Word: brianing
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Cecil B. De Mille's latest brian child, "The Crusades," has just moved into the Majestic for an indefinite run with all seats reserved. It covers the first crusade from the time Richard of England agrees to fight for the Holy Land up through the fall of Acre and the peace with Saladin. Although Mr. DeMille's fame can hardly be said to rest on his lightness of touch, his brilliant handling of great masses of people and an obvious striving for authenticity more than make...
Donald Barker; R. H. Bennett, Jr.; D. C. Berizzi; J. S. Brian; M. G. Bullard; P. R. Clark, D. P. Coffin; J. R. Coolidge, Jr.; J. J. Costello, Jr.; F. W. Cusack; R. M. Derby, Jr.; D. R. Donovan; R. A. Dowd; M. S. Erlanger; M. C. Galassi; C. L. Geer; E. H. George; Lincoln Godfrey, Jr.; G. A. Hamilton; R. T. Haskell; M. S. Hough; Whitney Howland; W. D. Hubbard; G. E. Jones; J. E. Jones; C. C. Jordan; R. W. Kirk; C. K. C. Lawrence; R. S. Levy; C. S. McVeigh, Jr.; Malcolm McVickar; D. D. Malcolm...
...question of a possible marriage, the man who has set the hearts of a million women palpitating said, "I will probably marry again, once I get a divorce from Fay Webb, although I have nobody in mind at the present time. As for the reports linking Mary Brian and myself, they are distinctly erroneous; we are only good friends...
...Flynn (libretto, lyrics & music by Brian Hooker, Russell Janney & Franklin Hauser; Russell Janney, producer) is the first musical romance to reach Broadway since last winter's Richard of Bordeaux (TIME, Feb. 26). A great many people liked Richard of Bordeaux for its color and pageantry. They should find The O'Flynn even more to their taste. A sword-&-cloaker of the first water, nimbly directed, eminently tuneful, scenically as magnificent as Hollywood's best, The O'Flynn tells a full-blooded tale about the battles between William of Orange and James II in Ireland...
...Bravo!' " High praise, too, was due Miss Cornell's excellent supporting company. Particularly good was Edith Evans as the Nurse. Miss Evans speaks lines which are usually expurgated with a wholesome bawdry which somehow manages to dodge the usual tiresome vulgarity of the part. Brian Aherne, in a curly red wig, is an ebullient Mercutio, gay as May in the Queen Mab speech, bitter as gall when he dies cursing "both your houses." Capable but less distinguished as Romeo is Basil Rathbone, whose virtuosity appears to stop just this side of eloquence. His pausing, prosy delivery is perhaps...