Advertisement

Writer

E. C. B.

Latest Content

MOVIEGOER

This is another case of the second feature outshining the first, but the competition isn't stiff by any means. You

PLAYGOER

This hardly seems the right moment for a period musical, particularly one with so much book trouble. A bodacious, bawdacious

MOVIEGOER

For sheer entertainment, "Star-Spangled Rhythm" is one of the most satisfying pictures in ages. It is also such wonderful publicity

The Playgoer

Maxwell Anderson's "Star Wagon" is a shuttle-train in time, allowing its drivers to ignore the usual chronological conventions and to

The Playgoer

"Pins and Needles," the Labor Stage musical review put on by the International Ladies' Garment Workers Union, is a merry

CRIMSON PLAYGOER

"Lady at Large," by Philip Goodman, presents the sorry spectacle of capable actors and actresses struggling with hopeless material They

THE PLAYGOER

Rodgers and Hart have come to town, and their current musical, "I Married an Angel" eclipses many if not all

The Playgoer

"Eye on the Sparrow," a comedy presented by Girvan Higginson and written by Maxwell Selser, is a disconcerted tale of

The Playgoer

The Hasty Pudding has once again served up a dish of varied entertainment, including the customary elements of political satire,

The Playgoer

The Crimson Playgoer hopes he has not lost all his credit by praising "There's Always a Breeze," which he thought

The Playgoer

Last night big business, that hungry monster without a soul, stalked his prey in the house of the Harvard Chapter

CRIMSON PLAYGOER

An apparent disposition to classify has lead S. N. Behrman to call his new play, "Wine of Choice," a comedy.

The Crimson Playgoer

"Our Town", presented by Jed Harris, written by Thornton Wilder, and starring Frank Craven, vitalizes the vital statistics of Grovers

CRIMSON PLAYGOER

Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" in the hands of Orson Welles and the Mercury Theatre, has been stripped of its superstitious characters

CRIMSON PLAYGOER

"Juno and the Paycock" again stimulates Boston audiences with its candid humor soon lost in trenchant satire and irony, and

Advertisement