Thomas Frost in a theatre, London (Princess's Theatre?) - between at the end of the 1830's and in the beginning of the 1850's
from Reminiscences of a Country Journalist, page 160:
Why did Mr. Vining, while engaging a comic-singer to give an air of realism to one of the scenes in “After Dark”, give his supposed music-hall the appearance of a tap-room, with barely a dozen topers at the tables? Such contradictions of policy are beyond comprehension.
Thomas Frost, Reminiscences of a Country Journalist (London, 1886), p. 160. https://led.kmi.open.ac.uk/entity/lexp/1665923935127 accessed: 29 November, 2024
Listeners
Listening to
hide composerscomic song in a theatrical show | performed by Singer |
Experience Information
Date/Time | between at the end of the 1830's and in the beginning of the 1850's |
Medium | live |
Listening Environment | indoors, in public |
Notes
The listening experience is included in Frost’s commentary about the ‘rage for realism’ in theatre set design, particularly ‘deviations of the realistic from the real’ (p. 159). Mr. Vining may be George Vining (1824 – 1875), an English actor and theatre manager who managed the Princess’s Theatre for several years.