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BLONDES AND ANTIQUES.

Grant Wallace's play "Interlude," presented at the Duke pf York's Theatre, London, within recent months, tells of the attraction of a Belgian pianist for an attractive young woman who is something of a musician herself but is suffering from a broken wrist when she meets the hero fbr the first time in an antique shop. . The young man would rattier admire antiques than play the piano, but; the lovely young lady, who marries him almost immediately after meeting, him, has other plans—a musical career. There is a dramatic climax wherein the young pianist, at the Queen's Hall on the big night of his wife's ambitions, refuses to play. However,' the adjurations of his wife and the conductor of his performance win. and the programme goes ahead. There is a happy reunion in the Hall. Louis Borell played the antique-lover turned pianist, and Sarah Erskine was the glamourous blonde who changes the whole tenor of his life.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19390921.2.143.16

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXVIII, Issue 71, 21 September 1939, Page 18

Word Count
159

BLONDES AND ANTIQUES. Evening Post, Volume CXXVIII, Issue 71, 21 September 1939, Page 18

BLONDES AND ANTIQUES. Evening Post, Volume CXXVIII, Issue 71, 21 September 1939, Page 18