Word: honeymooned
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...known to the world as Eddie Dowling. Mr. Dowling-Goucher's career is more remarkable than Mr. Gerry's. It began as a choir boy in Providence. It went on as a musicomedian with his wife Ray Dooley. It continued as a playwright (Sally, Irene & Mary, Honeymoon Lane). It cut over into the movies, first as an actor, then as producer. And it returned to Broadway last January when he produced Big Hearted Herbert. He has also penetrated political high places. Last autumn when President Roosevelt saw the screen version of Buried Alive, Producer Dowling dined...
...returned to Manhattan in high spirits after an 88-day world tour on which he sailed the day after he was to have married 18-year-old Socialite Eileen Gillespie (TIME, Jan. 29). Said he of his broken engagement: "Miss Gillespie's parents wanted to come on our honeymoon-and that is going pretty far. [ think we probably could have a reconciliation if I had time to think it over. Miss Gillespie's parents took the engagement ring away from her and the last I heard of it, it was in a vault down town...
...Shella, Lady divorces Madison because it is the only way she can save him from a false murder charge, and at the same time play the game square with all concerned. After the divorce, they both find out what really went on; they make up, and leave on a honeymoon to Norway. Through all the intricacies of the plot, Barbara Stanwyck seems to emerge victorious. And it is her personality dominating the entire show, which renders the picture worth while...
When he took office Franklin D. Roosevelt may have hoped that his political honeymoon could be made to last forever. Few new Presidents had hoped for less. For a full twelve months he successfully held Congress in a state of passionate adoration. The country at large got the firm-fixed impression that he was invincible, that he was destined to go through one term and probably two the complete master of himself and Washington. But last week brought two events in close succession which showed that even a Franklin D. Roosevelt cannot win a family fight every time...
...have made her forget how to speak English. 2) A woman too intelligent not to know she is being made a fool of by her lover and too weak to do anything about it but talk. 3) A nervous bride who wrangles with her mate over nothing on the honeymoon train. 4) A snob who preens herself on her willingness to be nice to colored people. 5) An opportunist who takes advantage of a drunken proposal of marriage. 6) An aging actress sodden with drink and self-pity. 7) A shopgirl famed among her friends for repartee, whose favorite shaft...