Show TONIGHT tL NaZimOva Nazimova Nazimova in Little Eyolf I r vaudeville fea- fea miring ring Rock and and Fulton ICK William Ingersoll stock pany in The Woman in iii the thet t LAn se a who opens an engagement k ht fht at the Colonial theatre cannot b by other actresses who have ha t fan lame e on the American stage She t ferent rent and her individuality has J r t leather a great following When this ed Russian came to the Salt Lake ti tr two 10 years ago o the reputation of wonderful acting preceded pre her and and d fashionable audiences witnessed t 1 three ree performances I.- I. A Dolls Doll's t V Hedda Gabler and tiette Ca will wm Rive give iYe Salt Lakers Ers an op- op of s seeing Ing A UA Dolls Doll's House I 1 ina d two to nw plays play Little E Eyolf Fairy Tale The first two by Ibsen en while the last named Is iThe pen of Arthur riTy iTy ty women have bave made successes of of ns n's plays plas The great preat Richard Mans Mans- not find success in Ibsen's Ibn I t q er iy G and nd Henry James found a Pa Toad when he took up this play 1 t Mrs Fiske Mrs Patrick k Campbell have drawn big bib audIeS audI audI- ti other women omen jes eE eS In fn Ibsen plays One well known t rit of ot Ibsen ien recently wrote Ib Ib- Ib i to women of the thc stage I o es more to riy ny other dramatist owes I Jl ny riy critics today consider prea est Ibsen interpreter and to her owes Ol j for the tho P his works and nd the regard fori for i genius and his memory i. i present Little Eyolf Olio last 18 t of Ibsen's works P us woman adoring her ba barid sees him absorbed in his love loveth th their fr son Ion a cripple The father mS of his bo boys boy's s 's tut future ure greatness and wife has no place In his life She Sh I Ic III but is met wl w h cold I frence re nce The Thc husband Alfred All All- All I book called aIled Human r i writing a risibility but transplants his ow own ions 02 ins to little titUe Eyolf his son At Att t a symbolical character such I n Is so fond of or enters It Is the lf whose nature is depicted I tL-Of tL the Pled Pip r of Hamelin T lIn C lit lures rats to the water where they I and she asks Rita if there r vermin i In fn your house One day dayt dayl t l her and is drowned tal E Ithe the second act at Rita is seen to l brei br bl blI f ei I r-of r f her boys hoy's memory and of r d adoration in recoil cc- cc Lot or their child Alfred confesses L e never neer really realty lov loved d her that by her beauty He lie holds jI Responsible for the death of or little She had not cared for the boy eded hI his hk movements as a mother r I HI Rita thus faces a a. double loss los los- child and of her husbands husband's re- re ier rs and his wife tife sit opposite N other and arid wrestle with their des- des dese e suggests eats suicide and that Agency is The spirit of is felt mystically to be he operative J scene The two finally take a agree ree to take up life as they l the little community where their home homO Alfred approaches responsibility with serious ise ei discarding ills his dilettante attl- attl I IUt it H is sen to be he freeing herself 1 the tyranny of passion newspapers rs In the west as well wen the east cast have deot devoted d columns lo to this season for her artistic and compelling power n nc ns Js s in tho San Francisco ti said IJ LUI lovers of theatre are grateful rate d me Nazimova that slit she lie brings brim to stage an exotic e personality Y the best st intentions could not d Into the tile teacup drama of There being being- nl no available tal- tal ong the stage hack writers wrIter that tJ fit this sinuous lady with custom clothes we are arc given Iven tho jat at the Savoy theatre seventeen after It was written of listening most wonderful prose poem Little t b cn 3 Is the seer mer of or the common common- v and in his disdain of the false J I 3 of the average pla playwright ris ht ho he here be- be 1 where hEre re the other leaves es a off lie He theatric climax in the first act J 9 tho death of 1 Eyolf olf Thereafter i no action only a wonderful ex- ex ont of state and conditions a ma of two souls Nazimova in act repeated the impression I first performance in English jr emed d superficial and hysterical I ter Anthony Anthon fn tho the San Francisco J 1 th aid a. a i net magnetism sm that almost struck Ibsen's ibsen s Norwegian cold nose oe a effected of ova a spell as last night She Sho fascinated far 44 nee and mado made her identity v passionate abandon an and fel- fel Tho result was not pleasant Like the tho play it seemed l tobo toT e true Mrs Allmers Allmer may In inars in- in 1 tear ars In fri hut but her tj type trpe pe iq ii aland and Alfred type too J to attract for either Mme Nazi Nazi- Ir for or her leading leading- man Brandon Ty- Ty 1 the he enthusiasm which their talents fy Talent In the thc Ca ease oase of Mme I ova ova- is too mea meager er a word She 1 The Tho company Is splendid Gertrude Berkeley gives a weirdo weird p o the rat wife which affects one I In Ins Ins- like the stories we C used to childhood about the tho evil witches J udder sr sly feeling feeling- secure In Ind p d e that she Isn't real f- f John W. W Kelly in the tho Portland Evening Evening Even Even- ing int Telegram h had d this thi to say It was a fine dismal depressing an evening of or agonies piled one upon the other punctuated ua te only with woes and lamentations But ut the acting Ah h. that was beautiful indeed and one I could forgive the of the phi play for the sake salm of the in In j And thus it was as that Alia Afla introduced to Portland Ibsen's Little J at the tho Hells last night Mme Nazimova and her company company com corn pany party Rive give h-c h a superb performance pei of the play and OI only Y tho superior quality r of the tho acting keeps the tho audience seated u itil the last curtain Madam Nazimova is 15 amon among the foremost actresses ses on the English speaking sp a ang ng stage She is a marvelous marvelous marvelous mar mar- woman an actress In every move of her undulating graceful figure There is no bett bettor better r actress in this country a country a rather sweeping statement yet Ct the truth Nazimova possesses a magnetism of unusual and anti an Intelligence to bring to bear upon her roles which illuminates them to tho the smallest detail It is a positive feast to 0 watch this woman wo woman wo- wo I man in action upon the stage co C 0 r GARr Ono One CK-One One of the best best performances performances perform perform- I ances of or orone one of the tho best est plays seen in Salt SaU Lake in inears years ears is the offering of Clyde Fitch's Filch's great The Woman oman in the Case The play is proving In ing Irig one of the most popular given presentation presentation presentation pres pres- by William Inget Ingersoll and I compan com coin pan pany pan ORPHEUM r me The Orpheum's well e varied bill Is proving pro exceptionally popular popular popular pop pop- ular and the thc attendance is IR all that could be desired by the management the house being practically filled fille nightly while hilo the matinees are also well attended The hIll bill runs runs the remainder cr of the week with a 3 matinee dallI daily dall I The Orpheum proposes to 10 o present here soon Roon a a. troupe from the tle Imperial theatre of oC St. St Petersburg bonafide bonafide Russian dancers unable to speak a word of any a n r language that isn't written in something that lo looks ks liko like a cross ross between Greek and Hebrew an anti and bearing beaTing the Astrachan caviar stamp on both hoth label and contents contente 0 0 0 Mart E. E Heisey Heise who tho plays plas pla s Big Bi Jim In Frederic Thompsons Thompson's production of Polly rony of the Circus the attraction which begins a weeks week's engagement at atthe atthe i ithe the Salt sail Lake Lake- theatre Monday Monda- December December Decem- Decem ber 5 fi has pla played ed more s-ol s soldier ler characters than any an- another other actor on tho the stage Among his friends he is familiarly known as Military 1 r Mart He was as in inthe inthe the or original productions of Shenandoah doah doali and The Girl I Left Behind and has been identified with the original I I casts of a num number r of other important military dramas I Mr tells a good story on him- him self It harks back hack to the late Jacob Lilts Lilt's big revival of Shenandoah a decade ago Hoisey J was In St St. Louis Louts han handling lin a theatrical venture of his own when Air Mr Litt wired him to tc report for rehearsals of the tIlt part for which he had b been n previously previously engaged ed It was as in tho late summer summer sum sum- m mer r and Heis Heisey's ys y's venture in St. St Louis had not ben been as successful as he hp had hd hop hoped d for He lie was as obliged to meet certain certain tain lain responsibilities and he ho wired Mr Litt kindly to advance him a sum pum of money for his fare to K Now Nw w York lotI etc Upon receipt of the tho telegram Mr Ir Litt instructed his bookkeeper to tell his banker to wire their St. St Louis correspondent correspondent dent to pay HeIse Helsey the amount he re requested re- re quested and incidentally he wired ITel- ITel sey as follows Money In First National National Na Na- bank St. St Louis Heisey immediately replied Money in First National bank hank bank everybody knows that Express me at once a a dark lantern lan Ian tern and a Jimmy Jimm |