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THEATER/THEATRE
A-C D-K L-Z
Celebrating
FAMILY VALUES
. . . Or
anyway, Valuing the Family
. . .
Dallas, R.C. Not at Home: A Dramatic Entertainment, in Two Acts. New York: D. Longworth, 1811. 12mo. 40 pp.
$35.00
Shaw & Shoemaker 22657. Sewn as issued; lacking wrappers? Dustsoiled, with the last leaf a bit tattered and dog-eared.


An 1892 YALE Dissertation
Davidson, Charles. Studies in the English mystery plays. A thesis presented to the Philosophical Faculty of Yale University. New Haven: Yale University, 1892. 8vo. 174 pp.
$30.00
Doctoral thesis analyzing religious drama.
Fair in printed paper wrappers, front cover torn nearly in half. (438)

“Columbia College”
Burlesque
Delpho, Thomas Horatius. The king and his cabinet. A remarkably short Attic comedy. [New York?]: [circa 1850?]. 12mo. 24 pp.
$45.00
Amusing collegiate burlesque, satirizing the 1849 inauguration of President Charles King of Columbia College.
Good in printed paper wrappers. Front cover with small holes, light foxing to some pages.

Illustrated Explorations of the
Countryside
Dibdin, Charles. Observations on a tour through almost the whole of England, and a considerable part of Scotland, in a series of letters, addressed to a large number of intelligent and respectable friends. London: G. Goulding & John Walker (pr. by T. Woodfall), [1801–02]. 4to (28.9 cm, 11.4"). 2 vols. I: 404 pp.; 27 plts. II: [2], 406, [2] pp.; 33 plts., 1 fold. map, 1 fold. chart.
$750.00
Click the images for enlargements.
First edition, published in parts, of Dibdin's epistolary account of his travels as a performer in the provinces. Charles Dibdin the elder was a famed but controversial singer, songwriter, and actor who spent a significant amount of time touring the countryside in an attempt to improve both his reputation and his income; in these Observations he includes remarks on the history, natural history, geography, famous natives, trade and manufacture, and customs of the towns and villages he passed through, as well as on various theatrical, literary, and cultural topics near and dear to his heart. He also denounces circulating libraries, watering places, and female boarding schools (in all three cases due to their detrimental effects on morals), as well as quack medicines and incompetent amateur performers.
The two volumes are
illustrated with 60 copper-engraved and aquatint plates, one folding map, and one folding chart. The copper engravings are done in two different styles; one set consists of large renditions of scenery, the other of smaller depictions of people and everyday life — the former done from Dibdin's own paintings, and the latter from drawings by his daughter Anne.
Anderson, Book of British Topography, 373; Lowndes 638; NSTC D1044. Not in Abbey, Life in England; not in Ray, The Illustrator & the Book in England. On Dibdin, see: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online. Recent quarter caramel morocco and ochre cloth. Light to moderate foxing; mild offsetting around plates; four pages with patch of offsetting from now-absent laid-in item. Plates depicting people all with small area of waterstaining to upper inner portions, just touching corner of platemark without affecting images; scenic plates unaffected. All edges marbled.
A solid, handsome, satisfying set. (26939)
(English
Literary Periodical). The monthly magazine, and British register,
part I. 1798. From January to June, inclusive. Vol. V. London: R. Phillips, 1798.
8vo (22.5 cm, 9"). Frontis., [8], 552 (i.e., 554; lacking 499–504, 120 used
twice in pagination, 521–28 numbered 321–28) pp.
$175.00
Collected issues of this monthly “literary journal,”
which actually served as a catchall also for general news and very various
items of interest—including articles on natural history and voyages or
travels; wedding, bankruptcy, and death notices; remarks on pictures, or on
theatrical
and musical performances; and assorted free-floating anecdotes
and witticisms, as well as original poetry and reviews of contemporary publications.
The preface notes that “by means of some new literary connexions in america,
we shall possess peculiar advantages in presenting to our Readers, accounts
of the most interesting circumstances belonging to the United States”—and
it was an American reader, in fact, who owned the present example.

This volume’s oversized, folding frontispiece shows the front facade
of the “new East India House now building in Leadenhall Street”;
there is also one in-text engraving of Lethington House in East Lothian, residence
of the Maitland family.
Provenance:
Front pastedown with inked ownership inscription of Joshua Gilpin,
a Quaker from Philadelphia who established the first paper mill in Delaware,
in 1787.
Disbound with front cover, front free endpaper, and frontispiece
separated; back cover lost, and signature sewing exposed/going, with many
leaves loose. Now contained in a simple, acid-free phase box. Edges untrimmed.
Minor offsetting and a few stray marks; mostly clean.
Proto–Nunsense?
Fitzball, Edward. The Carmelites! A Musical
Drama in Two Acts. London: J. Duncombe, n.d. [ca. 1840]. 12mo. 30 pp. Lacks
the frontispiece.
$35.00
Wrappers indicate publisher to be Samuel French of London; tone is suggested
by the fact that one character is called "Sister Opportune." From the "Cumberland's
British Theatre" series.
Pictoral wrappers, chipped and fragile.
Galsworthy, John. The plays.... London: Duckworth, 1929. 8vo (22 cm, 8.6"). [8], 1150, [2] pp.
$100.00
27 plays by the Nobel laureate and author of the Forsyte Saga.
Signed binding: Contemporary half tan morocco with marbled paper–covered sides, spine with raised bands each accented above and below with single gilt rule and single black rule; gilt-stamped title, spine compartments framed in gilt with gilt dots in each corner and each with gilt center device. Front free endpaper
stamped “Bound by Sangorski & Sutcliffe.” Top edge gilt; silk ribbon place marker.
Click the interior image for an enlargement.
Binding as above, spine slightly sunned, corners and extremities showing minor rubbing. Front pastedown with private collector’s armorial bookplate. Pages clean.

In
Italian &
English
New York
Giacometti, Paolo. Elizabeth, Queen of England, an historical play in five acts. Written expressly...for Madame Ristori, and her dramatic company, under the management of J. Grau. New York: John A. Gray & Green, 1867. 8vo. 40 pp.
$80.00
Early American printing of this historical drama, in which Elizabeth is presented as a willful woman prone to conflicting impulses. The text is given in both Italian and English (in a translation by Thomas Williams), with a cast list.
Fair in printed paper wrappers, front cover lacking, sewing starting to go.

Gilbert & Sullivan in
Fancy Dress
Gilbert, W.S. The Savoy operas being the complete text of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas as originally produced in the years 1875–1896. London: Macmillan & Co., 1927. 8vo (18.9 cm, 7.45"). [6], 698 pp.
[SOLD]
Click the images for enlargements.
Deluxe edition: Libretti for 13 comic operas composed by Gilbert and Sullivan. Among the beloved works collected here are The Pirates of Penzance, H.M.S. Pinafore, Princess Ida, The Mikado, The Yeoman of the Guard, and others.
Binding: Publisher's blue straight-grain morocco, covers framed in gilt double fillets, front cover with gilt-stamped lyre vignette; spine gilt extra with musical motifs, gilt-stamped leather title and author labels. Board edges and turn-ins with gilt rolls. All edges gilt. In the original blue cloth slipcase.
Binding as above, spine slightly rubbed and sunned to a very even, attractive cocoa brown; slipcase faded, with minor shelfwear. Pages clean.
A bright, beautiful volume. (25896)

Presentation Copy
Hardy, E. Trueblood. Crowding the season: A comedy in three acts. New York: Samuel French, [1870]. 12mo. [1] f., 82 pp., [1 (blank)] f.
$65.00
No. CCCXVII. French's Minor Drama. Original printed wrappers. Inscribed on front cover "Presented by the author to Library Association January 23 - 1873". Author's embossed stamp inside, rubber-stamp ("Newark Library Association") on front.
Spine and covers chipped, rear cover separating, lower corner of front cover dog-eared. Title-page chipped at one corner.

Social THEATRICAL Pleasures — A Social Club's Copy
Head, James H. Home pastimes or tableaux vivants. Boston: J.E. Tilton, 1860. 12mo. 264 pp., lacks printed title-page.
[SOLD]
Click the images for enlargements.
First edition, not a modern reprint. Includes “one hundred tableaux, with full descriptions of
costumes, scenery, positions, lights, shades, etc., designed for public exhibitions and the home circle.” An important work for the study of Victorian play, recreation, social interaction — and, theater. Notes at the back explain how to achieve fire effects, sound effects, etc.
The added title-page is printed in red and black and has a wood-engraved vignette of friends-and-family spectators rapt before a home stage.
Provenance: The German Society of Pennsylvania.
Publisher's blue textured cloth stamped in blind; light discoloration to edges. Ex–social club library, as above: call number in a neat 19th-century hand on endpapers and fly-leaf, rubber- and pressure-stamp on title-page and rubber-stamp on a very few other pages. No other markings. Faint waterstain at front in some lower margins. With the handsome added title-page but without the printed “main” one. Withal, a good copy. (26283)
Classically
CORRECT . . .
Jonson,
Benjamin. Catiline his
conspiracy. A tragedy.... (Extracted from The works of Ben
Jonson. London: Pr. by T. Hodgkin, for H. Herringman, E. Brewster, T. Bassett,
et al., 1692). Folio (36.5 cm, 14.5"). Pp. 237264.
$175.00
Jonson produced this play, focused on a conspiracy organized by Catiline to overthrow the existing Roman government and assassinate Cicero, as an attempt to bring "scholarly accuracy" to the English theater (CCHEL, 299), and he presents the events of the year 63 B.C. in as thorough a fashion as possible. The results of his effort are interesting for a variety of reasons, though the play, first printed and acted in 1611, has never been one of his most popular.
Wing J1006; Greg, I, 296 (h). Narrow green cloth spine; black leather label with gilt rule and stamping on front cover. Slight foxing, and pinhole worming through top corner of outer margins; a small hole on p. 241/242 affects text just barely, and there is a clean two-inch tear on p. 245.
(Jonson, Benjamin). We can offer
several other individual plays by Jonson, all extracted from the same edition
as the above and similarly bound. Among them are Catiline his conspiracy;
Poetaster: or, his arraignment . . .
Priced
from $175.00 to $255.00:
Click here to view a list of these items.

— THREE PLAYS BY HUGH KELLY —
Characters
Noble But
DENSE
Kelly, Hugh. False delicacy: A comedy; as it is performed at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane.... London: Pr. for R. Baldwin, W. Johnston, and G. Kearsly, 1768. 4to. [3] ff., 88 pp.
$200.00
Kelly, the son of an Irish tavern-keeper, launched his London literary career by contributing to newspapers while working as a copying-clerk to an attorney. After marrying a needlewoman, he moved to Middle Temple Lane, where the DNB says "he laboured untiringly as literary hack." Next he gained fame as a theater critic, publishing two books criticizing the actors of the Drury Lane Theatre and of Covent Garden; Garrick, whom Kelly had prudently praised in the first book, then encouraged Kelly to write plays himself.
Kelly’s first production, this play enjoyed great success both onstage and in print. Garrick wrote the prologue and epilogue to this rather provoking tale of an entire circle of friends attempting to get themselves successfully paired off, most of them foolishly determined to marry people they don’t love for the sake of nobly sparing everyone else’s feelings, and all of them completely misunderstanding the true natures of the various relationships.
This is almost certainly the first edition; of the four printings in 1768, one identifies itself as the fourth edition and the other two both seem to have been labelled "A new edition."
NCBEL 2, 845. On Kelly, see: DNB. Recent wrappers. Lacking half-title. Three pages including title stamped by now-defunct library. Pages with previous sewing-holes and some light foxing towards the end.

“I’ll
Mark This Down for an
Incident
in My Comedy”
Kelly, Hugh. The school for wives. A comedy. As it is performed at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. Embellished with an etching, by Mr. Loutherbourg. A new edition. London: Pr. for T. Becket, 1775. Frontis., xiv pp., [1] f., 96 pp.
$125.00

Speaking of himself, the author says "Tho’ he has chosen a title used by Moliere, he has neither borrowed a single circumstance from that great poet, nor, to the best of his recollection, from any other writer"—but certain situations may nevertheless seem somewhat familiar. The elderly soldier woos a young maid who thinks he is pressing the suit of his handsome young son, and the straying husband’s tête-à-tête at the masked ball turns out to be with his own disguised wife. Kelly tweaks these theatrical conventions by adding a saintly wife who smiles and forgives her husband’s capture in the most compromising of circumstances, then assures her best friend that she’d far rather he had twenty distracting dalliances than one serious—plus a spinster authoress, who throughout the play jots down what she considers the best conversational lines and most passionate utterances for use in her own plays!
With an etched frontispiece of Act 4, Scene 4.
ESTC T002464; NCBEL 1, 845. In recent wrappers. On Kelly, see: DNB as above. With sewing holes and five pages (including title) stamped by now-defunct library; some pages dog-eared. Frontispiece with a few small discolorations.
For
more KELLY, review our
unillustrated PDF list of 200+ separately
published
18TH- & 19TH-CENTURY BRITISH PLAYS
click here.
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