Shoulder Arms 1914 1918 next previous
Shoulder Arms Clippings 229/246
Louis Raymond Reid, Shadowland, N. Y., September 1919.
WHAT COULD BE FINER
THAN A REAL LAUGH?
Charlie Chaplin, passing through Chicago, spreads
sad tidings. He will never throw another pie.
He has made up his mind to do „finer, better things.“
(...) Editorial, Chicago Tribune, Sept. 28, 1923 (continued)
& ELOQUENT was the apostrophic
appeal, and human, which THE TRIBUNE editorial
of yesterday made to Charles Chaplin, asking
that he behave; but the reason he doesn‘t was summed
up in THE TRIBUNE‘S summing-up of why
he should: „After all, you know, you are an actor!“
(...) Editorial, Chicago Tribune, Sept. 29, 1923
„Along with the plays of yesteryear“
Editorial content. „Prohibition and The Cabaret
By Louis Raymond Reid“ (...)
„And now with the eclipse of Bacchus the cabaret seems
doomed. These resorts of the Rialto, these oasis upon
the desert of monotonous money-grubbing, these places wherein
the buyer, the deacon, the broker, the student, the
New Yorker-with-relatives-on-his-hand, the New Yorker-with-
time-on-his-hand, the flapper and the grandmother
were regaled with entertainment the while they paid fancy
prices for a hot bird and a cold bottle have seemingly
had their day, or rather their night, and are passing into the
limbo of forgotten things along with the plays
of yesteryear. the Grand Duke Nicholas, red-light districts
and Ford jokes.“ (...)
Redaktioneller Inhalt
Shoulder Arms 1914 1918 next previous