Word: page
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Strange Interlude, by Eugene O'Neill. Time has added a comic flavor to this 4½-hour Freudian opus that the somber-spirited playwright never never intended. However, O'Neill's innate theater sense saves all but the silliest lines, and the playing of effulgent Geraldine Page and her Actors Studio cohorts is a delight to behold...
...from California, to return for the vote. At White House urging, labor organizations, along with local-government groups, began calling and wiring Congressmen, telling them what the money would mean to the old home town. Texas' Democratic Representative Wright Patman inserted in the Congressional Record a 33-page list of all the communities that had applied for money under the bill. All this activity enraged Charlie Halleck. "They were really bludgeoning and blackmailing,'' he fumed...
...April 12). With only one foreign correspondent-Newbold Noyes's Paris-based brother Crosby-the Star cannot hope to match the 14 foreign correspondents who write for the Post, but the new editor plans to develop a team of "regional specialists." To match the Post's editorial-page lineup, Noyes is looking for fresh columnists. He has already bought the Manchester Guardian's Max Freedman away from the Post...
Quelle sold more than $300 million in merchandise last year, most of it right out of the 404-page catalogue circulated to 5,000,000 families. Gustav Schickedanz, 68, Quelle's mustachioed founder and owner, knows the perils as well as the profits of selling to Europeans by catalogue. "Just imagine the enormous confidence the customer places in us by paying for goods he has not seen," he says. His standard: "When the customer unpacks them they must be even better than he had expected...
...support of the central cast never waned. Lady Sangazure (Susan Bly), Sir Marmaduke (Lucian Russell), the Counsel (Philip Hartman), the Page (Jeffrey Cobb), and the chorus all added fine moments to the show. But here I suspect much of the genius - and there are bits of action that are genius - rests largely with the stage director, David Mills. If he is responsible for the choreography of the chorus, he deserves congratulations; if he created the gestures, the Victorian self-mockery, the hands that reach out of the curtain so that things conveniently disappear, he merits...