LONDON
“THE LOVES OF ROBERT BURNS" The London Theatre will this ing echo to celebrated airs that ' sung wherever Britons conerL?™ “Auld Lang Syne,” ’ Annie SS‘;; Coming Through the Rye” the*." 6, names to conjure with amone * r * people, wl ether at home or isolatM " the furthe it corners of the world t ln to hear them as they come from the golden voice of Joseph hS" 8 will be indeed a refreshing chane, ,p They are not introduced arbitral but are part and parcel of the dim,"''’ “The Loves of Robert Burns ~ ? e ’ great poet is seen and heard -Auld Lang Syne,” “Coming ThSf the Rye” and other poems that made his name famous, and their com position is woven into the story of M career. Burns had a brief, but som times gay and stormy life. It i s main?." on his love adventures that the dram' fastens, and these ofTer a story that I, sometimes merry, sometimes sad ass tragic, often romantic, but always grossing. The second feature is “The Wrecker *• the thrilling railway story based on the play seen in Auckland a year or two ago.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19300822.2.159
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Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 1057, 22 August 1930, Page 14
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190LONDON Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 1057, 22 August 1930, Page 14
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