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"Stop! Stop! I cannot bear this any longer.” With this agonised cry a midst of his frantic outburst in “The woman silenced Rob-art Loraine in the Father,” Stringberg’s drama at Everyman Theatre. Hampstead, recently. She was a middle-aged woman, seated in the stalls, and her cry sent a thrill through the theatre. She apologised to the management afterwards, and sa d the play reminded her of something in her own life. “The Father” is the story of a husband and wife struggling against each other to secure control of the education of their children.
Frank Neil, who will be at the Palace Theatre, Melbourne, from October 1 with American farce, says that he will have a company remaining in Sydney as we 1 as the Melbourne one. He also ta'ks of organising a third comp
appear in Sydney in “The Gorilla,” a satire on mystery plays, and of staging a 'Mother Goose” pantomime; in the same city in December. This sounds almost Napoleonic, or AVilliamsonian. In Mr. Neil’s company for Melbourne are Field Fisher. Mary Gannon, Lily Molloy, Rosa Duggan. Connie Martyn, Jefferson Taite, Leslie Woods, Jack Meyer and Paul Longuet.
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Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 164, 1 October 1927, Page 22 (Supplement)
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521Page 22 Advertisements Column 1 Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 164, 1 October 1927, Page 22 (Supplement)
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