The Brand (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 11, Ed. 1, Friday, December 4, 1959 Page: 8 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Hardin-Simmons University Library.
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Entertainment Keview
By
Tom Stevextfon
Entertainment Editor
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GREGORY PECK and DEBORAH KERR co-star in the 20th Ccntuiy-For
CincmaScope and color production "BELOVED INFIDEL"
Movie Depicts Romance
Of Two Famous People
"Beloved Infidel" is the true
story of the love of famous
writer F. Scott Fitzgerald for
columnist Sheilah Graham and
will open at the Paramount
theater Dec. 6 and continue
through Dec. 18.
Starring Gregory Peck as Fitz-
gerald and Deborah Kerr as Miss
Graham the film was taken from
the autobiographical best-seller of
Miss Graham.
The film begins with Sheilah
Graham's arrival in New York
with her titled English suitor.
The movie then follows "her suc
cessful efforts to become a news-
paperwoman her assignment to
Hollywood as a correspondent and
finally to her meeting with a
brooding alcoholic genius whom
she came to love.
From the moment these two
people meet they are caught up
in a whirlwind of emotions and
conflict which . are displayed in
detail by the movie.
The story is complete: Fitz-
gerald's attempts at rehabilita-
Ensemble Leaves
Moiidayoii Concert
Tour of N. Texas
CVthiiii ii iiniitiiiniiiititii itiiiiiin itiniiiiiMlllllI I1I1IIIIII inn
Concert Band
Will Present
Concert in RFH
i
The H-SU concert band will
present a concert Sunday after-
noon at 4 p. m. in Rose Field
House. The music will be varied
with some Christmas and some
religious numbers being given.
The first of the seven numbers
to be presented is "March Hong-
rofse lby Makoczy. This number
Faust" by Berloiz with the
theme being characteristically
Hungarian.
The second number is to be
Good Friday Spell from "Parsi-
fal" by Richard Wagner. Turk-
ish March from the overture
"Ruins of Athens" by Beethoven
will be given next followed by
"First Suite in E flat" by Gustav
Holtz.
The next number will be
Prayer and Dream Pantomine
from "Hansel and Gretel" by
Humperdinck which is the story
of two children who are lost in
the woods.
The" sixth number will be Le
Nozze di Figaro" overture by W.
A. Mozart. This overture to the
opera "The Marriage of Figaro"
is one of the best known of Moz-
art's works. Full of cheerfulness
and vital sympathy it has appeal
for every listener.
The seventh and final number
on the program is "Military
Francaise a finale from Alger-
ian Suite by SaintjSaens. Saint-
Saens was a great imitative
writer and could capture the
style and spirit of a nationality
in music.
tion; his education of Miss Gra-
ham who reveals herself to be
not the British aristocrat she had
pretended to be but an untutored
orphan; their fights and their
moments of love; Fitzgerald's
disappointments with his later
writing attempts and with his
suicide attempt.
However the main aspect of
the film is centered on the loving
moments these two needful peo-
ple shared and with the effect
upon Miss Graham's life of her
love affair with Fitzgerald.
These are the moments that
have become a part of the roman-
tic American legend the times
of closeness they shared on the
California beaches the gay mo-
ments in Mexico and the life
they led in Hollywood.
Eddie Albert as a sort of pro-totype-Robert-Benchley
charac-
ter adds a special spice to the
film while recreating a true role
from Miss Graham's book.
Hardin - Simmons University's
school of music will sendits 13-
piece Brass Ensemble on a concert
tour of North Texas the week of
Dec. 7.
The group will play 13 concerts
at Breckenridge Olney Seymour
Crowell -Vernon Burkburnett
Henrietta Bowie Nocona McKin-
ney )ecatur and Graham con-
ductor Robert Stephenson has an-
nounced. The program will include a
series of fanfares several concert
selections religious numbers and
novelty and popular tunes. Ac-
companying the ensemble will be
Norma Wendelburg assistant
professor of piano who will per-
form several piano concert selec-
tions. Making up the ensemble are
Lawrence Long of Pleasanton
tuba; Sam Beam of Abilene and
Charles Pierson of San Antonio
baritones; Bryan Shelburne of
Hamlin Bobby Etheridge of Gar
land and Milton Denny of Espar
nola N. M. trombones; Palmer
McCownof Littlefield Kenneth.'
Bur.ts of Channelview Keith LiW
tie of Valley Center Kansas..
George Nomura of Honolulu
Hawaii and Sidney Beth Guy-
ler of Houston trumpet; and John
Estes of Premont and Carrol Mof-
fatt of Seminole French horns.
NOW THRU SAT.
PARAMOUNT
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DICHOIK
imwi ROBERT ROSSEN
..... wwMOffMi
COMING SUN. THRU TUES.
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Mission Emphasis
(Continued from Page 1)
night. Pianist for the week will
be Sherry Baker.
Leech urged all students to be
prayerful for this meeting and
"plan to attend all the services"
Mahoney Gives
Clarinet Recital
In Caldwell Hall
James Mahoney graduate
clarinet major from North Texas
State College presented a pro-
gram of representative clarinet
literature Tuesday. He was ac-
companied by his cousin Mr.
Andy Patterson of the H-SU
school of music faculty.
The program was unique in
that it included such a represen-
tative cross-section of the stand-
ard literature for the clarinet. To
make the program more unusual
a bassoon quartet made up of
member's of the H-SU woodwind
ensemble were heard in a rare
combination. Few composers
have written works for four
bassoons.
Among the works for clarinet
that were performed were the
second movement of the Mozart
Concerto in A the von Weber
Concertino two movements from
the Brahms Sonata in f minor
two movements from the Saint-
Saens Sonata in E-flat Three
Pieces for unaccompanied clari-
Boh Dupree
To Draw Far
Brand Series
Beginning with this issue the-
Brand will feature a series of
cartoons drawn by Bob Dupree
of Abilene.
Dupree started his career as an
artist when he was in high school.
He won numerous awards while
he was in high school. Later he
continued his education in the-
field of art at McMurry College
where he studied for two years.
In the summer of 1958 Dupree
spent three months in North
Carolina doing advanced study
and painting. He is now in Cali-
fornia working as display man-
ager in a department store.
net by Stravinsky and the
Meister Erwinn Faniasie.
Mahoney displayed dazzling
technique in the Weber Concer-
tino and the Erwinn Faniasie- by
Meister but his musical insight
and fine sense of tonal coloring"
came through in the slow move-
ments of the Brahms and Saint-
Saens Sonatas. He thoroughly
demonstrated his total command
of the instrument in all registers
while maintaining a higI7 degree
of contrast throughout.
Finally the Three Pieces for
unaccompanied clarinet by Strav-
insky afforded the soloist the op-
portunity to contrast the various
registers of his instrument into a
skillful amalgamation of sound.
The low tones of the clarinet often
were used as a sort of pedal-point
against what the upper tones were
saying.
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GREGORY
PECK
DEBORAH
KERR
JERRY
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WILLIAM HOLDEN
and
ROBERT MITCHUM
"RACHEL ANt) THE
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The Brand (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 11, Ed. 1, Friday, December 4, 1959, newspaper, December 4, 1959; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth96988/m1/8/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hardin-Simmons University Library.