THEATRE ROYAL.
Fullers' Entertainers.
Fullers' Theatre Royal every night during the week bas been well-filled, the reason thereof being the big and interesting bill that the management are providing. It is a programme full of novelties^ and the managemenit are to be congratulated m securing the Biograph picture of the torpedo attack on the.H.M.S Dreadnought. Clear, and without a flicker, the picture of the attack is one of the most interesting ever seen, m Wellington,, which- is saying a great deal. To itemise every turn and to render each artist the praise they undoubtedly deserve is of course impossible, though "Truth-" offers the. glad hand of welcome to its old friend. Bob Bell, who as a patter and droll comedian, is one of Australia's very best. Bob's bound to catch on ; m fact,, he's caught— but Bob is a success wherever he appears. The Sandow Sisters, Myra Hammon and Alice Wyatt, still continue to single out Algy and draw him up (to the stage, only to shatter his hopes by a cruel turn-down. They're a good pair, a»d there has been a great demand for the front stalls since the beefy pair blew m. Walker and Hughes are a good pair of jugglers, but why on earth they cannot keep to a clean and neat performance as the tennis j racquet turn is more than "Truth can understand. The tossing of the torches hasn't been a great success. It's a bad copy of somebody else. Victor the Great, the ven'triloßWiist, has been making all bis dummies talk and sing with great effect, while all the other artists have helped to pass a pleasant evening away. Last evening, that quaint pair, Tom Armstrong and Priscilla Verne, renewed their . acquaintance . with a Wellington audience., and the reception the ' pair received was very : flattering. Tom Verno also re-appeared, his singing and dancing being greatly appreciated. Another new and nleasant face was that of Miss Flo Calcutt, a charming soubrette, who is sure to make herself popular. Considering the big programme which is to be put on tonight and the rest, of the week, the only trouble at the Royal ought to be tlie finding of a seat.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTR19070727.2.35.3
Bibliographic details
NZ Truth, Issue 110, 27 July 1907, Page 6
Word Count
364THEATRE ROYAL. NZ Truth, Issue 110, 27 July 1907, Page 6
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