11 MAY 1850, Page 12
The inconveniences to which a young gentleman subjects himself by
pretending to be married in order to win a wager, are very comically set forth in a flirce called .Not to be Done, produced at the New Strand Theatre. The pretended wife is an uneducated maid-servant ; and not only does the hopeful youth find that she annoys his uncle by her vul- garities, but the inconvenience is increased by the appearance of his ad- versary in the successive disguises of an old father and mother. The excellent assumption of these representatives of low London life, by Mr. .Leigh Murray, is the chief feature of the piece.