THE GERMAN AS VILLAIN IN DRAMA
... The enthusiastic reception of Mr. Walter Howard's new drama, Boy of My Heart, at the Lyceum on Saturday night, was very significant, for although it is an after-war pla ...
... The enthusiastic reception of Mr. Walter Howard's new drama, Boy of My Heart, at the Lyceum on Saturday night, was very significant, for although it is an after-war pla ...
... IF the classical Oxford Don could sec the enthusiasm created by Medea, presented this/week at matinees at the Holborn Empire, he might find some consolation in the optiona ...
... The enthusiastic reception of Mr. Walter Howard's new drama, Boy of My Heart, at the Lyceum on Saturday night, was very significant, for although it is an after-war pla ...
... LEAVESofYESTERDAY l\ A ^cok-Toae forToinor row ■fen. £vi- A Pleasant Pageant of Possible New Books by Notable People, including the Prince of Wales, And Reflections, in Passing, on the London Book Wor ...
... IF the classical Oxford Don could sec the enthusiasm created by Medea, presented this/week at matinees at the Holborn Empire, he might find some consolation in the optiona ...
... a 1FrOMTHE READER'S POINT OF VIEW. nj r\ .-i By W. DOUGLAS NEWTON. I COULD scarcely finish Limbo for. the excitement it stirred in me. It is the sort of book that shatters my sense of neutrality and turns me into an active benevolent. I want to attack all my friends with it in my hand, so that they shall not miss a delightful moment of it. It is a book of short stories written by Mr. Aldous ...
... By JINGLE THIS is an Irish play and a disthressful one at that. An ordinary person might reasonably conclude that there is already enough trouble in the world just now without anyone being asked to try and think up some more. I should not like to insist that the production of this play at the present juncture renders a very useful public service but, on the other hand, there is the undoubted ...
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... A LITERARY LETTER Recalling Pet Marjorie. London, March 15, 1920. I often think of all the things I would wish to do if I were a publisher, but I am quite sure that they would be the wrong things, and that not a publisher in London but knows his business better than I could know it. All the same, I have an idea that if I had been a publisher when the Daisy Ashford boom arose and people were ...
... . CARLYLE speaks of genius as synonymous with vision, so that it was probably only the lack of that see ing eye of which the sage writes which kept critics and others from being able to foresee the success of Abraham Lincoln at the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith. It was clearly seen to be a good play, but had every mark and sign of being an unpopular one. Conse quently it ran for a year or ...
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... L. WogLO By JINGLE THIS is an operetta of the Orient, and it is also a very picturesque and extremely musical entertainment. The fact that there are no (conscious) humorists in the East accounts, I suppose, for the fact that the entertainment does not run very much in the direction of comic relief. The date of the story is fixed at 1730, which is a year or two after the celebrated Nadir of ...