Stage News
Date: 05 May 1941
George Frederick Will (Champaign, 4 de maio de 1941), é um jornalista, escritor e colunista estadunidense, vencedor do Prêmio Pulitzer, e mais conhecido por seus comentários conservadores.
Filho de um professor de filosofia da University of Illinois, formou-se pela University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Foi editor da National Review de 1972 a 1978; passou a publicar uma coluna no Washington Post duas vezes por semana, que eram reproduzidas em jornais de todos os EUA. Em 1976 tornou-se editor-colaborador da Newsweek.
Suas colunas são reproduzidas em 450 jornais ligados ao sindicato que as distribui.
Leia mais...O dia 4 de maio de 1941 foi um domingo sob o signo de ♉. Foi o dia 123 do ano. O presidente dos Estados Unidos foi Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Se você nasceu neste dia, você tem 85 anos de idade. Seu último aniversário foi no dia segunda-feira, 4 de maio de 2026, 29 dias atrás. Seu próximo aniversário é no dia terça-feira, 4 de maio de 2027, em 335 dias. Você viveu 31.075 dias, ou cerca de 745.803 horas, ou cerca de 44.748.182 minutos, ou cerca de 2.684.890.920 segundos.
Date: 04 May 1941
FORTUNE GALLO'S San Carlo Opera Company will end its thirty-first annual season with appearances this Tuesday and Wednesday in Hartford, Conn. During its 20,000-mile trans-continental tour this year the company visited forty other cities.
Date: 04 May 1941
By Waldemar Kaempffert
Waldemar Kaempffert
Pub book on brain waves
Date: 05 May 1941
T.S
T.
Pin another gold star on the Globe's report card this morning for another breathtakingly suspensive melodrama from England. Hand a similar decoration to Carol Reed, who has directed it with the same grim urgency as his "Night Train," and to a thoroughbred cast for a flawless performance. "The Girl in the News" has not the headlong haste and violence of its predecessor; its impact comes rather from the relentless accumulation of small events which twice bring an innocent young nurse under the shadow of the gallows. Its tension increases like the tightening of a steel spring and it snaps only at the last moment.As the young woman twice accused, Nurse Graham is first brought to book for the death of a querulous female invalid who took an overdose of sedative and left unexplained certain incriminating circumstances. Acquitted despite the doubts of her own attorney, the nurse unwittingly steps into a trap when the wife of an invalid offers her employment. Thus when the wife and her paramour, the butler, dispose of the husband by using the identical sedative, the nurse's guilt is taken for granted. That the illicit lovers nearly succeed until an ironic twist betrays them gives the film its hectic pulse.Like the Englishman he is, Mr. Reed is a very devil at creating terror by contrast. The sense of impending disaster he allows to accumulate behind the commonplaces of small talk of a barrister's flat, and the murder itself gains in enormity when set against the archaic and time-slowing formalities of an English court or the politely isolated manners of his characters. Camera and sound track are constantly used with decisive effect. When a chambermaid takes tea to the already slain husband, the butler's hand momentarily dims the radio to hear her scream of discovery; a playful kitten pawing at the hem of a nightgown relates an invalid's painful progress to a forbidden medicine chest, and the courtroom sequences are clean of needless mumbo-jumbo. Characters, humorous or sinister, are revealed in a moment's flash. Mr. Reed keeps to the point.The performances are extraordinarily good. Margaret Lockwood's young lady in distress is forthright and true from moment to moment; Barry K. Barnes plays the young attorney with clipped precision, and Emlyn Williams adds another character to his series of malevolent portraits as the butler. To single out others would be an injustice to a cast that is perfect from top to bottom. Bring out the smelling salts, folks. Another spellbinding English thriller has come to town!
Date: 04 May 1941
By Herbert W. Horwilllondon
Herbert Horwilllondon
EDWARD SHANKS opens his Sunday Times review of John Gore's memoir of "King George V" (Murray) by quoting the dictum of an unnamed Chinese sage that it is a hard task to write the biography of a royal person while his dynasty is still on the throne.
Date: 04 May 1941
HERE it is May, and the theatre finds very little in its immediate future -- one new play this month, maybe two; one next. The record isn't very good, especially since in May last year there were ten new shows, including two musicals.
Date: 04 May 1941
By R.w. Stewart
PROBLEMS of radio in wartime will be to the forefront at Ohio State University's twelfth Institute for Education by Radio, which will be in session today through Wednesday in Columbus, Ohio.
Date: 05 May 1941
By Jane Holt
Jane Holt
On the pantry shelf of every selfrespecting colonial farmhouse -- snuggling cozily beside the cookie jar -- was a fat, brown crook of apple butter, just such a crock as we discovered last week on the shelves of a city department store. In delight we took off the lid to smell the fine, familiar fragrance.
Date: 04 May 1941
By Diana Rice
Diana Rice
To sponsor trip to Univ of Chile for Summer courses
Date: 04 May 1941
By T.r. Kennedy Jr
NBC comment