Hang it, Hang him, This Show Must Go On
The Grantham Journal Saturday 19th September 1874
A SANGUINARY AUDIENCE
At the Theatre Royal Cambridge, on Saturday night, the performance wound up with the tragedy of “Maria Martin, or the Murder in the Red Barn.” The curtain fell after Wm. Corder, the murderer, had been brought to the scaffold, and with rope dangling above his head “improved the occasion”.
The audience refused to leave, and when the orchestra played the National anthem, it was received with hisses and clamour, and the crowded audience remained in their places. :(:(:(:(:(:(
At length Mr. Frederick Hughes, the manager, presented himself, and apologised for being unable to gratify his patrons by actually hanging the actor – Mr Concannon, who represented the murderer, Wm. Corder, unless with his own consent, which he was hardly likely to give.
The “gods” shouted furiously, “Bring him out with the rope round his neck.”
Of course, the demand was not complied with, and after more demonstrations of the desire to see the representative of the Suffolk murderer actually hung, the crowded audience slowly and with manifest reluctance, left for home.
The Grantham Journal Saturday 19th September 1874
A SANGUINARY AUDIENCE
At the Theatre Royal Cambridge, on Saturday night, the performance wound up with the tragedy of “Maria Martin, or the Murder in the Red Barn.” The curtain fell after Wm. Corder, the murderer, had been brought to the scaffold, and with rope dangling above his head “improved the occasion”.
The audience refused to leave, and when the orchestra played the National anthem, it was received with hisses and clamour, and the crowded audience remained in their places. :(:(:(:(:(:(
At length Mr. Frederick Hughes, the manager, presented himself, and apologised for being unable to gratify his patrons by actually hanging the actor – Mr Concannon, who represented the murderer, Wm. Corder, unless with his own consent, which he was hardly likely to give.
The “gods” shouted furiously, “Bring him out with the rope round his neck.”
Of course, the demand was not complied with, and after more demonstrations of the desire to see the representative of the Suffolk murderer actually hung, the crowded audience slowly and with manifest reluctance, left for home.
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