Event Comment: Afterpiece: Not acted 
these 6 years.  [See 11 May 1772.]  [Young gentleman identified by 
Hopkins MS Notes.  
Genest, V, 517, also calls attention to 
the fact that 
the text lists 
Douglas as 
Norval and 
Old Norval as 
Stranger (1757) or 
Prisoner (1768).  
Webster first named as Douglas on bill for 27 Feb. 1776.  Review of Webster's acting appeared in 
the Westminster Magazine for Jan.: "His person is ra
ther elegant; his voice is full and harmonious, his pronunciation distinct and correct, and his delivery graceful and unembarassed.  Those are his excellencies, and considering it was his first performance, he seems to possess 
them in a degree far superior to 
the various candidates for 
theatrical fame which 
the managers of both houses have brought forward for some years past.  On 
the o
ther hand he is aukward, and in some parts unanimated.  His arms are too long, or he flung 
them about in a very disgusting manner.  He seemed to express 
the sense of his author much better than his own feelings.  His voice though full, wants variety and modulation; not but on some occasions he managed it with infinite grace and judgement.  But if this want of variety of tones and extent of voice, which is so indispensibly necessary to constitute a first rate actor, be not 
the effect of Nature, 
the Public may behold with less anxiety 
their decayed veterans giving nightly proofs of 
their increasing infirmities, and quick approaching 
theatrical dissolution."