Close Up (Jul-Nov 1927)

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CLOSE UP ger in secret and in taxis and alone, but openly in parties in the car. We emerge, glitter for a moment in the briUiant hght of the new flamboyant foyer, and disappear for the evening into the queer faintly indecent gloom. Such illumination as there will be, moments of the familiar sense of the visible audience, of purposefully being somewhere, is but hail and farewell leaving our party again isolated amidst unknown invisible humanity. Anyone may be there. Anyone is there and everyone, and not segregated in a tier-quenched background nor packed away up under the roof. During the brief interval we behold not massed splendours bordered by a row of newspaper men, but everyone, filling the larger space, oddly ahead of us. "What about a Movie ? That one at the Excelsior sounds quite good." Suggestions made off-hand. A Theatre is a rarity, to be selected with care, anticipated, experienced, discussed at great length, long remembered. But a film more or less is neither here nor there. May be good may be surprisingly good in the way of this strange new goodness provided for hours of relaxation and that nobody seems quite sure what to think of. It will at least be an evening's entertainment, a welcome change from talk, reading, bridge, wireless, gramophone. And the trip down town revives the unfaihng bright sense of going out, hfts off the burden and heat of the day and if the rest of the evening is a failure it is not an elaborately arranged and expensive failure. There's pictures going on all over London always making something to do whenever you want to go out specially those 62