No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:perfarts$caruso-in-costume.jpg]] | [[Image:perfarts$caruso-in-costume.jpg]] | ||
Enrico Caruso in Costume | '''Enrico Caruso in Costume''' | ||
Performing Arts in San Francisco | Performing Arts in San Francisco | ||
This chapter tells the story of some of the actors, actresses and dancers whose performances have graced San Francisco since the Gold Rush days, including the brother of the assassin of Abraham Lincoln, the world's first device for producing a concert of scents and the arrest of an actor for impersonating Jesus Christ. | |||
[[Early San Francisco Theater|Early Theater]] | |||
[[ | [[THE CHRISTENSEN BROTHERS AND THE SAN FRANCISCO BALLET| SF Ballet]] | ||
[[ | [[Jesus Arrested! San Francisco, April 17, 1879| The Passion]] | ||
[[ | [[Morse's Passion |Salmi Morse]] | ||
[[SF | [[S.F. Performing Arts Library and Museum |SF Performing Arts Library and Museum]] | ||
[[ | [[Edwin Booth - Actor| Edwin Booth]] | ||
[[ | [[Bert Williams - Vaudevillian |Bert Williams]] | ||
[[ | [[Black Crook| The Black Crook]] | ||
[[ | [[Chinese Opera in SF |Chinese Opera]] | ||
[[ | [[Isadora Duncan Intro |Isadora Duncan]] | ||
[[ | [[LOLA MONTEZ | Lola Montez]] | ||
[[ | [[Lotta Crabtree in SF| Lotta Crabtree]] | ||
[[ | [[Martinettis in SF |Martinettis]] | ||
[[ | [[Opera | Opera]] | ||
[[ | [[SADAKICHI HARTMANN | Sadakichi Hartmann]] | ||
[[SADAKICHI HARTMANN |Prev. Document]] [[S.F. Performing Arts Library and Museum |Next Document]] | [[SADAKICHI HARTMANN |Prev. Document]] [[S.F. Performing Arts Library and Museum |Next Document]] |
Enrico Caruso in Costume
Performing Arts in San Francisco
This chapter tells the story of some of the actors, actresses and dancers whose performances have graced San Francisco since the Gold Rush days, including the brother of the assassin of Abraham Lincoln, the world's first device for producing a concert of scents and the arrest of an actor for impersonating Jesus Christ.
SF Performing Arts Library and Museum