is very much on the stage & everyone enjoys him. He is very
correct of course. His riding suit is "a dream". He is funny. In fact all
the dialogue is very bright & witty. Gladys Wallis is the
cutest little school girl with curls & very much in love with an
idiotic Englishman, till his beard is shaved off - when she laughs at him.
There is an absent-minded professor - who forgets everything - and his
pretty & stunning young wife. Miss Adams has quite
a tragic part which she acts beautifully & ideally. She grows lovlier
& lovlier. We walked home by the Herald Bldg. & saw
the big presses, but they were not working yet. - Quite ready for bed and
February 28th Friday.
slept very well. Got down for breakfast at 9:15 & found
Gordon
talking to Claude. We chatted a
while and then went to breakfast & met Gordon &
Madden
at the League
later (after a pleasant walk up Fifth Avenue.)
Ed. Nolan
also happened in & going thro' the exhibit with the comments of
these young architects was quite inter- esting. It was a fine exhibition,
we all thought. I liked especially the sketches for decorations to
Hotel Manhattan. Elihu Vedder's sketches for
the Congressional Library. An angel baptistry. A burnt wood
large panel (or 3) of adoration of Joan of Arc. The
numerous casts of Gen'l Sherman statue competition (I tried
to take some photographs - with very doubtful success, I imagine.) Some
drawings of Louis Rhead's "Winter driving Fall"
and "Spring driving Winter" (very bright & decorative -
also some swan & peacock decorations by the same artist) Claude's book plates were the best there,
too. A lot of interesting architectural
is very much on the stage & everyone enjoys him. He is very
correct of course. His riding suit is "a dream". He is funny. In fact all
the dialogue is very bright & witty. Gladys Wallis is the
cutest little school girl with curls & very much in love with an
idiotic Englishman, till his beard is shaved off - when she laughs at him.
There is an absent-minded professor - who forgets everything - and his
pretty & stunning young wife. Miss Adams has quite
a tragic part which she acts beautifully & ideally. She grows lovlier
& lovlier. We walked home by the Herald Bldg. & saw
the big presses, but they were not working yet. - Quite ready for bed and
February 28th Friday.
slept very well. Got down for breakfast at 9:15 & found
Gordon
talking to Claude. We chatted a
while and then went to breakfast & met Gordon &
Madden
at the League
later (after a pleasant walk up Fifth Avenue.)
Ed. Nolan
also happened in & going thro' the exhibit with the comments of
these young architects was quite inter- esting. It was a fine exhibition,
we all thought. I liked especially the sketches for decorations to
Hotel Manhattan. Elihu Vedder's sketches for
the Congressional Library. An angel baptistry. A burnt wood
large panel (or 3) of adoration of Joan of Arc. The
numerous casts of Gen'l Sherman statue competition (I tried
to take some photographs - with very doubtful success, I imagine.) Some
drawings of Louis Rhead's "Winter driving Fall"
and "Spring driving Winter" (very bright & decorative -
also some swan & peacock decorations by the same artist) Claude's book plates were the best there,
too. A lot of interesting architectural
is very much on the stage & everyone enjoys him. He is very
correct of course. His riding suit is "a dream". He is funny. In fact all
the dialogue is very bright & witty. Gladys Wallis is the
cutest little school girl with curls & very much in love with an
idiotic Englishman, till his beard is shaved off - when she laughs at him.
There is an absent-minded professor - who forgets everything - and his
pretty & stunning young wife. Miss Adams has quite
a tragic part which she acts beautifully & ideally. She grows lovlier
& lovlier. We walked home by the Herald Bldg. & saw
the big presses, but they were not working yet. - Quite ready for bed and
February 28th Friday.
slept very well. Got down for breakfast at 9:15 & found
Gordon
talking to Claude. We chatted a
while and then went to breakfast & met Gordon &
Madden
at the League
later (after a pleasant walk up Fifth Avenue.)
Ed. Nolan
also happened in & going thro' the exhibit with the comments of
these young architects was quite inter- esting. It was a fine exhibition,
we all thought. I liked especially the sketches for decorations to
Hotel Manhattan. Elihu Vedder's sketches for
the Congressional Library. An angel baptistry. A burnt wood
large panel (or 3) of adoration of Joan of Arc. The
numerous casts of Gen'l Sherman statue competition (I tried
to take some photographs - with very doubtful success, I imagine.) Some
drawings of Louis Rhead's "Winter driving Fall"
and "Spring driving Winter" (very bright & decorative -
also some swan & peacock decorations by the same artist) Claude's book plates were the best there,
too. A lot of interesting architectural