home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
/
TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
/
1930
/
30winter
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-02-27
|
2KB
|
48 lines
<text>
<title>
(1930s) Winterset
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1930s Highlights
Theater
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
Winterset
</hdr>
<body>
<p>(October 7, 1935)
</p>
<p> Up from the shadowy dead-end of a Manhattan slum street rises
a pylon of Brooklyn Bridge, the span sweeping out of sight high
overhead with a sparse twinkle of lights. Beneath this dark
serenity Playwright Maxwell Anderson's people in the play,
Winterset, go furtively about their sinister business. With
classic disregard for law of probability, almost everyone
concerned in a 15-year old payroll robbery for which a
celebrated radical was wrongly executed, come together. There
is Trock, the consumptive killer who engineered the crime, just
out of prison for another misdeed. There is the judge (Richard
Bennett), out of his wits with brooding upon the injustice he
fears has been done. There is Garth, who saw the robbery
committed and might have saved the condemned man had he but
spoken. There is the radical's tough and tortured young son Mio
(Burgess Meredith), relentlessly set upon clearing his father's
name.
</p>
<p> Playwright Anderson, whose simple maxim is that "somebody must
write verse plays," has clothed his piece intentionally as well
as unintentionally in an uneven variety of poetic fabric. Much
of the common street speech of his criminals and vagrants is
good stout tow-sacking. Much of the overlong excursion into the
philosophy of justice, to judge by audience reaction, is
tiresome shoddy. But pure chamfered silk, most observers agreed,
were the tender, spontaneous love passages between Mio and
Miriamne (Margo), Garth's mercurial younger sister, a curious
and strangely opposite East Side Juliet.</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>