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P - Pc
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Pd - Pg
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Phalan, Timothy
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Phalen, Gerald B.
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Phan, Peter C.
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Phayer, Michael
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PHAYER, RICHARD
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Phayre, Ignatius
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Phclan, KaPPo
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Phelan, Gerald B.
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Phelan, Joseph McSorley, Gregory Feige, Georgiana P McEntee, John Gilland Brunini, Gerald B
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Phelan, Kappa
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Phelan, Kappo
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The Stage
(May 1950)
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on their own companions. But what makes Ford's film so wonderful, outside of his skilfully delineated characterizations and the stunning background scenery he always selects, is the...
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The Stage
(May 1950)
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and where she and her child are relaxing in comfort, comes the father of Barbara's illegitimate baby. He's the snake in this harmonious grass. Just at the time he blackmails Barbara and forces...
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The Stage
(March 1950)
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March 24, 1950 THE COMMONWEAL 629 within the next few months the need for more positive action will prove...
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The Stage
(March 1950)
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March 17, 1950 THE COMMONWEAL 607 Willie...
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The Stage
(March 1950)
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558 THE COMMONWEAL March 3, 1950 Mrs. Keith and Sessue Hayakawa as the colonel in charge of the Kuching prisons....
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The Stage
(February 1950)
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February 24, 1950 THE COMMONWEAL 535 Is I b1 b dill ~ 11111111111 III;I~!'II!li!!I''iu'll'! ~Ij~;lllll'1IIli~',IIII'II1111! III ''is'. I. .lil I„ I I I i;l,i...
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The Stage
(February 1950)
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February 17, 1950 THE COMMONWEAL 509 A further obstacle to their filling the role Mr. Mc- being to...
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The Stage
(February 1950)
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486 THE COMMONWEAL February io, 1950 Furthermore, we learn that the program of the Hun- garian National Theatre...
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The Stage
(February 1950)
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February 3, 1950 THE COMMONWEAL 463 later...
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The Stage
(January 1950)
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January 27, 1950 THE COMMONWEAL 437 Is it possible for such a movement-which al- ready claims a "zone of influence"...
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The Stage
(January 1950)
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414 THE COMMONWEAL January 20, 1950 ment and, where that was not possible, of reducing its But still the...
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The Stage
(January 1950)
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390 THE COMMONWEAL January 13, 1950 "Christopher Blake,"...
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The Stage
(December 1949)
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342 THE COMMONWEAL December 30, 1949 ring-do, "Prince of Foxes" will keep you entertained. thy, is explaining...
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The Stage
(December 1949)
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318 THE COMMONWEAL December 23, 1949 There is something in the laments of Father Reinhold and the Chilean...
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The Stage
(December 1949)
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December 16, 1949 THE COMMONWEAL 293 used government for evil ends it does not therefore fol- "Medea"? Or,...
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The Stage
(December 1949)
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December 9, 1949 THE COMMONWEAL 267 My cousin, raised in an overcrowded and poor section ion of moralists...
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The Stage
(November 1949)
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212 THE COMMONWEAL November 25, 1949 The National Maritime Union, under Joe Curran, is I do truly feel, at...
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The Stage
(November 1949)
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November 18, 1949 THE COMMONWEAL 179 to join the throngs who visited the collection of treasures from Vienna at the Tate. The...
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The Stage
(November 1949)
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November ii, 1949 THE COMMONWEAL Ib9 in the United States supported and defended the dis- a satirical...
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THE STAGE
(October 1949)
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October 28, 1:949 THE COMMONWEAL 69 and right are trying to saw them off. Does it seem the quilt. In...
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THE STAGE
(October 1949)
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October 7, I949 THE COMMONWEAL 63t A campaign is now under way by Church leaders to encourage more vocations to the priesthood. A large seminary, built at Government expense, has been opened...
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THE STAGE
(September 1949)
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606 THE COMMONWEAL September 3 o, I949 training school at Brussels for the required two-year program before leaving for the missions. After the first six months of her training she became an...
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THE STAGE
(August 1949)
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Augusta6, I949 THE COMMONWEAL 489 The Stage & Screen Westport Country Playhouse I T'S TOO HOT to think. It's too hot to drink, to dream, to collapse; or to guess, consider, argue, plot, plan or...
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THE STAGE
(June 1949)
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34o THE COMMONWEAL July 15, x949 Church. It was not fear but the fulness of his Christian commitment which prompted his thoughts, his words and his acts. And the poor knew it. During that cold...
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THE STAGE
(June 1949)
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June 24, 1949 THE COMMONWEAL 271 io% of the Austrian vote after World War I. At present, the People's Party opposes the idea of licensing a "fourth" party, while the Social Democrats favor...
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THE STAGE
(May 1949)
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May 20, 1949 THE COMMONWEAL 149 Santa Maria Maggiore) is similarly opened by a Car- | , dinal designated by the Pope. The end of the Holy Year II is observed when the Holy Doors are resealed the...
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The Stage
(May 1949)
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May O, x949 THE COM Screen ...... i I I Random Notes on the D.C.C. T O BE FRANK, it seems to me Mr. Wolcott G~bs so thoroughly dispensed with the fun-loving doings of the Drama Critics Circle...
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The Stage
(April 1949)
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April 29, I949 THE COMMONWEAL 69 The Stage & Screen South Pacific T HOUGH time and space ~his week do not permit a detailed discussion of the Drama Critics Circle's awards, it is still...
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The Stage
(April 1949)
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April 22, 1949 THE COMMONWEAL Everybody wiU understand that since ~ e business o f associating youth with age so that bot, h nay learn together must reckon with the inexperience of the young...
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THE STAGE
(April 1949)
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April I, I949 THE COM of the Church until the harvest day of Judgment, when the wheat and the chaff, the good and the bad, are separated, the latter to be burned in hell, and the former to be...
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THE STAGE
(March 1949)
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590 THE COMMONWEAL Symbols of Christ The Star o] Jacob "Baluam, the son o[ Beor, the man whose eyes are open has said: "I shall see Him but not now; I shall behold Him but not nigh; then shall...
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THE STAGE
(March 1949)
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542 THE COMMONWEAL March I I , 1949 The Japanese officer in command of the Southern Area postponed the capitulation of his forces more than a week, using all sorts of excuses in order to give the...
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THE STAGE
(March 1949)
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52o THE COMMONWEAL March 4, x949 private individuals' (Quad. Anno) . . . . Crude iron and steel and basic chemicals are the primary material without which a multitude of other...
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THE STAGE
(February 1949)
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February 25, 1949 THE COMMONWEAL 493 Workers could resent the indictment of UOPWA leaders by a Catholic priest as a strategic move, during a union election, against Communist union leaders....
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THE STAGE
(February 1949)
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47 2 THE COMMONWEAL February 18, I94 9 vinced of the moral justice of our position and hope that you will understand your own obligations." Despite full police protection, on the morning of...
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THE STAGE
(February 1949)
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February II, I949 THE COMMONWEAL 447 It has been especially difficult to obtain such documents for the earlier years of the college's history, from I859 to x9oo. If any of your readers have...
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THE STAGE
(February 1949)
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424 THE COMMONWEAL February 4, I949 to work with the Russians to insure that end. Finally, there was growing dissatisfaction with the somewhat stodgy, do-nothing record of the IFTU under its...
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THE STAGE
(January 1949)
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376 THE COMMONWEAL January 21, 1949 recall, if only for the sake of the record: a.) that Father Cronin's book has 'been praised very lavishly by the chaplain of one of the other ACTU chapters;...
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THE STAGE
(January 1949)
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January 14, 1949 THE COMMONWEAL Screen The Madwoman of Chaillot A LL IN ALL, I think it is just to say that a hopeless season has been saved by Alfred de Liagre's production of Jean...
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THE STAGE
(December 1948)
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3o6 THE COMMONWEAL December 31, x948 there would be representatives of organized labor, farm- ers, consumers, industrial management and Government." Finally, "the planning and administrative...
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THE STAGE
(December 1948)
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258 THE COMMONWEAL December I7, 1948 because Bridges is a Communist, or the next thing to it. And the tragic thing is that many of the men go along with this, and many others believe it when Ryan...
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THE STAGE
(December 1948)
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December io, 1948 THE COMMONWEAL z3I The Stage & Screen The Young and Fair G RAPHICALLY, there is mitker murder, rape, arson, nor mayhem committed oa the stage of the Fulton during its...
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THE STAGE
(December 1948)
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December 3, I948 THE COMMONWEAL I95 To a bishop friend Francis Thompson confided his belief that Wilfrid Meynell had "done more than any other man to educate Catholic literary opinion" in the...
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THE STAGE
(November 1948)
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I42 THE COMMONWEAL November 19, 1948 descent of atomic bombs produces a state of universal amnesia. Increased populations and the use of the machine are two factors which make it likely that men...
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THE STAGE
(November 1948)
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118 THE COMMONWEAL November 12, 1948 ScYeepl i
Life With Mother I THERE is anything the present Lindsay andF Crouse New Play" should convince us of, it will be that it was "Life With...
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THE STAGE
(November 1948)
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THE COMMONWEAL November 5, 1948 It IEi fun. And what about the toppling bicycle people? and The Stage & Screen that dancer who used to skate on the floor as thought it were the thinnest of...
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THE STAGE
(October 1948)
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THE COMMONWEAL October 29, I948 By HARRY Sylvester
Author o/ "Moon Gaffney" ALL YOUR IDOLS "There are fourteen stories in this book, and only a fire-bell or a scream in the next room...
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THE STAGE
(October 1948)
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I2 THE COMMONWEAL October I5, I948 What was it that sold a million pairs of long red underwear? Three little words: It Won't Itch~ A whole new approach. Thinking of others--of the other fellow's...
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THE STAGE
(October 1948)
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The Stage Magdalena IT IS impossible to understand why the movers behind this enormous oldfangled Operetta should have subtitled it "A Musical Adventure." The thing is so lavish, so overweighted,...
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THE STAGE
(September 1948)
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The Stage & Screen Sundown Beach IT IS DIFFICULT to understand why the ingeniously promoted Actors Studio-headed by Elia Kazan and Cheryl Crawford-should have chosen Bessie Breuer's play in the...
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THE STAGE
(July 1948)
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The Stage A Book Note IF THERE were any hope (and I do not say there is) for a change in the quality of our stage criticism, it ought to be effected at this time by Henry James. James's theater...
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THE STAGE
(July 1948)
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The Stage & Screen THE DUENNA A YOUNG organization called the "Lemonade Opera" is now offering its second season of opera in English at the Greenwich Mews Theatre and I would like to go on record...
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THE STAGE
(July 1948)
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The Stage Howdy, Mr. Ice SIX SEASONS of the Sonja Henie-Arthur M. Wirtz ice shows at Radio City's Center Theatre have unquestionably added something to the vocabulary of entertainment, if to...
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THE STAGE
(June 1948)
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The Stage & Screen Sleepy Hollow PERHAPS there is a good musical play buried some-where in the works of Washington Irving, but unfortunately the movers of this show have not managed to find it....
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THE STAGE
(May 1948)
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The Stage The Alchemist JOSE FERRER and the New York City Theatre Company have done it again. The production of the Ben Jonson comedy is extraordinarily well acted, well set, well conceived and...
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THE STAGE
(May 1948)
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The Stage & Screen Inside U. S. A. AT ONE MOMENT John Gunther does actually come "inside" this hit revue. This is when a hoosier monologist, Herb Shriner, wanders on in the midst of the hoopla,...
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THE STAGE
(April 1948)
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The Stage & Screen Lazarus Laughed FORDHAM UNIVERSITY'S presentation of the most difficult of early O'Neill is reason for gratitude in more ways than one. In the first place, only California (at...
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THE STAGE
(April 1948)
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The Stage Macbeth THEATRE INC.'S production of the Scottish Ttragedy is Stevenson-Shakespeare and as such, I think it's fine. Somehow or other, Paul Sheriff's designs and Norris Houghton's...
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THE STAGE AND SCREEN
(April 1948)
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The Stage & Screen You Never Can Tell When Shaw wrote Hesketh Pearson calling this comedy a potboiler, he was not far wrong I suppose; the honest truth being that even a Shavian potboiler is still...
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THE STAGE
(March 1948)
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The Stage & Screen A Temporary Island I LIKED Halstead Welles's play enormously and it seems to me that the Experimental Theatre is again serving a valuable purpose in returning this young...
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THE STAGE
(March 1948)
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566 The Stage & Screen The Hallams I DO NOT have a great deal of patience with Rose Franken's brand of naturalism. Without question her characters, in this continuation of her earlier...
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THE STAGE
(March 1948)
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545 The Stage & Screenwhere Stars Walk THE DUBLIN Gate Theatre seems to have hit a firmer stride with their third offering, a play written by one of their actor-founders, Micheal ...
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THE STAGE
(March 1948)
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520 The Stage & Screen The Old Lady Says 'No/' I WILL SAY at once that the repertory of plays imported by the Dublin Gate Theatre marks the management as the most deliberately innocent ever...
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THE STAGE
(February 1948)
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494 The Stage & Screen John Bull's Other Island I THINK this Shavian dissection of "the real old Ireland" makes a very good introduction to Edward Hilton's and Michael MacLiammoir's Dublin...
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THE STAGE
(February 1948)
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472 Four One-Act Comedies JOSE FERRER (& Co.) is providing four of the shorter Chekov pieces at the City Center and I think it's an intriguing evening. The bill consists of "A Tragedian in...
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THE STAGE
(February 1948)
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447 The Stage & Screen Look, Ma, I'm Dancin' IRAN into a large slice of midwinter mischance with this latest George Abbott musical. It seems to me the flu this winter is even sneakier than...
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THE STAGE
(February 1948)
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The Stage & Screen The Survivors I RAVIN SHAW and Peter Viertel, the authors, are not due to justify their title. Their play will have closed by the time this sheet hits the stands....
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THE STAGE
(January 1948)
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398 7 he Stage & Screen Power Without Glory THE MESSRS. Wilson and Shubert are displaying a fairly fascinating importation from England at the Booth. I think it is fascinating for a number of...
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THE STAGE
(January 1948)
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372 The Stage & Screen Skipper Next to God EVERY SO OFTEN I think it is possible for the most dogged critic to draw a blank, and I had better confess at once that Jan De Hartog's present...
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THE STAGE
(January 1948)
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Lamp at Midnight T HERE is much evidence of sincerity in Barrie Stavis's biographical piece on Galileo, presented as their first production by New Stages, Inc., a group of professional actors...
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THE STAGE
(December 1947)
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277 The Stage & Screen Trial by Fire IT SEEMS to me that George H. Dunne's plain documentary concerned with the destruction of a Negro family, about which he published several outright...
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THE STAGE
(December 1947)
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254 The Stage & Screen A Streetcar Named Desire THE appearance of a playwright—and I mean exactly that honorable term—on Broadway is cause for reflection as well as rejoicing Tennessee...
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THE STAGE
(December 1947)
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226 The Stage & Screen dntony and Cleopatra ONE SENSES such honesty of intention, plus generosity and an admirable selection of talents, when confronted by this Sornell-McClintic production,...
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THE STAGE
(December 1947)
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196 The Stage & Screen Eastward in Eden I SUPPOSE one should admit the possibility of a play based on such a life as Emily Dickinson's. One ought to be able to contemplate a play about...
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THE STAGE
(November 1947)
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The Stage & Screen Edith Piaf MISS PIAF'S reputation as chanteuse has preceded her across the Atlantic and I think there is small question that she is something to see and hear,...
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THE STAGE
(November 1947)
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The Stage & Screen An Inspector Calls A STRANGE WEEK, with two period pieces of preA cisely the same date, plus one translated fantasy of a genre which I think can never be entirely...
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THE STAGE
(November 1947)
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The Stage & Screen Medea IT IS necessary to say at once that Robinson JefEers's "free adaptation" of Euripides has resulted in an astonishing collaboration: a great performance. If...
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THE STAGE
(October 1947)
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7~ THE COMMONWEAL October 31 , 1947 point. I had never seen the book. I had ordered it on the strength of its reviews in reputable journals. Or been sent it as a present from the United...
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THE STAGE
(October 1947)
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October 24, 1947 THE COMMONWEAL II III The Stage & Screen II I ,-II @ im Man And Superman M AURICE EVANS and Company ar~ delivering the comedy portion of Shaw's "cerebral caper," an...
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THE STAGE
(October 1947)
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I6 THE COMMONWEAL October I7, I947 i i a circumstance which certainly seems somewhat mud-The Stage & Screen dled to me. However, there is one very interesting phenomenon, embraced by the...
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THE STAGE
(October 1947)
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622 THE COMMONWEAL October i o, 1947 are of a very humble condition. Yet this boy has become a writer and a well...
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THE STAGE
(September 1947)
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October 3, 1947 THE COMMONWEAL 597 of these areas as well as the more dignified interviews with Nehru, Gandhi, Jinnah and...
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THE STAGE
(September 1947)
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September i 9, 1947 THE COMMONWEAL 553 so, recruitment will have to continue for a number of years yet if the...
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THE STAGE
(August 1947)
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August 29, 1947 THE COMMONWEAL 47 criminal or punishable. When the French trials first started we formulated a "law" o f...
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THE STAGE
(August 1947)
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454 THE COMMONWEAL August 22, 1947 conquering the infectious diseases which in years original, for...
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THE STAGE
(August 1947)
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August I, 1947 THE COMMONWEAL ...
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THE STAGE
(July 1947)
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310 THE COMMONWEAL July 11, 1947 Franco regime makes communism certain one cannot avoid ...
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THE STAGE
(July 1947)
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286 THE COMMONWEAL July 4, 1947 purpose like the good of souls? That will not take would -be...
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THE STAGE
(June 1947)
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216 THE COMMONWEAL June 13, '947 ...
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THE STAGE
(May 1947)
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May 30, 1947 THE COMMONWEAL i67 Chicagoan (on leave), I feel quite free to challenge the statement and to point out, in...
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THE STAGE
(May 1947)
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May 9, 1947 THE...
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THE STAGE
(July 1947)
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April 18, ig47 THE COMMONWEAL i "THE IRON PASTORAL"- Notre Dame, Indiana T...
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THE STAGE
(April 1947)
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The Stage & Screen Bathsheba JACQUES DEVAL's piece is so irretrievably silly, there is not, as far as I can see, the slightest excuse for its importation; not even the presence of James Mason,...
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THE STAGE
(April 1947)
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613 The Stage & Screen The Eagle Has Two Heads A CCORDING to his preface in the French edition, it was a consideration of certain historical events, plus a reflection upon the present state of...
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THE STAGE
(March 1947)
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The Stage & Screen The Chocolate Soldier I WILL say at once that this Del Bondio-Bartsch production of the Strauss operetta (originally drawn, of course, from Shaw's "Arms And The Man") is fresh,...
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THE STAGE
(March 1947)
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565 The Stage & Screen The Importance Of Being Earnest JOHN GIELGUD'S production of the second Wilde of the season verges on perfect, I think: as elegant and balanced as Cecil Beaton's "Lady...
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THE STAGE
(March 1947)
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539 The Stage & Screen Donald Wolfit's London Company MR. WOLFIT'S PLAYERS arrived with a most commendable wartime record and it is unfortunate that the plainness (accompanied, I am sorry to...
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THE STAGE
(March 1947)
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518 The Stage & Screen The Medium IT SEEMS to me that Gian-Carlo Menotti's small opera is a masterpiece, and while the high musical scene is not properly the timber of this column, I want to...
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THE STAGE
(February 1947)
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February 28, x947 THE COM what you think of what somebody else is doing; they want to know what you have to say for your- self, what you yourself propose to do about thi'n'~;think--" I can agree...
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THE STAGE
(February 1947)
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469 The Stage & Screen John Loves Mary 1 SUPPOSE the emotional complications besetting the returning GI will be occupying Norman Krasna as long as there is one single solitary benighted...
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THE STAGE
(February 1947)
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445 The Stage & Screen All My Sons A RTHUR MILLER has attempted and delivered a tragedy: time—now; place—a suburban backyard in an American town. The fable is fairly skilfully worked. The...
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THE STAGE
(February 1947)
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422 The Stage & Screen "If In The Greenwood . . ." AS THE OLDEST and, at present, the only working experimental theater in town, The Blackfriars deserves not only the interest, but certainly...
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THE STAGE
(January 1947)
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The Stage & Screen Street Scene IT WILL BE, certainly, its change in form which has so enlarged Elmer Rice's Pulitzer Prize play into the monumental—and often truly impressive—job it is....
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THE STAGE
(January 1947)
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375 The Stage & Screen Temper the Wind, THE MATERIAL of Edward Mabley's and Leonard Mins's play is important. And it is used this way. To the home of the chief manufacturer of a small town in...
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THE STAGE
(January 1947)
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The Stage & Screen Beggar's Holiday HERE'S A strange mess. Aside from the endless literary reminiscences surrounding its original success, I suppose the two most vital facts one can...
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THE STAGE
(January 1947)
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325 The Stage & Screen Androcles And The Lion IT IS TRUE the phenomenon of Shaw to music is an interesting one, one wonders how he would like it. Nevertheless, it is necessary to state that...
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THE STAGE
(December 1946)
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The Stage & Screen Years Ago A HALF dozen good actors, plus the most sophisticated cat I've ever seen, combine to make Ruth Gordon's new comedy completely charming. As readers of the...
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THE STAGE
(December 1946)
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The Stage & Screen No Exit AS A VEHICLE for the transient philosophy of "Existentialism," M. Sartre's piece is interesting; as a play, it is very well-knit indeed. Contrived as a long one-act,...
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THE STAGE
(December 1946)
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200 The Stage & Screen Joan of Lorraine A LL-AMERICA Week on Broadway, with three openings precisely written by three living playwrights, was interesting business indeed, and...
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THE STAGE
(November 1946)
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The Stage & Screen John Gabriel Borkman ITS IBSEN REVIVAL must steadily secure respect, as well as admiration, for the American Repertory Theater. The production is very very good indeed;...
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THE STAGE
(November 1946)
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I44 THE COMMONWEAL November 2z, I946 This is only an inference and conclusion. But how else can one interpret the silence and refusal to see the leaders of Estrada; the refusal to offer...
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THE STAGE
(November 1946)
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The Stage & Screen Present Laughter IT WOULD be nice to be able to skim something of rage, controversy, or even delight from Noel Coward's latest combination, but I'm afraid it's impossible. The...
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THE STAGE
(November 1946)
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The Playboy of the Western World HERE'S A thankless job for a reviewer. Indeed it seems so impossible to make a fair division between gratitude to the producers and criticism of the performance,...
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THE STAGE
(November 1946)
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this are, I think, dull and sometimes laughable. Perhaps the most inwardly interesting of all the transitional Elizabethan work, the play has long been cherished for its poetry and for a kind of...
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THE STAGE
(October 1946)
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Wagnerian sham-scheme. It is a truism that O'Neill wrights for actors. But I think here it is a truth that not only the outstanding skills of Dudley Digges, James Barton, Carl Benton Reid and Paul...
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THE STAGE
(October 1946)
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16 The Stage & Screen Ballet Theater THE AMAZING tristesse of the atmosphere at the Broadway where this young company has been dancing faultlessly for over a week, seemed mysterious to me....
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The Stage
(September 1946)
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September 2o, I946 THE COMMONWEAL 55I Communications CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTORS New Y.rk, N. Y. T O the Editors: I should appreciate the opportunity to pass on to the readers of "l'Hg...
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The Stage
(August 1946)
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38z THE COMMONWEAL August 2, i946 The Stage Scree Notes from the West I THINK it may seem fairly frivolous, trying to fit a small travelogue into this serious theater column, but nevertheless I...
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The Stage
(July 1946)
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July 5, I946 THE COMMONWEAL 285 departed, when working-class parties thought they could not get along without leisured-class leaders. M. L6on Blum with his comfortable fortune, his good looks...
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The Stage
(June 1946)
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z38 T H E I The Stage Screen COMMONWEAL June zl, x946 i] there, but I believe I will add that too, a.s being, somehow, perfectly Americanly funny. For Mr. Welles himself--Dick Fix, the...
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THE STAGE
(June 1946)
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I92 THE COMMONWEAL June 7, x946 i l l 1 Scree. II r ,,~ [ ' r ~ - " ~ T ' 1 " I . . . . . . i U Oedipus with The Critic THE Old Vic's bill, matching classic tragedy ,double with Sheridan s...
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THE STAGE
(May 1946)
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166 THE COMMONWEAL May 3 I, I946 the military is as of much concern to a trade unionist as it is to a teacher o r a poet. A revised Case Bill, whose parent was designed to hurt the labor...
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THE STAGE
(May 1946)
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I42 THE COM'MONWEAL Mty 24, I946 siblz to be decent. All the protective rails of morality ,have broken down. We have come to know face to face the abjectness of man. And I, and a}l here present,...
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THE STAGE
(May 1946)
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xi8 THE COMMONWEAL May I7, I946 Communications INDIA'~ NEED New York, N. Y. T O the Editors: Experts say that from IO to 2o,ooo,ooo people in India face certain death from starvation...
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THE STAGE
(May 1946)
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72 THE COMMONWEAL May 3, t946 Green Flames, the Christian Democratic patriotic forces, outnumbered the partisans of the actionists, the communism and the socialists three to one. Italy can...
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Mary of Magdala
(April 1946)
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622 The Stage & Screen Mary of Magdala IN ACCORDANCE with the Lenten season and with their established and serious reputation as an experimental theater, the Blackfriars' Guild is offering...
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Three to Make Ready
(March 1946)
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The Stage & Screen Three to Make Ready OPERATING, presumably, on the principle that a revue should offer a cast of bright performers running throughout an array of sketches and musical numbers,...
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To the Messrs. Harold Clurman and Elia Kazan
(March 1946)
|
March 15, 1946 THE COMMONWEAL 553 The Stage To the Messrt. Harold Clurman and El'tit Kazan: IN REFERENCE to your three-column advertisement, "To the Theater Going Public," run in the New...
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Antigone
(March 1946)
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March 8, 1946 THE COMMONWEAL 525 The Stage & Screen Antigone 17-ATHARINE CORNELL'S presentation of Lewis J&V Galantiere's adaptation of Jean Anouilh's adaptation of Sophocla's tragedy u...
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THE STAGE
(February 1946)
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479 The Stage & Screen Born Yesterday TO GIVE Garson Kanin his due as writer and director of this neat feat should not take too long. Here is an immediately satisfactory evening: expert...
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THE STAGE
(February 1946)
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456 THE COMMONWEAL February 15, 1946 The Stave & Screen Dream Girl IT WILL be no news to everyone that Elmer Rice's latest is funny, psychologically apt—esthetically an innovation, I...
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THE STAGE
(February 1946)
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February 8, 1946 THE COMMONWEAL 429 Communications THE GM STRIKE Pittsburgh, Pa. TO the Editors: Of the CIO strike against General Motors you say, "the outcome of the dispute will greatly...
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Hamlet: Note
(January 1946)
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The Stage & Screen Hamlet IT IS somewhat difficult trying to assess the Maurice Evans "Hamlet" in retrospect. Planned, as everyone knows, for military consumption in the Pacific, it...
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THE STAGE
(December 1945)
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December 28, 1945 THE COMMONWEAL 287 The Stage & Screen The French Touch IN A designer's week, I think George Jenkins's setting for this miniscule farce by Joseph Fields and...
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The Day Before Spring
(December 1945)
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The Stage & Screen The Day Before Spring AT ONE point in John C. Wilson's musical offering, everyone in the audience woke up: one of the protagonists was down-stage-front, reading the...
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THE STAGE
(December 1945)
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204 THE COMMONWEAL December 7, 1945 The Stage & Screen A Sound Of Hunting NDT HAVING read Harry Brown's best-selling novel, "A Walk in the Sun," I am not qualified to draw comparisons...
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The Rugged Path: Are You With It? State Of The Union
(November 1945)
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168 THE COMMONWEAL November 30, 1945 The Stage & Screen The Rugged Path THE HISTORY of this Playwrights' Company production by Robert E. Sherwood, starring Spencer Tracy, was so much in...
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THE STAGE
(November 1945)
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The Stage & Screen The Secret Room AS ITS title suggests, Robert Turney's present offering is a melodrama entirely dependent upon architectural device, and while it seems to me that the...
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THE STAGE
(November 1945)
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69 The Stage & Screen The Assassin IRWIN SHAW'S picture of the Darlan murder, the fabulous Algerian scene, was seriously disappointing. The play's structure was weak: its action seemed...
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THE STAGE
(October 1945)
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17 The Stage & Screen Carib Song THERE IS no question but that there are nuggets of excellence contained in Katherine Dunham's serious musical play of the West Indies, but unfortunately...
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THE STAGE
(October 1945)
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.The Stage & Screen The Ryan Girl AS THIS is extinct star-stuff, one does not know whether to run a review under the play's title, or June Havoc's neon name. But since Miss Havoc is, by virtue of...
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THE STAGE
(September 1945)
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576 THE COMMONWEAL September 28, 1945 The Stage & Screen Boy Who Lived Twice A WEEK of horrors—two of which I was not urged to attend—and the third which can only sadly be called a long-term...
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THE STAGE
(September 1945)
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September 2 I , 1945 THE COMMONWEAL 553 The Stage & Screen Mr. Strauss Goes To Boston LARGE lemon. Indeed I should say the only commendable fact connected with Felix Brentano's present offering...
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THE STAGE
(August 1945)
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August 3, 1945 THE COMMONWEAL 381 The Stage & Screen Nazimova NAZIMOVA died Friday, July thirteenth, in Holly- wood, and I want especially to mark this in this column, not only out of news and...
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THE STAGE
(June 1945)
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262 THE COMMONWEAL June 29, 1945 are the only healthy people we have seen in Europe. But we have seen released prisoners rush for our garbage pails for food. We have seen their terribly starved...
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THE STAGE
(June 1945)
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June 22, 1945 THE COMMONWEAL 239 The Stage & Screen Concert Varieties I THINK if I were more learned in the history of the 1 great days of vaudeville, I would be better able to assess its...
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THE STAGE
(June 1945)
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June 8, 1945 THE COMMONWEAL 191 Foxhole in the Parlor THE Return of the Soldier is the theme Elsa Shelley is currently concerned with, but I cannot say her play builds from journalism into...
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THE STAGE
(May 1945)
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May II, 1945 THE COMMONWEAL 93 was probably before your time like diabolo and Bilboquet and mumbledypeg—and it is always the same sea, only it isn't a sea until the first man set foot on it or put...
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THE STAGE
(May 1945)
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May 4, 1945 THE COMMONWEAL 71 All the singing is excellent, clearly enunciated, and I thought the music memorable. I particularly liked the arrangements—the orchestrations are by Don Walker—with...
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THE STAGE
(April 1945)
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16 THE COMMONWEAL April 20, 1945 EDDIE DOWLING and LOUIS J. SINGER present LAURETTE EDDIE TAYLOR DOWLING hi THE GLASS MENAGERIE a new play by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS with JULIE HAYDON and ANTHONY...
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The Barretts of Wimpole Street-You Can't Take It With You
(April 1945)
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648 THE COMMONWEAL April 13, 1945 The Stage & Screen The Barretts of Wimpole Street MISS CORNELL'S revival of the memorable Besier piece, having traveled the European War Theater from...
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Kiss Them for Me-The Deep Mrs. Sykes-The Firebrand of Florence
(April 1945)
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624 THE COMMONWEAL April 6, 1945 The Stage & Screen Kiss Them for Me ADAPTED from a novel 1 haven't read—"Shore Leave" by Frederic Wakeman—Luther Davis's play was a disappointment In a...
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THE STAGE
(March 1945)
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March 30, 1945 THE COMMONWEAL 589 The Stage & Screen Foolish Notion HAVING composed this time a psychological primer in combination with the "Oxford Book of English Verse," there is not...
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And Be My Love
(March 1945)
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The Stage & Screen 516 And Be My Love WHILE it is very nice to have Walter Hampden back among us, and while it must be very nice for him to be playing an over-playing actor as he does in...
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The Stage
(March 1945)
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The Stage & Screen The Stranger and Signature THE WEEK deliveres two offerings beginning with an S (just like in lemon) and why on earth they weren't twisted together and stored away somewhere...
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Hope For The Best-One Man Show-An Open Letter To Noah Beery
(February 1945)
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The Stage & Screen Hope For The Best WILLIAM McCLEERY'S play goes something like this: a Connecticut columnist who has amassed eleven million readers by writing of the joys of life in Indiana...
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THE STAGE
(February 1945)
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448 THE COMMONWEAL February x6, 1945 colleges packed with the children of our war-rich, it is time that Negroes with the means and in-fluence call a halt to the age of glamor. It is hoped that our...
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THE STAGE
(February 1945)
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The Stage & Screen The Tempest THIS IS a nice enchantment. In spite of the fact that its English is pronounced six ways for each pentameter (the accents progress from the...
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THE STAGE
(February 1945)
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396 THE COMMONWEAL February 2, I945 production growth. Further, that very competi- tion has stimulated growth. All indications, however, point toward a solu-tion in a different form in Great...
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THE STAGE
(January 1945)
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The Stage Sophia OFF, after a week at the Playhouse, there is small reason for remarking this late comedy adapted by George Ross and Rose C. Feld from Miss Feld's erstwhile New Yorker...
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Dear Ruth: Little Women
(December 1944)
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December 29, 1944 THE COMMONWEAL 275 Communications "BUILT IN USA" Alhambra, Cal. TO the Editors: The December 1, 1944, issue of The Commonweal publishes a review "-Built in USA—...
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Hand In Glove: Seven Lovely Arts: A Bell for Adano
(December 1944)
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December 22, 1944 THE COMMONWEAL 253 The Stage & Screen Hand In Glove IN SPITE of a toppling second-night performance, I was quite frankly impressed with Charles K. Freeman's and Gerald...
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THE STAGE
(December 1944)
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230 THE COMMONWEAL December I5, 1944 operatives to enjoin the co-operatives from acquiring the company on grounds substantially similar to those ad-vanced before the Commission. Temporary...
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THE STAGE
(December 1944)
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...
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In Bed We Cry: Sadie Thompson
(December 1944)
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174 THE COMMONWEAL December 1, 1944 The Stage & Screen In Bed We Cry ^lpHERE IS, I am sure, A Moral to be pointed in the A fact that Noel Coward should have got ...
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THE STAGE
(November 1944)
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November 24, 1944 THE COMMONWEAL 151 The Stage & Screen Robin Hood FOR THOSE to whom the de Koven music may bring agreeable memories, this production of R. H. Burnside's is, I guess,...
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Ballet International: Embezzled Heaven: Harvey: Sleep my Pretty One
(November 1944)
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November 17, 1944 THE COMMONWEAL 123 The Stage & Screen Ballet International HAVTNG acqu red the old Park Theater as a permanenc...
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THE STAGE
(November 1944)
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102 THE COMMONWEAL November 10, 1944 The Stage & Screen Violet ONE REASON, I suppose, for the tiresome overemphasis on precocious adolescence on our stage for the past few seasons...
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THE STAGE
(November 1944)
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November 3, 1944 T H E C O M M O N W E A L 71 The Stage & Screen The Visitor T WILL confess immediately that I spent the three acts ¦*- of Herman Shumlin's latest offering growing...
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Bloomer Girl: Ballet Theater
(October 1944)
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October 27, 1944 THE COMMONWEAL 37 The Stage & Screen Bloomer Girl INCLUDING at once a superabundance of conventional makeweight plus a good bit of flashing invention, the latter...
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THE STAGE
(October 1944)
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16 THE COMMONWEAL October 20, 1944 The Stage & Screen The Odds On Mrs. Oakley ABOUT lemons: the tattered condition of my passion for the affairs of the theater having gravely...
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THE STAGE
(October 1944)
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The Stage & Screen Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo A LAST MINUTE visit to the City Center to view the Moliere-Strauss-Balanchine he Bourgeois Gentilhomme proved that this company suffered...
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THE STAGE
(October 1944)
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While the Sun Shines HAVING committed the grave error of spending this Saturday examining the works of Evelyn Waugh, interrupted only by the playing of the Franck symphony on the air, I find I...
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THE STAGE
(September 1944)
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568 THE COMMONWEAL September 29, I944 such works connected with or affecting the carrying out of the treaty, and without regard to the established rights on the river of states and communities...
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THE STAGE
(September 1944)
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The Stage & Screen Last Stop SOMEWHERE during the rehearsals of this collapso, it seems to me it should have occurred to someone to swing it, burlesque the entire business, and thereby earn a...
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THE STAGE
(September 1944)
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Anna Lucasta HERE, with a play to estimate as well as a performance (singular circumstance in any recent season), I earnestly regret not having seen Philip Yordan's piece in its original...
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THE STAGE
(September 1944)
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The Stage & Screen Song of Norway WRUNG in to the strains of "Ich Liebe Dich," it is safe to say that the season has arrived with this large offering of Edwin Lester's—an operetta based on the...
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THE STAGE
(August 1944)
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Catherine Was Great MAE WEST and her prowl through a long long million evening. With art. It will hardly be necessary to remind anyone over twelve years of age of this actress's especial...
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THE STAGE
(August 1944)
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The Stage & Screen Life with Father IN THESE DAYS of the dog, I was truly grateful to the Serlin management for its invitation to drop into the Empire to investigate the latest "Father" and...
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THE STAGE
(July 1944)
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The Stage Ten Little Indians TEN TIMES—and I may add with creaks and joints —Death coils to strike at the Broadhurst these evenings. Agatha Christie's arrangement in paranoia is nothing if not...
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THE AMEN CHILD (Verse)
(July 1944)
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The Amen Child The Amen child along the cold, As the bird hurleth up the dawn, Hurries the hills. The cold the cold Burns them, the stones he enters on (Now bow) to stand then kneel then...
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THE STAGE
(July 1944)
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Hats Off To Ice IT IS obvious that the new Ice Revue at the attractive Center Theater is new: costumes and mise en scene look fresh and crisp, and the performers look interested. As this is...
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THE STAGE
(June 1944)
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The Stage & Screen Broken Hearts of Broadway IT WOULD BE interesting to know something about the Central Opera House way up east on Sixty-Seventh Street. Why it is called "Central" for...
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THE STAGE
(June 1944)
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The Stage & Screen That Old Devil FT! HERE was of course only one thing going on last X week—the Invasion of France—and for once, I wish I were a journalist rather than a weeklyist so that I...
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THE STAGE
(June 1944)
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156 THE COMMONWEAL June 2, 1944 The Stage & Screen Dream With Music NIGHTMARE With Notes. The playbill stars Vera Zorina, features Joy Hodges and Ronald Graham, and otherwise numbers...
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EN L'AIR
(May 1944)
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En L'Air KAPPO PHELAN THE New York City Center has approximately twenty-seven hundred seats and during recent weeks—during the performances of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo—it seemed to me...
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THE STAGE
(May 1944)
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The Stage € Screen Pick-Up Girl THE FIRST THING to tell you about this play is in the nature of a warning: it is neither for the squeamish nor for the sniggering. Unquestionably a number of...
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THE STAGE
(May 1944)
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The Stage & Screen Sheppey W SOMERSET MAUGHAM subtitles his piece . "A Portrait." I should be inclined to call it a picture-puzzle with a good many pieces missing. Produced, 1 believe, some...
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THE STAGE
(April 1944)
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The Stage &* Screen Follow the Girls TO BEGIN with, this is an amplified show. In other words, as far as I am concerned, automatically a lemon. I don't know how most people feel about...
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THE STAGE
(April 1944)
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The Stage The House in Paris AFTER some hours of conjecture, contemplation, coffee and rage, I would like to concede at once that I am incapable of criticizing this play. For the trick is-if it is...
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THE STAGE
(March 1944)
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The Stage Jacobowsky and The Colonel POSING again the current carnival riddle-find the playwright-the Guild's third offering of the season quite simply calls for a drama detective rather than a...
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THE STAGE
(March 1944)
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The Stage & Screen Thank You, Svoboda ADAPTED from the novel by John Pen, the early closing of Milton Baron's honest sleep-walker was predictable, although not perhaps the admirable dispatch with...
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FOUR INTERVIEWS
(March 1944)
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Four Interviews
YASUO KUNIYOSHI
OF COURSE if you paint the graceful ladies, the duchesses-or those who look like duchesses because they have been carefully fed and most carefully washed-you have to...
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THE STAGE
(March 1944)
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The Stage
Caukey
SECOND offering of the season of the Blackfriars Guild, this is written by Thomas McGlynn, directed by Dennis Gurney, set by Thomas Fabian and handled by an interesting cast. The...
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THE STAGE
(February 1944)
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The Stage Take It as It Comes BETTER NOT. A circuitous scheme involving a Jersey household built into a "Model Family" by a homemaking magazine and subsequently involved with gangster money, the...
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THE STAGE
(February 1944)
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The Stage
Mexican Hayride
THE PRODUCTION of Michael Madis Todd, this is, of course, galore. And it's another good example of the losing struggle between the things and the players which has become...
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THE STAGE
(February 1944)
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The Stage
The Cherry Orchard
IT IS difficult to sort out the credits and commitments behind this Chekhov revival. Produced by Margaret Webster and Carly Wharton, starring Eva Le Gallienne and Joseph...
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THE STAGE
(February 1944)
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The Stage
Storm Operation
- DON'T KNOW whether it is its futility or its seeming authenticity which is the most disheartening aspect of Maxwell Anderson's play. Adroitly swaddled in advance...
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THE STAGE
(January 1944)
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The Stage Our Town WITH THIS revival of Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize piece, the New York City Center precisely justifies its intention and provides a truly impressive, significant evening at...
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THE STAGE
(January 1944)
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The Stage & Screen Over Twenty-One HAND (I think) in glove, Ruth Gordon as playwright and George Kaufman as director have plotted the first comedy hit of the season, and very plain funny it is. A...
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THE STAGE
(January 1944)
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The Stage
Doctors Disagree
REGRETTABLY, Rose Franken's second offering of the season can only be regarded as the most perfect exhibition of vainglory on the list for '43. In the ordinary course of...
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THE STAGE
(January 1944)
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The Stage Listen, Professor! AN ADAPTATION by Peggy Phillips of a translation by J. J. Robbins of a play by Alexander Afinegenov (the late young Soviet playwright), this production is both serious...
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THE STAGE
(December 1943)
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The Stage From Pillar to Post THROUGHOUT this one, various characters keep mentioning the phrase "From Post to Post" where upon others seriously answer "Oh no, from Pillar to Post!" and...
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THE STAGE
(December 1943)
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The Stage The World's Full of Girls AN ADAPTATION of Thomas Bell's novel, "Till I Come Back to You," Nunnally Johnson's play emerges as a book laid lengthwise on the stage and arbitrarily divided...
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THE STAGE
(December 1943)
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The Stage Lovers and Friends SOMEHOW or other, this Cornell-Wilson presentation seems to have the air of an expensive revival rather than of the entirely new production it is. And I imagine one...
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THE STAGE
(December 1943)
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The Stage Winged Victory JUST in case you haven't heard, read about, or struggled with its around-the-corner box-office queue, this is to let you know that Moss Hart's tribute to the Army Air...
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THE STAGE
(December 1943)
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The Stage & Screen
The Innocent Voyage
IT IS difficult to call this more than a dogged adaptation of Richard Hughes' sensitive and disquieting story and I am at a loss to understand the motives...
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THE STAGE
(November 1943)
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The Stage Goodbye Again TEN YEARS AGO, the late great Osgood Perkins made this piece and it must be admitted that it's a fairly luke dish without him. Presented last week as the second of Mary...
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THE STAGE
(November 1943)
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The Stage Outrageous Fortune AS AN excuse for the most skillful acting I have seen this season, Rose Franken's play is certainly justified, although the play itself is a disaster. Neither morally...
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THE STAGE
(November 1943)
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The Stage & Screen Slightly Married 1 IMAGINE enough has been said in this and every other column concerning the amount of pregnancy which is motivating the drama of our day. A little earlier in...
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THE STAGE
(November 1943)
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The Stage Othello IN MANY WAYS this will be, I think, the most beautiful Shakespeare you have ever heard. The Theater Guild stars Paul Robeson in it and lists it as "The Margaret Webster...
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THE STAGE
(October 1943)
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The Stage Another Love Story SOMETIMES a weak play will give an imaginative actor a chance. Sometimes a good director can build a weak play into a production. Sometimes some small touch of...
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THE STAGE
(October 1943)
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The Stage One Touch of Venus BY THIS TIME, Mercury (the little man in elevator shoes), has undoubtedly let you know that Venus has appeared in Forty-fifth Street and that everybody is pleased. The...
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THE STAGE
(October 1943)
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633 The Stage & Screen September-Take It Away AS SOMETHING called "Hairpin Harmony" folded before I could reach the gate, I have no program notes to offer you this week, merely a pair of...
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THE STAGE
(October 1943)
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612 THE COMMONWEAL October 8, 1943 The Stage & Screen hand of Fame I'M SORRY Albert Bein should be guilty of this piece of...
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THE STAGE
(October 1943)
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THE COMMONWEAL October I, I943 on the part of the public is really Mr. Rice's main idea as regisseur of the evening. If so, it does seem rather a commonplace to point out to him that no...
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THE STAGE
(September 1943)
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The Damned and the Saved "It reminded him of the Greek Drama, where the actors know so little and the spectators so much." The Longest Journey. By Cuthbert Wright EDWARD MORGAN FORSTER is,...
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THE STAGE
(September 1943)
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536 THE COMMONWEAL September 17, 1943 The Stage\ & Screen Blossom Time ONE, evidently, of a series of innocuous revivals...
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SUMMER SONG (Verse)
(September 1943)
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508 THE COMMONWEAL September 10, 1943 Summer Song Me music make These sundry, The windy lake, The whispery tree. Where...
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SONG (Verse)
(July 1943)
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368 THE COMMONWEAL July 30, 1943 Song Rose ring Riot thy bell, Bird sing Sweetly to tell, Clear air Sky me the sun Ere fair Evening is won. Grass green Gaily thy face, Tree screen Secret a...
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PLEASE
(December 1938)
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Please By KAPPO PHELAN 1WANT to write of my dog. This is because he is seven years old. He was born in November seven years ago and now when I consider his four grey hairs and his bad leg,...
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OF DAVID
(October 1938)
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October 28, 1938 THE COMMONWEAL 5 Of David By KAPPO PHELAN I CALL him David since he is so brave. And he is very brave. For a...
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Phelan, Kappon
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Phelan, Kapppo
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Phelan, Keppa
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Phelan, Koppa
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Phelan, Koppo
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Phelan, Lawrence
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Phelan, Paul J.
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Phelon, Kappo
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Phelps
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Phelps, Reginald H.
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Phelps, William Lyon
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Philibert, Sister M.
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Philip, Sister M.
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PHILIPPART, DAVID
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Philips, Robert
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Philipson, Morris
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Philipson, Morris H.
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PHILLIPS, (REV.) RANDALL R.
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Phillips, Charles
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PHILLIPS, CHARLES WM.
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Phillips, John
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Phillips, Kevin
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Phillips, Mark
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Phillips, Maxine
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Phillips, Randall R.
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Phillips, Robert
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Phillips, Sgt. Charles W.
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Phillips, Vanna
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Phillips, William
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Philpott, Daniel
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Phlegar, Thelma
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Piana, George La
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Piatt, Hester Sigerson
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PICARD, MARIE
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Picard, Max
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Picard, Roger
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Pichon, Charles
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Pick, John
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Pickering, George
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Picton, James D.
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Picture?, Is God in This
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Piderit, John J.
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Piehl, Mel
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Piehl, Patrick Jordan, Robert Coles, Mel
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PIEPER, JEANNE
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Pieper, Josef
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Pierce, Gregory F.
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Pierce, Ross Edwards
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Piero, W. S. Di
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Pierovich, Andrew L.
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Pierson, Frank
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Pierson, Harriet W.
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Pierson, Robert
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Pietro, Thomas De
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Pietrogiovanna, Mari
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Pilati, Joe
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Pilip, Maire Nic
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Pilkington, Betty
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Pilliod, Barbara Kane
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Pilot, from the Boston
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PILSBURY, ANNE
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Pinault, David
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Pineda, E. R.
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Pineda, Gerald B Phelan, Morton Zabel, Max Jordan, Paul Crowley, Margaret Kendall, E R
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Pinkney, Dorothy Cowles
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Pinsker, Sanford
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Pintauro, Joseph
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Piper, Norah
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Pippenger, Nathan
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Piren, Frances Fox
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PiRoman, Rafael
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Pitter, Ruth
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Pjaff, William
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