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Cuddihy, John Murray
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Cuddihy, Michael
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Cuddy, `Edward
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Cugna, Catherine Mowry La
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Culbertson, Diana
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Culbertson, Ely
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Culley, Margaret Mulvehill
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Cullinan, Elizabeth
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Cummings, Frank Ernest Hill, George Shuster, J. Corson Miller, Constance Naar, Marion
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Cummings, Grace P.
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Cummings, James E.
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Cummings, Kathleen Sprows
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Cummings, Marion
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CUMMINGS, MICHAEL J.
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Cummings, William
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Cummins, Damian
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Cummins, Evelyn A.
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CUNNEEN, JOE
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Cunneen, Joseph
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Cunneen, Joseph E.
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Cunneen, Sal
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Cunneen, Sally
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Cunningham, Charles
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CUNNINGHAM, DAN
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Cunningham, David S.
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Cunningham, Doris
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Cunningham, Francis Xavier
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Cunningham, J. V.
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Cunningham, James B.
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Cunningham, James F
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Cunningham, James F.
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Cunningham, James P
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Cunningham, James P.
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The Screen
(April 1938)
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666 The Commonweal April 8, 1938 The PIq and Screen All the Living A FEW years ago a producer who presented a play about lunatics in a lunatic asylum would probably have been judged a candidate...
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The Screen
(April 1938)
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636 The Commonweal April I, 1938 The Play and Screen Prologue to Glory THIS is a play which will arouse both enthusiasm and regret. The enthusiasm will be caused by several things. In the first...
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The Screen
(March 1938)
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6o8 The Commonweal March 25, 1938 The Play and eS°ereen Save Me the Waltz PERHAPS it is that the subject of dictators is too burning a one to submit to romantic treatment, or perhaps the...
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The Screen
(March 1938)
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March 18; 1938 The Commonweal 581 The Play and Screen Amelia Goes to the Ball " AMELIA GOES TO THE BALL" is a little opera by a new composer which will probably stay in the operatic repertory....
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The Screen
(March 1937)
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554 The Commonweal March 1I, 1938 The Play and Screen Wine of Choice WINE OF CHOICE" seems almost a parody of Mr. Behrman's two last plays, "Rain from Heaven" and "End of Summer." It contains the...
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The Screen
(March 1938)
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524 The Commonweal March 4, 1938 The Play and &teen Murder in the Cathedral GILBERT MILLER and Ashley Dukes are to be felicitated on bringing back T. S. Eliot's play to America and giving its...
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The Screen
(February 1938)
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496 The Commonweal February 25, 1938 The Ray and &teen Our Town HOW MUCH the success of Thornton Wilder's play HOW due to its stunt quality, plus admirable acting, would be difficult to...
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The Screen
(February 1938)
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468 The Commonweal February 18, 1938 The Ravi and &teen Bachelor Born T T HOSE who enjoy Punch will enjoy "Bachelor Born"; many others will enjoy it who never read Punch but do read the New...
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The Screen
(February 1938)
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440 The Commonweal February II, 1938 The Play and Screen Shadow and Substance AT ONCE bitter and tender, of the things of the spirit and the things of the world, "Shadow and Substance" is the...
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The Screen
(February 1938)
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414 The Commonweal February 4, 1938 The Ptavj and _Screen One Third of a Nation THE FEDERAL THEATRE PROJECT'S "Living Newspaper" has at last produced something not only interesting dramatically...
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The Screen
(January 1938)
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386 The Commonweal January 28, 1938 The Play and Screen Father Malachy's Miracle THE ANNOUNCEMENT by the Catholic Theatre Movement that it has removed "Father Malachy's Miracle" from the B list...
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The Screen
(January 1938)
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358 The Commonweal January 21, 1938 The Play and Screen Time and the Conways M R. J. B. PRIESTLEY is primarily a novelist, but of late he has been having his fling at the theatre with more or...
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The Screen
(January 1938)
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January 14, 1938 The Commonweal 327 The Play and _S'ereen Tle Shoemakers' Holiday THOMAS DEKKER'S "The Shoemakers' Holiday," first acted in 1600 before "The Queenes Most Excellent Majestie on New...
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The Screen
(January 1938)
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300 The Commonweal January 7, 1938 The Play and &teen Three Waltzes THOSE who pride themselves on being always up to the minute will probably not like "Three Waltzes." It has no social...
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The Screen
(December 1937)
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272 The Commonweal December 31, 1937 The Play and 5creen Drama at Inish LENNOX ROBINSON'S comedy was given here several years ago by a company recruited in New York. It was played then under the...
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The Screen
(December 1937)
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244 Tice Commonweal December 24, 1937 The Play and -5creen Cornelia Otis Skinner W HEN a few months ago a well-known critic chose as the four leading actresses of the American stage Katharine...
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The Screen
(December 1937)
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220 The Commonweal December 17, 1937 The Plat and Screen Barchester Towers HAD THOMAS JOB been more imbued with the spirit of Anthony Trollope and less desirous of writing something merely...
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The Screen
(December 1937)
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I 2 The Commonweal December to, 1937 * A Distinguished Gift! "THE MOST DISTINGUISHED NON-FICTION BOOB OF THE YEAR." —American Booksellers The FLOWERING of NEW ENGLAND now available in two new...
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The Screen
(December 1937)
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16o The Commonweal December 3, 1937 the Play and &Teen Julius Caesar I N THE production of "Julius Caesar" as the opening play of the new Mercury Theatre, Orson Welles once more proves himself...
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The Screen
(November 1937)
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132 The Commonweal November 26, 1937 The Play and S'ereen Father Malachy's Miracle THE LOVERS of Bruce Marshall's delightful novel —and who has read it and not loved it ?—heard with more than...
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The Screen
(November 1937)
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106 The Commonweal November 19, 1937 The Play, and Screen I'd Rather Be Right I N THE Kaufman-Hart-Hart-Rodgers musical, George M. Cohan makes President Roosevelt good-hearted but slightly...
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The Screen
(November 1937)
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78 The Commonweal November 12, 1937 The Flay and Screen Amphitryon 38 W HATEVER Alfred Lunt and Lynne Fontanne do is done with gusto, vitality and verve. They are two players unique in the...
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The Screen
(November 1937)
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48 The Commonweal November 5, 1937 The Play and Screen Angel Island W HEN George Abbott produces and directs a play one may be sure that it will be workmanlike in construction and fast moving in...
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The Screen
(October 1937)
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20 The Commonweal October 29, 1937, The Play and Screen The Abbey Theatre Players THE ABBEY PLAYERS are with us again, minus it is true the inimitable Barry Fitzgerald, but none the less welcome...
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The Screen
(October 1937)
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The Play and Screen Stand-In WALTER WANGER'S production of "Stand-In," based on Clarence Budington Kelland's Saturday Evening Post story, and written with much originality by Gene Towne and...
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The Screen
(October 1937)
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The Play and Screen The Bride Wore Red METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER asserted that it "lavished gold" to produce "The Bride Wore Red" from Ferenc Molnar's "Girl from Trieste." The superb Tyrolean and...
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The Screen
(October 1937)
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The Play and Screen Victoria the Great ENGLAND'S motion picture success on this side has been comparatively unimportant, despite the heroic efforts of her producers, particularly in the past...
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The Screen
(August 1937)
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August 27, 1937 The Commonweal 423 The Play and Screen Age Twenty-two IN HIS address last week at the close of the Mohawk Valley Drama Festival, Mr. Charles Coburn declared that our stars...
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The Screen
(August 1937)
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The Commonweal August 13, 1937 The Screen By JAMES P. CUNNINGHAM Stella Dallas OLIVE HIGGINS PROUTY'S famous novel of mother love and sacrifice is the subject of the first of a series...
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The Screen
(August 1937)
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The Commonweal 368 August 6, 1937 The Screen By JAMES P. CUNNINGHAM Zamboanga THE NEWEST of the far-away tribal films covers that very infrequently photographed portion of the Malay...
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The Screen
(July 1937)
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July 30, 1937 The Commonweal 347 The Play and Screen The Federal Theatre Project THAT the Federal Theatre Project has been a disappointment artistically is to put it mildly; that it has...
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The Screen
(July 1937)
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The Screen By JAMES P. CUNNINGHAM Knight without Armour THE BRITISH CINEMA may well be proud of Alexander Korda's contribution to James Hilton's novel, which, despite some sharp...
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The Screen
(July 1937)
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King Solomon's Mines GAUMONT-BRITISH PICTURES, of London, have given Sir Rider Haggard's famous story a spectacular production, establishing one of the largest locations in recent motion...
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The Screen
(July 1937)
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The Screen By JAMES P. CUNNINGHAM The Road Back SIGNIFICANTLY, the Nazis' war-glorifiers already are threatening dire consequences to "The Road Back," when and if it reaches Germany or any...
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The Screen
(July 1937)
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A Day at the Races MERRIMENT by the Mad Marx Brothers means slapstick in the craziest kind of melange, conceived with story-line limitations purposely overlooked, in order to pursue the...
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The Screen
(June 1937)
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The Coronation in Color FOR THE first time in contemporary motion picture history, an international event of top headline importance and splendor has been photographed by the newsreel in...
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The Screen
(June 1937)
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216 The Commonweal June i8, 1937 The Play and Screen The Masque of Kings THE PERIL which a dramatist undergoes in the business of casting was never more perfectly exemplified than in...
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The Screen
(June 1937)
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i88 The Commonweal June ii, 1937 The Play and Screen Room Service ((JJ OOM SERVICE" is one of those knockabout X\. farces indigenous to America, and which Americans act, write and direct...
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The Screen
(June 1937)
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i6o The Commonweal June 4, 1937 The Pky and Screen Abie's Irish Rose THOUGH "Abie's Irish Rose" ran for five years in New York the present reviewer never saw it. It was to repair this...
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The Screen
(May 1937)
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132 The Commonweal May 28, 1937 The Play and Screen The Prize Plays THE CRITICS' CIRCLE has chosen Maxwell Anderson's "High Tor" as the finest American play of the year, and not only Mr....
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The Screen
(May 1937)
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IO4 The Commonweal May 21, 1937 The Play and Screen The Man without a Country WALTER DAMROSCH'S opera is founded on Edward Everett Hale's famous story of the man who cursed the United...
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The Screen
(May 1937)
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The Commonweal May 14, 1937 The Play and Screen Without Warning WHILE "Without Warning" is far from the best mystery play seen during the last few seasons it is the only one now on the...
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The Screen
(May 1937)
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48 The Commonweal May 7, 1937 The Play and Screen Babes in Arms ** ID ABES IN ARMS" is one of the gayest, most -D spontaneous musical comedies New York has seen in recent years. It...
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The Screen
(April 1937)
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20 April 30, 1937 The Play and <$creen Excursion VICTOR WOLFSON is a shrewd observer of the New York scene in its humbler manifestations. In his comedy he has placed on the stage a number of...
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The Screen
(April 1937)
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The Screen Captains Courageous WITH no advance notice befitting its magnificence, Rudyard Kipling's immortalization of Gloucester's hardy and courageous fishing folk thrills us with fine seascapes...
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The Screen
(April 1937)
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Seventh Heaven TEN YEARS ago Fox Films gave "Seventh Heaven" a production of inspiring quality, and it has since been remembered by a great many as one of the last outstanding plays of the silent...
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The Screen
(March 1937)
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The Screen Maid of Salem THE COLORFUL pages of early American history are intriguing and human when pictured as realistically, as vividly, as this seventeenth-century tale of the wild fury of...
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The Screen
(February 1937)
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Fire over England THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS turned attention for the moment from international intrigue to award to "Fire over England" its own cinema medal of honor for the year, acting by unanimous...
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The Screen
(February 1937)
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THE SCREEN The Good Earth "THE GOOD EARTH" is the motion picture's A first important presentation this year; it will remain important through this and many another twelvemonth, for it stands...
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The Screen
(February 1937)
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THE SCREEN Champagne Waltz A TARDY deviation is at hand in the formula that has been so strictly adhered to in conducting music for motion pictures. The distinction which heretofore has been...
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The Screen
(October 1936)
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617 The Play and Screen The Gay Desperado "THE GAY DESPERADO" is a desperately gay satirization of the machine-gun technique of American gangster films by good-natured swashbuckling Mexican...
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The Screen
(October 1936)
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560 In His Steps GRAND NATIONAL PICTURES makes its debut with the picturization of Charles M. Seldon's book, and thereby comes the resurrection of the old Pathe, which will not engage in...
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The Screen
(October 1936)
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The Play and Screen Dodsworth SINCLAIR LEWIS'S unsentimental chronicle of a sentimental ruins-and-tomb viewing American husband from the little town of Zenith in the States gives as excellent...
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The Screen
(September 1936)
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504 The Screen The General Died at Dawn HOLLYWOOD'S ablest observers feel certain that steadily, surely, the needle of Hollywood's production compass is swinging toward the East, toward China,...
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The Screen
(September 1936)
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487 The Play and Screen The Gorgeous Hussy MANY fine qualities flavor "The Gorgeous Hussy," a vivid play of human life that skilfully blends dramatic and romantic American fact with fiction,...
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The Screen
(September 1936)
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September 11, 1936 The Commonweal 467 The Screen The Last of the Mohicans STURDY, exciting, fighting dramatization of James Fenimore Cooper's semi-historical Americana, "The Last of the...
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The Screen
(September 1936)
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446 The Commonweal September 4, 1936 The Play and Screen Romeo and Juliet WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE'S "Romeo and Juliet" is accredited with having had more presentations on the stage than any...
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The Screen
(August 1936)
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407 The Play and Screen Mary of Scotland 66| IKE fateful stars, Mary Stuart and Elizabeth 1._d Tudor appeared in the sixteenth century to rule over two great nations in the making. They were...
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The Screen
(August 1936)
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The Play and Screen Anthony Adverse F ILMING of "Anthony Adverse" was preceded by no little speculation concerning the daring moral tones of substantial parts of the source novel by Hervey...
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The Screen
(July 1936)
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347 The Screen The Devil Doll THE MIGHTY interesting results accruing from Tod Browning's latest directorial effort bring conclusive evidence of the appropriateness of the title, "Master of...
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The Screen
(July 1936)
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328 The Play and Screen The Poor Little Rich Girl THERE are strong indications that her producers are proceeding strictly on the premise that no matter how much Shirley Temple there is in a...
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The Screen
(July 1936)
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The Screen The Case of Dr. Forbes THEATRICALLY, Frances Hyland's and Saul Elkins's original screen play is as intriguing as the implication of its title, straightforwardly unfolding a tale of...
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The Screen
(July 1936)
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287 The Play and Screen Hearts Divided THE FLUFFY Marion Davies's performance is all too reminiscent of the histrionics that might be expected from a student of high-school theatricals after...
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The Screen
(June 1936)
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246 Fury NORMAN KRASNA'S original screen play serves as a stirring and brutally frank indictment of mob hysteria of this day, of the kind that leads to tragedy from violence—in this instance,...
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The Screen
(June 1936)
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218 Cloistered "CLOITREES," from France, is a most unusual academic documentation, authentically recording, in a peacefulness that seems natural and a delicateness that is beautiful, the...
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The Screen
(June 1936)
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190 The Play and Screen Bullets and Ballots CROOKED politics and lawless banking are exposed under a hail of bullets and ballots. Admitting that the title is reminiscent of unadulterated...
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The Screen
(June 1936)
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160 Green Pastures VERILY a great contribution is made by the Warner producers to the art of the motion picture in completing with such satisfaction so courageous an undertaking as this simple...
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The Screen
(May 1936)
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132 The King Steps Out GRACE MOORE'S appearance in "The King Steps Out" is considerably more the personification of a gay and vivacious, even capricious, motion-picture heroine of the...
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The Screen
(May 1936)
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104 Dancing Pirate OLD SPANISH California, of the early 1800^, in the colorful days of the fighting dons and sweet senoritas, rises ablaze in glorious color in the first full feature motion...
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The Screen
(May 1936)
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76 The Play and Screen The Passing of the Third Floor Back THE WARM acclaim enjoyed for a quarter-century by Sir Johnston Forbes-Robertson's masterful portrayal of the inspiring play by...
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The Screen
(May 1936)
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48 The Plau and Screen Showboat OSCAR (THE SECOND) HAMMERSTEIN'S screen adaptation incorporates all of the melodious spirit of musical gaiety and charm that Miss Ferber's novel inspired in the...
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The Screen
(May 1936)
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The Play and Screen I Married a Doctor THE MIDDLE class living in America's small towns is no longer warped by the willing bigotry that caused Sinclair Lewis to write "Main Street" some twenty...
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The Screen
(April 1936)
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724 The Commonweal April 24, 1936 The Hag and creen Gilbert and Sullivan /lgain A S WE can't have the D'Oyley Carte Opera Company with us every season, it is with heartfelt pleasure that we...
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The Screen
(April 1936)
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698 T]ze Commonweal April ~7, ~936 HUGE STOCK OF GOOD SECOND HAND BOOKS Speeialls~ In Out-Of-Print Books Lists and Corresponden9 Solicited DAUBER & PINE BOOKSHOPS, INC. 66 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK...
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The Screen
(April 1936)
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664 The Commonweal April t o, 1936 find...
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THe Screen
(April 1936)
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636 T/ze Commonweal April 3, I936 T/w P[a / and 3creen Murder in the Cathedral A T LAST the Federal Theatre Project has presented a play worth while. Oddly enough it violates all the canons of...
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The Screen
(March 1936)
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March 27, 1936 The Commonweal 609 Smith...
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The Screen
(March 1936)
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580 The Commonweal March 20, 1936 Miss Joyce Carey,...
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The Screen
(March 1936)
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552 The Commonweal March 13, 1936 ageous,...
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The Screen
(March 1936)
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524 The Commonweal March 6,...
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The Screen
(February 1936)
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February z8, 1936 The Commonweal 497 any moral or...
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The Screen
(February 1936)
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468 The Commonweal February 21, 1936 Australian...
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The Screen
(February 1936)
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February 14, 1936 The Commonweal ...
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The Screen
(February 1936)
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414 The Commonweal February 7, 1936 Few plays of...
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The Screen
(January 1936)
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386 T/w Commonweal January 3 I, I936 PlW and Screen Russet Mantle M R. LYNN RIGGS has a certain flair for the theatre, and when he grows up will unquestionably use it to better advantage than...
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The Screen
(January 1936)
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356 The Commonweal January 24, 1936 The P/ag and dcreen
Mid-West aa~ ID-WEST" is a play of many admirable quali- lVl ties; it has atmosphere, a number of salty char- acters, sincerity, a...
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The Screen
(January 1936)
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330 The Commonweal January 17, I936 of...
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The Screen
(January 1936)
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The Commonwea[
January io, i936 3oI The P/a Screen every inch a woman. She has charm, she has will, she has dignity. She re-creates not only a monarch but an age. She is splendidly...
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The Screen
(January 1936)
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272 The Commonweal January 3, 1936 Belgian...
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The Screen
(December 1935)
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244 The Commonweal December 27, 1935 to go to Morris...
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The Screen
(December 1935)
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December 20, 1935 The Commonweal 21 B. ALTMAN &CO. The...
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Cunningham, James V
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Cunningham, James V.
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Cunningham, Lawrence
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Cunningham, Lawrence S
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Cunningham, Lawrence S.
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Cunningham, Lawrtence S.
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Cunningham, Nora B.
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Cunningham, Norah B.
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Cunningham, Philip A.
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Cunningham, Tames P.
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Cunningham, Vinson
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Cunningham, W.F.
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Cunningham, William F.
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Cuomo, Mario M.
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Cupich, Blase J.
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Curian, Waldemar
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Curley, Thomas
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Curley, Thomas E.
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Curley, Thomas F.
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CURNIN, MIRIAM
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Curran, Anne
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Curran, C.P.
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Curran, Charles A.
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Curran, Charles E
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Curran, Charles E.
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Curran, Constantine P.
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Curran, Cornelius P.
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Curran, David Francis
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Curran, John F.
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Curran, P.
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Curran, R. Emmett
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Curran, Robert E.
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CURRAN, T. M.
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Currier, Isabel
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Curry, David
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Curry, James E.
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Curry, Tom
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Curtayne, Alice
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Curti, Elena
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Curtin, Crimmins
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Curtin, William M.
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Curtis, Christine Turner
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Cusack, Cyril
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CUSEO, ALLAN
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CUSHING, DAVID
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Cusk, Rachel
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Cutler, Donald
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Cutler, Donald R.
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Cutter, John
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Cypriano, Joseph
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Cypriano, Joseph L.
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Czaia, Zach
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Czapski, Joseph
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