Word: budapests
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...Faticati four) and come home in two years with a brimful crock of gold. But at the border, the Russian occupation troops and the Hungarian border guards were not impressed by their bright dreams nor by their party cards. They sent Merlino and Faticati to the secret police in Budapest for questioning...
...hearers, it was well-remembered history. Turkey in 1919 was crushed, defeated from without, disintegrating within. Gone was the fury and might which, beginning in 1299, had sent Ottoman legions smashing at Vienna's gates and made Budapest a suburb of Constantinople. Gone was the conquering fervor that created a tri-continental empire the size of the U.S., encompassing what are now 20 modern nations stretching from the Dniester to the Nile, from the Adriatic to the Persian Gulf. In 1919, British warships still rode in the Bosporus and British troops held Constantinople; Italy, France and Greece were secretly...
...Curtain refugees turned up in London's Festival Hall last week and put on a rare show: a firsthand demonstration of contemporary Russian ballet style. They were Hungary's Istvan Rabovsky, 23, and his wife, Nora Kovach, 21, since 1949 leading dancers in the Leningrad, Moscow and Budapest Opera ballets. They danced the Grand Pas de Deux from Don Quixote-a circusy old number that gave little chance for high art but plenty for high jumps-with a kind of brilliant virtuosity that left balletomanes' toes twitching. Istvan won top honors with his incredible double turns...
...Leningrad took leading roles only about four times a month. Many of the ballets for which they had been trained are now banned; Ravel's Bolero is "erotic," Stravinsky's Petrouchka is "decadent." Nora also likes to jitterbug, but when she tried it one night in a Budapest café, she was warned it might get her into trouble as too Western. Another long-frustrated ambition of Nora's: to see a Fred Astaire film. Just ahead should be plenty of chances. Manhattan Impresario Sol Hurok dropped in one day, watched Nora and Istvan perform...
...experience and finesse, the budding LaSalles are no match for such famed international quartets as the Budapest, Griller or Paganini. But where these majestic ensembles tour the cosmopolitan concert circuits, quartets like the LaSalle are digging themselves in as hinterland institutions. The LaSalle finds that it has literally built a new audience. Moreover, by going out of its way to play for young listeners, it is building up chamber-music interest for the time when the youngsters will be buying their own concert tickets...