Writer
E. E. M.
Latest Content
BOOKENDS
It is perhaps inevitable that any biography of Henry Adams will bring to its subject the same air of redundancy
CRIMSON PLAYGOER
Ownership in Hollywood confines itself to either a pent house or a woman and in "Possessed," now at Loew's State,
CRIMSON PLAYGOER
The opportunities for entertainment in Boston this week are distressingly curtailed, what with the theatres dark and "The Woman in
CRIMSON PLAYGOER
The fourth largest industry in America has long treasured the erroneous idea that George Bancroft is a "mighty star." Years
THE CRIME
Comrades, leave me here a little, on this cool November morn; To reflect on Harvard's glory, that which was but
CRIMSON PLAYGOER
While Mr. Carl Laemmle, as council lot the defense has been presenting the case for the movies each week in
BOOKENDS
"T HE snow, wind, and rain of Virginia and the doctors at Mount Vernon, in their cruel wisdom, had done
The Crimson Playgoer
The general impression has gotten about that Ed Wynn is quite a card. "Simple Simon," now at the Shubert, was
CRIMSON PLAYGOER
When three such eminent film celebrities such as George Bancroft, Kay Francis, and Clive Brook are gathered together for a
BOOKENDS
P ERHAPS the most valuable instrument in the hands of the historian is "time". It is easy to censure or
As it Was and as it Might have Been
THERE has always been a certain fascination in idle speculation of the past. Men wonder how their own lives would
The Crimson Playgoer
A play in three acts by Maxwell Anderson, now being presented by the Theatre Guild, Inc., of New York at
BOOKENDS
T HERE are certain events that are of themselves too dramatic for man to dramatize. The assassination of Archduke Franz
Yarns from the Southwest and an Irish Stylist
T HE glory of Donn Byrne may carry this little book to a fame which it could never achieve from
The Crimson Playgoer
The Fine Arts Theatre reopened its doors this week with a French talking movie called "Sous Les Toits de Paris".