Difference between revisions of "Nightlife and Entertainment"
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[[Image:Bittersweet.jpg|thumb|center|635px|"We All Wear the Green Carnation" from Noel Coward's ''Bitter Sweet'', Act 3, Scene 1. Courtesy of British Pathé.]] | [[Image:Bittersweet.jpg|thumb|center|635px|"We All Wear the Green Carnation" from Noel Coward's ''Bitter Sweet'', Act 3, Scene 1. Courtesy of British Pathé.]] | ||
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+ | [[Image:Atkinson_Bitter_Sweet_Review.jpg|thumb|Brooks Atkinson, 'Bittersweet' Here; Witty and Breezy. New York Times. Nov 6, 1929]] | ||
== Notes == | == Notes == |
Revision as of 18:09, 10 May 2011
You would be stimulated anew by contact with this strange and vital city. It remains elixir to me. It is inexhaustible. [1]
- My dear boy, on thirty-five dollars a week I am living at a hotel which is luxurious and delightful; I see one or two plays (from the upper balcony, it is true, but I don't have to smell the actors to appreciate the play); I dine with several different people each week, choosing those who I feel most like talking at; I visit those ultra ultra spots where drinks cost a dollar each (though I get only one or two) and the like of which is nowhere else in this unfair country. You would have a delightful time here with me.[2]
Notes
Back to Leo Adams: A Gay Life in Letters, 1928–1952
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