Show s S. S L L H Hails a I I s sT Talent lent T Of Lunts Lunt A packed Utah theater Monday evening paid tribute to a superlative tive performance by brilliant actors actors actors ac ac- ac- ac tors of There Shall Be No Night Robert E. E Sherwood's tense drama of Finland and its stoic stole people The aristocrats of the stage Alfred Alfred Alfred Al Al- AlI I fred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne with witha I Ia a worthy supporting company enacted enacted enacted en- en acted their roles with a significance and artistry of unusual excellence The story in itself is a moving one yet it was so ably handled by bythe bythe bythe the gifted Lunts that its eloquence was made made to appear as an actual experience not a stage perform perform- ance Mr Lunt as the scientist Dr Val Valkonen konen honored by an award of the Nobel peace peace prize peace prize has a winning winning winning win win- ning characterization believing as ashe ashe ashe he does that patriotism as it is practiced today is one of the most virulent manifestations of evil But he is rudely awakened from his dream when his own son takes up arms against Russia when little Finland is attacked and realizes that while the coordinated barbarism barbarism barbarism barbar barbar- ism as revealed by the German consul exists there can can be no peace or freedom no hope for man man- l kind ind Miss Fontanne the spirited gracious gracious gra gra- cious clous wife doctor has a noless no- no noless noless less outstanding role as she loses her son finally her husband and andis is left to wait stoically the Russian advance with guns and ready The message of the Sherwood play is easily gleaned from the lines expressed by the German consul The United States is se secure secure secure se- se cure for the present It may continue continue continue con con- so for a long bong time if the Americans refrain from ing |