person or book cover
Courtesy of the Library of Congress
Hugh D. McIntosh Hugh D. McIntosh i(A61006 works by) (a.k.a. Hugh Donald McIntosh; 'Huge Deal')
Born: Established: 10 Sep 1876 Surry Hills, Inner Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, ; Died: Ceased: 2 Feb 1942 London,
c
England,
c
c
United Kingdom (UK),
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Western Europe, Europe,

Gender: Male
Heritage: Irish ; Scottish
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1 Untitled Martin C. Brennan , Hugh D. McIntosh , 1916 single work correspondence
— Appears in: Australian Variety , 7 March 1916; (p. 7)

Two letters, one from Hugh D. McIntosh, Governing Director of Tivoli Theatres Ltd (q.v.), and the other from Martin C. Brennan, owner and publisher of Australian Variety (q.v.) regarding the cancelling of legal action by McIntosh against Brennan. A statement from McIntosh accepting Brennan's disclaimer was also published.

The situation initially came about after McIntosh's financial stability was question in the 29 October 1915 issue of the American Billboard magazine. McIntosh believed that Brennan was behind the article, and instigated the legal action. His decision to halt the action was made after Brennan publicly denied having anything to do with the article and further claimed that as far as he was aware the statements in question were untrue.

1 Capitulation - And Peace Martin C. Brennan , Hugh D. McIntosh , 1916 single work correspondence
— Appears in: The Theatre Magazine , April 1916; (p. 33)

Correspondence between Hugh D. McIntosh, Governing Director of Tivoli Theatres Ltd (q.v.), and Martin C. Brennan, owner and publisher of Australian Variety (q.v.) regarding the cancelling of leagl action by McIntosh against Brennan. Both letters, dated 23 February 1916, had also been published in Australian Variety the previous month (7 March 1916, p7), along with a statement from McIntosh, which he requested in settlement of the issue.

The situation initially came about after McIntosh's financial stability was question in the 29 October 1915 issue of the American Billboard magazine. McIntosh believed that Brennan was behind the article, and instigated the legal action. His decision to halt the action was made after Brennan publicly denied having anything to do with the article and further claimed that as far as he was aware the statements in question were untrue.

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