CINE World (Jun 1965)

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she too was given little opportunity to show-offi From England a lovely Technicolor handling of Ivor Novello’s successful musical play "Dancing Years" was released in 1950. Its chief vocal contribution was offered by Olive Gilbert from the origiral stage production. As a film it was beautiful but bad. Much more musically entertaining was the Technicolored British film "The laughing Lady", starring another husband and wife team Webster Booth and Anne Ziegler. This film mst be a collector’s item it is doubtful whether it has had more than fifty showings throughout North America. The other British offering was "The Glass Mountain" with Tito Gobbi making his Englishspeaking motion picture debut. He managed to shine brightly if briefly. The operatic finale was originally written for the picture by Nino Rota, who was later to achieve filmic fame with his msic for "War and Peace", Mr. Gobbi also sang a northern Italian mountaineer‘’s song "La Montanara'", As a film it deserved and got little public attention. From France came a non + musical version of "Manon", with the story brought up to date to show displaced Jews returning to their biblical homeland. Manon dies not in New Orleans but in an arid, arabic area ~aria-less} ATT TEE ETT SEE DT EDO IE RESETS A limited number of the following issues of CINE World is available from our Mail order Dept.: Vol. I: No.1, No. 2, No. 3 Vol. II: No. 1, No. 2, No. 3/4 Kindly state issue requested enclosing 35 cents for each copy and mail to: CINE World, Box 86, Toronto 9, Canada.