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The Theatre: Twelfth Night Open Air, Regent's Park

... friends. The guest batsman from London, so to speak, was Mr. Ernest Thesiger, who scored a century as Malvolio. Not only was he in good form, but suited the team to a T. Cunningly placed in the slips (still so to speak) were three experts of the Dolmetch school ...

Published: Wednesday 26 July 1944
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 828 | Page: 8 | Tags: Review 

MY LIFE'S PILGRIMAGE

... in the Nile Desert y He; Pilgrimage, by Thos. Catling. London: John Murray.) (From 'page 974.) nisi bonum proviso, can he speak in all freedom of those who have gone before. It is a proof, then, of Mr. Catling s ability as a journalist that in his narrative ...

DIMITY HALL

... moral, and morals show up best in black and white. We should like Mrs. Baillie-Saunders's work better if her people did not speak quizzingly and huffily and mutter brokenly but at the same time we suspect her public is rather pleased than otherwise with ...

Published: Wednesday 02 September 1925
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 127 | Page: 70 | Tags: Review 

NEEDLES AND PINS

... running away from her, only to fall into another woman's clutches. And so on and so on. Much fun, some emotions, and no moral to speak of. But the moral doesn't matter here. NOVEL NOTES. ...

Published: Wednesday 30 April 1924
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 143 | Page: 76 | Tags: Review 

OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC

... something fascinating in itself. ims is where the Lourt theatre production fails. When Mr. Alfred Clark steps upon the stage and speaks his first line, you know that the performance cannot satisfy your Mjsnes. ior nere is no ripe, meiiow, intellectual, unscrupulous ...

THE CINEMA: Miss Bergner's Rosalindchen

... Rosalind is Rosalind at all. It may be, and in Miss Bergner's case it is, an enchanting some thing else. This clever actress now speaks the English language remarkably well, yet with a German quality which takes all the Shakespeare out of the verse. This is ...

Published: Wednesday 16 September 1936
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1154 | Page: 8 | Tags: Review 

THE PASSING SHOWS: Strictly Dishonourable, at the Phoenix Theatre

... proprietor of the speak-easy and groom of the chambers to the amorous Count, is as volatile as Vesuvius. When Tomaso. his look-out man (Mr. J. W. Gilchrist), and Mario, the waiter (Mr. Marius Rogati), get together, the term, speak easy, takes on another ...

Published: Wednesday 01 April 1931
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1546 | Page: 19 | Tags: Review 

A LITERARY LETTER.: The Marathon Race--Mr. Stanley Weyman's The Wild Geese--Mr. Chesterton's New Novel

... ignorantlv applied by the Lowlanders of Scotland to the Gaelic-speaking Highlanders. One has no more right to speak of the Erse language when one is talking of Ireland than one has to speak of the Cockney language when one is talking of England. An educated ...

Published: Saturday 08 August 1908
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2328 | Page: 20 | Tags: Review 

PATRICIA LACKED A LOVER. BY JOHN NORTH. (Jarrolds; 7s. 6d.)

... eight, and husband not in before ten minutes to. Item, cigarette smoking in bed holes burned in the best linen sheets, not to speak of risks of fire and Patricia did not mention the fire, but nagged about the holes. Don't we all know it And yet it is only ...

Published: Wednesday 02 November 1927
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 176 | Page: 90 | Tags: Review 

The Theatre: Salt of the Earth Vaudeville

... nationals concerned, all of whom, for obvious reasons, must speak a common language we can understand. But once these preliminaries are settled, it is up and away, hell for leather, narratively speaking, with comedy jostling tragedy, brutal threats coun tered ...

Published: Wednesday 29 July 1942
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 857 | Page: 8 | Tags: Review 

EMIL JANNINGS RETURNS

... been shown in making the picture suitable for English speaking nations without the use of doubles. Jan nings, for instance, is depicted as a German professor of English literature, therefore he speaks, naturally, English with an ac cent. The cheap cabaret ...

Published: Wednesday 16 July 1930
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1251 | Page: 42 | Tags: Review