Word: cabareting
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Roger Hewlett '33, author of the book, did not go far afield for his plot. That it includes scenes "in the living room of Miss Caroline Porter's House," on board the S. S. Iambic (which provides opportunity for a pirate scene) and a Paris cabaret gives sufficient hint as to its nature. W. F. Draper '35 takes the feminine lead with admirable gusto. His blitheness and litheness put the local vanities and ventures in the shade. Between the acts it was embarrassingly difficult to distinguish between the genuine debs in the audience and the members of the chorus...
Official announcement of a cabaret to follow the Boston performances of "Step Lively," the Hasty Pudding show, on Friday and Saturday evenings, was made last night at the Club, where last minute arrangements are now in progress. Copied after the cabarets which have been such a popular feature of the Pudding's performances in New York, this week's program will represent a complete innovation in Boston. It will be held in Repertory Hall following the performance upstairs...
...living, had finished her autobiography which "ought to be a swell book because she sure is one swell woman." Of his wife, who once in vaudeville sang his song, "Will You Love Me in December as You Do in May?" and wept in Miami recently when a cabaret orchestra played it, he said last September when she saw him off for Europe, "She's one brave woman...
...four public performances, two of which will be held in the Hasty Pudding theatre in Cambridge on Wednesday and Thursday evenings, March 29 and 30, and the remaining two at the Repertory Theatre in Boston on March 31 and April 1. As a feature of the Boston showing, a cabaret will be held following each performance, after the manner of the cabarets which have been such a successful feature of the Hasty Pudding performances in New York...
...Lionel Atwill) not only fails to send her money but takes away her gurgling child. The child grows up to be a soldier, sets out one night to have a good time. Propelled by laws of coincidence peculiar to stories like this one, he goes to the very cabaret where Irene Dunne, now a dignified harridan, is acting as mistress of ceremonies. She is able to take the blame when he murders the father of a girl he is trying to seduce. Most inevitable shot: the son (Douglas Walton) denouncing his grandfather in court, where the truth comes...