In 1889, Janet Acch Church traveled overseas with her three-year husband, Charles Charington. In Cairo, Janet Archer has born a stillborn child who died while giving birth. The pain afterwards and the pain of the performance on the stage are increasingly using morphine
Janet Achurch starred at Wiers-Jenssen (1866-1925), finally called The Witch. She retired immediately after the end of the season and finally stopped using morphine on September 11, 1916. Her last remainder is 4 Devonshire Terrace, Ventnor, Isle of Wight
Janet uses morphine in the latter part of her life and emphasizes the historical usefulness of this medicine. After the licensing bill entered into force in the second half of the 19th century, these substances could only be purchased from pharmacies. When Janet Archach dies, many injured soldiers will come back from the battlefield of Flanders of the First World War. Where the use of substances including morphine and cocaine resulted in a high degree of dependence. These substances are provided free of charge to soldiers representing the British army.
"A new actress will come out again and you will be able to see a neat genius than Janet Archach, but it was one thing that was called women's liberation, as always it was always It will not be an important person for any player, a double creative role - a new representative of the performing arts and a pioneer of awakened sexual responsibility
Ince started his article with the phrase "position as an assurance of the actress of Janet Achurch", but I know her name, but I do not know very little about her career. Indeed, she is a little strange to me. One of the windows of stained glass known as the Benson window of the Royal Shakespeare Theater is Janet Achurch, Mrs. Macbeth. But she worked with Frank Benson, but I never played in Stratford-Upon-Avon. Janet Acch Church played Mrs. Macbeth and played a piece indispensable to the history of Stratford Shakespeare. In April 1885, Benson was at Leamington Spa, the head of the Shakespeare Memorial Theater, Charles Edward Flower and his wife who wanted to find someone to take over the festival's second year art.
In 1889, Janet Acch Church traveled overseas with her three-year husband, Charles Charington. In Cairo, Janet Archer has born a stillborn child who died while giving birth. Afterwards pain and running pain on the stage are increasingly using morphine. Janet Achurch starred at Wiers-Jenssen (1866-1925), finally called The Witch. She retired immediately after the end of the season and finally stopped using morphine on September 11, 1916. Her last remainder is 4 Devonshire Terrace, Ventnor, Isle of Wight