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NO SUBSTANTIAL BACKING

KING'S THEATRE

A hint that resolutions passed by the Oxford Union Society should not be taken too seriously, nor as representing the opinion of the university as a whole, was given by Mr. Lester Moller, a former New Zealand Rhodes Scholar, when addressing the Univex*sity Association of Southland, states the "Southland Daily News." He said that only 800 of the 4000 graduates at Oxford were members of the union, and Only a small proportion of that 800 were debating members. The publicity given some years ago to a resolution by this Coterie that they would not fight for King and country harl created the false impression that the resolution re.presented the general feeling at Oxford, whereas it had been evolved by a few radicals. The union had been formed in the first instance as a debating society, but the magnificent library and other facilities at its disposal had attracted members for mental recreation other than debating, which was now confined to purely political elements. ■•• k ■

"Wuthering Heights."

The grey moors of Yorkshire, an ancient house rendered spectral by a love tragedy, a glimpse in the eerie darkness of the ghostlike form of a woman—and out into the night, never to return, rushes the gaunt lover, in pursuit of the wraith of the woman for whom he has waited. Divided between loyalty to her husband and the weird fascination of the other man, she had died years before in the latter's arms, whereupon he himself had proclaimed that he was the cause of her death, and he had invited her to come back from the after-life and to haunt him. Much more than that is found in the story of "Wuthering Heights," but enough has been said to indicate a complex of mysticism, of personal magnetism on its sex side, or perhaps of pre-ordained fate. The heroine of "Wuthering Heights" is two women alternately, and sometimes almost at once. She (Merle Oberon) is the dutiful wife of her husband in home and in drawing-room, but out on the Yorkshire moors the witchcraft of wild, grey places lays hold of her and she is the passionate adorer of her baseborn lover (Laurence Olivier). This problem of a woman's divided soul is very old and ever new. Emily Bronte, herself one of the most mystic features of the Bronte tradition, created the novel "Wuthering Heights," and Samuel Goldwyn created the picture of the same name which is to commence on Friday at the King's Theatre. The two principals, Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon, are the pivot of the story, but the picture owes much [to a strong supporting cast. Today, | just as for the last eighty years, [critics regard the novel as an enigma, land Emily Bronte herself is regarded as the most enigmatic of the three literary Bronte sisters. She had had mystic experiences before her death, at thirty years, in 1848. Add to this background of mystery, of tragedy, and of borderline life the haunting greyness of the Yorkshire moors, and the result is a problem picture full of subtle charm. There is ghostliness but no ghastliness. Passion is displayed, not torn to tatters. A picture to be I remembered.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19390719.2.31

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXVIII, Issue 16, 19 July 1939, Page 6

Word Count
532

NO SUBSTANTIAL BACKING KING'S THEATRE Evening Post, Volume CXXVIII, Issue 16, 19 July 1939, Page 6

NO SUBSTANTIAL BACKING KING'S THEATRE Evening Post, Volume CXXVIII, Issue 16, 19 July 1939, Page 6

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