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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 

CINEMA CAMEOS

... . By C. A. LEJEUNE. THE most im pressive films I have seen in the past fortnight are both about war in the desert. One is British, the other Russian. Both, oddly enough, have numerical titles, The British film is NINE MEN (New Gallery). The Russian film is THE THIRTEEN (Tatler). Nine Men is directed by Harry Watt, the man who made Target for To-night and London Can Take It. Watt is one of ...

Published: Sunday 10 January 1943
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2269 | Page: Page 8, 9 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

GRAVITY, GAIETY and GHOSTS: The Tragedy of Malaya; Mr. Price Among the Mediums; A Children's Book for Grown-Ups ..

... GRAVITY, GAIETY and GHOSTS The Tragedy of Malaya Mr. Price Among the Mediums A Children's Book for Grown'Ups A Discursive Dachshund -By Vernon Fane THE Malayan campaign, and the loss of Singapore, re mains one of the greatest tragedies of the last three years of war; possibly the greatest defeat that British arms have suffered during that time. Mr. Ian Morrisons MALAYAN POSTSCRIPT (Faber. Ss. ...

Published: Saturday 09 January 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1614 | Page: Page 30 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

New Shows in Town

... by Playbill THE theatre has probably never meant so much, both in London and the 'provinces, as it does to-day. That is not to say that every theatrical produc- tion is full of meaning; many of them, in- cluding some of the most popular, mean precious little. But there is a probably unprecedented boom, and the living drama, from Shakespeare to pantomime, is being supported (most London ...

THE LITERARY LOUNGER

... . By L. P. HARTLEY. DESTINATION CHUNG KING is the auto biography of a Chinese lady, born in Honan and bred in Peking, who, in 1937, when barely twenty, came to London to study obstetrics. Her natural bent was for literature, but Science was our god, a beneficent god to make of China a rich and happy nation. At that time she was a pacifist, and had many bitter arguments with her childhood ...

Published: Wednesday 13 January 1943
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1732 | Page: Page 20 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

CINEMA CAMEOS

... . By C. A. LEJEUNE. IT is so pleasant to watch those ex cellent artists. Gaby Morlay, Michel Simon, Eric von Stroheim and the rest at work again, that few people will grumble if the new French film at Studio One, DERRIÈRE LA FAÇADE, is not arranged quite as impeccably as their talents merit. Derriere la Facade was in pro duction when the war broke out. It was actually showing in Paris when ...

Published: Wednesday 13 January 1943
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2181 | Page: Page 8, 9 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

THE NEW LONDON PLAYS

... Reviewed by PHILIP PAGE The most important novelty is The Petrified Forest, at the Globe Theatre, which comes from America, where it had a long run. Mr. Robert Emmett Sherwood has never written a bad play yet, and this is almost (but, to my mind, not quite) his best. It deals with gangsters yet they are only incidental (though they shoot the hero dead), and it is not gangster drama, but a ...

Published: Saturday 09 January 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 627 | Page: Page 28 | Tags: Review 

The Theatre: Cinderella (Stoll)

... By Horace Horsnell Cinderella (Stoll) PANTOMIME, like beer, is a wonderful leveller. It removes inhibitions from both sides of the footlights, and absolves actors and audience alike from taking themselves too seriously. It has rhyme, but little reason, and is no respecter of persons. Kings are of less account than commoners; licence is the order of the state. The fabric of the story it tells ...

Published: Wednesday 13 January 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 893 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

THE LITERARY LOUNGER

... . By L. P. HARTLEY. THE categories into which novelists can be divided are manifold, and if they are seldom very water tight or precise, at any rate they clear the ground and make a basis for discussion. The oldest, the best-known and, on the whole, the most useful of these categories, the romantic and the realistic, for many years divided fiction into two camps. Romance and realism are ...

Published: Sunday 10 January 1943
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1715 | Page: Page 22 | Tags: Photographs  Review