The evening world. Newspaper, May 17, 1913, Page 9

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"D087 wavomauuy KISS@O HER wAND" “TO GET To Stk A MANAGER TARO To TaKG PIM® Axes To A Couece of GP FICE Bovs” But Failures Don’t Hurt You, They Help You, hh You're Strong Enough, Declares Actress Who Has) “ Arrived"’—At the Sains Time She Advises Young’ Women of the Stage toi Stay in New York Till| They Are Known. S baci the By Charles Darnton. OUNDS of sawing aud hammer ing that came from another part of the apartment made me by enpoun ed soul,’ no" r ver b wonder whether work had already)” ) jiuye a French teacher coming tor] “However” she added, “it must be anil Dad Nase but ote } begun on theefour new plays that) morrow, and I'm going to take uP} admitted that the young women of our| fered to pay for the dinnere of two | Miss Laurette Taylor plans to give prety ; and keep it bl dha i yooy oy stage are coming slong and at the saine| Hawaiians every day if he would find a ho My ashamed of/time it must be regretted that our \¢. { e oper week of her next] i Made me th ie em ror mi during the opening ss ron] MICH Nat to be able to speak to Bern-| young men are making no progress.| gin by getting rid of my Engilsh a New York season, ere’s & Di ardt when | walked with her in’ Wherg will vou find young actors of] cents, £ told him T had been yaara gramme that, if carried out, will set) ‘Pedro Ans other puaraurrite| promise? While the men waste their] quiring it. He sald no matt i would ca) world by the ears, 1) Clark realized that her French was) time at the Lambs’ Club the women are| have to go. After parting with my | the theatrical worl : re afaue | SCPADDY, so the best I could do was to) constantly working tv improve them-| English accent in sorrow T felt hope- could hardly velleve mine, But nor iii iy’ one of Rernhardt’s secretarion| selves, itere and the oN until Mr, ‘Tully remarked that the : selves, Mere and (here, of course, you "i : \ thing, apparently, can disturb Peg of| oy something and. say tell etl fod @ feurtoensvearola inti wailan woman was apologetic in \ as , bd pologetic for living, for Your Heart. She Is undoubtedly SHEL MIRGEE ENR 4 atcry ver.’ oT an that is incapaole of improvement, but] foe ing, for even every word she uttered. . Rin a ee aint oe \ kn sid, but it sounded} the tact 1 ns that alinost y girl i ff t IShould-Worry actress, If] Know what she sa ut the fa ns al every glr me an id and the soft : Pet ivan, came along tonight) Ys | felt exactly us though Twere| on the atago is trying t» make aome-[yonein gave me the an. eartha Vgetting spanking until Bernhardt! thing of ictself. There is always hopo| supposed. to complete the ch P iP and jolted her out of bed she woul@) turned toward me with her wonderfull for the person who has a purpose In life} Isn't it odd how things turn out probably wit, up on the floor andj siniie, 1 just naturally bent down like/and sticks tu that purpose, The dige| The odd thing about 1 ry ,{ an automaton and Kissed her hand. con . it is ‘ ig that she seems thoroug! calmly remark, “And they told nol iy ie time T felt tke apologizing for regalia! iat ie Mane eld efaie | Bhe speaks of hersclt ay ano might of hen 1 moved Aue sos this was 9} being there and when we reached th Hh MtaNe. ork Saearey lara geome. oie tn whom she felt no particu quiet neighborhood. [throne f stood there—in a most n+] play here only to be Jost on the road aula iit isa ak aBecaaa aa ee eae “Why stick to one play?” shel era nC attttaay my lusbund after-] toy aeveral © that may mean every} with Michael hog 1 bring on tn quem | Ward tol me—for what seemed «thing to her career. She cannot afford asked, This seemed 4 sieple ane) thousand years, The worst of it waslto let Now ¥ for: ‘ the poor little mutt and took him tion until tt suggested another how] tiyt 4 went into the affair without| tell ® young actress to the pound the day before he was to | to find four plays of the right sort. realizing it was a proves agent stunt. | part into another for th have been killed, And Michael as been “You forget that I have a play-| But it had its funny wide, Tho Joke ofjing in Now York wutt osha d peat nod ie feck Vint Y } re niwaweras ¢ G b i cone wright right here in the house,” she) '' Was that Miss Clark and T wore! known, Hut manag qeated lung that made it necessary to h Ne | hustled » the supers’ room and} not in the habit of giving this arly keep his chest bandaged. That's the laughed, reminding me that she {8} rigged up in blankets by women whol because it is against their interests In] way It Koos! It's a heart-browking busi- the wife of Hartley Manners. "Of) mod to be cursing us in Mrench.} the four years | have been in New York | ness, but I belleve every one 'n it will | " nes . wo "t go on hecause he em 8 come to th o iNke a cork if it Ie ” ghe added, “every critic In| Jane Cowl didn't go on ise her} T have played se Fatluren | come to the surface Nk auras. os obably throw up lis] DMMKet ax too short, and tie sten-[ don't hurt you t youre | to be, Ber how Dorle Keave atter yen town would pr y tarow up ographer who took her place saved me} strong enough to bear up under tur (aes veers Bas a hands and say, ‘Have I got to g0 and) from feeling like a super for « moment wd that leads to Broadway te | OR the omer we that woman act again to-night:') at least by timidly approaching and y and i hard one, but t MTA ee HI Chase BNA chon iTS ie aa Tm saving: 'T feel toward you as you do Holy beeaune eth \ked straight into popu- Bie bay y a ie um toward Bernhardt=nervous.’ At that I) +i York asim tie i id of belig forced to nent not afraid of hard work, and to me] iirey out my chest and felt finmensely (gaat. The fact js, 1 got int» 4 her way slep by step. This is ail very {t doesn't mean anything to fail.| proud that 1 could make some one n. horse rut. After giving imitations jn | delixitful of course, but T feel that the | actress who is strong enough ' After all, there's no fun in getting} vous. It’s all very well to have your! vaudeville syed in Bacal’ hent hee ythine to tates i ine up in electric letters, but it takes! yo he West : 4 wake a Heht ha ving to and Nnoney except to lose it, perlaps, on| "3 aN, ipareey eat aaat si Ar Bn aa Ase 20! pothing 10 lone, For one thing, to. be 4 tat the Palace] youn prostration, Ti caine Sow emotion one should something you love. While most of atve to bring you down to earth. | York y becuse it Was my hone, ved 11, 1 belic Au us feel that we should get ft while); yeyer realized the « wering eifect | For two year | was idle, Ne one want ave ‘mut ive lived a ‘a. good, why should wejof a great personality until J stoud bes led me. To WO MAN Ser he hioke off sive the best yeurs of our life merely | eit einen ss not gilt not wanubigs Aacas 1 cat We ofl ike Towen funny world! We to money-making? If 1 lost every) aie secret of her Undeniable chara is, | that T had played Mthibat ay ins | Wee Ne on tt red /eapt I've earned 1 could stil go The Road to Broadway Proved Long and Hard look at Sarah Bernhardt! Just how far Pore to launch four plays in a ain, week Miss Taylor did not say, but she peraape, that abe taken bareals For Laurette Taylor | Moreover, she has a ‘sense of humor that Makes you jose all sense of time. “Foreign artists are remarkable for | their amotional quaitty ene went | "One day a little girl came to my dress. | ing room and with word of expia- | nation snid very ‘I—aaw—your= | play -I—want —to — | tett—you" "MisHGL OPENED IN NEW YORK WITH A CONGESTED LUNG "To aa 1T Does WT meAW ANYTHING TO Faw” an all over again, but got no further. To my amazement she burst out crying My jand threw hdtself into my arms. mother, who would laugi at a funel couldn't keep her face straight, w my colored maid, who has a passion for cutting murder storics out of newspapers and pasting them in scrapbooks, looked grimly on, with her h ‘What iq it, my child? bing girl. ‘I'm not a enild, woman,’ she answered, throwing back hor head, ‘and | wanted to tell you how much T admired y Then [ learned te my strange vixitur was Lydia Lopou- kowa, the exquiaite little Russian dancer, Any cmotion that an American mii fecl over a performance would srow cold before it reached the atage door— that’s the difference. And our actresses, as @ rule, are more inclined to find fault than to give praise. ‘To one of this kind I said the other day, ‘You will never be & big actress because you have a stingy k to vaudeville, where I started. She has kind of spirit 1 admir he had been influenced the indefatigable Sarah in her pu on. — Here she stopped, then bel THE EVENING WORLD, Pty Se0or w Caulle, thes & was tnow any meso then we ‘ds bedava, The Most Famous Woman Artist of Japan ef ef “They Are Not Remarkably Beautiful,” Says Wakana Utawaga, “and They Lack Grace and Softness of Expression; They All Look Alike and Talk Too Much About Themselves. “They Put Color On in Lumps, and It Is So Ob- vious; but They Have a Splendid Drawing Force About Them and They Do Know How to Stay Young.” SATURDAY, MAY 17, Sketches and Discusses New York Women Marguerite Mooere Marshall. This is a brand new peep at Ame! can Women, and a peep taken by a pair of black eyes accustomed to keen observation, the sort of observation that almost instinctively formulates itgelf into ehrewd comment. In short, the eyes of an artist have been “look- ing us over” this week, the G@rst week in America of Miss Wakana Utagawa, the girl-gentus of Japan. When Mies Utagawa was six years old ber draw- ings attracted the admiring comment of others besides her fond parents. When she was fourteen she became the “baby student” at the Tokio Academy of Fine Arte, all her co workers having passed their twentieth year, Now at twenty-two she has ex- hibited her paintings {n all the great cities of Europe, and has received commendation from the most eminent] ent authorities on the art of the Orient. To-day in The Evening World ene Presents several charming and distinc- tive sketches of typical New York wo- men appear to her. Misa @ankly tmpresstoniatic in students of her work may observe at the exhibition which she will shortly give. But there's very little visionary vagueness about her paintings and none at all about her opinions, as I found when I talked with her at the Hotel Astor. ‘es, 'L_have noticed many inter PEP cil dines: Matted Medios fairly intelligent and that all I wanted was a small part I never succeeded in getting inte hig office a second time. My opportunity finally came, of course, in “The Bird of Paradise,’ but 2 nearly missed it because after T was engaged Mr. Tully, the author, came along and 14 I wouldn't @o at all, He first ing things about American wo! began, speaking English that was quick Just after luncheon, and she wore the Diainest of dark blue tailor made coat sults, The skirt wa extremely narrow. not allt nor was it Her small, elim feet were incased in high black pat- 1 and ready, if a trifle hara to follow 3 tim “3 do act think the women in New York deoutiful. ‘They Reve good, otrong @004 complezions whes But they have they lack’ laepen enpreseton. ‘Their mask. And though beautiful gowns, that the women wearlag eeouread by the amount and the trim. mings and jewels.” Of course, now, you are wondering how Mies Utagawa was dressed. It was with gray cloth top was imple white lawn shirtwalst with @ high collar, She except @ stall pin m her throat. Hi mooth, olive-tinted skin was unpain' and unpowdered. Bhe has the beautiful dark brown eyes and the quick-coming smile so charac- feriatic of the women of her race, but there's an intelligence tn her face which a @ not found in many of the little fan-beauties, “You believe in the beauty of aim- plictty?” I asked, rather unnecessarily. me replied. “When @ woman wears cinbd- orate garments and many ornaments’ the covers up the flow of the natui 1913. miss New A NEW YORK MOTHER * AND WER “CHILD lines of her figure, of her fyve and of her hy AML things thar a woman Weara should conform to her natural shape, not hide ft or even distort It. Mer hair whould be wound gracefully about her head, and her shoes should follow the lines of her feet, insteai of cramping them into another shape. “Way Go s0 many New York women wear earrings? ‘This article of jewelry pulls the car out of shape and spoils the beautiful contour of the lower part of the face. A nose ring would be no more ugly, and I am surprised that it {9 not worn. “Another thing that has surprised me here in New York te the number of st imitation finery worn by the giris who work In shops and (Mces ap well as by the wealthy woinen In thelr carriages, In Kurope It Is only a few women comparatively pay much money for thetr’ cloties, ‘The women who work and the wives of the men who are not rich wear simple, quiot garments, Over there one can imme- diately tell to what clase a woman be- longs by looking at her, Here that docs not acem to ho possible, I know that all the women whom T see on the | etreots don in the same circle, yet they all look a0 much alike. “T have noticed, however, that with many of the women wearing expensive clothes there is something net quite not quite—not quite chic,” finished Mise Utnxawa, after a moment's hesitation. ‘There is something wrong with the Mt, or the skirt does not hang right in the back, or there is not @ complete harmony, That quality te an ab- solute essential of artistic dress. “Even the altt wkirt may be attractive If tt is worn by @ slender woman whose costume ts harmonious, But only now popular in America? were wearing it in Paria three years ago, It seoms to me & mode that be- lon; to the carria, T ha some dreadful examples of It on the streets of New Yor! Utagawa confessed, candidly. “And has the prevalence of make-up among New York women impressed you?" T asked. “S @o not think that Hew York ‘women actually use ae muck paint and powder as de the women of Paris. But the Prench women are oo much more |ekilieg im the art of make-up. When | Its “Be “Back to the Farm” for the Actor People Broadway 5 Favorites Plant- ing Onions UpLett Center, Sowing Corn Down Right, and Raising Chickens Down Leit. Farms Pay! And the *PORS and v es have tong ‘een associated, It, waa, how- ever, partnership tn which all A tha tania Foe Ga the vouwee for intles around profit by her generonity | which. in turn, tually lay on the sido) and ability as a crop ral or bosom of the offending player UF should you by chance ve passing Hut now the old order Is changed through Portehester, N don't fail] If you were to pass a cluster of ri ‘pay to 1d your path to ‘he farm oper carrots at a thirty-mile galt to one of! by that distinguished Russi our leading players to-day he would | Mine, Nugimova; or et Onalning diop probably grasp tt about the midriff, step |over to the extensive and beautifully forward to the footlights and exclaim: ‘culttvated truck farm where Mise My dear wld chap, where did you get| Hianche Hates dayotes the b part such @ poor varlety of carrot? The size | of her muminer and shape are most int r Now on] Still another “farmette’ « my farm last vear I rained some car: 4 thyely in ploughing, sewing tf rots that were carrots,” and so On AA }ing the harvest 1s Mins Chrystal Hern infinitum. , Who fe keeping up the old eountry It In back to the farm for the actor: | itace of her iatier ut Sag Harbor, Bille Burke, raking hag. ty dAalnty | prong & typical old-fasiit print gown and sunt Mine. Naal-ticngiand farin, prod mova, bareleaded, in prnfield | cromm radiahen ¢ vashce gathering in the juley ears, John Drew exchanging bis immaculate urban gar Refore we | the “farmet ments for ov And wide brimined | discuen a few of the most pre straw hat: Richard Carle, the lengthy )Of our actor agriculturists, Mine. pedian, extracting potatoes with a hoe| tilide Cottrell!, who made such a oan you picture it? hit In The Five Frenksorters,” must Hor the past three yeare the crage| not be forgottes. Khe hasan extensive among tho player otk to ge! “clone tol] farm tn New desey, speciatiaing 4 Ne sunshine and |oranberries avd tmoxquitues, ‘Then, tov, Hing (nh the work ele Miss Helen Lowell, the char as spread wita roactress who yred such \amasing ra until it te difficult ins ' 1008 The La deed tu tind a prominent ‘ who iy a ently 4 ane yh the coming summer | ietticoat Wir her parthe * any 0 Armstrong, not connected with the 1S vow dou't believe Lusty sulse Burne @tage Mise Lowell operates @ b0-sere Lourlals @ois, and all the > ie } most part in Is @ perfectly good tittle fariner—or should {t be farmette-take a run somo ay this sununer up to Maatings-on-the- Hudson and inquire your way to Burke lelgh Crest, You will find an estate of & dozen or more acres, laid out for t efully arranged tittle rectangular patches, [t is ten to one that you will find Miss Burke actually at work In one of the gardens, or at least prettily superintending some par- tleularly arduous bit of farm operation Her truck gardens provide only all she and her summer guesia can eat of the choicest vegetablon in acaaon, but her friends in the city and nelgnbo A {very Proportions and fertility f { at East North- lonal baste clear fruit and berry f port, N. Y., on a pro! and makes money each eummi and above her vacation expenses, test aspirants John Draw, one of thi for agricultural honors, has bought @ bis farm at Hast Hampton, L, L It would seem to ba atretching it @ Bt to picture that pink of sartorial perfection at actual labor tn his teld rbed asa simple rustic, but that in what he has annured his friends they may expect when they motor down to call. If it w to be ao, something neat tn the way of clone fitting, pin striped overalls, with soft roll Engitah lapel effects may be ex> pected. wing thelr wont the himtrions p pretty Well together even in thetr vacation times, as witness the numerous summer colonies on Long Teland and te w England populated nively by members of the th: fexsion Down at Bayport, larly extensive colony to whiek John Mason has just become a recruit with a neat Ite farm of several acres. 'Aamuin there i the Sag Harbor contin: lgent, where Robert Edeson does prac- theal sive farming, where Willlam jeourt in experimenting in melons fon a scale and handsome ‘Billy’ Farnum rune a general farm of | 4 Virginta, blushing newly. save opened @ big place at Harrt- Y, where Courtenay ts aity of artichokes. He J ovosem, as is Miss Harned, it being even rumored that jt was over @ portion of | arth * with Hollandaise sauce that | h melted Into one, Vern hero of the "Vv an Lat prevent thrilling many a ' e mant 1 Denton tn is pining to get to his ole " . at Bucksport, Me. He raines enol truck to supply the pig BAGEL LOSA, dus i | ef rd voat “I lke the strength of the N woman,” the artist added, ¢ "She gives me the feeling that she ea) obtain apything, conquer anytiin: There te @ driving force about ber that is very eptendid. “Only, why need she employ it phyoloally, in a crowd? 1 do think yous crowds are eo impolite, They squeeze Qgainst one and rush along, and they ver way, your pardo} In London there are great crowds, too, but there ts not so mued rudeness." And there ts one other count that Miss * Utagawe drings against the New York ‘woman-+that she is very prone to bead about herself in @ high voice tells me @o much about what.she doce lamented the Iittle Japanese girl, “and whe does not tell me about the American custome which T wish to know, “But there is one very nice thing about. w York women,” she finished, brigit- “They do not seem to grow old. 1 have hardly eeen an old woman tn America. Ané in Japan when @ woman ia atxty—oh, she is wo old! 1 think ét Ia fine that in New York you know hew to stay young.” keeps an expert superintendent on Job the year around. 'T muet eay I don't know e great deal about aclentific farming,” eaid Farnum the other night, “but I can handle a Pitohfork or hoe with the next and I Uke nothing better than to get into my farm rig and put tn my eight heures @ day in the fields.” The “Arizona” company furnish att] another actor farmer of practica) experience, Rapley Holmes, who soon as the season ends will entral for the banks of the Saskatchew: ‘way up in Canada Near the town of Saskatoon he has 160 acres of whea: and his almost daily reports give prow pect of # great July crop. ‘Then there te Henry Miller, the dis. tinguished actor-playw rt manager who has @ big farm in Connecticut an ea it; Cyril Beott, with @ practioa truck farm at Bayside, L, 1, where he Paines etuff for the market and make @ good thing out of {t; Macklyn Ar buckle of “County Chatrman’ an “The Round Up" fame, with « 4 fruit farm of 180 acres up tn Ne York if eund farm f prominent players—al! have felt and answered the ba the-woll clarion and who take their farming aa sertously ae they do thei acting. Whon they firat start many of thes: Histrionte agriculturists don't know bean vine from an apple tree, ‘The! early dencriptions of the country plac they had bought sound like the dire. tlons of & tage manager for the set ting of the first act of » Down Bas! | thritter, “Say ‘fellows, one was heard to re- mark tn the Lamba Club the other day “Lye just bought the niftiest Nettle coun. try setting you ever saw, Hig house up left centre; old-fashioned well, dow right; barnyard with real cattle in tt, jdown left; plenty of aky borders, and for my ares drop ay whole, pine forest with @ lake, off left upper emtranc: Qeme clase, th wh ee at old *

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