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Word: dona (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...joint announcement made last night, the Harvard Dramatic Club and the 1946 Jubilee Committee set forth plans for Saturday, May 1, listing a matinee performance of "Dona Rosita" and an informal tea-dance...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HDC PRESENTS MAY 1 MATINEE | 4/21/1943 | See Source »

Louisiana Purchase (Victor Moore, Bob Hope, Vera Zorina, Dona Drake; (TIME...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Current & Choice, Feb. 9, 1942 | 2/9/1942 | See Source »

...played too long a part un worthy of her. She had consented to be the Dona her world had demanded-a superficial, lovely creature, who walked, and talked, and laughed, accepting praise and admiration with a shrug of the shoulder as natural homage to her beauty, careless, insolent, deliberately indifferent, and all the while another Dona, a strange, phantom Dona, peered at her from a dark mirror and was ashamed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Bull's-Eye for Bovarys | 2/2/1942 | See Source »

This other Dona (whom thousands of Miss du Maurier's readers know as "the real me,") knew that "life need not be bitter, nor worthless, nor bounded by a narrow casement, but could be limitless, infinite-that it meant suffering, and love, and danger, and sweetness, and more than this even, much more." How much more, Miss du Maurier wisely neglects to say; but she does bring on, as Dona's lover, the one sort of man who could conceivably supply it: a Frenchman (They Understand Love). He is a philosophical pirate, as tired of the world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Bull's-Eye for Bovarys | 2/2/1942 | See Source »

...Dona meets him while she is rusticating, away from it all, on her husband's Cornish estate. She is assisted in her intrigue by one of those button-mouthed little men-servants whose lines, always the wittiest in the play, terminate in a dry "my lady." With the pirate, Dona forgets her inept domesticity in a mischievous piratical foray against her dunderhead neighbors, and in the 17th-Century equivalent of a long weekend at Atlantic City...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Bull's-Eye for Bovarys | 2/2/1942 | See Source »

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