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Actor Charles Boyer's confident, romantic, tragic Pepe le Moko, and Joseph Spurin-Calleia's unhurried, calculating Slimane are cinememorable. So are Director John Cromwell's handling of this strangely fraternal, chaseless man hunt, and such intense scenes as that in which an informer (Gene Lockhart), backing away in terror as his executioners advance, jars a mechanical piano into action, dies to a ragtime tune. But best of all is the smoldering, velvet-voiced, wanton-mouthed femme fatale of Algiers, black-haired, hazel-eyed Viennese Actress Hedy Kiesler (Hollywood name: Hedy Lamarr). Her coming may well presage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures: Jul. 25, 1938 | 7/25/1938 | See Source »

While in New York the Cambridge team will stay at Columbia University and will use their athletic fields for their practice work-outs. Among the members of the team are J.D. Low, their captain and scrum-half; R. B. Bruce Lockhart, nephew of the author of "British Agent," and P. J. Bateman Champain, renowned as one of the heaviest rugby players in England...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cambridge Rugby Men Arrive in Gotham for Tiff with Elis, Crimson | 3/22/1938 | See Source »

...SCOTLAND-R. H. Bruce Lock-hart-Putnam ($3). In this nostalgic, slow-paced account of his athletic boyhood, Author Lockhart (British Agent) gives first place to relatives and Rugger, with interspersed laments on the decline of bagpipes, kilts, Scotch whiskey, dialect and nationalism, winds up with a stirring defense of schoolmasters. Concluded with this volume, Author Lockhart's autobiographical series adds little to modern letters, but makes an interesting example of Scotch frugality in living one's life twice over...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fiction: Recent Books: Jan. 31, 1938 | 1/31/1938 | See Source »

...immaculate in thought, word and deed as Mr. Anthony Eden." Passing Ethiopia he thought of Conrad, who wrote a chapter of Almayer's Folly in a steamer named Adowa. His mind richly stored with literary and historical illustrations, everything that happened seemed to remind Bruce Lockhart of some celebrated incident...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Sentimental Journey | 12/7/1936 | See Source »

Aided and embarrassed by friends who showed all Beaverbrook's excitement about his return to the land of the little wooden shoes, Lockhart soon found that spectators were almost more interested in his reunion with Amai than he was. He put it off as long as possible, fearing to find Amai a fat, betel-nut-chewing grandmother. He lingered in Singapore, speculated about the British Empire and colonial service, the future of the East, revolution and the consequences of the cinema lowering white prestige before the yellow races. When at last he met Amai, with his friends waiting nearby...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Sentimental Journey | 12/7/1936 | See Source »

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