Word: claudels
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...Marshall and Ruth Chatterton are billed above her, Simone Simon is the star of this picture. Producer Darryl Zanuck designed it expressly to provide a vehicle for her U. S. debut, and Screenwriter Gene Markey and Director Irving Cummings have intelligently fitted the material to her talents. As Marie Claudel, an undergraduate in a European seminary, she loves Stephen Dominik (Herbert Marshall), the head of the school. When a romantic, unsigned letter in her handwriting, addressed "My One and Only Love . . ." is fished out of a classroom wastebasket by an invidious and sex-starved school mistress (Constance Collier), the child...
...committee had at the beginning much difficulty in obtaining its films, but since M. Claudel, the French ambassador in Washington, offered the use of films obtained through the "ralise diplomatique" it has been easier, and there is now a permanent committee of selection in Paris, composed of both French and Americans...
...were thronged last week by foreign ambassadors and ministers marching & countermarching at a tempo set by the White House. The moose-tall figure of Britain's Sir Ronald Lindsay came & went repeatedly at the spacious office of Secretary of State Cordell Hull. France's plump, smiling Paul Claudel, soon going home, clicked his heels up & down the stone floors. In the Secretary's anteroom with its stiff jet-black furniture and portraits of Hughes. Lansing, Colby and Kellogg, Italy's Augusto Rosso, proud of his "Americanism." waited his turn. So did Belgium's May, gazing...
Married, Pierre Claudel, 24, elder son of France's Ambassador Paul Claudel who this week left Washington for his new post at Brussels; and Marion Rumsey Cartier, 21, only child of Jeweler Pierre C. Cartier; in Manhattan...
...week's conferences in Mr. Roosevelt's Manhattan home began with French Ambassador Paul Claudel on War Debts, with Canadian Minister William Herridge on tariff reciprocity. After an overnight stop at his Hyde Park home, Mr. Roosevelt motored on to Albany to attend the legislative correspondents' annual dinner and political burlesque. He laughed uproariously when a "Roosevelt" asked a "Smith": "Well, Al, what do you think my administration will need most?" And was told, "a four-leaf clover, Frank...