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4 revisions | Landon Braun at Apr 16, 2020 03:30 PM | |
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165“The Scouts of the Prairie" at Niblo’s. | 165“The Scouts of the Prairie" at Nible’s. The Jong-promised production of The Scouts of the Prairie" at Nible's was accomplished last night without accident. A densely crowded base greeted the heroes of the drams, and these were also the genuine heroes of many a feat on the Western prairies a piquancy and Interest were given to appearance seldom felt upon the appearance of real actors. The drama, of which we understand Ned Buntline is the author, is about everything in general and nothing in particular. Every act ends with a fight between the scouts and the Indians the Art act being still further embellished by a characteristic war dance. The Indiana, as well as the scouts, are the genuine article. The real Hero of the piece is Cale Durg, the part represented by Ned Buntme, the American Balwer. Mr. Judson (otherwine Buntline) represents the part as badly as it is possible for any human being to represent it and the part is as bad as it was possible to make it. TheI Hon. Willian F. Cody, otherwise "Buffalo Bill '' And occasionally called by the refined people of the Eastern cities “Buffalo Bill,” is good looking fellow, tall and straight as an arrow but ridiculous as an actor. Texas Jack, whose real name, we believe, in Omohundro, is not quite so good looking, not no tall, not so straight and not so ridiculous. Mile. Moriacchi, as Dove Eye, is only an insipid forest maiden, but the worst actor of the let la Senorita Carfana, the representative of Hazel Eye, a young white woman who is very tall, very, straight and very virtuous. She is worse, even, thann Ned. Buntline, and he is simply maundering imbecility. Her first appearance is ludicrous beyond the power of description, more ludicrous, even, than Ned Buntune's temperance address in the forest. To describe the play and its reception in alike impossible. The applause savored of derision, and the deriston of applause. Everything was so wonderfully bad that it was almost good. The whole performance was so far outside of human experience, so wonderful in its daring feebleness that no ordinary intellect is capable of comprehending it that no ordinary mortal can discuss it at any length with good taste and gbod temper. Buffalo Bill was called before the curtain at the end of the first act, when he made a speech that was neat and appropriate, as well as short. The entertainment began with a farce by Ned Buntline, called “The Broken Bank,” probably the worst ever written, and certainly the worst acted atrocity ever seen on any stage. |
