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...David Selznick, that his policies would determine the management of both companies. In general, Radio pictures will, for the future, be made at a lower than average (for Hollywood) cost. The Selznick idea is to develop stars rather than buy them ready made; to recruit acting and directorial talent from the Manhattan stage; to hold down production costs by avoiding some of the most flagrant waste motion common and to some extent unavoidable in cinemanufacture. Knowing observers last week suspected that the competition from RKO which Hollywood had foreseen with so much consternation two years ago, might now be forthcoming...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures: Nov. 16, 1931 | 11/16/1931 | See Source »

...Hidden talent among House plan harriers will come to light tomorrow afternoon when aspiring distance runners from the seven units race over a mile course on Soldiers Field...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HOUSE HARRIERS TO CIRCLE THE STADIUM | 11/12/1931 | See Source »

...themselves, a group of friends at Provincetown, Mass., 16 summers ago, went over to Hutchins Hapgood's verandah and put on a couple of plays. Susan Glaspell was there; so were George Cram ("Jig") Cook, rebel John Reed, Mary Heaton Vorse. Robert Edmond Jones, a young man of talent and resource, fashioned scenery out of porch furniture, odds-&-ends. The Almighty supplied the backdrop, a tumbling ocean. Next year the play-acting fad persisted. Mary Vorse turned over a shack on her wharf to the enterprise and someone named Eugene Gladstone O'Neill, a lank, bushy-headed fellow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theatre: Greece in New England | 11/2/1931 | See Source »

...Grand Opera Company (the world's only woman opera-director since Anita Colombo was eased out of her position at La Scala) but in five years her position has radically changed. No longer does she haggle over prices or stitch costumes. She wears orchids, travels abroad to engage talent. Prosperity came in 1929 when Mrs. Mary Louise Curtis Bok, daughter of Publisher Cyrus Herman Kotzschmar Curtis, decided to support the company, to use it partly as an outlet for opera talent in the Curtis Institute of Music. Proof of the company's security and artistic prestige...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Philadelphia Curtain | 11/2/1931 | See Source »

...been fully bridged. Much remains to be done before the selfish old system which reserved education for the privileged classes is finally overthrown, but it is only fair to say that today both the "public schools" and the universities of England, old as well as new, are open to talent, no matter what the accidents of birth. At Oxford it has been recently shown, "out of 1,263 male students who matriculated in the year 1928-29, less than half came from English public schools and no fewer than 223 had begun their education in public elementary schools...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Oxford Professor, Formerly at Princeton, Compares English and American Education | 10/28/1931 | See Source »

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