WM. S. HART IN "HATE."
Because one woman had robbed Jiira of everything he had worked for arid fought for during two long years, in the pitiless'desert, "he hated the whole sex; he wreaked his vengeance by throwing those who fell into his hands to the human beasts he ruled with iron will- on the edge of the desert. One can imagine the sitiiation such a theme creates and the power infused into "Hate," or "The Aryan," the splendid five-act Triangle drama, by' William S. Hart as "fhe Man-Beast j" :.nd Bessie Love as the girl who wandered into the camp to plead for mercy for the women he held in babarous captivity. She was little more than a child; yet she faced the fierce renegade without a tremor; she did not fear him; she trusted him! Yet she bowed to his every mandate, and when pleadings were of no avail, pulled from its holster the revolver, pointed it at her own head, and—but we will leave the picture to tell all the rushing, exciting, heart-throbbing events which happen after that, at His Majesty's Theatre this evening -(Saturday). -.
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Marlborough Express, Volume LI, Issue 87, 14 April 1917, Page 8
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188WM. S. HART IN "HATE." Marlborough Express, Volume LI, Issue 87, 14 April 1917, Page 8
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