Word: napoleonism
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Encouraged by the pronounced success of last year's production, "Napoleon Intrades," which had to be held over for an extra performance, and by the marked revival of University interest in its productions, as in the early twenties, H. D. C. offers this fall "Circumstantial Evidence." This play, by Otto Bastion, is not the usual courtroom melodrama, but rather a poignant presentation of a problem that is more and more becoming of vital interest...
...Club, "Circumstantial Evidence," may be produced in the future on a professional New York stage has arisen. This depends largely upon the degree of success which it achieves at its Harvard premiere at the Pi Eta Theatre on December 13, 14, 15, 16, and 17. Last year's production, "Napoleon Intrudes," is about to enjoy a Broadway run, largely due to its popularity last spring in Cambridge...
...During the War he served with distinction as an aviator in France, Macedonia. Morocco, where he had time to paint a number of most effective landscapes. He was decorated with the Legion of Honor, but, a sincere Royalist, he scorns the boutonniere as a relic of the Corsican upstart Napoleon. Shortly after the War he married Delfina Edwards-Bello, beautiful daughter of a wealthy Argentine. Their town house in Paris was the former studio of the late great Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, built on the site of an ancient convent, which Artist Boutet de Monvel has redecorated in a style...
Many members of the cast have had experience in previous productions of the Harvard Dramatic Club. Breckinridge played the part of Hippolyte in "Napoleon Intrudes." Hutchinson was cast as Father Lamb in "Charles and Mary" and as Le President in "Napoleon Intrudes." King has had parts in three productions, "B.J. One," "Charles and Mary," and "Napoleon Intrudes." Sullivan is playing in the fall production of the Radcliffe Idler Club and Patterson in the Barnswallows Society play...
...none of Rockefeller Center's murals startles the beholder quite so much as a large canvas hung this autumn in the spectacular foyer of Grauman's Chinese Theatre, Hollywood, entitled "Hollywood Comes to Napoleon's Aid". So lavish are the decoration and the crowds in Grauman's Chinese that ordinary theatre-goers might pass this picture by. Last week it was called sharply to public attention by 20-year-old Sherman Miller, editor & publisher of California Youth. On a white charger Napoleon rides across a wheat field that seems to be exploding under his horse...