Evening Star Newspaper, March 18, 1928, Page 58

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

AMUSEMENTS.® MARCH 18, 1 928 PART 4. AMUSEMENTS.’ E. SHERWOOD. BY ROBERT | HMILE scanning the latest] Charles Rogers is uhquestionably an news and gossip, as revealed |everyday young man who has grown ;n one of the many movie up in an ordinary American manner; Moving Picture Album trade papers that are pubs he has had fame thrust upon him and Jished in Hollywood, I hap- | has not (to date) been spoiled thereby. ned upon an editorial in which the | Why in the name of all that is sensible D% cureer of Charles Rogers was dis- | should the press agents try to convert The egitorial pointed out that | this youth—or any other youth or oung Rogers is one of the most prom- maiden, for that matter—into some- jsing upstarts in the film business—as, | thing that he most emphatically is not? indeed, he is—and then went on to Why do they want to endow him complain that Rogers is being “mis- ‘I'llh the exotic allure of the late Ru- handied” by the Paramount press | dolph Valentino, the excessive wvirility sgents, 3 | of Francis X. Bushman or the tem- Said the editorial: “They are run- | peramental instability of John Barry- ning stories on him in the fan maga- | more? ‘\‘\ ‘making him out just a nice, aver- | Rogers has looks, he has talent ge, clean-living American boy, with and ne is a hard worker. Why not no eccentricities and no serious vices. | let it go at that> Why not allow him ¢ this keeps up. theyll ruin |to work out his destiny in his own Rogers as a potential box-office star. egitimate way? He'd probably make The public doesn't want to know that | much better job of it than any press thair favorites are normal people. They | agent could. the stars to have colorful person- | alities. It the Paramount press agents are wise, they'll get Rogers mixed up in a scandal—get him pinched —anything to get the flappers inter- ested in m." This is & curious point of view, but one which is not uncommon in Hol wood, where the belief still exists that sensat press-agentry lies the eanly true 10 success. * ook ok Without mentioning any names, I beg leave to tell the story of a young film star whose press agents ruined him. He was an actor on the speaking stage | —and a very humble one at that—when suddenly he struck gold in Hollywood. He was playing in a stock company in | California when he came to the atten- { tion of a perceptive movie director who gave him a screen test and then a job. | His first appearance on the screen was in an effective comedy part in an enor- Last week, in this column, T ex- |Mously successful picture. Within a | “d the opinion that pross agentry | few months thereafter he was a lead- he world’s most overrated institu- | Ing man, and in a year he was a star. forementioned trade paper | The world was his oyster. e to express that| It so bappened that, like Charles more forc- | Rogers, thls young star was singularly {normal om ‘unaffected. At first, he was thoroughly unimpressed by his new ! o ow o Press agentry is not & constructive More often than not it is a | found fame. erously destructive one. It has| _ Then the press agents went to work. more reputations than it has They decided that our anonymous hero i o | needed to be exploited and ballyhooed, | s0 that the public might be made con- | sefous of his sex appeal. Stories were | written in wheih he was presented as 2 Great Lover. He was even shoved e ! bodily into a divorce scandal as co-re- e bat ealbred ‘;mx‘lfi;:( He became & lamb in sheik's ducted by Para- | ‘The terrible part of it all was that the young man himself began to take the press stories seriously. He became s ¢ | conscious of his personal magnetism. JRogers showed talent | He read all the mash notes from star- | e Fauth ™ which | Struck flappers. He rather fancied him- B ety i Thr. | Self as & Great Lover. With the result s * | that he changed from a simple, natural - 3 | boy into an insufferably conceited ass. the graduates of OId Para- | The awful change was painfully ev mount Charles Rogers is the only one | dent in his pictures. He played Val- who has really made good. He has ap- | entino roles when he should have peared to excellent advantage in minor | sericted himself to those homely char- roles several productions and has | acterizations for which Charles Ray achieved conspicuous success by dint of | was once famous. bis fine performances in “Wings” and | It wasn't long before this young man's My Best Girl. | >mployers realized that he was no longer In both these pictures Rogers' great- |a popular star. Today—only three est charm was his unselfconsciousness, | years after his entrance into. the his apparent unawareness of the fact | movies—h> is a has-been. that he was playing a part in a movie. | Over the grave of his ambitions there He was as thoroughly naive and in- | might well be placed a tombstone with genuous as Rin Tin Tin, or Rex, the ' the inscription, “He died of a rush of Wild Horse, or Jackie Coogan (in his | publicity to the head.” childhood days). : (Copvright. 1028 ) . is that obviously ng man. Charles Rogers. He from the metropolis of Olathe, where his father is prominent Coming Attractions | Francis I. Curtis, '28, author of the KATIdNAHne 19th Hole.” What is announced as by far the Plece. He is cast as Madame (Ju(ne.-‘ best laughing entertainment and the | Vere Bliss, a typical “Elinor Glyn most appealing play in which Prank Scenario writer, and is aided and Craven has appeared in years is his abetted by W. S. Beaumont, in the domestic comedy, “The 19th Hole, in Sinister role of Wolf Step, leader of which A. L. Erianger will present him | the band of Mafian brigands who besct for & week's engagement at the Na- i movie troupe, while “on location” in tional Theater, beginning March 26. | Siclly. Despite its title, which has o do with | William R. Scott, a Washington boy the golfing and that the comedy | Who appeared in last season's show, T o the | will be seen as Tonio, the bloodthirsty golfing backgroun piay ts one that depicts everyday hu- |mutineer from the bandits' ranks; ' man nature as displayed in the ma- | “Bo” Brown, as Jim Benton, manager Jority of suburban communities all over | 0f the Instigation Pictures, Incorpo- the country. There said 10 be of highly diverting compli- | Fanny, a tough movie extra. Norman cations centered about the role of Ver- | Roche, who has been a feature of the non Chase, a whimsical and placid | chorus, is this year cast as the leading writer, who in an unguarded moment | lady, Laline Lane, and others include aliows himself to be bitten by the golf | such veterans as Edlund, Boeckler and bug. This indifferent one—a role that { Palmer. New men include R. M. Sam- finely displays the dual capacities of (son, R. S. Kaighn and C. B. Doane, jr. Ir. Craven as actor and playwright— | Boxes and tickets for the show are becomes a non-foozling enthusiast. | to be had at Mrs. Wilson-Greene's Golfing rivalries and golf: quarrels, | bureau in Droop’s, Thirteenth and G the scenes, with others, of a locker | streets. yoom teeming with chatter, and do- | mestic rifts fill three acts with homely | COMMUNITY INSTITUTE EVENTS. are three acts rated, and James O. Daggett as Prisco | and _good-natured palaver. | “The 19th Hole” is char- | A rounded cast, with Dorothy Black- bumn, Kitty Kelly, Marion Abbott Pobert Wayne, Homer Barton, Roy alter Downing, H: Howard Sydney, John Har- a2y Adalr Young and Charles Macdonald will assist Mr. Craven in de- picting the various characters. GAYETY— Dr. Willlam Starr Myers, professor of politics at Princeton University, will talk Thursday night, March 29, at Central Community Center on “Cur- rent History." Dr. Myers is a nationally recognized | Dolores del Rio, Mexican cinema star, and her cousin, Carlos Amor, who is “clicking” in the Hollywood movies. The two appear in “Ramona.” These Follies Girls. Oln'h\| dea}e‘rted the stage, b((i'ebnl;."e b everything the stage could do about it, line, ‘Another Zl:g.!‘eld Follies and took: flight 6 the film studlos, Girl Makes Good in Films. |adorning the reels for the first time as This time it's Anita Garvin who is|a Christie bathing girl. She can swim, being glorified by the screen. She is/too. But that makes no difference. playing a role opposite Madge Bellamy | She had ambitions to be a real actress, in “The Play Girl” for Fox, and it’s | because, after all, there isn't much meant as no reflection on the gilded |chance for real art when you're simply chorus girls of this country to say that | splashing around. Miss Garvin portrays a gold-digger. Of | Subsequently, her first dramatic ap- course not. | pearance was n “Bertha, the Sewing She was born in New York City, | Machine Girl," in support of the same which is rather a rare accomplishment | Madge Bellamy with whom she now ap- for a “Follies” girl. Most of them |pears. Now in “The Play Girl" she has come from the cornfields of Kansas and |a real part, and hopes to be able to similar unsophisticated centers. They give up the role of bathing beauty for 80 to New York to learn. Miss Garvin | good. saved the expense of carfare. Director Arthur Rosson considers After receiving her education at the that Miss Garvin, in the role of Minnie Holy Cross Convent, in the metropolis. | the vamp, is showing considerable she was chosen to lpreu in a Mack |charm in a part which calls for genuine Sennett revue, traveling as bathing 'ability and impersonation—for Miss escort of honor with a picture. Later | Garvin, need we add. is much different she received a 2-year contract from i from this in private life, being known Flo Ziegfeld and appeared in two of | to her friends as one of the most retir- his successes, “Sally” and “The Follies l ing young women in the film colony. of 1922." This made it inevitable that| Oh, yes—there are others in the cast sooner or later she would get into the }ol the picture, but one may be excused movies. for not mentioning them when the pub- Sure enough, when the road tour of | lic Is waiting with bated breath to hear “Sally” reached San Francisco, Miss about a “Follies” girl. First Movie From India. ‘IT was somewhere between 500 and)and tamed many elephants, slew many !4 600 B.C., when Croesus was flourish- | tigers and left a tradition of his splen- ing in Lydia and Cyrus was preparing | dor and his wonderful processions. { to snatch Babylon from Nabenidus, that | _Siddhattha Gautama, later called | the founder of Buddhism was born in | Gautama Buddha, was born in a small India. republican tribal community The history of India for many cen- | north of Bengal, under the Himalayas, turies had been happier, less fisrce and | in which is now an overgrown jungle more dreamlike than any othe: history. | country on the borders of Nepal. The The noblemen, the rajahs, hunted; life | institution of caste was not yet fully was made up largely of love stories. |established in India, and the Brahmans, Here and there a maharajah arose | though they were privileged and influ- amid the rajahs and built a city, caught | ential, had not yet struggled to the head of the system.- But there already She Dances I was marked class distinction and a par- GET out the famous standing hea tition between the noble Aryans and the darker common people. Gautama belnn,ed to the former race, and his teachini i of the life of Gautama always have been called the ‘The ry Buddha has been picturized by the In- ! dian Players under the patronage of | the youngest ruler in India, the Maha- | rajah of Jaipur, who now is only 17 years of age, having ascended to the | throne in 1922, This first film enacted, | directed and produced by high-caste h or the Aryan Truf suthority on current affairs, and is well known in this city, where, as a member of the faculty of the Army ' War College, he commands alert atten- tion and keen interest. Dr. Myers likewise conducts Summer courses in | Brahmans in India is being giyen its | premier showing in Washington by the | Motion Picture Guild. James Hall has just signed a new con- tract to appear in Paramount pictures in the | Ten Years on Job. USICIANS are seen and heard, but scldom heard of, Harry Borjes, who conducts the Palace Concert Or- chestra, is no exception. When his tenth year of service for the Loew-interests in Washington rolled in, the press agent at the Palace was called into conference to see what could be done about the matter. ‘When Botjes was little Harry, aged 8 his father 0 was an eminent clarinet and drum player, decided Harry was to have violin lessons. So Harry was sent to Henry Froehlich. As the years rolled by we find him at the College of Music and the Conservatory of Music in Cin- cinnati. A free scholarship won by his ability secured him three years of study at the Graninger School, now out of existence. He played at that time for vdrious musical clubs and on the con-} cert_stage. | When he was 17, he passed the examination necessary for membership | in the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra and became a member of that body | under Van der Stucken. He ramained there three years and then went to New York, where he played at the Knickerbocker, Sherrys, Prince George Hotel, as well as with the Russian Sym- | phony Orchestra under the direction of Modest Alt-Schuler. For a year in New | York he played with the Philharmonic Orchestra. He returned to Cincinnat! when 22| years old, rejoining the Symphony Or- | chestra of his native city. Conductor Stokowski left the follow. ing year to go to Philadelphia and he | was succeeded by Ernest Kunwald. Borjes left Cincinnati to join Uncle Sam’s forces. After the war he came to Washington. He was concert master at Loew’s Columbia until the Palace was completed, when he was assigned for duty there. Last September he was appointed conductor, o Th:Et; rnal Triangle. ETERNAL triangles, it appears, are by no means confined to the human family. Proof of this is said to have developed on the Fox Films West Coast lot recently. F. W. Murnau, who is directing “The Four Devils,” is using many animals for the circus sequence, among them three pachyderms, two females and a male. ‘The keeper noticed that there was animus developing between the two fe- males. Time came for “daddy” to go on the set, and the keeper thought- lessly left the two “ladies” alone and loose while he was away. Soon there was a loud commotion, | bringing studio folk to a point on the back of the lot where a new fllustra- | tion of feminine fury was in progress The larger of the two female pachy- derms had wrapped her trunk thrice | around a 10-foot pole and was flailing | her smaller companion mercllessly. | While none on the lot could translate | the grunts and snorts of the buxom | beater, it is said to be noticeable that | the “flapper” elephant has cast no| ogling eyes at Mr. Elephant since the occurrence. | An Up-in-the-Front Gown. | A STRIKING evening gown, repre- | senting the new ‘“up-in-the-front™ dresses Is one of the costumes designed | for Pola Negri to wear in her new pic- ture, “Threc Sinner: It is described as a very decollete | black satin slip over which is worn a| long-walsted, snug bodice of black tulle, ending in a full black tulle skirt, which starts at about the normal walstline in | front and gets much longer in the back. | ‘This makes the skirt reach the floor ' behind, while in front it ends halfway | between ankles and knees. i A diagonal design of palm leaves em- | broidered in black paillettes starts from | one shoulder and continues clear down the other side. Black and silver bro- | cade slippers go with the gown. Races With the Fashions. *“T'HE wardrobe of a modern motion picture star must be miles ahead of the fashion of all times!” So says Florence Vidor, star of “Doomsday.” | It generally takes several months to make a picture and in order to be right up to the last minute the moving pic- ture actress must be far ahead of the present day styles and fashions. Nliss Vidor is considered one of the smartly | dressed women of the screen and it/ has been her delight to be in the fore as far as fashions go. The public gaze is very searching An eye for the future in dress is essen- tial to the successful star and she must have at her command a competent | | | | ried couple, Richard Barthelmess ad Molly O'Day in the First National screen version of “The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come,” from the story of the late John Fox, §. | it¢* | . 1Current zAttractlons (Continued ¥ t Page.) | Bittinger, Seeley Gray, Willlam Caples and Hetbert Ellfott. The College Glee Club will sing several numbers. Other features will be Martin and Field in a banjo novelty in the olio, Edwin A. (Texas) Brooks, in a droil monologue; a soft-shoe dance by Her- bert Elljott and Otis Fellowes, and sev- eral numbers by the male quartet which includes J. Courtney Hayward, | Roland Parrish, Donald Olmstead and | Tom Martin. A classic feature will be presented by Irene Pyle, harpist, and Alice Hetze] dancer, and the concluding feature wi, be a one-act comedy, “The Lost Sl Hat,” by the College Dramatic Club, of which Arthur Gerth is president. Tickets have been placed on sale at Droop’s. CLARA W. McQUOWN—Friday. Clara W. McQuown, at her weckly | talk on Friday morning, will take 1 | various matters before Congress, espe clally the immigration and agricul tural questions. She will also discuss existing dic- tatorships. These talks are given every Frid:y | morning at 11 o'clock in the ballroom of the Washington Club, 1010 Sev teenth street. JANET RICHARDS—Tomorrow. Janet Richards, at her interpre review tomorrow morning of affairs po | litical and international, will speak fur- ther of England's acute Colonial prob- lems in Egypt and Arabla; also of King Amanullah in London; who and why” and can Tangier be made a second Monte Carlo? Under home affairs, the latest phase of the oil scandal will be touched upon Won Out in “Homey” Plays RANK CRAVEN, who during the| week of March 26 will be seen in | Washington in “The 19th Hole,” has | oftcn been the principal actor in| comedies written by himself. He did “The First Year,” an irresis- tibly amusing treatment of the initial| 12 months in the life of a young mar- for three years. Before| that he appeared in “Too Many Cooks, in which he wrote about the amusing | trials and tribulations of a couple of young lovers who decided to spend their | married life in a suburban home built by themselves. Afterward he gave the | stage his “New Broom: which pre- sented and made immensely funny an- other domestic angle from the every-| day life of young people. i Now he is exploiting, laughable way, a play with theme, that has to do with a sc in a wholly goifing holastic- | minded couple who find a temporary domicile In the midst of a suburban eommunity knowing no other relaxation than golf. As & pioywright Mr. Craven displays | not alone a particularly keen under- |Teally no use for the immoral plays. standing of human nature, both of the man and of the group, but also he fmuemes the gift of being able to clear- ly translate his observations into the terms of the theater. In so doing he has been responsible for a chain of irresistibly funny plays. In addition he is very clever in the acting of tm- Next Week's Pho‘mplays COLUMBIA—Lillian Gish and Ralph Forbes in “The Enemy.” METROPOLITAN — Conrad Nagel and Myra Loy in “The Girl from Chicago.” FOX—Victor McLaglen in A Girl in Every Port.” RIALTO—Mary Philbin and Norman Kerry in “Love Me and the World Is Mine.” PALACE-—-Norma Shearer in “The Latest from Paris.” also California’s problem in the Yosem Must its giant trees be sacrif to_commerce? morning in the Masonic Temple, Thir- | teenth street and New York avenue, at | 10:45 o'clock. 1 INSTITUTE T i RECITAL. partant roles In his own comedies. | gate McComb; best known for her Craven claims that it requires no| ., rava) of the leading role in “Juno mine what the theater-going public 3 < are after in the way of theatrical en- | it In support of Mabel Rowland, come. tertainment. Experience has con- | dienne-diseuse, when the Institu |the Women's Theater presents with__likable, youthful middle - cla ! s people. homey sorts of folk, drawn from |3 the Hotel Mayflower Thursday noon. everyday walks of life and not thrust|March 20. o L o el oot e "!‘noll};fghsL‘(r.wlFrlek(‘fhs | includes representation from many reason, Craven's piays always have to | bassies and legations. g not over rich, of course, ot common | 2 nor too poor types, but the sort one fs | New Titles Chosen. constantly meeting. ture producers almost as much not-to-be-dodged questions that are al- | as actual production. ‘The newest comedy starring W. C. The ‘alks are given every Monday WOMEN'S THEATER deep”thought powers in order to deter- POGFRYSl OF 0% PERACHR F0€ R OO vinced him that plays that have to do| {he Women's Theatet Dreschs Mot into over-complicated situations are | o patronesses and the box-holders do with more or less ordinary people, { THE title problem seems to worry pic- His themes invariably treat of the be ways perplexing family life. In observ- | ing and studying life as he comes in | Flelds and Chester Conklin will | contact with it he often runs across just | known as “Odd Fellows”; the Adolphe the character which he needs for a| Menjou nicture now in production from comedy or to be duplicated in its writ- | the Alfred Savoir story. “Super of the ing. His conviction is firm that as| Galety” will be known to the screen high as 99 per cent of all people have | as “A Date With a Duchess.” | Doris Anderson is writing the screen | adaptation for “White Hands,” the | Arthur Stringer story which Paramount 1 Ideal Screen Lovers. | has just obtained for Es * [ DEAL lovers of the screen!" Such is said to have been the | exclamation of Director. William Well- JANET RICHARDS man of the “Legion of the Con-|Public Questions: Home and Fo | demned.” referring to Fay Wray and| Every Monday Mor: ‘3 Gary Cooper, who have the leads in| 2 the "pictute. " Both are comparatively, Masonic Temple 3 St 4 Admissi | new to screen audiences. Only in the | 65¢ past year have they reached the top e ——— rung of the ladder. Suzanne Savoy Harpist Miss Wray is a blond with deep blue eyes and of mediumn height. Cooper Juanita Froehlich Soprano | is described as a perfect masculine WILLARD HOTEL physical type. He was reared on the open ranges of Montana. Miss Wray | Wed. Eve. March 28, 8:30 Tickets for Sal d and Cariten also is & Westerner, having been born in Canada, but she has lived the great- er part of her life in Arizona, Utah and California. BEG. TOMORROW N‘IGHT ouvea, COLDIMITH .7...,&-.,&-; $100ps. er Ovciad oy WILLam 4 2 20 and Mat., Orch., $3.25; Bal, $2.75 and $2.20, Z2% LN MAS LESLIE HUNTEA 0 HEQGE wiID L SY G100 TAWDE WILLAM PATAICIA © MARE JonN HAROLO OMAS writcen arrich: & autiain 1 810 prompcy-. 7 Big Banner Burlesquers.” | history and politics at the University Banner Burlesquers” will be of Tennessee and at Johns Hopkins, EORCE C. next wegk's United Burlesque offering | and during the Winter season at Brook- 8t the Gayety Theater | 1yn Institute and before the League for This atiraction is said 15 be new in | Political Education at Town Hall, New every particular and has a large cast of | York City. talented entertainers, new scenic| This lecture was scheduled as the effects, original costumes, new comedy final event in the Community Institute | lines and other novel effects | for this season, as arranged last Fall A festure will be the chorus of six- | but owing to the artistic and financial teen girls, each selected for her abllity | success of the institute an extra at- 10 sing and dance the dozen or more traction will be added to the course murical numbers of the show Wednesday night, April 11, when the % directors of the institute announce the first Washington appearance in public concert ot the remarkable Russian ! singers known as the Kedroff Quartet, who have aroused much enthusiasm since their frst appearance in New He 1s one of the group of 11 young | players whom Jesse L. Lasky recently announced as due for special opportu- | nities to become stars during the com- | Ing_year. “Big : ER'S $.COND CIASSIC AVIVAL o cae SEASON 1028 1) NEXT MONDAY NIGHT—SEATS THURSDAY A. L. ERLANGER Presents THE DOMESTIC COMEDY SUCCESS “THE 19th HOLE” DY AND WITH FRANK CRAVEN tH: MON. APR. 2.t BEGINNING D. & SAT. AMERICA’S FOREMOST COMEDIAN CHARLES DILLINGHAM presents 7 FRED STON Calest SU0ESS oF Ris caneer Current History Lectures CLARA W. McQUOWN Every Friday, 11 A.M. 17th & K on, 65¢ PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTR PIERRE M Ux Oonductor LEA LUBOSMUTE, Vielinfst, TUESDAY, MARCH 37, 7% MABEL ROWLAND—March 29. Rowland, Conway Tearle's 1ll appear Thursday afternoon. March 29. in & program of her original comedy cartoonslogus May- fiower Hotel, for the benefit of York last January. of the Woman's Theater Haders of season subscription boos of successtul professional women | of the institute are advised o retall ywpg iy appearing in the minstrel show & national w,udw slwa'. aspiring | ;:u: “I;Szhu:l;gm"lnt;r; tzok‘.d:mkh:: 0 be hrlrby the junior class of Ameri- WASHINGTON AUDITORIUM ghts and sctresses, ; title University, Saturday evening, March | ‘Tiokets $2.60, 99,00, 31,00, §1.00 material is sll of | io this concert sttraction on April 11. | g Lo rermey. Baturdey . [ o anbal B0l Bida orship and is sald 1o be | Tickets for this event may be had also funny * It ts short mono- | at the Community Center Department, | | TONIGHT BEST SEATS 51.50 n- a SHUBERT TONIGHT BEST SEATS 5150 MISS ALICE HETZEL, { MGMT. LEE AND J. J. SUUBERT In 2R logues which later are W be presented the New Willard newsstand and at the door at the time of the concert, as short comedy festures for Mack Ben Bancroft in “The Dragnet. i e oy prominent society women are on the list of patronesses of the insti- tute, which 1 headed by Mrs, Calvin as the title for George Bancroft's next picture tion at the Paramount studio. The sctor's first picture in MASK AND WIG —March 26 After an shsence of two years the Mask and Wig Ciub of the University of Pennsylvania will return v Wash- ton for the premiere of new 2rite W be g n- March 26, at the Belasco has just been relessed The clude woth of tured in TY the ou which sory in which oomedy falls nderwor | arams. The' director of “The Dragnet “Underworld” end Comnmund " DANCING, lnn CIKAKIYAL | RGARY, Neats Now Single Performances METROPOLITAN OPERA COMPANY Wiom the Metropotitan Opers House N Yotk Ot wivinn Hidlek™s 1 4 Performances—April 18-19-21 POLI'S THEATER “v “NORMA" weile, Telva, Pinea i RIS GODUNOFF" 4.5 ""ROMEO ETJULIETTE Bort, Gigh, De Luca Lum:.y “5% “TANNHAEUSER Orchesirs, 86--Corps do e . Maln 6493 4 Ve THE FOX Bon7. Eat TUDIO TAKFOKD PEARERTON M Al Rpls of Dopeing ) Siudle 1% Coun. Ave. Fi DAVISON'S T CHI.RNIKOFF-GARDINER SCHOOL OF DANCING s Tu we: pains Worys el 1 o | | THE DRAGNET" has ben selected soon o go into produc- which hie appesrs as & star, “The Bhowdown,” t for “'The Dragnet” will in- lyn Brent and Fred Kohler, | om were prominently lea- Bhowdown.” ‘Those same crs appesred with Bancroft wiso in the great crime melo- | will e Jose! von Sternberg, maker of abw of “The Last i il '/ / oy a il A . . g Sunday Matinee at 2:15 > Callfornia Comes This Bensational Attraction 5 Miss BABE ECAN aowe. HOLLYWOOD REDHEADS Prasenting @ Whirlwind of Rollicking Mirth and Rhythm U ) © W) d Il [Cio-sa Su._fil:.g.:ihm ,MLLE. ANDREE ¢- ~ DOLLY CONNOLLY o JEX MCLEOD #MCIAUGHLIN £ EVANS CILBERT ¢ FRENCH \ROCERS SISTERS; Hainty Entertainers S s (i ) f’?;/'fim/ (i {5 (i 'WI| | (e i (fl$ | i (’l [ i i I i i) LADIFN i /f)ll;: MATINKEEN Aoy, Tuens Weduesidny wnd ‘D f (i {l AEBOP'R WAL Al Weuts tha ol THE DA to the dadies ANN NICHC rLUN PRICES: Nights, 500 to $2.50; Vubversits of Fennsy vand ‘ NEWS WEIKY Ul‘ ‘4". 4400, 6023 ANl Beats Mo weeved B A0, IR Nights, 50¢, 75¢, $1, $1.50; We ""BEG. NEXT TUESDAY— MASK AND WIG CLUB NTELLA® Farewell to the World’s Greatest Laugh 01N Pres TAN 50c, 75¢, $1 “SEATS THUR. Mats., 50c to $2. - waa— Belasco Theater, Monday, March 26, 8:15 P.M. A 10, 8100 ni ’ - CGroenc's B W Beop's, BEL wal W Rrices #0100 256%5; v DOROIHY ORDERS 33+ iiin ™ i) NOwW These pricas tnclud and stamped env | POLI’'S--TONIGHT Matinees Thursday and Saturday CHAMBERTA PWA'S ALL-STAR CONMOR( NOARTINTS In the Greatest Dramatic Success of the Present Century | WITHIN THE LAW | | {| ™y BAVARD VEILLER (Author of “THE TRIAL OF MARY DUGANY) | With This Amasing Cast HEMING WARWICK MAY THTON ROBSON CH._RCHILL and Z 227727 8:20 P.M % 72772 72 7477 Z Z oMARLES RAY STANLEY LOGAN nesnN vuum LR FARNUM SCHEFF SHEPLLY DIRECT FROM ITS SUCCESSFUL NEW YORK RUN NO ADVANCE Ae, KO, SLAS, 8200, 8380 IN PRICES Z 2277777777 222, Evonings N Thur. & Nat, )

Other pages from this issue: