comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1932-02-27 · page 34 of 36

Judge — February 27, 1932 — page 34: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — February 27, 1932 — page 34: Judge, 1932-02-27

A restored page from Judge, 1932-02-27. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

Have you seen Judge—Recently? “GOOD— they’ve got to be good!” Sidney Lenz.. Joe Williams. George Jean N Pare Lorentz...... Ted Shane Richard J. Walsh. Bruce Bairnsfather. . Clive Weed ...... “Bridge” sneseiewens “Sports” he Theatre” The Movies” “Books” . .- Editorials +-“Old Bill” - Politics In Judge—every we Johan Bull—I, Klein—E: —Chet Shafer—Margaret F k Also: ig—Dr. Seuss rold—Forbell —Jack Cluett—Jefferson Machamer and Judge Jr. JUDGE 18 EAST 48th STR NEW YORK, N. 1 YEAR, $5.00 2 YEARS, $7.80 21 WEEKS, ee 10 WEEKS, $1 ENCLOSED FIND $...... ay SEND JUDGE TO NAME. THE THEATRE | forgot to stick the time-honored curl on his forehead and who didn’t, at least three times during the course of the evening, shove his right hand into | the bosom of his c best play ever w , remain out of the storchouse long if the leading actor toyed with the customers’ idea of Richelieu to the mere extent of appearing in a little black moustache. These historic: tual or conjectural, a (Continued from page 18) at. Nor would the | en about Richelieu, al plays, be they fac- nount otherwise in sum to little more than talking pic- | ture versions of the Eden Musée Madame Tussaud and Mrs. Jarley's | Wax Works. | P : wright, not without promise, had considerably more ingenious dramatic Though the characters | | aphed from life, the ly seem’ con- an purely it The present pl characters, idea than most of the vendors of such historical delicatessen, but out of his idea not very much has come. De- spite one or two effective scenes, he might better have and written his tale S pjured the theatre nto a book. 0 @ ometuine called “The Marriage at Cana,” by a Mr. MacDonald, opened recently down in the Province- town Theatre. As it alw whenever a new p the rains ns down in opt Provincetown Theatre—the only | clear opening night that the Province- town Theatre has ever experienced occurred in the October of 1925—I didn’t travel to those ulterior reaches | to see it. The last time I journeyed down there, I got soaked and cau such a cold that most of the theatrical managers in town began to perk up. “Mourning, Becomes Electra” (Guild)—No. 1 on. the year’s dramatic list. “Of Thee 1 Sing” (Music Box)—No. 1 on the year's music-show list “The Animal Kingdom” (Broadburst)—Bar ry's well-written and pointed comedy on the somewhat, familiar wife and mi “Briet Moment” (Cort)—Behrman the equally familiar maladjusted young mar nied couple topi “tne Li the not less familiar subject of the literary expatriates in Paris “The Cat and the Fiddle” mental be Ke “Counsellor-at-Law” (Plymouth)—The — fall and rise yster, told with considerable acuteness and also, alas, with a dash of the old hokul nassaxing. Scandals” (Apollo)—S. some laughable skits, so what Brothers? “The Laugh Parade" (Imperial)—Ed Wynn and a humorous evangel. Nathan Recommends—With Cynai wanderin “Reunion in and the Missus warm up a rather tepid comedy into an often sparkling evening. Nathan Recommends ett Bank" (Little)—Rice's ditto on that is charmingly unpretentious and does it matter Reservations (Morosco)—The fall and rise of a g husband, told in the same way. " (Beck)—Alfred) Lunt comicbooks.com