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EARTH ABIDES

... victims astutely and leads us through some varied scenes in pub, office, flat, street, with confidence. His occasional plain speaking would have been called obscenity not long ago and embarrasses me, even if it will do nothing of the sort to younger readers ...

Published: Wednesday 02 August 1950
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1051 | Page: 32 | Tags: Review 

THE TAMING OF THE SHREW

... TAMING OF THE SHREW (Open Air Theatre) TIE that knows better how to I I tame a shrew, now let him speak. 'Tis charity to show. When Antony Eustrel speaks the lines under the floodlights at Regent's Park, we feel that no one can teach this Petruchio much ...

Published: Wednesday 02 August 1950
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 210 | Page: 23 | Tags: Review 

MISTER ROBERTS

... Jo Mielziner's vast set of AK 603, and he enjoys perching people in the unlikeliest places. All the actors have to do is to speak with forthright clarity. Tyrone Power, as Mister Roberts, is good at this so, too, are Russell Collins as the amiable Doctor ...

Published: Wednesday 16 August 1950
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 466 | Page: 21 | Tags: Review 

at the theatre: The Taming of the Shrew (Regent's Park)

... weather conditions. The Open-Air Theatre, naturally, is at its best at the end of a more or less perfect day, meteorologically speaking. Nature becomes the handmaiden of art when the setting sun imperceptibly gives place to cunning lighting of the raised sward ...

Published: Wednesday 16 August 1950
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 813 | Page: 12 | Tags: Review 

CAPTAIN CARVALLO

... light romantic role that James Donald touches off with much charm. Diana Wynyard, in the unlucky position of having no part to speak of the author seems to have forgotten her looks beauti ful and creates a part by force of personality. Thomas Heathcote, J ...

Published: Wednesday 30 August 1950
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 295 | Page: 27 | Tags: Review 

First Choice: THE SECOND MRS. TANQUERAY.; Haymarket

... modern comedy. Pinero's dialogue is here at its most rounded and ornate. The play calls for a special style of acting and speaking for a fullness, an authority to which the contemporary stage is unused. Personally, I do not find Tanqueray tiresome I find ...

Published: Wednesday 13 September 1950
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 449 | Page: 29 | Tags: Review 

ROSMERSHOLM: St. Martin's

... brings doom to Rosmersholm but she does not communicate it to us the secrets remain unshared, largely, I think though she speaks well because her range of English intonations is still limited. We have to look to the Rosmer, who is Robert Harris, grave ...

Published: Wednesday 13 September 1950
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 199 | Page: 29 | Tags: Review 

THE MINIVER STORY

... periodically clutches her heart and fumbles in her bag for tiny pills, we are left in very little doubt that she has, crudely speaking, had her chips. The nature of her illness is never clearly divulged she herself blames it vaguely on the war and after but ...

Published: Wednesday 13 September 1950
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 469 | Page: 32 | Tags: Review 

ACCOLADE

... waned, we can find ourselves as disappointed as though the gold we had been grasping had thinned to sifting dust. So it is (I speak for myself) with Accolade. While the play was in performance on the first night, I felt that it must all be urgent and exciting: ...

Published: Wednesday 27 September 1950
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 481 | Page: 23 | Tags: Review 

Bon Voyage!

... Italian Life and Landscape (Elek, i 12s. 6d.) you feel you are getting not so much the know-how as the S know-all, culturally speaking. He, too, agrees that you can shake off S yournativePuritanism in Capriand even become, to Italian eyes, a devil incarnate ...

Published: Sunday 01 October 1950
Newspaper: Britannia and Eve
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 369 | Page: 40 | Tags: Review 

at The Theatre: Journey's End (Westminster)

... dialogue, to date, but there are in fact mercifully few set jokes. The humour is of the unobtrusive sort that rarely, so to speak, sticks its neck out. And the sentiment is too simple ever to grow musty. It turns on the modesty of Osborne, the imperturbable ...

Published: Wednesday 18 October 1950
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 871 | Page: 28 | Tags: Review 

High and Wide

... world, the goal at which the novel may eventually arrive? There is no other similarity between these two books of which I speak; but from Strangers in Florida, by Bernard Glemser (Cresset Press, 10r. (id.) I take the quotation, He looked up and saw a ...

Published: Wednesday 25 October 1950
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1549 | Page: 50 | Tags: Review