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Rare Archibald Forbes & Charles Kean Hand Written Documents COA For Sale


Rare Archibald Forbes & Charles Kean Hand Written Documents COA
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Rare Archibald Forbes & Charles Kean Hand Written Documents COA:
$489.99

Rare! Archibald Forbes & Charles Kean Hand Written Documents. The first document is hand written by Charles Kean and dated 1854. The second document  is hand written by Archibald Forbes and is dated 1892. Both document are tipped to a page. This item is certified authentic by Todd Mueller and comes

with their Certificate of Authenticity.  

ES-2237



Archibald Forbes (17

April 1838 – 30 March 1900) was a Scottish war

correspondent.  On being invalided from the army in

1867, he started and ran with very little external aid a weekly journal called

the London Scotsman (1867–71). His chance as a journalist came when in

September 1870 he was despatched to the siege of Metz by the Morning

Advertiser (from which paper, however, his services were transferred after

a short period to the Daily News). In all the previous reports

from battlefields comparatively sparing use had been made of the telegraph. Forbes laments his own supineness in

the matter of wiring full details from the scene of operations. But the

intensity of competition rapidly developed the long war telegram during the

autumn of 1870, and no one contributed more effectively to this result than

Forbes. He witnessed many of the events of the autumn campaign and entered

Paris with the Prussians (with whom he established excellent relations) on 1

March 1871. On this occasion he was nearly drowned in a Parisian fountain as a

German spy by an enthusiastic French mob. He managed to arrive first in England

with his account of the Prussian entry. Two months later he returned to Paris

and witnessed the horrors of the commune

with the sang froid for which he became celebrated.



 



Charles John Kean (18 January 1811 – 22 January

1868), was born at Waterford, Ireland, the son of the actor Edmund Kean.

After preparatory education at Worplesdon and at Greenford, near Harrow,

he was sent to Eton College, where he remained three years. In

1827, he was offered a cadetship in the East India Company's service, which he was

prepared to accept if his father would settle an income of £400 on his mother.

The elder Kean refused to do this, and his son determined to become an actor.

He made his first appearance at Drury Lane

on 1 October 1827 as Norval in Home's Douglas, but his continued

failure to achieve popularity led him to leave London in the spring of 1828 for

the provinces. In Glasgow, on 1 October in that year, father and son acted

together in Arnold Payne's Brutus, the elder Kean in the title-part and

his son as Titus. After a visit to the United States in 1830, where he was

received with much favour, he appeared in 1833 at Covent Garden

as "Sir Edmund Mortimer" in Colman's The Iron Chest, but his

success was not pronounced enough to encourage him to remain in London,

especially as he had already won a high position in the provinces. In January

1838, however, he returned to Drury Lane, and played Hamlet

with a success which gave him a place among the principal tragedians of his

time. He married the actress Ellen Tree (1805-1880) on 25 January 1842, and

paid a second visit to America with her from 1845 to 1847. Returning to

England, he entered on a successful engagement at the Haymarket

Theatre, and in 1850, with Robert Keeley, became lessee of the Princess's Theatre, London. The most

noteworthy feature of his management was a series of gorgeous Shakespearean revivals that aimed for

"authenticity". Kean also mentored the young Ellen Terry

in juvenile roles. In melodramatic parts such as the king in Dion

Boucicault's adaptation of Casimir

Delavigne's Louis XI, and Louis and Fabian dei Franchi in Boucicault's adaptation of Dumas's The Corsican

Brothers, his success was complete. In 1854 the writer Charles Reade

created a play The Courier of Lyons for Kean to

appear in, which became one of the most popular plays of the Victorian era.



 



 



 






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