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RADIO STARS
take a Beauty Laxative
■OLexandet IWooLLcott a IfljnettQ
ALEXANDER WOOLLCOTT, noted author, playwright, raconteur and — in the role of the "Town Crier" — conductor of one of the most popular and provocative periods on the air, usually baffles his interviewers. He doesn't like to be interviewed. For those listeners, however, who know that Woollcott is a celebrated wit, a boon companion of great personalities, a host at famous Sunday breakfasts, a champion croquet player, and a lot of other intimate details — but who do not know where he was born, went to school, worked and played, this history has been compiled.
Alexander Woollcott was born in Phalanx, New Jersey, U. S. A., on January 19th, 1887, the son of Walter and Frances Grey Bucklin Woollcott. After he finished wading through his nursery library — reading everything from Nietzsche to Lewis Carroll — Woollcott trudged off to Philadelphia to attend Central High School.
From Philadelphia Woollcott proceeded to Clinton, N. Y., and spent the usual amount of time acquiring a Ph.D. degree from Hamilton College in 1909. After some years of general writing, studying and teaching, he became dramatic critic of the New York Times — a post he held from 1914 to 1922.
During the War, Woollcott deserted his aisle seat and enlisted for service overseas. With Harold Ross and several others, during those tremendous times, he published "The Stars and Stripes," a superb literary
creation and the official newspaper of the A. E. F.
In 1922 Woollcott became dictator of dramatic tastes for the readers of the New York Herald. Three years later his criticisms and personal enthusiasms popped up on the drama page of the New York World.
By 1928 Woollcott's talent for injecting his own enthusiasms into the imaginations of a vast number of readers brought his writings into the pages of the Saturday Evening Post, Collier's, newspaper syndicates, and books. His writings include "Mrs. Fiske — Her Views on Acting, Actors, and the Problems of the Stage," "The Command Is Forward," "Mr. Dickens Goes to the Play," "Enchanted Aisles," "The Story of Irving Berlin," "Going Places," and the recent best-seller, "While Rome Burns." He has also written the plays, "The Channel Road," and "The Dark Tower," and made his debut as an actor in "Brief Moment," at the Belasco Theatre in 1931.
Late in 1930, Woollcott faced the microphone for the first time in the New York studios of the Columbia Broadcasting System, conducting a chatty literary column called "The Early Bookworm." Since that time he has commuted, off and on, between the typewriter and the "mike." After a vacation Woollcott now is back on the air as "The Town Crier," heard every Sundav from 7 :00 to 7:30 P. M. (E. S. T. WABC.)
Woollcott always carries a cane and a well-filled portfolio, and "collects" god-children.
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Miss — Mrs _ _ _
Street
City State _
89