Word: jeane
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...with everything else she does, the fact that Playwright Jean Kerr would be on TIME'S cover this week became the subject of high-spirited discussion in the Kerr household. Her five sons knew all about her being interviewed, and sitting for her portrait. At this point, fortnight ago, TIME, with Guilt and Anxiety as its cover subject, arrived at the Kerr home. Son Christopher, 15, looked long and admiringly at Edvard Munch's 1893 painting of a skull-headed figure, screaming out its loneliness. He turned to his mother and said: "I like it. They...
...camera captures the alternating anxiety and joy of the hero through his wordless activity--whether bounding eagerly up a flight of stairs or tearfully staring through the bars of a paddy-wagon. These effects are heightened by the perceptive photography of Henri Decae and the delightful score of Jean Constantin...
...young boy, Jean-Pierre Leaud manages to steal the show from his older and more experienced fellow actors. His transformation from a mischievous, carefree imp to a lonely but childishly appealing outcast is convincingly portrayed, and his portrait of the sensitively curious, misguided child is remarkably well sustained. The other performances, especially those of Claire Maurier and Albert Remy as the blundering parents, are appropriately less delicate and in equally perfect taste...
...course of a lifetime that stretched from 1780 to 1867. Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres was reviled and honored and reviled again, but he scorned both tribute and taunt. "I took the road of the masters." he told his students. "That is what I did, gentlemen; I took the road of Raphael." This week 73 of his masterly drawings and paintings went on display at Manhattan's Paul Rosenberg Gallery, thus bringing together for the first time the bulk of Ingres' works owned by U.S. museums and collectors. The gallery professed itself pleasantly surprised that such "an important...
Mary, Mary. A thoroughly engaging comedy by Jean Kerr, author of Please Don't Eat the Daisies, who offers an obvious marriage-divorce plot, but has decorated it with splendid...