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Okeedoke

... MR. RICHARD LLEWELLYN'S successor to How Green Was My Valley None But The Lonely Heart (Michael Joseph, 10s. 6d.) is not c only about Cockneys; it is written throughout in Cockney idiom. Young S Ernie Mott, a artist very near, wants to achieve Tate Gallery eminence c like his father; but his widowed ma runs a furniture shop Kingsland Road way, with shoplifting and receiving as sidelines, ...

The Theatre: Present Laughter (Haymarket)

... By Horace Horsnell Present Laughter (Haymarket) WHAT future generations will make of our plays and other theatre proceed ings remains to be seen. Still, I venture to forecast that, with this delightfully ridiculous comedy (possibly the wittiest since The Importance of Being Earnest), Mr. Noel Coward will have made a notable advance in the opinion of posterity. He should figure in that select ...

Published: Wednesday 12 May 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 871 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

The Theatre: There Shall Be No Night (Aldwych)

... By Horace Horsnell There Shall Be No Night (Aldtvych) ALFRED LUNT and Lynn Fontanne are such agreeable and accomplished actors that we should welcome almost any play they chose to bring to us. We like them both for what they do and the way they do it. Their acting is so skilful and studied an art that it might be described as inspired methodism. Their technical equipment includes (but is by no ...

Published: Wednesday 29 December 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 829 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

MYSELF AT THE PICTURES: Gay and Grim

... MYSELF AT THE PICTURES Gay and Grim By James Agate NOT always do we feel disposed to visit the cinema: there are days and days. So, after cutting our finger, upsetting the ink-pot on to our priceless Axminster, put ting two important business letters into the wrong envelopes, using a new mouth-wash instead of the accustomed Nufix for what we humorously call our hair, and ending up with ...

Published: Wednesday 13 January 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1307 | Page: Page 6 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

The Theatre: Pink String and Sealing Wax

... By Horace Horsnell Pink String and Sealing Wax (Duke of York's) CHOOSING a title for a new play must be as tricky as choosing one for a new peer. What does this one suggest to you-- a theme for a surrealist painter, or a conversation piece by the Walrus and the Carpenter? Actually, it has nothing to do with either of those æsthetic extremes. Mr. Roland Pertwee is not that kind of dramatist. He ...

Published: Wednesday 22 September 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 871 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

The Theatre: Magic Carpet (Princes)

... By Horace Horsnell Magic Carpet (Princes) MAGIC carpets are tricky aircraft. They fly, as you know, on a mixture of dreams and wishes. Transcending both time and space, their range is limited only by the imagination of the pilot. They take off at the word (or wish) of command. Once started, however, they are apt to get out of control, have a tendency to stall, and prefer a crash to a happy ...

Published: Wednesday 09 June 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 892 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

MYSELF AT THE PICTURES: A Great Russian Film

... MYSELF AT THE PICTURES A Great Russian Film By James Agate LET it be laid down clearly and distinctly, without any iff-ing and aff-ing, as we used to say up North, that One Day if War, the Russian film, now showing at the Regal is by streets, miles, and any other unit of measure you can think of, the best documen tary ever made. The day chosen to be shot by the hundred and sixty Russian ...

Published: Wednesday 10 February 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1185 | Page: Page 6 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

The Theatre: Arsenic and Old Lace (Strand)

... By Horace Horsnell Arsenic and Old Lace (Strand) THOUGH poised to begin with somewhat perilously between the comic and the macabre, this ruthless comedy comes down so deftly on the side of the wicked burlesque that laughter, which might have been self-conscious or constrained, becomes both spontaneous and full-throated. Its theme is homicidal mania; its two most charming characters are active ...

Published: Wednesday 06 January 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 903 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

MYSELF AT THE PICTURES: Two Good Films

... MYSELF AT THE PICTURES Two Good Films By James Agate Watch on the Rhine (Warner and Regal, Marble Arch) is in one way poorer than the play but in many ways better. Herman Shumlin, who directs, seems to have had an inspiration amounting to a brain wave. This is to leave the horrors of Nazi misrule where Lillian Hellman left them-- to the imagination. Throughout the entire picture we do not ...

Published: Wednesday 08 September 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1433 | Page: Page 6 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

The Theatre: Flying Colours (Lyric)

... By Horace Horsnell Flying Colours (Lyric) IF the bright particular stars that adorn our stage were ruled by a benevolent autocrat, and I were he, an old but not impertinent problem would not have been raised once more by this revue. It concerns Miss Binnie Hale, who adorns some of the programme's more memorable features. That problem, which is purely speculative, may be briefly re-stated: is ...

Published: Wednesday 08 September 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 840 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

The Theatre: Vintage Wine (Comedy)

... By Horace Horsnell Vintage Wine (Comedy) OUR stage has long excelled in good comedians, and our drama in good parts for them to play. Even the great days of tragedy deferred to them. The Elizabethans, like ourselves, enjoyed a good laugh; and it is not without significance that Falstaff, that prime comedian, should have dominated three of Shakespeare's plays. Those two good judges, Hazlitt and ...

Published: Wednesday 26 May 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 816 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

STIRRING TALES FROM NEAR AND FAR

... -By Vernon Fane Norwegian Autobiography, and Life in Norfolk Conflict in France Death in Wyoming /Esop Refold The Latest Peter Cheyney IN the past few months many good and moving books have come out of Norway, and the latest of these is called RETURN TO HAPPINESS (Mac millan. 18s.), the autobio graphy of another kind of Norwegian. Mr. j onas Liea lias, m common witn Ms leiiow- Norwegian ...

Published: Saturday 25 September 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1713 | Page: Page 30 | Tags: Photographs  Review