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... : Reviewed by Trevor Allen WHEN I read a novel in these home-bound days I not only want a good story, I want to go places by proxy. Miss Katharine Brush's You Go Your Way (Cassell, 7s. 6d.) whisks me to the New York of cocktails, highballs, wisecracks, snappy dialogue, and divorce. Connie, you see, who wore a sleek black satin dress that loved her figure, had wilful ideas about marriage. ...

Back Room Drama: It Was a Question of Give and Take-What a Man Owes to His Country and What His Country Owes to Him

... Back Room Drama it Wr as a Question o/ i re mi tl Cake-- What a dan Oires to His Country antl What His Country Owes to Him By Barry Perowne WE get every imaginable war device submitted to us, the minister began, when his visitor was seated. Thou sands! Thousands! It's amazing, really, the number of people who think they've hit on the idea that will win the war! He paused for a moment, ...

Published: Thursday 01 July 1943
Newspaper: Britannia and Eve
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2526 | Page: Page 19, 20, 21, 67, 68 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

The New London Stage Productions

... Reviewed by PHILIP PAGE 'THE LISBON STORY.-- A theatre's tradi tion can be a trifle dangerous. Almost ever since I have known the London Hippodrome it has been associated with light-hearted, amusing shows (though it started its career as a cinema, than which, in my opinion, no form of alleged entertainment is more depressing). The Lisbon Story, its latest production, is not in the least funny ...

Published: Saturday 03 July 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 434 | Page: Page 28 | Tags: Review 

ORATORY THAT WILL LIVE FOR EVER: The Speeches of English Prime Ministers from Walpole to Churchill A Stirring ..

... ORATORY THAT WILL LIVE FOR EVER -By Vernon Fane The Speeches of English Prime Ministers from Walpole to Churchill A Stirring Diary of Malta A Tale of Wartime France Complicated Deaths and Loves THERE is a rich treasury to be found in a book that I have only started to study this week, and that I hope to keep by me for years as a reference and refresher course in English oratory. ENGLAND IS ...

Published: Saturday 03 July 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1700 | Page: Page 30 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

The Theatre: The Lisbon Story (Hippodrome)

... By Horace Horsnell The Lisbon Story (Hippodrome) LIBRETTISTS who seek to break away from hampering convention in their writing of -'books for musical plays need all the encouragement they can get. They are a kind of perpetual pioneers, faced with pitfalls and problems that might well daunt genius itself. Few are as fortunate-- or for that' matter as successful-- as Da Ponte, who adapted the ...

Published: Wednesday 07 July 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 847 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

STORIES OF THE WORLD OF TO-DAY: J. B. Priestley's New Novel: A Soldier's Escape from France; The Artistry of ..

... STORIES OF THE WORLD OF TO-DAY -By Vernon Fane J. B. Priestley's New Novel A Soldier's Escape from France The Artistry of Edward Seago A New Edition of Sir Banister Fletcher's Architecture THERE may be many views of Mr. J. B. Priestley as a radio speaker; there can be few divergent opinions about him as a novelist. There is a school of thought which sees in him the true descendant of Dickens, ...

Published: Saturday 10 July 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1729 | Page: Page 30 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

The Theatre: Living Room (Garrick)

... TU By Horace Horsnell Living Room (Garrick) ONCE upon a time there were two kindly old maids named Vicky and Deborah who lived with Molly, their niece, in a fool's paradise somewhere up north. They were neither rich nor poor, but just com fortable. Their father had left, them a little house property for what they had fondly assumed was life. And since Molly, their only relative, was an orphan, ...

Published: Wednesday 14 July 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 878 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

THE LITERARY LOUNGER

... . By L. P. HARTLEY. MODEST heroes are apt to be a little self- conscious about their modesty; one respects them for this, but all the same it may become an irritating trait, almost as irritating as boastfulness. une ot tne pleasantest features in the very pleasant character of Corporal Jack is his open- minded attitude towards his own achievements. We can not say that he was a hero malgre hti, ...

Published: Wednesday 14 July 1943
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1851 | Page: Page 22 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

CINEMA CAMEOS

... . By C. A. LEJEUNE. Hollywood takes a rest from propa ganda speeches, Commando raids and sinister little yellow men, and gives us the lighter side of war in THE MORE THE MERRIER (Gaumont) The piece, which is an acceptable diversion for us too, is concerned with America s nome iront and wartime Washington's famous housing shortage. In the national emergency, with eight girls to every man in ...

Published: Wednesday 14 July 1943
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2172 | Page: Page 8, 9 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

The New London Stage Productions

... Reviewed by PHILIP PAGE THE MASTER BUILDER.-- Has any dramatist ever written a more baffling play than this? Does the keenest student of the high-brow drama know what it is driving at? Did Ibsen himself really know what he was driving at? As a tale it is comparatively simple --about a bad-tempered architect, jealous of the rising generation, with a wife depressed because her two babies had ...

Published: Saturday 17 July 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 492 | Page: Page 30 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

The Theatre: The Russians (Playhouse)

... By Horace Horsnell The Russians (Playhouse) A HUNDRED years separate the writing of that lovely play, A Month in the Country, from that of this heroic contemporary melodrama; and though they are both Russian, they have as little in common as peace and war. For whereas Turgenev approaches his theme romantically, and handles it as a poet, Konstantin Simonov, author of The Russians, writes as a ...

Published: Wednesday 21 July 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 866 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

INTERESTING FACTS AND POWERFUL FICTION: France is Still Full of Frenchmen; Charles Graves, The Compleat Home ..

... INTERESTING FACTS AND POWERFUL FICTION --By Vernon Fane France is Still Full of Frenchmen Charles Graves, The Compleat Home Guard The Progress of Simenon Rex Stout and James M. Fox in Classic Detection and Tough Fiction DURING the past year there have been two novels written by men who have understood, loved and respected the French people, and who have been able to portray them with all their ...

Published: Saturday 24 July 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1844 | Page: Page 30 | Tags: Photographs  Review