Word: laughed
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...hope he'll be a good one." Eleanor Roosevelt Roosevelt, his wife, said: "You're always pleased to have any one you're very devoted to have what he wants. It is an extremely serious thing to undertake, you know. . . . It is not something you just laugh off and say you're pleased about...
...What this country, needs, along with a good five cent dollar, is a real hearty laugh," declared Henry Hull, who plays the role of Henry Dewlip in "Spring-time for Henry," in a CRIMSON interview between the acts at the Wilbur Theatre last night. "I enjoy my part in this play immensely because the production is a kind of tonic that America needs. Our country has fallen into a state of morbid hysteria over the depression that we must overcome. The fun never flags in this skit, and the larger the number of Americans who can learn to laugh whole...
...robed himself in a big checked, black and white suit. "Guess I am a combination of efficiency worshipper and here-worshipper. For this reason, Herbert Hoover is a kind of passion with me. Roosevelt spells chaos for America. However, oven the candidates can stand a sincere, hearty laugh...
...from conveying a definition, as to call "Green Pasture" a play. It is not puny, like many plays of its type. It combines all the sentiment and carefully unwinding plots of "The Cat and the Fiddle," but it is not fastidious nor in it a madcap like "The Laugh Parade...
...player most perfectly in the Gilbertian tradition. His devastating Oriental grin stretches permanently from ear to ear; he rocks with noiseless merriment as Ko-Ko tells of the deadly snickersnee; he recites the list of hand-tailored punishments aimiably through his teeth, till suddenly his blood-curdling laugh, like Mephistopheles, rips up and down the baritone scale. He is so like a scoundrel, and so like a benevolent bishop at a christening, that Gilbert could not but approve...