Word: sternberger
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...lighting effects will be under the direction of J. W. Welsh '31, who has done this work for the last three productions. M. P. Smith '32, who is in charge of make-up, has also assisted in this capacity in a previous production. M. S. Sternberg '31, the publicity manager, and W. R. Keany '32, who is directing the ticket sales, complete the committee...
...McGirr '32, T. F. McGuane Jr. '31, T. J. McKay Jr. '33, R. L. Mindlin '33, M. W. Powell '32, F. B. Rawson '31, G. E. Ray '32, M. A. Rauh '32, F. Richardson '31, David Russell '31, F. G. Shaw '31, G. W. Shinney '33, M. S. Sternberg '31, R. J. Strauss '32, B. S. Thompson '33, W. R. Timken '33, A. J. Torrielli '33, E. E. White '32, F. B. White '33, R. C. Whitman '33, and B. S. Wood...
...directed picture released since Pathe's Holiday. The story is nothing much?the French Foreign Legion as the background for the love affair of a private soldier and a vaudeville star who has seen better days?yet its often mechanical sequences are brought to life by Director Josef von Sternberg. Always aware that a moving picture ought to move, von Sternberg tells the story rapidly and often silently, so that Morocco has the effect of being a silent picture into which dialog has been woven, not the "incidental dialog" of the primitive, remade silent pictures, but incisive, necessary words, labelling...
Marlene Dietrich, German, had tried to be a violinist, given it up, studied drama at Max Reinhardt's school and played in the German version of Broadway when von Sternberg put her on contract. He said: "Thank God you are not like the American actresses. You can make more than three faces." Mysterious on the screen, she is plump and girlish in private life; she dislikes Hollywood women because "they talk about their bracelets." She knows little English but her accent has been eliminated before the microphone because von Sternberg did not allow her to memorize her lines until...
...final day Old Paul motored over from his headquarters in Castle Sternberg to review both armies. On parade ground, surrounded by thousands of jubilant burghers throwing their hats in air, the 82-year-old president stood grimly at salute while infantry marched (not goosestepping) and cavalry, artillery clattered past for two solid hours. Up & down, up & down went the old Feldmarschal's arm, returning salutes. Not for an instant, though his weak arches ached painfully, did he relax...