9 NOVEMBER 1850, Page 8

Mr. Macready goes on prosperously at the Haymarket: he has

appeared in Lear, his best Shaksperian character, and in Richehett and Werner, two of his own peculiar creations. Highly interesting has been the progress at this theatre of Mr. Davenport, who has been the juvenile assistant to the weightier business of Mr. Macready. His Ulric in r•-:r, with all its vicious haughtiness and insolent defiance, is, in its way, a I' .igbly-finished specimen of acting. If Mr. Davenport will adhere to his line, and not be lured out of it by ambitious dreams, he may easily secure the position of being the first juvenile tragedian of his day.