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above mentioned Cartoon. * * * * * [Illustration: BETWEEN THE QUICK AND THE DEAD.] * * * * * AVENUE HUNCHBACK. Of course there is nothing very new in the idea of a cripple loving a beautiful maiden, while the beautiful maiden bestows her affections on somebody else. SHERIDAN KNOWLES's Hunchback, _Master Walter_, is an exception to Hunchbacks generally, as he turns out to be the father, not the lover, of the leading lady. It has remained for Mr. CARTON to give us in an original three-act play a deformed hero, who has to sacrifice love to duty, or, rather, to let self-abnegation triumph over the gratification of self. This self-sacrificing part is admirably played by Mr. GEORGE ALEXANDER, whose simple make-up for the character is irreproachable. That something more can still be made by him of the scene of his great temptation I feel sure, and if he does this he will have developed several full leaves from his already budding laurels, and, which is presently important, he will have added another 100 nights to the run. [Illustration: Mr. Punch applauding Master Walter George Desmarets.] _Maud_ (_without_ the final "_e_") capitally played by Miss MAUDE (_with_ the final "E") MILLETT. (Why didn't the author choose another name when this character was cast to Miss MILLETT? Not surely for the sake of someone saying, "Come into the garden"--eh? And the author has already indulged his pungent humour by giving "_George_" _Addis_ to "GEORGE" ALEXANDER. Mistake.) This character of _Maud_ is a sketch of an utterly odious girl,--odious, that is, at home, but fascinating no doubt, away from the domestic circle. Is a sketch of such a character worth the setting? How one pities the future Bamfield _menage_, when the unfortunate idiot _Bamfield_, well represented by Mr. BEN WEBSTER, has married this flirting, flighty, sharp-tongued, selfish little girl. To these two are given some good, light, and bright comedy scenes, recalling to the mind of the middle-aged playgoer the palmy days of what used to be known as the Robertsonian "Tea-cup-and-saucer Comedies," with dialogue, scarcely _fin de siecle_ perhaps, but pleasant to listen to, when spoken by Miss MAUDE MILLETT, MISS TERRY, and Mr. BEN WEBSTER. [Illustration: Dr. Latimer at the Steak. Historical subject treated in Act II. of _S. & S._] In Miss MARION TERRY's _Helen_, the elder of the Doctor's daughters,
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