#William Squire
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officaldavidcallan · 8 months ago
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Tea Time
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mariocki · 1 month ago
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Play for Today: Buffet (BBC, 1976)
"Freddie likes squalid plays."
"I don't think I care for the theatre. If the theatre came to me, then that would be different. One has to go to it."
"I like a play to be about nice people. I like a comedy. I like to be taken out of myself. The plays Freddie likes to see are about squalid people. I like a play to reflect my own problems, I like a play to be about people like ourselves."
#play for today#buffet#single play#classic tv#bbc#1976#rhys adrian#mike newell#tony britton#phyllida law#amanda barrie#robin bailey#clive swift#maureen pryor#edward de souza#nigel hawthorne#anthony pedley#george innes#william squire#arthur pentelow#esmond webb#i enjoyed my last Adrian PfT (Evelyn) enough that i sort out another; like Evelyn‚ this was adapted from one of the writer's own radio#plays (and like Evelyn‚ seems to have come in for some criticism for its failure to match its visuals with the stylised dialogue). this is#the stronger of the two‚ for me. it seems on the surface to be treading similar ground (a middle class‚ middle aged business type heading#into midlife crisis) but the treatment is more pointed here‚ the style even more unnatural. Britton's crisis is much more existential than#the one Ed Woodward was suffering; he's in constant fear of 'cracking up'‚ as is nearly everyone he meets and speaks to. these passing#conversations‚ mostly in railway buffets‚ are the meat of the play and they gradually become stranger and more detached from reality as the#play goes on (and Britton inches towards his crack up). they reach a Pinteresque height of dark absurdism in a scene in which he is#pressed for money by an airline steward who insists the price of landing has been raised while Britton was midflight. it honestly won't be#to everyone's taste but i found myself truly gripped by this in the second half‚ an inventive and very funny black comedy of ageing despair
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ronnola · 1 year ago
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anewstartrekfan · 4 months ago
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The Squire of Gothos part 2: Q’s Boogaloo:
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uwmspeccoll · 2 years ago
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Typography Tuesday
Here are some border and initial designs by the eccentric English artist, designer, and occultist Austin Osman Spare for the English writer and editor J. C. Squire’s collection of short tales, The Gold Tree, printed in 1917 at the Pelican Press for Marvin Secker in London in an edition of 500 copies signed by the author. The designs were engraved in wood by William Quick who was responsible for engraving most of Spare's designs.
Austin Osman Spare (1886-1956) was an English artist and ardent occultist who developed his own personal occult philosophy and wrote a series of grimoires. As an artist Spare was influenced by artists who worked in the Art Nouveau style, such as Charles Ricketts and Aubrey Beardsley, and in the 1920s he established two short-lived art magazines, one of which, The Golden Hind, we hold a full run (1921-1924). The magazine was co-edited with Clifford Bax and published by Chapman and Hall, and each issue was signed by the editors and included an original signed print by a different artist. 
That’s a lot of signing, something of which The Gold Tree’s author J. C. Squire evidently was not a fan. In another copy of this book currently for sale on the rare book market, Squire added a comment to his signature, “I would rather write the book again than sign another 500 copies.”
View our posts on Austin Osman Spare’s The Golden Hind.
View more Typography Tuesday posts.
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yeetmylifeu · 2 years ago
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ghassanrassam · 2 months ago
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1957 the end of the British rule in the Caribbean..crumbling racial boundaries
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rabbitcruiser · 1 year ago
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The Chrysler Building in New York City opened to the public on May 27, 1930.  
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no-side-us · 2 years ago
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Letters From Watson Liveblog - Feb. 12
The Reigate Squires, Part 1 of 3
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What a tease. You just know Conan Doyle was giggling to himself coming up with some outlandish names and titles for a story he knew he would never write. I want to know what Baron Maupertuis and his colossal schemes were about!
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"Don't worry Watson, I never rested for a moment! I didn't eat, sleep, or even use the bathroom! My health is secondary, no, tertiary to stopping crime! Isn't that reassuring?"
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I'm assuming that this means there were only guys there, no women, which is an odd thing for Holmes to desire, though not entirely surprising considering his opinion of women in the last letters. Unless this means something else in this context, of course.
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Holmes is just adorable. How could anyone read these stories and come to the conclusion he is always a cold and emotionless person?
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And Watson's adorable too! They've both been very cute and caring in this story so far.
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I wonder what the earliest time the murder would've had to have occurred for the Colonel to decide to skip breakfast. Like if the murder happened at 5 a.m. would that be early enough, or just too late in his mind?
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Poor Watson. I just realized that this story is the equivalent of a vacation episode in a detective show: the detective and their partner go out of town, the partner just wants to have a good time, but oh wait! There's a murder! And the detective just happens to be there to help solve it!
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Just want to say thank you to Watson for transcribing the note. Reading cursive is not my forte.
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Getting that compliment from Holmes as an Inspector is high praise, good on Inspector Forrester.
A lot of interesting little mysteries and clues so far. I'm curious to see how it might all fit together in the next letter.
Part 1 - Part 2 - Part 3 - Clues
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gaytobymeres · 1 year ago
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Callan isn’t a comedy but it is (sometimes) really fucking funny
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letterboxd-loggd · 2 years ago
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Footsteps in the Fog (1955) Arthur Lubin
January 31st 2023
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mariocki · 2 years ago
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A Challenge for Robin Hood (1967)
"I love to see men wrestle."
"And after this, a hanging. There's no end to the entertainment."
#a challenge for robin hood#hammer films#1967#robin hood#british cinema#c. m. pennington richards#peter bryan#barrie ingham#james hayter#leon greene#peter blythe#gay hamilton#alfie bass#jenny till#john arnatt#eric flynn#john gugolka#john harvey#william squire#donald pickering#reg lye#a rollicking good time! pleasantly surprised by just how much I enjoyed this; surely one of the best of Hammer's adventure films#benefits from a rich and detailed plotting which explores not just Robin's background and noble heritage‚ but the larger Saxon and Norman#conflict and political landscape of the era. Ingham is a fine Robin (if difficult to accept as a hero; he played snobby assholes too often#in his tv guest spots) and Gay Hamilton is badly served by a script which renders Marian as little more than an object to be fought over#and rescued again and again‚ but the supporting cast of telly faces is immaculate. Arnett is a superbly snakelike Nottingham‚ all quiet#menace and unsettling looks‚ while dreamy Peter Blythe (sigh) is a perfectly spiteful and bitchy main villain. Eric Flynn (father of Jerome#and bros) is an earthy and likeable Alan a Dale (and was soon to play the lead in the BBC's excellent 1970 adaptation of Ivanhoe‚ meeting#another Robin Hood) while Leon Greene (who Hammer seem to have been considering for romantic lead status; he also did The Devil Rides Out#for them) is an amusingly blithe Little John. spectacular swordfights and a few moments of shocking violence: pure Hammer adventure fun
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storyofmorewhoa · 10 months ago
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Margaret Jameson's illustrations from The Vicar of Wakefield by Oliver Goldsmith
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historicalreusedcostumes · 29 days ago
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This dark blue embroidered coat is worn on William Campbell as Trelane in Star Trek: The Squire of Gothos (1967) and later worn two times in The Monkees: The Prince and The Pauper (1967), First on old footman and later worn on Joe Higgins as Mike Nesmith in The Monkees: The Prince and The Pauper (1967)
Credit: trekkerscrapbook, Anne81
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alwaysbewoke · 11 months ago
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Racist print promoting anti-abolitionists' fears of multiracial personal relationships. Created by Edward Williams Clay in 1839. On December 13, 1893, Judge Householder of Knoxville, Tennessee, sent an entire family to jail on felony miscegenation charges. Setting bond at $500, he jailed a black man named Jim McFarland, and his mother, Ms. McFarland, a black woman, Henry Whitehead, a black man, Harriet Smith, who local authorities reported was a white woman, and her children from prior relationships with white men, Lydia Smith and John Smith. At the time of arrest, the multigenerational family lived in the same household. The court’s order left a young child at home without a caregiver. The family spent over a month in jail before facing trial in January. Newspapers noted that Smith had reported to them “with shameless candor,” that she was actually a black woman—while her mother was white, her father was a light-skinned black man—and that she had never pretended to be white. Local news speculated further that since Smith’s children had white fathers, those children living with black men and women might violate the miscegenation codes as written “even should the taint of negro blood be traced to the remote degree claimed.” Local media and the white Knoxville community praised Squire Householder’s actions, reporting that he “came to the rescue of the community” by “starting a war on the crime of miscegenation.” Ultimately, a month after her arrest, Smith was tried before a jury that determined she was “of colored stock,” and acquitted her and Henry Whitehead of miscegenation. However, the jury still convicted them both of lewdness for living together, and they were each sentenced to 11 months in the workhouse. The cases against her children were dropped by the prosecutor after this verdict.
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antonio-m · 2 days ago
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"William Squire in Sailor Costume", 1949 by Duncan Grant (English, 1885-1978). V&A Museum, London. oil on canvas
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