THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAIY 9, 1937 . . . .. ... . ............. . .. . ............. ........ . ....... . ......... ............. ........... -- . ....................... ....... ---- .............. ... . .. . . ............. - - Tonight At 8:30' Headline Season He'll Be rShylock' In Drama Seasowz Gareth Hughes, who is now appearing in the West Coast production of the play, will give a vigorous and new interpretation to the great part of Shylock in The Merchant of Venice opposite Peggy Wood's Portia. Coward Says Peggy Woods' Work Is Schimply Schwel Noel Coward, actor, and author of the as far removed from my vision of short plays which comprise the two Sari Linden as Mrs. Wiggs of the Tonight at 8:30 bills, has just had his Autobiography, Present Indicative, pub- Cabbage Patch. (I have since learned lished by Doubleday, Doran and Com- that this deshabille off-stage appear- pany. Next to Gertrude Lawrence, Mr. Coward is said +o rievoe more space ance is one of Miss Woods' charming in his book to the brilliant London and and innocent artifices). New York star, Peggy Wood, than to any other actress. She played the An Old Acquaintance leading role In the London production "I had known her on an off for of Bittersweet, his favorite among his own plays. Miss Wood, who will play several years, in fact ever 'since My Portia in the Dramatic Season's produc- first visit to New York in 1921, but, tion of The Merchant of Venice, Is odyeouh nalthttm a mentioned in many chapters of the dn oninallthattmstIghad book. Mr. Coward discusses his first never once seen her on the stage. I meeting with Miss Wod in the fol- had, of course, heard onhall sides lowing excerpt from his autobiography:enhsatccousofercig .During that winter, January and her extraordinary beauty and the and February, 1929, I finished 'Bitter loveliness of her voice, but never hav- Sweet,'" Mr. Coward continues, "on ing been able to judge for myself, and which I had been working intermit- confronted by that rubber hat, that tently for the last few months. My face devoid of make-up, and those first choice for Sari had been Gertie horn-rimmed spectacles, it was with Lawrence, but when the score was al- some trepidation that I heard my- most done, she and I both realized self asking her if she would care to that her voice, although light and come over to London and do an oper- charming, was not strong enough to etta. carry such a heavy singing role. "She replied that she'd love to, but "One afternoon, in the lobby of the that hadn't I better hear her sing Algonquin Hotel in New York, I ran first? And so we rushed off imme- into Peggy Wood. She had just come diately to my studio in the Hotel des in from the country and was wearing Artistes. On arrival, Peggy realized a fraincoat, an unbecoming rubbery that she hadn't any music, and so she hat on the back of her head, and darted out and down the street where, horn-rimmed glasses, and she looked fortunately, her music teacher hap- pened to live, and returned in a few minutes with the score of 'Mannon. "I was impressed by her surprising lack of 'star' manner. With a long list of distinguished successes behind her she behaved as though she were To Have Your being offered a good part for the first Printing and Developing time. Likes 'Bitter Sweet' done by a ". . . Peggy Wood arrived in god PHOTOGRAPHER time from America and proceeded slowly and surely to build her dis- tinguished lovely performance. I think that of all the shows I have I3rig your fifhs to ever donea'Bitter Sweet' gave me the greatest personal pleasure. Above all, my favorite moments were Peggy Bo b Ga Wood's entrance as Me. Sari Lin- den in her exquisite white dress of at IhW the nineties; and the final moment of ARCADE CAMERA the play, when, to the last crashing chords of 'll See You Again,' Sari, as SHOP an old woman, straightens herself 14 Nickels Arcade Dial 9028 with a gesture of indomitable pride and gallantly walks off the stage. VOILE and NETS y i0=N LOWiBACK Foundations / Either boned or boneless. $5.00 and $7.50 Lovely, Mesh ' Girdles in various lengths and either boned or boneless. -- S- -:5 - rOO __ Come)y Spirit To Prevail In SpringFestival Chandler, Fletcher To Play, Leading Parts In First Coward Bill The Dramatic Season this year is truely a festival in the literal mean- ing of the word. The emphasis on comedy makes it an event in keeping with the spring season and the spirit that will prevail in Ann Arbor on the next few weeks in connection with the coming Centennial celebration. First, there are the two bills of plays by Noel Coward. And he is recognized everywhere as one of the leading writers of comedy of the pres- ent generation of playwrights- whatever other opinions you may hold about his work. The first bill, especially, comprising Ways and Means and Hands Across the Sea has a full share of brilliant dialog and intriguing situation.' The second Noel Coward bill of Tonight at 8:30 will have two musical fantasies. There is Shadow Play with its song numbers in the style of the Room With A View number from This Year of Grace and Family Album with its quaint Victorianisms. The tinkling music-box episode in this play sets the spirit of the whole. Tovarich' Last Then, closing the season, is To- varich. This comedy by Jacques Du- val has had long runs in several1 capitals. Adapted by Robert Sher- wood, it was a long run sensation in London and, now, in New York where it is still playing at the Plymouth Theatre. The quality whicha dis- tinguishes it fromatheordinary com- edy success is its intelligence. Al- though it is built on a theme used often since the war, the idea of Rus- sian nobility getting jobs with a+ bourgeois family, it has true origin- ality in its telling, in its characters, and in its idea-the relation of the Old Russia to the New. Without skill and taste this fan- tasy of two Romanoffs who hire. themselves out as servants rather than touch one of the four billion francs left them as a sacred trust by their late relative, the Czar, would be just another comedy. But with the pathos and charm imposed on the plot and the reality given the characters by M. Duval and the sparkling dialogue with which Rob- ert Sherwood enhances the story, we have a play which has been the chief1 delight of the present New York sea- son. Choice Of The Smart There can be really no comparison, between the interest and value of a play like Tovarich and the-at best -ephemeral gag lines of a play lile -You Can't Take It With You. Of course, the Duval-Sherwood play was not eligible for the Pulitzer prize- being an adaptation of a foreign play- wright's work-but would always be the choice of anyone who doesn't -check his brains with his hat when he1 goes to the theatre. The Merchant of Venice and The Laughing Woman, too, are comedies even though each has its element of tragedy or pathos. In the Ann Arbor production of1 Tovarich, the important role of the Grand Duchess will be played by Elena Miramove whom Gilber Miller specially selected for the part. She had starred in his London production1 of Grand Hotel. Season Ingenue Let et GO L me die drunkens cr's wnic! me not see this er's wine! with the dreani- soul-house built My song may trumpet down the gray Perhaps. Let -me be as a tune-swept fiddle- string toppling to the dust-a vacant' That feels the Master Melody-and shrine. snaps! et me go quickly, light like a candle- -John G. Neihardt. l1 Snuffed out just at the heydey of its glow. Give me high noon-and let it then be night! Thus would I go. .JACKSON DANCE WOLVERINES ORCHESTRA Peggy French, the charming in- genue, who will appear in several productions in the Season. Coward's Wit Compared To old Dramatists By CLIFTON FADIMAN Reprinted, by permission, from The Stage. In connection with the present sea- son's crop of comedies in New York it may be pertinent to recall Charles Lamb's famous remarks about Restor- ation plays. Lamb was a moral, though not a prim, man; maidenly rather than old-maidish. Endeavoring to reconcile his gen- uine purity of heart with the equally genuine delight he took in the gay lubricities of Wycherly and Congreve, he elaborated a very pretty theory. To his own satisfaction he provedl. that the Restoration dramatists were neither "wicked" nor "good," that their plays could not be judged by conventional moral standards. Remembers Phrases One recalls those brilliant Elian phrases: "That happy breathing- place from the burthen of a perpe- tual moral questioning-the sanc- tuary and quiet Alsatia of hunted casuistry . . . I could never connect, those sports of a witty fancy in any shape with" any result to be drawn from them to imitation in real life . . . The Fainalla and the Mirabels, the Dorimants and the Lady Touch- woods, in their own sphere, do not offend my moral sense; in fact they do not appeal to it at all . . . They have got out of Christendom into the land-which shall I call it-of cuckoldry-the Utopia of perfect gal- lantry, where pleasure is duty, and the manners perfect freedom. It is altogether a speculative scene of things, which has no reference what- ever to the world that is." Coward Nearest . . . Looking at the seasons' come- dies from Lamb's point of view, one is drawn to the conclusion that it is Mr. Coward who comes nearest to what Lamb conceived the Restora- tion wits to be. I do not refer to the serious Mr. Coward. I refer to the Mr. Coward, in "Tonight at 8:30," of "Ways and Means" and "Hands Across the Sea" and "Family Album"-all three of which seemed to me completely unpretentious, completely successful, and complete- ly delightful. (I didn't get to see the "Fumed Oak" series, which might quite possibly have even straightened these airy generalizations.) RTATE ITREET C&WEI.R WATCUH & JE4WELRY REPAIRING NINE PIECES SOLO ISTS P.A. SYSTEM Dates Available May 15, 21, 23 -All of June SPENCER MYERS 600 Fourth St. Jackson IL F i w , 300 East Washington Phone 2-1350 FREE PARKING SPACE FOR CUSTOMERS' LEVT ME LIVE OUT MY YEARS' In Memoriam i ii ve it my years in heat of And grant that when I face the grisly blood! 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