Word: cohans
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...featured act at Keith's this week is a vaudeville version of the famous musical comedy "Going Up" The plot is condensed to a brief synopsis of the play, which was originally based on Geo M Cohan's "The Aviator," and deals with a young man who is induced to enter an airplane race to win the love of a girl. He does the stunt and proves himself a hero...
...following program will be presented by the orchestra: Marche Militaire, Schubert Egmont Overture, Beethoven Flute Duet, Selected Selection from the "Royal Vagabond," Cohan and Goetzl March of the Little Lead Soldiers, Gabriel Pierne Air for Solo Violin, on the G-string, Bach Mock Morris, Grainger Fair Harvard...
George M. Cohan used to sing through his nose and glorify his country. Hodge talks through his nose, but he, too, glorifies the country--the rural regions of it. In this play he is, as usual, just a plain, easy-going country chap, who can faze a multi-millionaire with a shrug of the shoulder. That's probably why Boston likes William Hodge better than Broadway likes him. And that's why, in spite of a rather vapid vehicle, William Hodge will continue to talk through his nose at the Majestic for eight or ten weeks--unless influenza seizes...
...Chin Chin," at the Globe; "The Birth of a Nation," at the Liberty; "Hip, Hip, Hooray," etc., at the Hippodrome; "Common Clay," at the Republic; "Hit-the-Trail-Holiday," at the Astor; Geraldine Farrar in "Carmen," at the Strand; "Young America," at the Gaiety; "Miss Information," at George M. Cohan's; "Around the Map," at the New Amsterdam; William Gillette in "Sherlock Holmes," at the Empire; "Rolling Stones," at the Harris; Lillian Russell at B. F. Keith's; "The Boomerang," at the Belasco; "The Battle Cry of Peace," at the Vitagraph; and "Town Topics," at the Century. Members...
...Hamlet"; Maxine Elliot's Theatre, "The Lure"; 39th Street Theatre, "At Bay"; Cort, "Peg o' My. Heart"; Wallack's, Mr. Cyril Maude, in different plays; Empire. Ethel Barrymore, in "Tante"; Astor, "Seven Keys to Baldpate"; Lyceum, Grace George, in "Half an Hour", preceded by "The Younger Generation"; Geo. M. Cohan's Theatre, "Potash and Perimutter"; Eltinge, "Within the Law"; Long Acre, "Adele"; Belasco, "The Auctioneer"; Republic, "The Temperamental Journey"; Knickerbocker, Donald Brian in "The Marriage Market"; Globe, Richard Carle and Hattie Williams in "The Doll Girl"; and New Amsterdam, Christie Macdonald in "Sweethearts...