Abstract

The Drama in London

Archer, William | January 10, 1918 issue

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Most of theatres are booked up for weeks well in advance. Some plays for which, under ordinary circumstances, one would have prophesied failure with cheerful confidence seem to have found a public of some sort, though where it comes from is a problem that baffles conjecture. Such a play is "Wild Heather," by Dorothy Brandon. Furthermore, American productions are, as usual, much in evidence. The inexhaustible "Romance" has entered upon its third year at the Lyric Theatre, and next door, at the Apollo, "Inside the Lines" is drawing large houses.

See Also:

THEATER; WILD Heather (Theatrical production); ROMANCE (Theatrical production); BRANDON, Dorothy; PERFORMING arts; DRAMA
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