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Word: maud (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

...Hollis Street Theatre. The company that will present it at the Columbia will be under the direction of Mr. Charles Frohman and is headed by Miss Johnston Bennett, who will play the part of Lady Thomasine. Miss Elaine Eilson will be seen as Lady Wilhelmina, and Miss Maud Odell as Lady Noeline. These three young ladies are eminently fitted for the three roles and have met with the greatest commendation wherever they have appeared this season. Mr. George Alison will be seen as Viscount Litterly, Mr. Beaumont Smith as the Count De-Greville, and Mr. Lorrimer Stoddard as the Earl...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Special Notice. | 12/20/1894 | See Source »

...most pronounced and it promises still greater success. It is one of the most artistically amusing plays of the Lyceum Company. The company includes Georgia Cayvan, Herbert Kelcy, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Walcott, Katherine Florence, Fritz Williams, Bessie Tyree, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Mrs. Thomas Whiffin, Robert Weed, Ernest Carleton, Maud Odell and Ida Andry. All the original scenery is carried an tour by the company for this visit...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Special Notice. | 10/23/1894 | See Source »

...although it has none of the serious element they have been led to expect in the past from the Lyceum players. The company will include Georgia Cayvan, Herbert Kelcey, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Walcott, Katherine Florence, Fritz Williams, Bessie Tyree, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Mrs. Thomas Whiffin, Robert Weed, Ernest Carleton, Maud Odell and Ida Andry. All the original New York cast and every stick of the original scenery is carried en tour by the company for this visit...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Special Notice. | 10/15/1894 | See Source »

...Cosmopolis City Club" by Washington Gladden. "The Voice of Tennyson" is one of the best articles in the number. It is written "to record a memory" not to enter into any trivial gossip over Tennyson's life and works. Mr. Van Dyke describes the poet as he reads "Maud" and shows us how singularly beautiful and strange this reading was. He says, "It was not melodious or flexible, it was something better. It was musical, as the voice of the ocean, or as the sound of the wind in the pine-trees, is musical. There is given a short criticism...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The February Century. | 2/1/1893 | See Source »

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