Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: May 9, 2025
So I will marry no man who may be ashamed of me before his children. Thank M. Boullé for the honor, and tell him " The door opened, Destournier recalled one of the few plays he had seen in Paris, with a tragedienne who had won a king's heart, and it seemed almost as if this girl might step into fame, so proud and full of power was she, standing there.
'You'll have to broaden the style a little for the theatre, said the tragédienne, 'but for a small room nothing could be better. 'I venture to predict, said the tragedian, 'that Miss Allen will become an ornament to the profession. 'I am afraid, said Barbara, rising from the piano, 'that after all I may be only wasting your time. I have not asked your terms, and I am I have not much money.
The mother, undisturbed by this plea, turned to Serviss with an exultant smile. "Does she look like one breaking down?" The girl rose from her chair like a tragedienne. "It isn't my body, it's my mind!" she cried, with poignant inflection, clasping her head with both her hands; and her look transformed her in the eyes of the young scientist.
While Rachel was, without question, the greatest tragédienne that France ever produced, excelling Bernhardt in deep tragic force, she yet lacked many qualities which our contemporary possesses in a high degree. She had constantly to contend with a cruel fate and a wicked, grasping nature, which brought her to an early grave.
You will be so beautiful in it!" said the poet, gazing rapturously at Agar. I was called on to the stage just at this moment, and on returning a few minutes later I found the young poet talking in a low voice to the beautiful tragedienne. I coughed, and Agar, who had taken my arm-chair, wanted to give it me back. On my refusing it she pulled me down on to her lap.
They waited both before and behind the curtain for the debut of the new actress, with much curiosity. She stood waiting for her cue, but as it was given, to the amazement of all, the great tragedienne glided upon the stage.
Why, if I broke my heart, you know I should still want to paint," she added, flippantly. "I'd give a good deal to see you break your heart!" said the tragedienne, her dark eyes kindling "you'd be just splendid!" "Thanks, awfully! There's the pony." Susan held her. "You're really going to the Tower?" "I am. It's mean of me. When you hate a man, you oughtn't to go to his house. But I can't help it.
Clairon, the great French tragedienne, whom he met in Paris, and whom he persuaded to come and make her home with him in Ansbach. She lived there seventeen years, and though always an alien, she bore herself with kindness to all classes, and is still remembered there by the roll of butter which calls itself a Klarungswecke in its imperfect French.
The evening found me quite an habitué now behind the stage of the Theatre Royal, nodding to one or two acquaintances, most of the people looking on me with grave respect and talking of me as the eccentric milor. I was supposed to be pining for an introduction to the great tragedienne, who, very exclusive as usual, had so far given me the cold shoulder.
She never transformed herself into an impassioned tragedienne, but through the spell of great personal attraction, of an exquisite voice, and of exceptional sensibility, taste, and propriety in her art methods, she advanced herself to a high place in public favor.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking