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The Smartest Set in World

in such a distinguished gathering. We saw the Duke of York and the Duchess dancing beside ust! We s saw Prince George siting next' to Lady Mountbatten. We saw the Marquis de Casa Maury, Sir Philip Sassoon, who was beautifully dressed—l wonder who his tailor Is?—and dozens of other people whom we did not know but could see at.once were both brilliant and famous. I tell you, we were tickled to death. I got a particular kick out of seeing Lady Louis Mountbatten, because it was on the day she arrived in Hollywood that I got my first big chance on the pictures. For that was the day that Charlie Chaplin offered me a part in “A Woman of Paris.”

And what wonderful manners you English have got! I wanted to stare all the time at the Duke and Duchess of York and Prince George, but nobody else did and. so I just had to content myself with a peek every now and then over my wife's shoulder. If it had been in New York on Hollywood, everyone would have been staring hard all the time, and I am afraid I should have done so too. But when in Rome, do as the Romans do. When in London, show your best manners. On three or four occasions I very nearly yielded to my inclination to bump into the Duke so that I could apologise to him, and when I got back to America say that I had had an exclusive interview with the King’s second son.

ADOLPHE MENJOU RECORDS HIS FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF FASHIONABLE LONDON

HITHIN an hour of my arrival in London I was asked to give my opinion of English women and to criticise the way English men dressed.. To have done the first was clearly impossible, for I had not seen any. To have done the second would have been an impertinence. The English are the best-dressed nation in the world. All I would care to say about clothes is that I take a very great deal of trouble with my own. A film actor has „ to —for the slightest blemish in cut stands out a mile on the screen. To me London is easily the smartest city in the world. The men are so well dressed in the streets. They carry sticks. It gives them an air. The policeman and the commission; alres salute so smartly. The carvers and the waiters in your chop-houses and restaurants are so tidy antT efficient, while in the hotels there is just enough foreign intonation among the staff to produce a pleasant cosmopolitan veneer. Kind friends took us to the Embassy Club, Never in my life have I been

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MT19280721.2.77.35

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Times, Volume LIII, Issue 6667, 21 July 1928, Page 5 (Supplement)

Word Count
454

The Smartest Set in World Manawatu Times, Volume LIII, Issue 6667, 21 July 1928, Page 5 (Supplement)

The Smartest Set in World Manawatu Times, Volume LIII, Issue 6667, 21 July 1928, Page 5 (Supplement)

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