RENOWN THEATRE
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY ' Iiere is the spirit of England . . . the reason England is . . . the story of an English family . . . your family. Noel Coward's latest success, "This Happy Breed," has been brilliaritly brought to the screen in technicolour and tells humanly, humorously, dramatically, the simple story of a family, of their lives in between two wars and how they go forward in the shadow of world events. One of the latter portrayed in the films is the peace. procession of 1919, and we see the troops of the victorious Allies marching past to the cheers and tears of the crowds. Amongst them in the filmed scene proudly marched many a son of a French father who marched in the original parade, for many members of the fighting French went to Denham for the day and dprined -the uniforms their fathers wore to victory, for the shpoting of the sequence. A walk through memory lane . . . "This Hanrw Breed" takes you back along a well remembered road.
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Bibliographic details
Chronicle (Levin), 8 January 1947, Page 3
Word Count
166RENOWN THEATRE Chronicle (Levin), 8 January 1947, Page 3
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