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Director Alan Schneider very mistakenly points up this allegory by overdoing the buffoonery of the characters which the playwright satirizes, Prince Bounine, the materialist, acts like a cross between Robert Taylor and a crafty mogul out of Executive Suite. He seems too typically the European conception of Americans, and his two flunkies are just ludicrous. Prince Paul, played by Robert Duke, is merely innocuous, which may or may not imply what the French think of England...

Author: By Frank R. Safford, | Title: Anastasia | 10/24/1955 | See Source »

...replaced him, Major General Iskandar Mirza, is a blunt soldier who believes his people ready only for a "controlled democracy." Descended from one of the great Mogul families of India, and the son of a wealthy Bengal landowner, Mirza is a Moslem aristocrat and autocrat. Says he bluntly: "Democracy requires breeding. Pakistan is not ripe for democracy. These illiterate peasants certainly know less about running a country than I do." Mirza joined India's raj, or ruling class, when the British sent him to Sandhurst military college in 1918. There he got to be a crack rifle shot...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PAKISTAN: Her Majesty's G.G. | 8/15/1955 | See Source »

...Daniel T. O'Shea, 51, onetime movie-mogul turned CBS vice president, was picked by RKO Radio Pictures' new owners (TIME, Aug. 1) to be president, succeeding Howard Hughes's longtime friend James Grainger. Born in Manhattan, Dan O'Shea set out to be a doctor, switched to Law (Harvard, '30). With the help of New Dealer Tommy Corcoran, O'Shea got his first job with RKO, where he made such a hit with RKO Production Chief David 0. Selznick that he was called to Hollywood as resident counsel. There, O'Shea...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PERSONNEL: Changes of the Week, Aug. 15, 1955 | 8/15/1955 | See Source »

...Chitor. "The swell of its sides," wrote Rudyard Kipling, "follows the form of a ship-from bow to stern more than three miles long and from three to five hundred feet high." Four centuries ago, in the land battleship of Chitor, the Rajputs held out against the invading Moguls. The Rajputs wore armor and fought with spears; the Moguls used cannon. In the last decisive engagement, a lucky Mogul shot killed the Rajput chieftain Jaimal, and the garrison, losing hope, performed the dreaded rite of jauhar...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDIA: The Reconquest of Chitor | 4/18/1955 | See Source »

...women and children were immolated on funeral pyres, and the warriors threw themselves on the Mogul swords. To complete his victory (which consolidated the Moslem conquest of Hindustan), the Mogul Emperor Akbar massacred 30,000 Rajput retainers, but failed to arrest the flight of the Rajput's famed armorers. With their families they followed their own Prince Pratap Singh into the forests, and took a solemn oath never to sleep under a roof or on a bed until Chitor was reconquered...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDIA: The Reconquest of Chitor | 4/18/1955 | See Source »

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