Word: thanked
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Upon my departure from the Eighth Air Force I wish to thank you and your organization for your great help. The morale of our hard-fighting officers and men has been encouraged and supported by the fact that you, through your publications, have told their kinsmen and acquaintances at home about their superior performance in battle...
...thank you so much for the space and attention TIME (March 13) has given to my recent autobiography, You're Only Human Once . . . . There are, however, several points I should like to make...
Well, I am a part of the present day of trial and tribulation for the singing artist. I am happy to feel, however, that it is the public's opinion that has sustained my career and kept me a star for 20 years. I thank you again most profoundly for your review and, as long as I can go on creating "dramatic excitement merely by walking onto the stage," there will be reason for prolonging that inevitable day when the curtain must fall on my singing career...
...this occasion to say how very much I have enjoyed being a subscriber of TIME for the last two years, and to thank you for reliable information, frequently brilliant writing, and often superior analysis of world events; in short, for all the features which distinguish your magazine from other and less gratifying manifestations of journalism...
...dramatic purposes Jack Norworth and Nora Bayes are pitted against a wholly fictitious archenemy named Costello (Robert Shayne), who spends most of his time buying up vaudeville theaters in which the team might otherwise appear. In real life they had no such trouble. The Norworths sing the new Thank You for the Dance in an empty theater, to an imaginary audience, get the idea for their title hit on a moonlit country buggy ride. In real life Jack Norworth dreamed up Harvest Moon in a Manhattan subway train. Just as fictitiously, Nora tries to save Jack's career...