Word: generously
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...this time Cupid's aim is sure. However Diane realizes Field's dependence upon her and returns to marry him. Her life with Field only serves to sharpen her realization of her love for Brady and after a tremendous struggle within herself she is finally saved by the generous defection of Field from the scene. This hackneyed plot is easily counterbalanced by the attractiveness of Miss Crawford and Mr. Gable's genial masculinity. The lines are good and the photography excellent in spots. For all except the most incorrigible high-brows this is bound to provide an entertaining hour...
...Generous to the point of extravagance, the show offers four worthwhile lady entertainers: 1) saturnine Luella Gear, complaining that she has tried all the advertised luxuries of life but still "I Couldn't Hold My Man"; 2) lean Frances Williams who sings "Fun To Be Fooled" with bright authority; 3) a pert little body from the night clubs named Dixie Dunbar who kicks and chortles cutely; 4) Esther Junger, a concert dancer, bringing Carnegie Hall technique to frivolous Broadway...
...living with his divorcee bride, Diane (Joan Crawford). Diane opens a letter from the husband (Otto Kruger) she has just deserted and says to Mike: "Richard has gone to Maine for the summer." Mike Bradley's reply is intended to reveal him as a young man of generous and perceptive sentiments. "That's great," he says. "We'll send him some fancy beef for a barbecue...
...American Dream," Author Corey writes glowingly of the early American Democracy before it was overtaken by modern capitalism. Originating in revolution, it was dedicated to the ideals of Liberty, Democracy, Education, Equality, Progress, Peace. Pointing out the discrepancies between ideals and practice. Lewis Corey is, for a Marxian, generous in his estimation of its real accomplishments. To him, the impending "American Revolution" is consistent with U. S. traditions. It will mark the triumph of the socialism of Marx and Lenin...
Irenee du Pont, of the Delaware du Fonts, Republican in days gone by, but a supporter of Smith in 1928, of Roosevelt in 1932; a generous donor to what he considers worthy causes...