Word: bows
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...other actors is that the men and women who take a different type of part each week are in no great danger of making a hit in one part and remaining in that role or roles much like it all his life. An actor who can make himself more bow-legged than Greeley Kelley, or can toe in more than Glenn Hunter, is supposed to be successful; but in reality he is merely grotesque. And he has to stay grotesque all his life. Charlie Chaplin is the only exception--he is a real artist...
...questing uncle of Gherardi's novel but to that once equally devastating blade, the gay, the cavalier, the verbose Mr. Arlen. A curtain--for at last his brief hour has been strutted on the stage of public fancy. The enfant gate of suburban London, the treasure of America must bow to the inevitable "what and what and then again", retreating with "that lovely lady" and her friends to the shades of an Anglo-Armenian oblivion. Like many even bonnier brethren he must watch the dust collect upon his once bright leaves while bastard epigrams evince a quick decay...
...Berry '27, who has been at three this fall, was put at bow, displacing J. R. Perkins...
Blue Crew--Stroke, Isham Carpenter; 7, A. G. Thacher Jr.; 6, J. H. McKesson; 5, Everett Addoms Jr.; 4, G. W. Brewster; 3, Dean Chamberlain; 2, Edward Dane; bow, R. O. Bishop; cox., L. H. Seiff...
White Crew--Stroke, Marton Cole; 7, W. L. Shearer; 6, C. H. Olmstead; 5, A. A. Houghton; 4, K. W. Hooker; 3, M. L. Bell Jr.; 2, F. P. Bennet; bow, J. W. Outerbridge; cox., G. S. Tiffany...