18

OverviewTranscribeVersionsHelp

Here you can see all page revisions and compare the changes have been made in each revision. Left column shows the page title and transcription in the selected revision, right column shows what have been changed. Unchanged text is highlighted in white, deleted text is highlighted in red, and inserted text is highlighted in green color.

5 revisions
CYT Students at Dec 03, 2019 01:00 PM

18

Buffalo bill in "The Red Right Hand," a play written expressly to display the Hon. Mr. Cody's prowess with knife and rifle, is the truly extraordinary attraction at Beethoven Hall this week. The drama is in five acts, founded on the contest between Black Hills miners and Indians, complicated as frontier romance ever is with outlawry and blackguardism. There are numberless combats, single-handed and enmasse, in which the immense bowie knife, the short repeating rifle, and the big silver pistol of Buffalo Bill invariably do temendous execution. the interest of the piece of course centres upon this character, who is also a charater of some renown off the stage. As specimens of the Indian-slayingscouts of the plains, Buffalo Bill and his companiaon, Captain Jack Crawford, who is also a scout not unknown to farm amoung readers of "Dime" publications-- are studied with a good deal of curiosity. It must be said that theideas obtained of these terrible fellows inthis play make them out much less formidable charactersthan the sort of free-shooters with which city populations at the East are acquainted. Buffalo Bill has a pleasantly frank and open countenance and speaks very "bad grammar" in a high nasal key, while his long and curling locks and his somewhat unmasculine figure, gait and manner convey the notion rather of a "gentelmenly" hotel or dry-goods clerk than of the shooting, riding, scalping hero of a hundred fights. A tolerable dramatic support sufficed to keep up the rhodomotade and fusillade of the play, so as to give "Bill" scope to display his best paces and poses. A farce precedens the melodrama. the attendance was very good last night.

18

Buffalo bill in "The Red Right Hand," a play written expressly to display the Hon. Mr. Cody's prowess with knife and rifle, is the truly extraordinary attraction at Beethoven Hall this week. The drama is in five acts, founded on the contest between Black Hills miners and Indians, complicated as frontier romance ever is with outlawry and blackguardism. There are numberless combats, single-handed and enmasse, in which the immense bowie knife, the short repeating rifle, and the big silver pistol of Buffalo Bill invariably do temendous execution. the interest of the piece of course centres upon this character, who is also a charater of some renown off the stage. As specimens of the Indian-slayingscouts of the plains, Buffalo Bill and his companiaon, Captain Jack Crawford, who is also a scout not unknown to farm amoung readers of "Dime" publications-- are studied with a good deal of curiosity. It must be said that theideas obtained of these terrible fellows inthis play make them out much less formidable charactersthan the sort of free-shooters with which city populations at the East are acquainted. Buffalo Bill has a pleasantly frank and open countenance and speaks very "bad grammar" in a high nasal key, while his long and curling locks and his somewhat unmasculine figure, gait and manner convey the notion rather of a "gentelmenly" hotel or dry-goods clerk than of the shooting, riding, scalping hero of a hundred fights. A tolerable dramatic support sufficed to keep up the rhodomotade and fusillade of the play, so as to give "Bill" scope to display his best paces and poses. A farce precedens the melodrama. the attendance was very good last night.