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APARTMENTS. St. Louis Man to Succeed Day Tuttle at Civic Theater F. Cowles Strickland Will Follow Director Signed by Movie Company—Roadside’s Second Play Tonight. BY JAY CARMODY. OCOWLES STRICKLAND will next season. Mr. Strickland direct the Washington Civic Theater will come here from St. Louis to take I the job because Day Tuttle will not return from New York to take it. ® The movies have snatched Mr. Tuttle just as they have snatched every one except Maxwell Anderson Qnd your favorite bartender. Just what they are going to do with him we are not at liberty to disclose except definitely to say he will not play Rhett Butlers in G. With the W. Besides, we have to get back to Mr. Striekland. Mr. Strickland, who is a bachelor | in his early thirties, whereas Mr. ‘Tuttle was a married man in his early thirties, comes to Washington with Just the kind of reputation needed to take over the latter's job. For the last four years he has been director of the St. Louis Little | Theater. Under his direction, amateur performers in the Missouri metropolis | have been welded into a phenomenally successful dramatic group. Twelve and 14 performances have been neces- sary in the case of virtually every play, testifying to a popularity that has been the envy of many another similar enterprise throughout the country. Prior to his association with the 8t. Louis project, Mr. Strickland di- rected for seven years in the famous Stockbridge Summer Theater in Mas- sachusetts. There and on Broadway he acquired the experience which figured so profoundly in his subse- quent success in St. Louis. ‘The latter theater, incidentally, eonforms to the pattern of the one which he will take over here. It is a volunteer, non-commercial project de- signed to give expression to every local Salent related to the drama. Like Day Tuttle, Strickland is a product of the Yale drama school. A student of Alexander Dean at North- western during bis undergraduate days, he followed the latter to New Haven for graduate work after getting his degree at Northwestern University. Strickland will meet with the gen- eral membership of the Civic Theater for the first time tamorrow evening. The subject of their get-together will be plans for a seasan including seven major productions, dramatic instruc- tion and the schedule of workshop evenings. * * ¥ % OT LEWIS, who told us the Strickland story (thereby rescu- Ing us from a pretty serious Monday solumn situation), also would have #6 know that Jim Berryman is somé one else she knows about. Says a cartoon of Mr. Berggman's, drawn for #he Civic Theatel rly last season, pow appears in Theater Arts Magazine @6 a fine sample of fine promotion. ® X X % OADSIDE THEATER (say is our name MagArthur that we should be writing “Among the Amateurs?”) Jaunches its second production of the jummer tonight. It will be “Our erican Cousin,” and helping to make it memorably farcical will be two of your, and our favorite local players, Ann Ives and Maurice Jarvis. Others In the cast will be Fred Haskin, Lan- ging Hall, Carl Christianson, Betty Boyers, Pgul Walter, Milton Freedo- man, Ann Garrett and Harison Libeey. Any or all of them may be your and our favorite players after the per- formance. AMATEUR VAUDEVILLE NIGHT AT AGRICULTURE Variety Program to Be Staged Tomorrow by Workers of Department. AN’ “AMATEUR VAUDEVILLE NIGHT" will be presented tomor- yow night by the Amateur Players of the Agriculture Department in the department’s air-cooled auditorium. Curtain is set for 8 o'clock. The audience will select the best of Ehe performers among the amateur sots and prizes will be awarded the winners. There'll be community singing on #he program, too—plenty of old- gashioned songs, such as “A Bicycle Built for Two,” “Only a Bird in a Gilded Oage” and others. Charles £. Haycraft will be the “song starter,” end the accompanist will be Alice Burrus. A. A. A, Resettlement, Soil Con- pervation and other bureaus of the Agriculture Department will be well gepresented in the evening's program of songs, dances, sketches, acrobatics, tnstrumental numbers and other novelties, SYLVAN PROGRAM Marian Chace Dancers Featured on Festival Tomorrow. THE Marian Chace Dancers will present the featuge attraction of the second Summer Fegtival program 8% the Sylvan Theater on the Monu- ment slope tomorrow night. The dance portion of the enter- Sainment, starting at 8:30 o'clock, will be preceded by a concert by the United States Army Band beginning 8t 8. Vocal sélections during the inter- mission and at the end of the dance ooncert will be offered by Mrs, E. Milburn Colvin, ? SONGWRITER ACTRESS. Esther Muir, versatile comedienne playing with Wheeler and Woolsey in R-K-O Radio's “On Again—Off Again,” earned her first screen song- writing credit by collaborating with ber husband, S8am Coslow, on & num- ber to be sung by Bob Burns in a Sorthcoming picture. fi M.LWEISsCo. PLASTERING _STUCCO : CONCRETE Phone COLUMBIA 6725 T AT pretty, pretty, pretty blond in ! “Mountain Music,” starting Fri- day at the Earle, will be Terry Walker. It is her first picture angd you might be interested to learn that, unlike most pretty, pretty, pretty blonds, | Miss Walker did not have to crash | the movies. The movigs did the crashing and, boy, did they have to do some pursuirg? Paramount saw Miss Walker in a Rockwell magazine cover drawing. It | went completely out of its mind, so to speak, about her. It got in touch with Norman Rock- well, asked him who she was, discov- ! ered he merely knew her name, and then decided to find her if it took until Paramount and Miss Terry were both old and wrinkled. After weeks and weeks of chasing up and down the countryside, Paramount and Miss Terry met in a night club in Miami. It was a case of contract at first sight, without waiting even for a screen test. . x ok X CRITICS will be given an excellent opportunity tomorrow to run a test on the spacing of laughs in the new Marx brothers' picture, “A Day at the Races.” It is always a problem, a very interesting problem, to keep one laugh from “washing out” the next in a Marx film. If it can't be done with & small audience of four or five in a screening room, we shall let you know S0 you can plan to see it twice when it comes Friday to the Palace. * % ok X ICKETS for seeing Freddie Steele knock the ears off Hobo Williams, or vice versa, went on sale today. The fight, sponsored by Variety Club for the enrichment of its welfare fund, will be held at Griffith Stadium July 20. Steele, middleweight champion, was Variety's guest of honor at lunch- eon today. The National Theater box office is the central downtown ticket office. The club would like very much to have you as one of its 20.000 cus- tomers at the ear-crunching contest. * x X x ‘HAT man-with-cocker-spaniel who appeared on the sands of Beth- any Beach out of nowhere yesterday morning was Dan Terrell, Warner publicist, from Washington . . . Regi- nald Gardiner, the svelte Englishman who imitates wallpaper, trains, and thinks like that, has been cast in “The Ugly Duckling” by M-G-M. You may remember him in “The Show Is On” at the National early last season. Or as the cop who con- ducted the mythical orchestra in “Born to 'Dance” . . Speaking of M-G-M, it has started work on “Big City,” the picture which will have Luise Rainer and Spencer Tracy in the leading roles . . . It is the first time the two, who probably will win academy performance prizes this year, for the “Good Earth” and ‘Captains Courageous,” have worked together few Faces of 1937 will beam st critics at a preview today. It comes next to Keith's, starting ‘Wednesday. Where and When Current Theater Attractions and Time of Showing. Capitol—“Last Train From Ma- drid,” Spain’s troubles become a photo- play background, at 11 a.m., 1:35, 4:20, 7:05 and 9:45 pm. Stage shows at 12:45, 3:30, 6:15 and 9 p.m. Palace — “Captains Courageous,” Kipling's story in a masterpiece for children and grown-ups, at 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:35, 7:05 and 9:30 p.m. Earle—“Another Dawn,” love and sacrifice in the desert, at 10:30 am., 12:45, 3:05, 5:25, 7:45 and 10:05 p.m. Stage shows at 11:50 a.m., 2:10, 4:30, 6:50 and 9:10 p.m. Keith’s—“Riding on Air,” with Joe Brown a small-town newspaper man, at 11:20 a.m, 1:10, 2:55, 4:45, 6:30, 8:15 and 10:05 p.m. Metropolitan—"I Met Him in Paris,” smart and so far the season's gayest comedy, at 11:35 am. 1:35 3:40, 5:40, 7:45 and 9:45 p.m. Columbia—*Parnell,” heroic biography, at 11:25 am., 2, 4:30, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Little—"“Broadway Melody of 1936,” full of comedy and music and R. Tay- lor punching noses; at 11 am., 1:12, 3:16, 5:28, 7:41 and 9:53 p.m. Rialto — “Theodora Goes Wild,” smart, sophisticated comedy, at 1, 3:55, 7 and 10:05 pm. Also “The Vir- ginian,” at 11:40 a.m,, 2:55, 5:35 and 8:40 pm. Trans-Lux—News and shorts. Show runs 1 hour and 15 minutes, con- tinuous from 10 a.m. until midnight. Ambassador—“Another Dawn,” at 6:15, 8:05 and 10 p.m. Uptown—"A Star Is Born,” Holly- wood looks at, itself with intelligence and brightness, at 2:30, 4:50, 7:10 and 9:30 p.m. Tivoli—“Shall We Dance?” the latest musical frivolity by Astaire and Rogers, at 2:20, 4:35, 6:55 and 9:15 pm. Roadside—“Our American Cousin,” Tevival of the play at Ford's the night Lincoln died, at 8:30 pm. b CLEANED, ONE DAY M-G-M tries | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, Two Stars and a Film Title The two stars are William Powell and Luise elaborate candlesticks before them. Rainer and the film title is provided by the two The picture is M-G-M’s “The Emperor’s Candlesticks,” bring- ing Powell and Miss Rainer together for the third time. It opens Friday at Loew’s Capitol. Marxes Spent 10 Months In Perfecting New Film 75-Minute Stage Act Was Played 140 Times Before Beginning Production on “A Day at the Races.” BY HAROLD HEFFERNAN. some of the new pictures: “A Day at the Races”—Groucho, Harpo and Chico spent 10 I IOLLYWOOD, June 28.—Facts, figures and personality sidelights on months dabbling over this one . . . From January to July in 1936 they worked out idea, plots and gags . . . Then they put.it into stage form as a 73- minute act, rehearsed it four weeks and took to the road ... Played total of 140 performances—four a day for sevens (Duluth, Minne- | days—in five citles apolis, Chicago, Cleveland and San Francisco). . . . Then back to studio for more work. Co-ordinating, elim- inating and whipping together . . . Film went into production last Novem- ber, to be finished May 1 .. .six weeks spent cutting and editing. Marxes claim tryouts before audi- ences only way of knowing how good or bad comedy is . .. No comic, they contend, can trust himself to sense sure-fire comedy . . . On road, not two of 140 performances were samg, and San Francisco saw scarcely any- thing d®® what was started that first day in Duluth . , . On tour, boys took writers and two members of final screen cast—Margaret Dumont and Esther Muir . . . Miss Dumont, who always plays society woman to whom Groucho makes love, has been with Marxes 10 years—five on stage, and this is her fifth picture with them . .. Actually, she is a former New York society woman. All three are married . . . Chico celebrated 20th anniversary last March 20—his birthday . . . He has 19-year- old daughter, Maxine, talented musi- cian . . . Groucho checks off 16 years on his Benedict chart and has boy, Arthur (named after Harpo) 15, and daughter, Miriam, 9 . . . Harpo eloped with Susan Fleming last September .+ . All three wives are beautiful and former setresses . . . Chica, oldest, bears name of Leo . . . Harpo is next and he is Arthur ... Groucho is third and he is Julian . .. Never call each other by real names, but rather con- dense nicknames to Chic, Harp and Grouch. “Mountain Music"—Broadly satiri- cal but good-humored treatise on Ar- kansas backwoods phases of Amer- icana, as conceived by Irish immi- grant producer (Benjamin Glazer), French director (Robert Florey) and German cameraman (Karl Strauss) from original story by Iowa-born Mackinlay Kantor . . . In short space of 18 months Bob (real name Robin) Burns, star, has become Nation's out- standing hill-billy reconteur . , . When he reported in Hollywood at that time he had $35 in his pocket; this year hell make Federal tax re- turn on approximately $300,000. Cavern - mouthed Martha Raye, whose variously applied®appellations, “ultra-violent,” “moutha” and “riot- ous” still fail of good description, plays opposite, & perfect foil for shy- mannered Burns . . . Comparatively straight romantic leads played by at the ook’ MORRISON" FAPER €O, 009 Pa. Ave. Phone NA. 2945 THEATRE PARKING 6P.M.TO Mo 3§ CAPITAL GARAGE 33, s 1“'& TERRACE DANCING = Dinner, $200, Sat SZ\Efiwj Cover. 55¢. Sat & Hol N Additional Cover for Dinner Guests| Za cenam| 58 Special for Tues., Wed. and Thurs. Only HALF SOLES SEWED ON Ladies’ Leather Heels 15¢ peliite onsed and u Walt HATS iANAMAS AND FELTS BLOCKED AND RESTORED TO ORIGINAL SHAPE. DRY CLEAN- ING SERVICE—NO EX- TRA CHARGE. LIBERTY VALET SERVICE 1412 H st. N.W, John Howard of “The Lost Horizon™ and petite, blond Terry Walker, “dis- covered” for screen through Norman Rockwell cover illustration for na- tional mazagine . . . Specialty players include Rufe Davis, ex-Oklahoma cot- ton chopper, whose vocal imitations of choo-choo train, Jews harp, Donald Duck and bull fiddle decorated well- known vaudeville act called “Radio Rubes” . ., . Wally Vernon, in first camera view of famed vaudeville song and dance routine ... Jan Duggan of Los Angeles’ hardy 4-year perennial, “The Drunkard” . .. And Charles Tim- blin, the Jeeter Lester of ‘“Tobacco Road” . . . Principal locale is Mo- notony, Slumber County, Ark. which is figment of scenarist’s whimsical imagination . . . Not so the razor- back hawgs that root in street . o . they're real acorn eaters. “Hotel Haywire"—Comedy Lead Lynne Overman, native of Maryville, Mo. . . . Became jockey and followed that profession until he found himself too heavy to “make weight” ... Then became owner and raced thorough- breds on New York tracks . .. Finally took to acting because it looked like easy life . Soon learned he'd figured it in reverse . . . Made start with minstrel troup, then joined stock com- pany and so on up to musical comedy and film tryout. Leo Carrillo quit newspaper job to become actor . . . Was cartoonist on San Francisco paper and made such a hit in Press Club show friends insisted he was neglecting brilliant stage So he went to New York ed part in a musical . . . Forbears were among earliest settlers in California. (Copyright, 1937, by the North Amerfean Newspaper Alliance, Inc) TAILORED 8Y GOODALL W 2abm \\\>\ 73.aach L) FROM THE GENUINE CLOTH THE SUMMER SUIT of proven merit Distinctively smart are the new weaves . » . multi-color stripes, large and small glen plaids, university checks ... and smartest of all are the new Palm Beach whites. 6 All at Summer’s value price. /5 Books Closed—All charge purchases made tomorrow will not be billed until August 1. GROSNER of 1325 F Street Listen in WRC at 11 P.M. every night except Sat- urday—to Bill Coyle’s Sports Column of the Air! JUNE 28, 1937. ROBERT TAYLOR STARTED TOWARD TOP IN MUSICAL “Broadway Melody,” at Little for Revival, Gave Him a Boost on His Way. OW comes “Broadway Melody of 1936” to the Little Theater for a revival, bringing with it, perhaps, one of the secrets of Bob Taylor's rise to popular’vy. Up until the time he up—l peared in this musical Robert had been merely flapping fledging wings in such things as “Times Square LXdy” and “Society Doctor”; since he's most- ly been busy making love to sundry frothy dishes of the cinema. In “Broadway Melody,” however, you must remember, Bob played a thea- trical producer and every time he saw something in the paper he did not like he would go around to the office of the sheet and plant a paw in the puss of Jack Benny, engaged in the film in impersonating a newspaper columnist. The movies were not ex- actly considerate in insinuating this hint in the minds of people who might read things they do not like in the newspapers, but punching Mr. Benny proved to the gals that Mr. Taylor was a manly thing and prob- ably helped him as much in his ca- reer as grinding grapefruit i1 little girls’ noses sided Cagney. Mr. R. Taylor, however, was not all of “Broadway Melody.” In fact he was merely another of the cast. “Broadway Melody” had what is known in the ads as mirth and mel- ody. The musical score introduced a lot of hits, including a few you still hear today on your radio, like “Broad- way Rhythm.” The comedy, too, was in able hands, with Mr. Benny being not only aided, but sometimes sur- Passed by Sid Silvers, and there were Una Merkel and Vilma and Buddy Ebsen to add more laughs. There were dances, also—the topnotch tap- ping of Eleanor Powell, the skilled acrobatics of Nick Long, jr.; more tap- ping by the Ebsens, novel and original ensemble routines by scads of girls, a honey of a ballet stued by Albertina Rasch. Yes, and “Broadway Melody" had Frances Langford to do one song number to a pretty turn, In fact “Broadway Melody” still has all these things, if you're going to be Ppicayunishly particular about tenses, H. M. o Jean Wanted for Play. JEA‘ PARKER, playing in Colum- bia’s “Life Begins With Love,” is| wanted in New York for a stage role. The play is “Loan Out,” being rewrit- ten after a tryout there, by her hus- band, George MacDonald. Picture commitments, may make it impossible, however. 1fs always € O O L ar Loewss WHERE YOUR COMFORT IS ASSURED e CAPITOR CC | with Dorothy Lamour ® Lew Ayres Gilbert Roland ® Karen Morley Lionel Atwill H Mack On the stage SMITH & DALE JOE MORRISON Other Acts Liews PALACE [;%0 Now . . Second Thrilling Week “CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS® FREDDIE BARTHOLOMEW SPENCER TRACY LIONEL BARRYMORE 6 A DAY AT THE RACKS™ vnh he mad MARX BROS l@u.ecowuam o 25 9th St. Above G Opens |1 A.M,| IRENE DUNNE umzo-q—czon fl—)i VIRGINIAN k>, caty coopeR ' OPPOSITE BELASCO .vw>uis. NOW 12th WEEK IN WASHINGTO! Originaily Suppressed by U. §. Customs THE PIOTURE ALL WASHINGTON 1S WHISPERING ABOUT Evenings only eontinuous 7 to 11:30 P. M. Baloony 40¢ WASHINGTONS ORIGINAL BARN THEATRE Tonigt ot §40- through Jumo The 9t Contirys Yevouts Yarce/ ®7th & WATEB STS S. w. ® Phone NAtional 7722 DANCING. CAfilll’Nl IBA 'LE 814} Le I"OY H. Tha')"er Fox-Trot—Tango—Waltz—Rumba well, follow easily. De- balance and confidence in & Call guest n and RIA | AMUSEMENTS. TO PLAY LEAD Arthur Westover Has Top Role in “Help Yourself.” RTHUR WESTOVER takes the leading role in the New Theater Group’s forthcoming production of “Help Yourself,” playing the young man who walks into an old and staid banking institution and sets it and its directors on their ears. The satire, directed by Sylvia Mil- rod, opens a three-day engagement at Pierce Hall tomorrow night, Others in important roles are Sylvia Selbin, known far her work with the Jewish Community Center, and Ethel Davis and Harry Stranger, both new to Washington, Grace Moore Rehearses. GRACE MOORE started rehearsals with a huge orchestra last week at Columbia Studios for “I'll Take Romance,” her forthcoming picture. Melvyn Douglas plays opposite the signer. Actual shooting on the pic- ture will start within 10 days. ON WEDNESDAY . . different than anything you‘ve over seen before. LAST Bea DICK Pa\\ i1 o MADELEINE CARROLL THE AVENUE.” “ESPIONAGE,” With EDMUND LOWE and MADGE EVANS. ASHLEY{YUWFHR;‘:T:EE“%AA‘RJrsi ll’ld “MARKED WOMAN 2 11th & SE. CAROLINA ''tXStint® CIRCLE Home of Mirrophonic ;f' a Mati Tues :EAN' "HARLOY - TAYLOR APERSONAL Gang Comedy. DUMBARTON **{i; Woraiionea™ GRACE MOORE. CA'RY (‘RR in “WHEN __YOU'RE IN LOVE." News and Comedvr FAIRLAWN AYAcosTia. . o Conditioncd " JEAN HARLOW in *PERSONAL PROP- ERTY. 3227 M8 LIDO sor ¥ %RowN Yo YQUR BIRTHDAY?" "Also * AYS' 608 9th St. uTrLE Ur-(un'llllnnev: ELEANOR POWEL and ROBERT TAYLOR in “Broadway Melody of 1936.” PRINC 1119 H St. N.E. Double Feature. GLADYS SWARTHOUT in -CHAMPAGNE GENE AUTRY in “GIT ALONG LITTLE DOGIES. SECO Continuous h’um 6:00 P “Swing High, Swing Low,” CAROLE_LOMBARD. FRED MacMURRAY. STANTON th and | C St est Continuous From 5:30 Double Feature M. “ESPIONAGE,” With EDMUND LOWE and MADGE EVANS. UTRY i GENE Al n “THE OLD CORRAL.” "RETHI " 6930 Wi STATE-BETHESDA 8.5 N FRANCES LANGFORD in “THE HIT PARADE.” “LOUIS-BRADDOCK FIGHT PICTURES.” 2:00 P.M.—Conti TA OMA 4th and Buf oo Farking Trouk lu nd 1b] UGB OF THE TOWN. —___Selected Short Subjects. " FALLS CHURCH. VA. LE| NO. SAIKING GARY COOP!E 600D OLD BOAK." THE PLAINSMAN.” ARLINGTON, VA. ASHTON on Wilson levard TYRONE POWER EILERS Xnnna DUNN “WE HAVE MEN’ d_LORI YOMUN() IN ‘cAr: and h PROPERTY.” W WHEN'S THE PUB- LJ 7 STARS! 8 WT SONGS! 50 CLAMOROUS GIRLS! WARNER BROS. THEATERS Wanes Brov In Warner Broe. “Another Dawn” on stage—S Big Acts OWEN Mc GIVENEY s mows “haother Baw" Can Nisa Be Sém Todsy Tomorraw, & Wed. A The Ambssader 25cto 1 P. M. METROPOLITAN NOW 2nd Week Downtown CLAUDETTE COLBERT In Paramount s Comedy ~Drama. “| Met Him In Paris” Mo DOLKLLS Robert YOG MAT. 25¢-EVE. 275¢ & 40c T KEITH'S .- a New Idea in Entertainment Startling Novelty Sweeps the Screen Here Comes a 3 Ring Laugh-and-Rhythm Show JOE PENNER MILTON BERLE PARKYAKARKUS HARRIET HILLIARD F WILLIAM BRADY JEROME COWA Look entil you're dexzled! Laugh until you're limp! 2 DAYS—JOE k. BROWN IN “RIDING ON AIR” m. AY FRANCIS ERROL FLY __"ANOTHER DAWN. " Also_Ni H St. N.E. APOLLO oi5a. fne a5 FREDRIC MARCH._JAN AYNOR A STAR 1S BORN 2 AVALON 5612 Conn. Avm ol N \ __Silly Symphe AVENUE GRAND ¢ E. NORMA ~SHEARER. | LESITE - HOWS __ARD_“ROMEO_AND JULIET. CALVER 2321 Wisconsin Ave. Cleveland 2348 CENTRAL SNt 2y Fhone Mew 2801 SPENCER TRACY. GLADYS GEORG: in “THEY GAVE HIM A GUN Popeve Cartoon and Ken Murray __Comedy. __ERROL_FLYNN. MAUCH 1230 C St. HOME riohd e o “PRINCE AND THE PAUPER. h ERROL FLYNN. MAUCH TWINS. illy Symphony. PENN 650 Poun. Avéuxg S.E. m TAE _WE DANCES " New 3030 13th 8t N.W. Phone Col. 4968 “BEHIND THE HEAD- rtoon. Sheridan Ran. 2400 M. Matinee. 2:00 P.M. FREDRIC_MARCH. JANET GAYNOR in_“A STAR IS BORN. ) St. & Park Ra. N.W, ol 1800 TlVOLl e phine FRED ASTAIRE &R ROGERS, 'n WE DANCE?" March of e HlPPODROME x %?.’é' “":m Bing Crosby, Bobu Burns in * __Wedding: CAMEQ ™™ marves. sm. NOW SHOWING BRADDOCK-LOUIS . - BOUT. Pflsy?fluy in }‘ang 7's Today-Tomor. WINCHELL and BERNIE in ‘WAKE UP AND LIVE. g RICHMOND %.PE.’S"T'J’.:“ ok EDW. G. ROBIN and BETTE DAVIS in “KID GALAHAD.” @2 | JESSE THEATER T Carrier Air-Condit| “CAFE METROPOLE, TYRONE POWER. mRmA YOU'NO' SYLVAN 1,52 . tck “WAKE UP AND LIVE - WALTER WINCHELL. BEN BERNTE. PALM THEATE oo analrgla—wity om'ohlumnn Btodio ONI 1215 Cenngeticut Ave, MET, 4121 & BERNHE!MER 4 P 133 ‘“‘A STAR IS BOR}l‘," AT, OATNOR snd FREDRIC Direction g SlDNEY LUS‘I" REED ALEXADRIA NS Taylor and Stanwyck in “THIS IS MY AFFAIR.” Pree Parking Space—S00 Cars. ____Combpletely Air-Conditione ‘ 0 RO lvl}_fl, M MA SHEABER in “ROMEO AND JULIET.” AIR-CONDITIONED. Pree Parking. a