DRAMA BY A CRIPPLE.
LONDON, June 1. The first night of a play entitled “the Outsider” at St. Janies’ Theatre, had a more dramatic ending than the play itself, “The Outsider” is an unqualified bone-setter, who cures a famous surgeon’s crippled daughter in spite of the father’s opposition. The crippled girl’s passionate outcry against her fate is the feature of the play. When calls were made for the author, Dorothy Brandon walked on to the stage with the aid of a stick, displaying the same limp as the heroine, She is a life-long cripple herself, and had put her heart and soul into the play.—A. and N.Z. cable.
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Manawatu Standard, Volume XLIV, Issue 722, 2 June 1923, Page 5
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108DRAMA BY A CRIPPLE. Manawatu Standard, Volume XLIV, Issue 722, 2 June 1923, Page 5
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