THE WOLVERINE SKESPrEARE AT MICHIGAN SIIAEESPEAI5 AINI lIEN IJONStIN AlT ChESS A newly discovered portrait of Shakespeare probably painted from life by Karl van Jiander, a Dutch artist, recently purchased by the de Heyman family of Brooklyn, N. Y. e * * * e * * * * * : :r. X N, x x: BEN GRtEET WQODILAN) PLAYERS C(ampos Theater Afternoon performances at 3 Evening performances at 8 Friday afternoon, "A Comedy of Errors." Friday evening, "Much Ado About Nothing." Saturday afternoon, "As You Like It." Saturday evening, "Romeo and Juliet." $' 5k OOKS WORTH READING The Macmillan Company announces the following new books on Shakes- peare. A new edition, enlarged and revised, of the standard biography, Sir Sidney Lee's "A Life of William Shakespeare" "Shakespeare's Theater" by Ashley H. Thorndike. This is a thorough survey of the theater in Shakespeare's time and has many illustrations from rare Elizabethan prints and portraits. "The Tudor Shakespeare," edited by Wfilliam A. Neilsen and Ashley A. Thorndike. This edition is character- ized by the authenticity of the text and the practicality of the notes. Edit- = : : : x PROF. I. N. IiEM ION TEAGCIES ed by Alexander Dyce. SHARESPEAItE WORKS 35 YEARS "Thet'oems of Shakespeare," Al- dine Edition. This edition eontains all Just two years before Ienry Clay the lyrical and narrative poems, and the songs that occur in the plays. made a famous run for the presid'ey "Concordance to Shakespeare," by of the United States, Professor Isaac John Bartlett. A revised and enlarged Newton Demmcsn was born in Summit edition of Bartlett's standard concord- County, Ohio. He looks back over a ance. This contains besides the words span of about 80 years, during which and phrases, references to passages of he was brought up in a wilderness of considerable length. There is a sup- Indiana, and by availing himself of all plementary concordance to the poems. opportunities for a good education, he "The Facts about Shakespeare," by finally became head of the department William A. Neilsen and Ashley H. of English at the University of Mich- Thorndike. A condensed account of igan. He has taught courses on the facts of Shakespeare's life, envir- Shakespeare for about 35 years, and is onment and works, collating and com- conducting courses in the present paring the various contradictory evi- summer school. dences and theories. {THE COAST LI N E OTO DETROCIT CLEVELAND, BUFFALO, NIAGARA FALLS TOLEDO, PT. HURON, ALPENA, ST. IGNACE. A REAL VACATION The Water Way is the Only Way ThesGreatashaes a the s ecc a fornpartiularasand xperieneedta e son bus e atd pleasuters t. The D. & o. LasneSeameerseembody all the seualtestfspead, sty ad comfort. The faeedeat af the decks, the coot, refreshingglake basezes, the coss- modous state rooms ndunexaelled custite,iease ifesaboard these fleet g palasa . "D. & C. A SERVICE GUARANTEE" turinCagummeSeasontheTGaoGiatsoftheGreat Lakes,strs.CtysinetroitIand CtysofClevelad III, oeraete daily serelce hetweesa Deteoitsad Satfate; daily seeteee between Detroit and Ctevelaad, alse dellghtl day trips dering July nd Augusts s weet as twe beats o5 utDteroitadCteveslad eerSaetuadayadSnay nights dua Rerwmos.O'ATRtPS WEEKLY FOMTOLEDOAND DETROIT TO IvIACKIINAoIA1\' AND wAX PORTS-romJules 550' IoSseptemtber toss. SPECIAL STFAMER CLEVELAND TO MACKINAC ISLAND. Two TRIPS WEEKLY. NO? STOP5StOO;TE EXCEPT AT JDETROIT EVERY TNIP. Daily service between Toledo and Put-tn-Bay, June lathto september 10th. YOUR RAILROAD TICKETS ARE ACCEPTED On D. & C. Line steamers for transportation between Detroit and Cleveland, Detroit adBSfatot, ettedirecton. Send see seesta eptorillustrated pamphlet and Great Lakes Map. Address L. G. Lewis, G. P. A., Detroit, Mich.' DETROIT & CLEVELAND NAVIGATION COMPANY PHILIP H. McMILLAN, Pres. A. A. sCHANTZ, Vice-Pres. & Gen. Mgr. AlnD.r&C. steamers arrive and depart Third AvenueWhaarf. Central Standaad Time. C a BEN GREETMASTE |oF SHIAESPEAHE ltttor and ifManager of Outdoor Plays in America and England for t ;Years CIVE 4 EI'lZAIT'l'lAN SUETTING Shakespcarean actors will come and go, but it will be many years before the world will be blessed with another such master player as Ben Greet. A true scholar, he has spent most of his life in careful study of the language of Shakespeare, and in valuable re- search work. At the time of Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee, i .1887, he organized his company of woodland players, and since then he has played annually at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge. He has won favor alike before the crowned heads of Europe and the uncrowned heads of America, having played all through Shakespeare's England, and at many of the country seats of the English aristocracy, as well as at every state college and university of this country. His is the only company of open air players which has played on the White House grounds. The greatest charm of his produc- tions is their absolute simplicity and perfect adherence to the text. Every word, every syllable, is said as it was said in the productions of the seventeenth century. And Ben Greet dispences with the monstrous trap- pings of the modern stage,-does away with gaudy and complex settings, and relies on the beauty of the play itself, the perfection of the acting, to at- tract and interest his audience. Act- ed in the open air with leafy boughs as background and grassy turf as a floor, his plays have a freshness and charm which mingles perfectly with the bouyancy of Shakespeare's lan- guage. In this connection Richard Burton says, "The recent tendency to return to a more seemly simplicity and to the assumption that the spectator's imag- ination will help to stage a play, if on- ly it be trusted, is a promising thing with this in mind. The work of Ben Greet and the Coburns in aiding aud- iences to grasp this fact by their re- turn to something of the Elizabethan manner, whether historically accurate or not, is welcome for this reason." Just to look at the genial face of Ben Greet, one feels that he "could a tale unfold" if ever anyone could. And he can, and will, if asked when he happens to be in a reminiscent mood. He was born 57 years ago on board an English war vessel of which his father was captain. His brother is Admiral Thomas Young Greet of the British navy. He has spent the great- er part of his life in study, but for the part 36 years he has been an actor, and for 31 years a theatrical manager as well. He has been offered chairs in two universities of this country, but has refused to give up his work. He selects all of his players, and be- fore they appear before the public, they are required to serve a five year apprenticeship under costant and strict supervision. It is said that Mr. Greet has trained more theatrical stars than has any other one man. Seventy-two companies left New York in 1911 with Greet players in the lead- ing roles. mong others, Mr. Greet has tutored H. B. and Lawrence Irving, Edith Wynne Mathison, and Mrs. Pat- rick Campbell. The supreme proof of Ben Greet's greatness has come with the war. At the first call, he returned to his home in Kent, England, where he has since been doing much to alleviate the suf- fering by filling his house with refu- gees whom he has fed, clothed and cared for generally. Besides this, he has been playing in Victoria Hall and at Stratford in the huge Shakespear- ean Tercentenary recently celebrated there. Tercen tenaries Given in America P~ercy 1lackaye's Masusle iiPIk it y Many Prominent Actors in New York City One of the most important of the tercentenary celebrations in America seas Percy Mackaye's masque "Cali- lan" given in the Stadium of the Uni- versity of the City of New York. Among the prominent actors who took part in this masque were John Drew, Edith Wyane Matthison, David Bisp- issue ansi Robert Bantell. Another Shakespearean Masque was given in the Century Theater, New York, in honor of William Winter, the author and dramatic critic. There are many illustrious names in the list of those who took part, such as Walter Hamp- den, Viola Allen, Crystal Herne, Rose. Coghlan, Henrietta Crossman, Jane Cowl, Anna Russell, and Elsie Fergu- son. A no less noteworthy event was the large amount of Shakespearean litera- ture which appeared in the magazines and newspapers at the time of the ter- centenary celebrations. Articles by prominent men of letters and dramatic critics of both America and England constituted a real Shakespeat'ean re- vival. The subjects of the articles ranged from "Shakespeare and the Sea," "The Word Musician Who Loved His Tools," to critical discussions of the most famous characters and the actors who have helped to create them. As John Palmer, dramatic critic of The Saturday Review, of London, says, "it is Shakespeare's privilege to be born again about once every quarter of a ce'ntury. Each generation has praised him for a different reason. * * * All this simply means that each genera- tion has discovered some new aspect of Shakespeare's genius, and that it has quite rightly resented the blind- ness to its own particular discovery of those who went before. a * * The spirit and mental attitude of the gen- erations has differed from period to period with the result that one gen- eration has worshiped what another has discarded." SHAKESPEARENS HOLO GELEBRTION h'os . Nlesscmsn, . 1'. 'Tilley, ail T l ecisdtnce Mse' ln lce is , n es 'Tre'stenary Celebratiose ivee Tst night in Uni- versiy hal Iheee "xperts on Shakes- peare's works explained to the pub- lie the influence of his works on mod ern life and the great charm which he, holds still for every reader. Those appearing on the program were: Professors I. N. Denmtsn, Horris . Tilley, of the E'Jng isl slepartient, and1 Thomas C. Trueblood, of the oratory department. Prof. 1. N. naDemmon, who appeared first on the program of the evening, chose as his subject, "Romance and Reality in the Tempest." Prof. Dem- mon traced the traditions which gave to Shakespeare the theme of "The Tempest." Chief among these was the foundingof the colony at James- town and the adventures and ship- wreck of the returning ships. "The scene of 'The Tempest' though located in a desert isle in the niddle of an unknown sea has much of the char- acter of England. The persons ap- pearing in the scene are many of them English though they possess foreign names. Thus Trinculo the drunken sailor when he first sees the monster Caliban desires to transport him to England where a deal of money could be gained by exhibiting him. This practice of side shows in front of theaters was very common in Shakes- peare's time," was Prof. Demmon's way of explaining the English char- acter of the Tempest. Prof. P. Tilley followed Prof. Dem- mon and gave as his subject, "Hamlet's Character." Prof. Thomas C. Trueblood in con- clusion of the program gave from Hamlet, the gravedigger scene, and the closet scene where Hamlet stabs Polonius. LYN D ON'S, 719 N. University Ave. POE Eastman Kodaks Eastman Films Guaranteed Amateur Finishing Enlargements from your Negatibes a Specialty I have led while others followed in amateur finishing for twelve years. Now we are still leading. We guarantee perfect results or no charge. 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