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Tatler, The

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The Tatler

Two Journalists

... Flanders, whose continual immorality brought her to so comfortable and respectable an end. And as Mr. Freeman points out in speaking of this book, Moll was the surname of the Royal Geographer (in fact a friend of the author's) who wrote a book about Flanders ...

Published: Wednesday 10 January 1951
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 757 | Page: 37 | Tags: Review 

at the theatre: The Fol-de-Rols (St. Martin's)

... which they illustrate in spectacle and dance, and notable among these set pieces are the Dresden Music Box, the title of which speaks for itself, and a number in which the whole company and the same number of marionettes combine in the gayest of dances. -Aniliuiiy ...

at the theatre: The Young Vic

... Portia, at her best in the trial scene. It is not her part, but she has a natural grace of movement and can speak verse naturally. The speaking of the verse was the chief fault of an otherwise admirable production by Mr. Glen Byam Shaw. The young actors ...

Published: Wednesday 31 January 1951
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 915 | Page: 12 | Tags: Cartoons  Review 

at the theatre: ''The Madwoman of Chaillot'' (St. James's)

... ragged finery, she is like a glorified maypole carrying a satyric face with the fixed expression of the Fool who knows that he speaks many a true word in jest. She is apparently as mad as a hatter; but all the poor people adore her and when she saves a would-be ...

Published: Wednesday 28 February 1951
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 868 | Page: 14 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

A Penny For A Song (Hay market)

... given to a blinded soldier needs more enchantment than it can draw from the words the lovers and their philosophic spectator speak. For these defici encies the author must answer; yet I cannot help thinking that the words, such as they are, would have a ...

Published: Wednesday 14 March 1951
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 765 | Page: 18 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

Under Two Flags

... purgatory. My father, who was very good, very serious, would never have been unfaithful to my mother and he had a charm when speaking to anybody that he could no more hide than the nose in the middle of his face. He hated to see his wife so unhappy, but the ...

Published: Wednesday 21 March 1951
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1601 | Page: 35, 42 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

at the Theatre: The Historical Cycle at Stratford

... study of kingship and of the two tvoes of Dersonalitv from which men have always chosen their rulers. IN the first act, so to speak, efficiency in the person of Bolingbroke triumphs over imagina tion. The second and the third acts show the limits that are ...

Published: Wednesday 11 April 1951
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 719 | Page: 14 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

Hand of Authority

... to have seen a psychiatrist. But this interesting profession, alas! did not exist in the seventeenth century. He could not speak until he was five years old, and his ankles were so weak that he had to crawl until he was seven. He had other physical defects ...

Published: Wednesday 11 April 1951
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1833 | Page: 36, 37 | Tags: Review 

Hectors of the Hoe

... doing in that rigout, he said. The man in purple replied: These are dark sayings. Scarcely do I understand you. But you speak the speech of the Children of the Stars, and you have among you a sweet musician. All such are welcome here. The Brethren ...

Priestley's Glorious Rag

... carrying brass cans of tepid water. There was an early whimsical sketch of a lift. There was much blowing and bellowing down speaking- tubes. Any meal taken up to a bedroom involved about a hundredweight of metal dish-cover. The latest drama and literature ...

Fantastic Family

... him, and his widow, dying in 1897, left Hertford House and its treasures to a country whose language she always refused to speak. But it is much easier to say what Sir Richard Wallace did, than to be certain who he was. He had acted as agent for the fourth ...

Published: Wednesday 23 May 1951
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1783 | Page: 36, 37 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

at the theatre: Mr. Christopher Fry's Festival Play

... a Biblical character. In these dreams each is seen through the sleeping thoughts of the others and each, in his own dream, speaks as at heart he is, not as he believes himself to be. The final dream changes to a state of thought entered into by all the ...

Published: Wednesday 06 June 1951
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 876 | Page: 16 | Tags: Cartoons  Review