| Edmund Clarence Stedman, Ellen Mackay Hutchinson - 1890 - 708 sivua
...had used before in characters of the same ilk. But from the moment Rip meets the spirits of Hendrik Hudson and his crew I felt that all colloquial dialogue...domestic plane and lifted into the realms of the ideal. To be brief, the play was acted with a result that was to me both satisfactory and disappointing. I... | |
| Joseph Jefferson - 1890 - 690 sivua
...others had used before in characters of that sort. But from the moment Rip meets the spirits of Hendrik Hudson and his crew I felt that all colloquial dialogue...domestic plane and lifted into the realms of the ideal. To be brief, the play was acted with a result that was to me both satisfactory and disappointing. I... | |
| Joseph Jefferson, Dion Boucicault - 1895 - 246 sivua
...being of a natural and domestic character, I had only to draw upon my experience for their effect. But from the moment Rip meets the spirits of Hendrick Hudson and his crew, I felt that the colloquial speech and lazy and commonplace actions of Rip should cease. After he meets the elves,... | |
| Joseph Jefferson, Dion Boucicault - 1899 - 254 sivua
...being of a natural and domestic character, I had only to draw upon my experience for their effect. But from the moment Rip meets the spirits of Hendrick Hudson and his crew, I felt that the colloquial speech and lazy and commonplace actions of Rip should cease. After he meets the elves,... | |
| George Iles - 1908 - 204 sivua
...others had used before in characters of that ilk. But from the moment Rip meets the spirits of Hendrik Hudson and his crew I felt that all colloquial dialogue...domestic plane and lifted into the realms of the ideal. To be brief, the play was acted with a result that was to me both satisfactory and disappointing. I... | |
| Arthur Hobson Quinn - 1917 - 998 sivua
...the changes in character drawing and in language. Mr. Jefferson says in his introduction to the play: "From the moment Rip meets the spirits of Hendrick Hudson and his crew, I felt that the colloquial speech and lazy and commonplace actions of Rip should cease. After he meets the elves,... | |
| Arthur Hobson Quinn - 1923 - 536 sivua
...character drawing and language. Mr. Jefferson says in his introduction to his own edition of the play: "From the moment Rip meets the spirits of Hendrick Hudson and his crew, I felt that the colloquial speech and lazy and commonplace actions of Rip should cease. After he meets the elves... | |
| Arthur Hobson Quinn - 1917 - 1072 sivua
...the changes in character drawing and in language. Mr. Jefferson says in his introduction to the play: "From the moment Rip meets the spirits of Hendrick Hudson and his crew, I felt that the colloquial speech and lazy and commonplace actions of Rip should cease. After he meets the elves,... | |
| Barry Witham - 1996 - 370 sivua
...being a natural and domestic character, I had only to draw upon my experience for their effect. But from the moment Rip meets the spirits of Hendrick Hudson and his crew, I felt that the colloquial speech and lazy and commonplace actions of Rip should cease. After he meets the elves,... | |
| Andrew Burstein - 2008 - 432 sivua
...I felt that the audience would accept it at once." From the moment Rip meets the spirits of Hendrik Hudson and his crew I felt that all colloquial dialogue...domestic plane and lifted into the realms of the ideal. In the minds of many awestruck theatergoers, Joe Jefferson was endowed with the spirit of Rip Van Winkle.... | |
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