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Great Catherine: Whom Glory Still Adores is a 1913 one-act play by Irish dramatist George Bernard Shaw. It was written between two of his other 1913 plays, Pygmalion and The Music Cure . It tells the story of a prim British visitor to the court of the sexually uninhibited Catherine the Great of Russia.
Agnes loses Glory in a poker game to Sobbing Sam Cooney, who is Chad's trainer, but Chad arranges for her to recover the horse. Neighbors stake the entry fee for the Kentucky Derby so that Glory can be entered. Ned returns to train her, and Glory's surprising victory is a happy ending for all, including Clarabell and Chad, who are in love.
The Road to Glory is a 1936 American war drama film directed by Howard Hawks and starring Fredric March, Warner Baxter, Lionel Barrymore and June Lang, and produced by 20th Century Fox. It is a depiction of World War I trench warfare in France.
She was also "on the fence" about starring in the film, so her involvement as the writer-director-star was "a budgetary necessity". [5] [6] [4] Filming took place in the Bronx in 2014. [3] The bookstore, King of Glory, was owned by Mensah's aunt and uncle. [7] Expenses for post-production were raised through crowdfunding on Kickstarter in 2015.
The Intrigue is a surviving [1] 1916 silent film drama produced by Pallas Pictures and released through Paramount Pictures. Frank Lloyd directed the film which was written by Julia Crawford Ivers and photographed by her son James Van Trees .
Intrigue and Love, sometimes Love and Intrigue, Love and Politics, or Luise Miller (German: Kabale und Liebe, pronounced [kaˈbaːlə ʔʊnt ˈliːbə] ⓘ; literally "Cabal and Love") is a five-act play written by the German dramatist Friedrich Schiller. His third play, it was first performed on 13 April 1784 at Schauspiel Frankfurt. The play ...
Glory was, as the writer and critic John Updike observed in a 1972 New Yorker review, the author's fifth Russian-language novel but his last to be translated to English. "In its residue of bliss experienced," Updike writes, "and in its charge of bliss conveyed, 'Glory' measures up as, though the last to arrive, far from the least of this happy ...
Paths of Glory, a 2009 novel on Everest by Jeffrey Archer; Paths of Glory, a 1935 novel by Humphrey Cobb, the basis of the Stanley Kubrick film; Paths of Glory, a 1915 book written by Irvin S. Cobb; a non-fiction account of his journalistic experiences during World War I; Paths of Glory, a 1935 play by Sidney Howard, based on Humphrey Cobb's novel