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CABARET

... . By IVAN PATRICK GORE. QUEEN'S Among the reoent acts working in the standing cabaret here are Monty Woulf and Lillian Lowe. Both have appeared in the Leicester Square house previously, and are exceedingly popular with Quai d'Orsay audiences. Miss Lowe remains in the programme, which also includes a couple of clever ecoentrio acrobats, the Arva Brothers. Regina West, whose en gagement must ...

Published: Thursday 21 April 1927
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 808 | Page: Page 15 | Tags: review 

CABARET

... . By IVAN PATRICK GORE. QUEEN'S: NIGHT-TIME REVELS OF 1927. After some months' absence from tho Qual d'Orsay, Henry de Bray has returned to produce for Mme. Coletta, and has constructed a good entertainment, although the dressing is not quite up to the cabaret's standard. Swiftly on the spirited opening by the girls. ?yyho sing that they ae lonely, omes Carletta Mossetti with a good number, ...

Published: Thursday 10 February 1927
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1166 | Page: Page 13 | Tags: review 

CABARET

... . By IVAN. PATRICK GORE. PLAYTIME AT THE PICCADILLY. E. O. Lcndley, who used to run cabaret at the Piccadilly in conjunction with Harry Foster, and more recently was on his own account, has now severed hie connection with the entertainment. It is now being run by Colonel Elwy Jones. Tlie change has meant a good deal of reorganisation, the chief item of which has been the wholesale removal ...

Published: Thursday 14 July 1927
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1056 | Page: Page 4 | Tags: review 

CABARET

... . By IVAN PATRICK GORE, ELECTION NIGHT. To-night is undoubtedly the night in the West End. Managements of night cabaret clubs and restaurants are putting on special shows, making presentations to the ladies, getting extensions, all for the purpose of letting members and guests know just exactly what tho political late ol the country is going to be. Tho Cosmo Club, with its 3,000 members, is ...

Published: Thursday 30 May 1929
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1055 | Page: Page 22 | Tags: review 

CABARET

... . By IVAN PATRICK GORE. THE RIVERSIDE. Thames Riviera, the popular riverside resort, reopened success fully two weeks ago. Grounds, gardens, redecorations, cuisine wines, all came up to expectations and the entertainment provided was capital, but without being out of the ordinary. The hotel Paris, Bray, started its seasot last week. This establishment with the management of which Colonel ...

Published: Thursday 15 May 1930
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1010 | Page: Page 12 | Tags: review 

CABARET

... . By IVAN PATRICK GORE. LYONS. Trocabaret has a long list of first-class artists for this month and next. The Cochran cabaret revue The Prosperity Party runs on in the grill-room as merrily as ever, the Melvilles, the clever comic jugglers, now taking the place of Dekker and Pan. In port of the talkative Maurice, we have many old favourites, includ ing Mr. Flotsam and Mr. Jetsam, Nairn on ...

Published: Thursday 09 October 1930
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 763 | Page: Page 17 | Tags: review 

CABARET

... . By IVAN PATRICK GORE. THE SILVER SLIPPER. Following on the footsteps of the Kit Cat, which, after ending its career as a night club, blossomed out in due course as a restaurant the Silver Slipper in Regent Street is now open to the general public, which can eat, dance, and see a good cabaret entertainment. Although there is no great difference between the actual entertainment of the caba ...

Published: Thursday 18 October 1928
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 951 | Page: Page 26 | Tags: review 

CABARET

... . By IVAN PATRICK GORE. The other day I went into a club which only a few nights before had been raided. I had known it when the entertainment was in full swing, and the difference was remarkable, almost ghastly. Just a short time back tho atmosphere had boon one of music and laughter, honest ap plause for the artists who took the floor, soft light} and a, perhaps, too lioavily scentcd air. ...

Published: Thursday 25 October 1928
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1647 | Page: Page 25 | Tags: review 

CABARET

... . By IVAN PATRICK GORE. QUEEN'S. The return of Will Honder and his band has made a notable change, both in the music and the business. Hender himself and hit instruments do a great deal of work and take up a lot of room. There is a big fellow, fondly called a marimba-xylophone, which is capable of all sorts of noises from tiopical storms to the cooing of love-sick pigeons. Until I met this, ...

Published: Thursday 12 June 1930
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 716 | Page: Page 18 | Tags: review 

CIRCUSES

... PAGEANTRY AT OLYMPIA On December 17 the twenty-second season of Bertram Mills's Circus opened at Olympia. From the grand opening parade to the finale there is presented a spectacular variety of animal, aerial, tumbling, and clowning acts with such speed that the three hours are never allowed to drag. Before and after the shows, and during the interval, there is a fun-fair adjoining the ...

Published: Friday 31 December 1948
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1233 | Page: Page 3 | Tags: review 

CABARET

... . By IVAN PATRICK GORE. THE ROAD HOUSE. When the Road House, the latest of London's West End clubs opens its doors, Harry Adams will be found in charge of the entertainments. Harry Gordon will lead the orchestra, and the opening cabaret will be headed by Lilian Lowe and Allan Shires. The limes in Leicester Square have been contorted from on old-timi- kinema which was fondly known a* Cupid's ...

Published: Thursday 21 August 1930
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 540 | Page: Page 15 | Tags: review 

CABARET

... . By IVAN PATRICK GORE. With the same regularity as the first cuckoo is heard to herald spring comes the statement that there is nothing to do in London on Sunday night, nothing to but visit a kinema, or go to some private theatrical performance if you happen to be one of the lucky ones. As a fact, this it quite a fallacy, probably in spired by the apparent, deadntfss of the West ...

Published: Thursday 10 July 1930
Newspaper: The Stage
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1232 | Page: Page 12 | Tags: review