Page 13 - Art First: Simon Morley: Lost Horizon
P. 13

Fast forward to Europe in the 1930s and Shangri-La. James Hilton’s best-selling
                  novel, Lost Horizon (1932), written as the dark clouds of war gathered over the
                  world, was made into a marvelous Frank Capra movie starring Ronald Cole man

                  in 1938 (and into an execrable musical version in the 1970s). It brings a West-
                  meets-East dimension to the ancient myth.


                  e first shots of the movie are of a book. e pages turn to reveal this text:

                                         In these days of wars and
                                         rumors of wars—haven’t
                                         you ever dreamed of a
                                         place where there was

                                         peace and security, where
                                         living was not a struggle
                                         but a lasting delight?
                                         Of course you have.

                                         So has every man since Time
                                         began. Always the same
                                         dream. Sometime he calls it
                                         Utopia—Sometimes the Fount-

                                         ain of Youth—Sometimes
                                         merely ‘that little chicken farm’.


                  e name of Hilton’s now famous kingdom derives from the Tibetan paradise

                  Shambala—and Lost Horizon up-dates the dream of Mount Penglai and the
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