The subgroup contains a chronological sequence of 10 press cuttings books, compiled by AEFH, which fully document the history of the Abbey Theatre, Dublin, from its inception to 1913, and chart selective events between 1913 and 1930. The cuttings are taken from a broad range of publications, both local and national. They consist of reviews of National Theatre Society productions, staged both at the Abbey Theatre and on tour - in other Irish towns, on mainland Britain (including their annual London season), and during 3 visits to the USA; also included are a wide variety of features, articles and reports, on such topics as the history of the Society and important events associated with it, individual figures involved in the theatre, and drama in general.
The scrapbooks provide ample scope for research into the history of the first repertory theatre in the UK and associated subject areas. The cuttings chart the reception of the Irish plays by various critics in different areas and countries, as well as the impact made by the players' new, more naturalistic, acting style. The company's changing repertoire is illustrated, revealing the extent to which the directors' own plays dominated their list of productions, as well as documenting the emergence of new playwrights and the fate of each play - some proving failures, others winning enduring success and enjoying repeated revivals. From the outset the Abbey Theatre was the centre of controversy, and all the major controversial events and issues are illustrated in the cuttings, such as the furore surrounding the first production of Synge's Playboy of the Western World, various other storms of protest at the portrayal of Irish peasants, and the censorship issues raised by the staging of Shaw's The Showing up of Blanco Posnet which had been banned by the English censor. The general mood and political climate in Ireland is reflected in the volumes, illustrating all too well the impossibility of divorcing the national theatre from politics, as AEFH had intended. The scrapbooks also yield information on playwrights, actors and managers connected with the theatre, such as Yeats and Lady Gregory, as well as other literary and dramatic figures. AEFH herself, however, does not figure as prominently in these cuttings books as she does in those documenting the Gaiety Theatre in Manchester, with which she was more actively involved.
A number of the volumes contain articles written in French and German.