The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 28, 1920, Page 3

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+ TODAYS PROGRAMS COLISEUM.-William — Farnam “Heart Strings, | CLEMMER — Craufort Kont tm | Dither Men's Shoow Harold Lioyd ty “Hie Royal Stynens LIBERTY Harold = Mactirath's “The Lack of the Lrtsh Loane Tucker's “The May Allison in “The ! | — af the Yakeon, x fT COLISEUM he “HEART STRINGS” (Pox) satrte Sam | Pierre Foorne! Kathieen Noyes Gedrietic Fourne! + Repert Blake LaTouene. Rouget. DMIt evidently Awaiting thor “Heart Strin at the © + .:Gindys Coburn Betty Muburn Robert Cain Paul Gazeneure Rowtand Q, Bdwarde of William Farnum have a great treat #,” which opens today The r h, stout hearted man of the Du the Brave, adventurous soldicrsailor of “Wings of the Morning,” he chang to a simple, tender-hearted young Musician whose whole life and whose whole heart are wrapped up in his Uttle sister. Mr, Farnum never has appeared in & more affecting love story thy i “Heart Strings." It is a story of self sacrifice thru devotion to his sister for, when fame grasp as a struggling gives up all for her. laid in a Little village in Quebec and in New York City. ee seems musich “OTHER MEN'S SHOES” (Pathe) Stephen Prowntng | James Browning | Irene Manton Dr. Manton... Marton Prowning Facod Dreener “Other Men's Shoes,” the photo py attraction opening at the Clam Mer today, boasts of the greatent of extras ever on the ser jeture of this kind. In a a one expects to see massive » and also in a motion picture @ historical significance. “Other " Men's Shoes” ts neither of these, and Yet over 4.000 people were employed A. Crautord Kent Irene Boyle id Forshay odby Cone fm the filming, of which nearly 3,000 / are children. ‘The script of the play calls for an home and playground re children are taught the pleas- of life and where they can learn trade as well. The famous Orphan and Day School in New Jersey Aimed for these scenes. ides “Other Men's Shoes,’ is a dramatic photoplay, the will show Hareid Lioyd's comedy, “His Royal Slyness.” . LIBERTY | “THE LUCK OF THE IRISH” James Kirkwood Anna Q. Nilsson Harry Northrop Ward Cr J Ternest Butterworth -wittiam Grogan traveled on, the carpet of his day dreams. turn of his plumber’s wrench @ turn of the pilot's wheel as he on imaginary seas. He was ing the world with his mind's eye d dreams come true, sometimes, as did for Grogan. His trip around world, his love for Ruth Warren. was making the same trip; his y adventures, startling discov. and hair-breadth escapes, give interest to “The Luck of the Trish,” an Allan Dwan productionr a version of Harold MacGrath's 4 seller,” which comes to the Lib- erty today. . COLONIAL i lS ARREST “THE WALK-OFFS” (Metro) Kathleen Rutherford line Rutherford wyter Ruther: Van Allen Jagge Brent Mary Carter. Kathleen Kerrigan May Allison, last seen here in the popular comedy, “Fair and Warmer.” comes to the Colonial today in Fred-|®% eric and F* play, “The nnie Hatton’s Broadway as Kathicen Rutherford pla Tole of 2 young society woman who is Much dissatisfied with the empty life she is leading. Her fortunes are at a low ebb because her brother has been @igorced by his only means of sup. port. Here there enters into the story ‘a man with “caveman” methods of weoing. Kathicen’s efforts to ignore him are both amusing and interest L IT “LORD AND LADY ALGY” Joldwyn) oe ————— TLE cad Tom Moore! nom! Childers Lasiie Stuart Alec B. Francis lady Alsy- Jethroe Bwepson That of comedy @ratna, the hypocritical elder brother, fg nade a réally human, living figur in Goldwyn's “Lord and Lady Algy He pays Lord Algy’s debts and im mediately A suspects that wants some He does. “Lord and dy y"’ opens Sun day at the Little ‘CLASS A “THE FLAME OF THE YU KON” (Tr favorite and ngle) “The Fiame” Phe Btranger Dorot? Kennet » Harlan “Phe Flame of the Yukon,” opening at the Class A Sunday, is one of the first screen which Dorott Dalton She play the role of a li hall giel who falls # love with a youth wh won popularit . on lands $i Alaska with a crowd of gold-seek.|of proven powers. The croo n has completed | by Herbert Rawlin filming of “The Passeraby.” The scenes are | ty | y {deals with th lhom@et and useful citizens. 6¢°T'HE Luck of the Irish,” Harold MacGrath’s “Best Seller,” Transferred to Screen; William Farnum Plays Role of Tender-Hearted Mu: tle Bobby Connelly, Clever Child Star, Back in Films; A nita Stewart to Be Seen in Role of Chorus Girl; “The Miracle Man” Plays Third Return” Engagement; May Allison, as Society Bud, Defies ‘“(Cave-Man’ s” Wooing; Other Pictures Feature Dorothy Dalton and Tom Moore. , | i} | Wiltiam Farnum | 1 in his newest picture, | | (1)—Scene from “Other Men's Shoes,” at the Clemmer, —Anna Q. Nil. Farnum, at the Coliseum. |(7)—-Tom Moore, featured at the Little. »| # part of the } ing utensils from every world. Corrine Grittith taking dancing l¢ dore Kosloff, the dancer. Her role a new photoplay : Vitagraph star, is exons from ‘Theo famous Russian The Memento,” s* the cause, Wyndham Standing, one of the Standings who have achieved hts and on the many fame before the footlig aftver will be seen in the Goldywn picture, “Earth . Bound,” written by Basil King one ‘Traffic at a busy Los Angeles tn tersection was held up for nearly an hour recently by permission of the | police during the filming of ane of | the nes oof “Blind Youth,” a National Picture Production. eee wp “Yea or Na” the popular Broadway atage suc is to be filmed with Norma Talmadge in the leaditg role. cee Clara Horton, who ts appearing in | Selanick productions, is now in her }10th year in pictures, tho she Is not yet 16 years of month of January leading man for “A Lady in Love, received four in his “fan” During the Harrison Ford, Ethel Clayton, in her latest photoplay, leap year proposals mail. After having appeared in five ple tures for Vitagraph, including one opposite Corrine Griffith and four as leading man to Alice Joyce, Perey Marmont has returned to Famou | Players, where he is supporting Billie ke in “Away Goes Prudence.” cee Emile Schauer, head of the forelen department of Famous Players | Lasky, testifies to the potent power jof antisubmarine warfare tn a re een loent report that the Lawson Butt, Goldwyn player, |«hipped more than 50,000,000 fret of ponsesses a rare collection of pipes—|film abroad during the war without meerschaum, drier and other smok- the lons of a single reel | MARGERY WILSON IS OUIJA BOARD HABIT] POEFICALLY INCLINED Alice Brady has succumbed. She! yrargery Wilson, wno plays “Mer- has purchased a oulja board and |cedes,” the Spanish maiden, in Zane morning, noon and night when she | Grey's “Desert Gold,” screened by ls not working she is trying to get! Benjamin B. Hampton, has been tn: the poor overworked board (Olgpired by the call of the ow wer af kinds of questions: Thes® ag portrayed by Mr. Grey’ range from what continuity 8h@'to write verse. It in readable, tn jshould select for her next Healart teresting verse, declare her friends, jpicture to how many more years she nut Miss Wilson says she is going to |may expect to live. And the answer write a great deal better verse, with lof the oulja board to all her que practice, and whe hopes in time to tions has been deep and mysterious, publish a volume silence. Miss Brady is about dis-| ‘ [soured Hor last question | BLACKIE DAW IN NEW PHOTOPLAY the ouija board didn’t seem to know for it maintains tts silence. Miss Brady has almost decided that the Daw, who was almost as important a¢ J. Rufus Wallingford himself in George Randolph Ches [next cold spell will find some use| for the oulja beard, for it might make good fire wood. ters “GetRich-Quick” Wallingford wre stories, will be an important char acter in the new Chester novel, CTURE Son of Wallingford.” Bia In ‘the Paramount Arteraft pro-|always the partner of J duction of “Lady Rose's Daughter,” | his get-rich-quick schemes, After a picture version of Mes. Humphrey |The Son of Wallingford” has been Ward's novel, Elsic Ferguson plays | published as a magazine serial Vita women of three generations: Lady | graph will present it on the screen Maude, 1865; Lady Rose, 1890, and jay a epecial feature. Julie Le Breton, Lady Rose's daugh- ter, in the modern story. ALICE BRADY GETS Blackie LSIE'S NEW Rufus | MABEL MUST BE DIETING At last “The Slim Princess” wil make her screen debut. The famous play, by George Ade and Henry Blossom, which set all America laughing for many seasons, will be! | picturized by the Goldwyn company. | Mabel Normand ia to be the “slim | princess. STRAN D ie) “MIND THE PAINT GIRL” * ] Victor Steele Templer Saxe | Arthur Donaldson Arthur Stidulph. . Virginia Norden A flash of the galleries, with their comedy scenes, as well as of the stage itself, is seen In “Mind the Paint Girl.” a pleture based on the latrical Ufe, a Firet National attrac |tion which will be shown at the Strand for the first time today Anita Stewart takes the leading | role, supported ty Conway Tearle, in |this remarkable picture of the joys! \and sorrows of the grease paint girls. | She takes the part of a little slum/|— girl who is ambitious, is pretty and} lhnan a good voice, Her rise from a| \chorus girl to a famous player in a} night is intensely fascinating. | | “7 * )%~—__———_—_-.— \{ REX | #—__—— “ | MIRACLE MAN” (Paramount) Thomas Meighan Betty ¢ Lon © 4 me iM TTL Lawson Butt | V.Soneph J, Dowling | | 4 e Patriaren m “The cle Man,” | most popular photopl is back again. ‘Tucker's shown Mir one of the} ver shown | Thi remarkable | at the time | | George production Rex The Loane is Silver fox fur is used exten- |sively as trimming for this | handsome cloak which Pauline being of “The Miracle Man” moral transformation plot of a gang of the beneficent of a and blind patriarch, who is of, “The Woman in heater! Room 137’ a new Goldwyn photoplay. It is of black Bo- livia cloth, and is about three- quarter length, slightly longer in back than in front influence deat | scenes ity plan to commerct old} man's power to heal, but instead one one they are transformed into son, in Harold MacGrath’s “The Luck of the Irish,” at the Liberty. (5)—Scene from play at Colonial., company | GAH OW Fo WOE We () Stewart and Conway Tearle, at the Strand. | (4)—Gladys Coburn and William (6)—Thomas Meighan and Joseph J. Dowling, at the Rex. | -Anita Keenan Does } the “Shimmy” } te * Ince Star Is Very Popular Keenan, popular umbed He actually nore than that wu himmy! and Fixt haracter act haa t cod It it has screen! Thi n recor unbelievable Mr {renee takes p (nan's latent noldering ace in Pathe Embers” x Director Pulls li “Some Brodie”) ~ fire vans hie w ht << te bm Found pwn work! 4 tor who ’ Ernest © * nM and] the megaphone for 4. Kerrigan | It happened dk & preview of the st Kerrigan pictures for W W. Hodkinson distribution. All mem bers of the a considerable remarkable he hand Warren gener ne, new cast and wd of press bled in to nee front When the first ncene of the nec ond reel was flashed on the sereen Warde made a grab for his hat people were assem Ward to Kerrigan the Br Jection room the picture held a seat, next “Where are Jed Kerrigan | “Going out,” growled Warde. “This picture impoasible—inconalstent.” “The deuce it ts; so all | fired wrong?” stralia b 8 bra A year is supposed to elapse be-| Au aad boast and brags tween the first and second reeie—| about charming Enid Bennett, fan't that right?” one of the most popular of “Yea, but what-—?" | Ao “Well?>nald Watde gioomiy, “tne! Thomas H. Ince luminaries.) second reel of thie story shows «| This new portrait shows Misa family with the eame servant it b84) Bennett in one of her delight- “By Gi * nald Kerrigan, “that| ful moods. (Gossip: Miss | Bennett is the wife of her di- is ridic And they both went out together.| pector, Fred Niblo.) you going?” demand) ry what's | Movie Quizzes | “Wader” Skies—My «mall son says that more than a month ago I prom: ined to take him to seo Bill Hart in hia new “pict're wih the pony.” Sand,” I think it is called. Rill has not shown up and if I do not find jout the cause of his delay and some |information as to when he and the i*Pinto” are to do their stunts in Be attle there is going to be a young riot in our peaceful home. A-—-According to the Famous PlayersLasky local exchange “Sand” yet been Booked for showing . What Bn G. is Priscila Dean's addrens. A.—Universal City, Cal |“MOVIE BUG” GETS ’EM ALL, SAYS WALLACE “In there anybody who does not |want to get into motion pictures?” | Wallace Reid, Paramount Arteraft ar, inquired after going thru his “fan mail" recently One letter was from a 17-year-old |boy who felt capable of starring in | we pletures. Another was |from a woman of 60 who regretted that she had not started in motion pictures earlier, but added that she ‘was ready to start at once. Still an- lother was from a mother of a pair jot %-year-old twins. “They are the handsomest boys I ever did see,” the mother wrote, “and I just know they have dramatic talent.” “There undoubtedly are many people who do not want to break into motion pictures,” Reid commented, “put I never heard of them.” tern “TAFFY” No less a person than Geraldine Farrar remarked that Pauline Fred erick is one of the be: dressed we men she ever saw. perfect taste,” nid star, And Madge knows the value of clothes. Her style is more simple than Miss Fred Jerick’s but it suite her exquisite |melf perfectly.” And Miss Farrar | knows @ thing or two about clothes| | herself. | | | e dresses in the Goldwyn Kennedy, toc “AMUSEMENTS onvunum VAUDEVILLE MOORE |] Mite, Rhea w York crooks under | 'rederick wears in one of the| | | | Arbuckle’a next picture, 22] 5 If it were not for the fact that ) E. V. Darling, of the United } Booking offices, is a personal ) friend of Dr, John D. Stewart, { who in private life is the hus- } band of Olga Petrova, there (might have been friction and } misunderstanding in the Petrova ) household at Great Neck, L. 1, j when the following telegram was forwarded there last Tuos- day from Pittsburg: “We want the bi vaudeville against Harry Lauder next week in Cleveland. Can I have you Darling? foes day on the Universal City lot may be found hundreds of jyoung girls who aspire to stellar prominence on the screen. Doubt- less the ambitions of some of these some day will be realized, while oth- ers will remain “extras” until their rdor is dampened by repeated dis. appointments, Many of the “extras” come ‘rom good families, have good homes, and work in the movies for the fun of the experience. Others are star- | worshipers, who are thrilled by the opportunity of working in a picture DIRECTOR SHOWS poertan ne tn THEM HOW IT’S DONE} cox the employment as an easy Noel Smith, who directs the Jim-| Means of earning five to ten dollars my Aubrey comedies for Vitagraph,|* 48¥, never hoping to progress be- recently drove a motorcycle thru yond that Imitation, and the rest garage window because he couldn't |“ really ambitious girls, with a find anyone eine to do tt the way he| latent spark of talent, which will wanted it done. After he had been | some day be discovered by an astute restored to consciousness the mem-| director, bers of the company congratulated | en Less him on not having broken his cece. | Byes He only had some severe lacerations | * of the noalp and face, and a broken| The supply of extra girls seems If the call goes out for ten finger. He was back on his job a| ndiens. few days later. | girls or @ thousand to appear in a | big scene, more than the oumber Fatty | required can always be secured with- out the lightest difficulty. “The Roundun" wilt be One day the girls will evening clothes as guests at @ jfunction or as part of the at the Metropolitan opera few days later they may Apache giris in a Parisian as entertainers in a western |hall Some of the “screen extra girls know all about and carry their own cosmetic while others must be n assistant directors ptovided : purpose, But there are very of them who do not hope some to have their own dressing & their own directors, and see names in electric lights in fromt cinema palace. ‘ GETTING ACQUAINTED WITH FINNY TRIE Antonio Moreno and Pauline | ley, his leading woman, have playing for = week tm four water for subterranean his current serial, “The I Hand.” Tony says that he never go fishing again. He that there is too much of @ comradeship between him finny tribe that flock to the ‘2 Always the Best for the Liberty Guest. The fastest, liveliest action play of months—a love romance by Harold MacGrath—that takes you around the world, with picturesque scenes and exciting adventures in every port-— “THE LUCK OF THE IRISH” 4 Monday is Province of Ulster Night—Come on, all you An- trim, Cavan, Donegal, Down, Ferman agh, Londonderry, Monaghan and Tyrone folks from the Northern Division! Is it the luck of the Irish to be day dreamers, riders of Mag- ic Carpets? You’d think so when you see William Gro- gan, the plumber, and what ha does with the $28,756 and 36 cents that he inherits—especially what he does with the 36 cents! WALLACE on the WURLITZER “Aida,” grand selection....... vesecceeegar VORGL “Barcarolle” .........,. ... Offenbach “What Would Be the Use of Living?” ..:Malotte CONCERT 12:30 SUNDAY

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