ever shown in the Colonies. Lecturer Mr J. M. Perrier. Musical Director ... Mr W. D. Francis. Comique ... Mr F. Milburn. Mechanists... Mr Howard and A ssistants. Secretary ... ... Mr J. St. Aubyn. Part I. THE SUEZ ROUTE AND THE NILE. Suez by Sunset—Palace of Mehomet Ali— Egyptian Well —Port Said—St. Jean D’Acre —Battle of the Nile—Explosion of L’Orient —Cairo—Street in Ca : ro—Grand Bazaar— Great Religious Festival -Mosque and Tomb of Sultan Kaitbay—Pyramids of Egypt— Siout— Temple of Isis and Dendera—Thebes —Temple of Kavnae —Edfon. Interval of ten minutes. Mr Frank Milburn in two songs. Part 11. Illustrating Principal Events of. the FRANCO-PRUSSIAN WAR. Preparing Ships to sink in the Elbe—De» parture of the French Troops—Scene on the Boulevards— Battery leaving Station with Mitrailleuse—Dioramic Effects—Square of Mayence-Bivouac of Troups—Bridge of Kehl—Explosion—Battle of Saarbruck—Emperor and Staff—Town of Weissenburg— Battle of Weissenburg —Death of General Douay—Requisitioning— Chateau ClicquotGreat Moonlight, effects. Interval of five minutes. Mr in two songs. Part 111. Battle of Woerth -Town of Metz—Battle of Gravelotte— Removing Wounded and Prisoners to the rear—The Flights at Pont & Mousson— Cavalry Engagement-Battle of Sedan —Bismarck and Von Moltke —Em* peror’s Prison, Chateau of Wilhelmshoe—The Soldier’s Dream of Home, introducing all the latest Dioramic effects —Sortie from Paris— Siege of Orleans, fight in the Trenches— Paris from the Seine. GRAND FINAL TABLEAU. The Marseillaise, after Gustave DorA Prices ... 3s, 2s, and Is. Carriages may be ordered for half-past tea o’clock, THE WONDERFUL HAIRLESS HORSE Caoutchouc, Will be on Exhibition Daily in a spacious Boom adjoining the Queen’s Theatre, from 2 p.m. till 10 p.m. Admission —Ladies and Gentlemen, Is. Children, fid. MISS AITKEN (Mrs J. L. Burden) begs most respectfully to return her grate* ful acknowledgment to the many requests that she should give one or two evening readings. Miss Aitken trusts to have that honor on her return from Invercargill in about ten days. George street, Dunedin, 2nd June, 1873,
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18730603.2.15.7
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Evening Star, Issue 3209, 3 June 1873, Page 3
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673Page 3 Advertisements Column 7 Evening Star, Issue 3209, 3 June 1873, Page 3
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