71A (Vol. 2)

Transcription

WESTMINSTER-BRIDGE THEATRE.—The amusements of this house, long as they have been admired, never had so great a claim to our praise and public encouragement as at present, for never had Young ASTLEY a company so numerous or excellent, nor entertainments so pleasing, grand, and interesting.—The new Pantomime (to say nothing of the rest of the performances, which are by no means destitute of admirers) forms of itself a spectacle of the first attraction; the dresses, scenery, music, and machinery of which were never surpassed at the first-rate Opera-house in Paris, when that now unfortunate city was at the zenith of its glory. To give a just idea of the various beauties of the WEIRD SISTERS, is a task by no means the most easy, and would require more space in our paper than can be allotted to a description of this kind. We shall leave the public to form its judgement, conscious that it will agree in opinion with us, that a better Magical Pantomime could  not possibly be invented, nor better executed,

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