[TOWNSEND'S
"AMATEUR THEATRICALS."]

A Practical Guide for Amateur Actors.

PRICE, 25 CENTS.

This work, without a rival in the field of dramatic literature, covers the entire subject of amateur acting, and answers the thousand and one questions that arise constantly to worry and perplex both actor and manager. It tells how to select plays and what plays to select; how to get up a dramatic club—whom to choose and whom to avoid; how to select characters, showing who should assume particular rôles; how to rehearse a play properly—including stage business, by-play, voice, gestures, action, etc.; how to represent all the passions and emotions, from Love to Hate (this chapter is worth many times the price of the book, as the same information cannot be found in any similar work); how to costume modern plays. All is told in such a plain, simple style that the veriest tyro can understand. The details are so complete and the descriptions so clear that the most inexperienced can follow them readily. The book is full of breezy anecdotes that illustrate different points. But its crowning merit is that it is thoroughly PRACTICAL—it is the result of the author's long experience as an actor and manager. Every dramatic club in the land should possess a copy of this book, and no actor can afford to be without it. It contains so much valuable information that even old stagers will consult it with advantage.


[HELMER'S
ACTOR'S MAKE-UP BOOK.]

A Practical and Systematic Guide to the Art of Making up for the Stage.

PRICE, 25 CENTS.

Facial make-up has much to do with an actor's success. This manual is a perfect encyclopedia of a branch of knowledge most essential to all players. It is well written, systematic, exhaustive, practical, unique. Professional and amateur actors and actresses alike pronounce it THE BEST make-up book ever published. It is simply indispensable to those who cannot command the services of a perruquier.

CONTENTS.