Word: helene
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
WHAT EVERY WOMAN KNOWS- Helen Hayes proffering a most engaging interpretation of Barrie's Maggie Shand. AT MRS. BEAM'S-Strange doings in a stuffy English boarding house when a boarder appears with a habit of eating females. CRADLE SNATCHERS-A wicked week-end party on which the hostesses are middle aged and the young men still in college...
...than her husband. LESS SERIOUS THE LAST OF MRS. CHEYNEY- Ina Claire nearing the end of her run in the witty tale of thievery among the British peerage. AT MRS. BEAM'S-The horrible case of Mr. Bluebeard in a careful English boarding house. WHAT EVERY WOMAN KNOWS- Helen Hayes happily occupied with the old Maude Adams part in Barrie's graceful comedy. CRADLE SNATCHERS - In which three matrons make off with three undergraduates for no good reason. MUSICAL Trivialities are well attended to in Sunny, Scandals, The Vagabond King, No Foolin', Iolanthe, The Merry World...
...female form. The idea the editors tried to get across was that "flat flappers" are not desirable, that dieting is therefore foolish. Voluptuous, well-fleshed women are preferable, the article tried to say. More or less appropriately, poses by Marjorie Rambeau, Lenore Ulric, Gertrude Ederle, Ethel Barrymore, Helen Wills were printed to illustrate the point. The interesting thing was a detail which used to be unusual for a Hearst paper. However vulgar his aims and practices, Publisher Hearst never used to be accused, even by his most nauseated critics, of hiring writers ignorant of the English language. Yet in this...
...mentioning a "taut white skirt" and, perhaps, tucked under one of Tilden's feet. a picture of Kitty McKane, British champion in 1924. Miss McKane is now, resolutely, Mrs. Godfree, and this year her picture was at the top of every spread. Over the shadows of Helen Wills (scratched), of Suzanne Lenglen (retired), of Molla Mallory (beaten), she stepped forward to win the "Women's Wimbledon...
WHAT EVERY WOMAN KNOWS - Barrie's glowing essay on charm admirably interpreted by Helen Hayes...