The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 3, 1921, Page 3

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chert Rawlinson in raed Pund ne BLUE MOUSH—Lon ¢ Night WINTER Keme GARDEN —Seaw a Lights Are Low Valentine The Sheik") Back Jones in Nothin’.” , REX—Chartes Chaptia in “The c ‘- * STRAND | J —" “THE SHEIK" (Param ) Diana Mayo Agnes Ayres Sheik Haasan Rudolph, Valentis Raoul Hubert Omair Walter < BOUNDING in lavish color, | gorgeous costumes and beautiful tings, “The Sheik” ranks as one of George Melford’s most pretentious productions. The story deals with Arab of a the capture by & young haughty English girl and t quent strange roman’ heir subse “The Sheik” is showing at the Strand. # e——_— aisiond | CLEMMER “THE MILLIONAIR (Uatversat) Herbert Raw Re Jack Norman Bobo Harmaworth Jimmy .. Kate Blair Verne Winter Lillian Riek Where are usually the source and t | | comedies. headquarters of crime? The “top” or} “pottom”? Devious paths of mystery | “OO concept and intrigue are followed In the un- folding of the romantic story, “The Millionaire,” Herbert Rawlinson’s first starring vehicle, now showing at the Clemmer. —— LYE | BL “THE NIGHT ROSE” UE MOUSE (Goldwye) screen comedy until I regain my 1—Anita Stewart, Coliseum, 2. Clemmer. 7—Buck Jones, Colonial. Sessue Hayakawa and Gloria Payton, Winter Garden. § | Charles Ray Makes Frank THEY STOP THE CAMERA WHEN LOUISE LAUGHS “When a woman feels funny she} has to laugh.” | > hha EG te EIR Confession an interviewer the other day. Louise ; * of the who have had filen: 4 feminine Buster Keaton of the doesn't laugh in her t isn't that 1 she says. “You ahing: you have want ave to feel sense the candid about it « rter in Chic ® passed thru on te York, Charles made & frank confe of the situation to make , others laugh. sion, It waa. tht “And I do laugh, Then the di “L should ike to play character rector stops the camera and waits parts on the stage, Nc = to thea composure.” matinee idol. parte-I ldn't want Louise Fazenda ig the antithests to to do them. I'd like to play on the of a movie stage and in a studio, too~not do lactress. She is just like “a country pictures exclusively P | cousin,” Not a few actors of the stage treat | No short skirts, No rouge. No the filma superc One was fancy clothes. Hands, arms, face quoted recently as s r work in and hair tinged by the sun. ths piateree wan. tctied enon 6a 2 You know how Louls ix on the sort of hy y with pay that the Iacreen, You probably have seen her real love was for the stage. Ray in tha old Mack Sennett comedies, doesn’t feel. that way ebout it. He | stopping a ple with her face, or en has often skid the art of the ctnema | gaged in slapstick stuff, | s 60 great, that caty thé Georgia Rodman Leatrice Joy} Weill, she’s not that way off the seittilities hae gat been O'Rourke screen. She hax a softly modulated Graham : voice, a row of pearls for teeth, a | ascination of or o — uilen Mavwti quiet. mannér. Refined, that's dheanee P pes ok st pe pn — Thru his long experience as a social | | ouise the diate pleasure of testing re worker in some of our largest cities.| She ix now making a new sert ponse from those for whom it is oy Scott, the author of the NeW | of comedies for Educational. Teddy, done. The sound of applause in dear Goldwyn underworld melodruma.}the dog. and John Henry, Jr, the to the h t of the actor, But the “The Night Rove,” now playing 4! | comic baby, have prominent parts in jakeence of that is more than ba the Blue Mouse, has presented | them. | anced by the tokens I get by mail thrilling story which reveals the tn- | ———————————_-____________ from the vastly greater public 1 am ner workings and the tremendous ‘Tee Wong Sain la.. Gloria Payton ‘The struggie of love against th fron wall of Chinese traditions whieh exacts from its victims sacrifice with power that is wielded by criminal) out question, is the vital dramatic! theme on which “When Lights Are Low,” the picture Hayakawa at the Winter Garden, is based Hayakawa is seen in the role of a Chinese prince COLISEUM | “THE INVISIBLE. FEAR” (First National) co Anite, Btewar One of the most dramatic pictures|The post-season football game be.jton of Montgomery *| act in the movies. He went to in which Anita Stewart has yet ap-| tween Pennsylvania State and U. of| plant and posed with the Paramount) Coiwyy studio to visit hh peared ia "The Invisible Fear,” now|W., on Saturday, will be on the/star while the pictures were taken | grandson and stayed on to. play showing at the Coliseum. Hampton | screen Saturday night. _ : . in one of the photoplays, “Sent Del Ruth wrote the story, and the RAY'S OLD TWO-K) JERS: for Out.” plot is built up to a thrilling denoue- ment in @ fascinating manner. io | | LIBERTY “THE SON OF WALLINGFORD” ¥ J. Rutus Watiingtor Blackie Daw Jimmy Wallingford raph) Wilfrid North George Webb Tom Gallery ‘The Son of Wallingtord, the widely read stories by Lillian and George Randolph Chester, is now be ing shown at the Liberty. The pic ture, which took months in makin btu Mr. and Mrs. Chester | COLONIAL | —_______ ——- ‘BAR NOTHIN (Fox) Harold Lynne Buck Jones Buck Jones, star, is playing the popular Western t the Colonial in his newest thriller, Bar Nothin Hard riding, hard fighting, dare-devi stunts, ardent love-making and tory; that’s Jones in this new feature “REX r wi x “THE IDLE CL. The Absent-Minded | Husband } Charies Chapit The Tramp wes Hin Wife Edna Purviance Tae Angry Father -Mack Bwain Charlie Chaplin, in his famous dual role, the absent-minded husband and the tramp, ig at the Rex. The pic- ture is called “The Idle Class,” and it is one of the funniest this comedian has ever made. It will be noticed that the cast includes Mack Swain, an old-time comedy favorite. Jack Holt has a unique role in his new Paramount picture bused on of Pana mint.” As escaped convict 999, Holt posed as a parso to & small up, only to Rene Adore Tom Moore's wif will support John Gilbert in bis eur- rent Fox picture So will Maude Georg get religion.” Starring Seswue/ } | Priactiia Bonner | ” the first] tion of @ series of pictures taken from| motion picture director—without, | ring Charlie Ray, I to be releawod CRUZE TO START however, giving up any of his (In his support appear such old fa Wi Prcke tnd ‘athered’ the. al | other vérations. He is now |vorites ax Louise Glaum, Enid Mar) 0000 or Satrimony a Failure? | directing his own photoplay, | key, Clara Williams, J. Barney Shera po. Barnes will play Leo Ditric | “Remembrance,” which he re | ry and Frank Borzage eonge Walter Hiers will hi . | cently completed for Goldwyn. hea in the sense of avolrdu | - ~— - | Ralph Ince, stilt under 30, has over the £ a | Mird Battista, clever chila ' 300 toplays to hie credit as a mo. | P08: f ae will play the feminine Pil ape ; <j lead. Zasu Pitts, Charley Ogle and} tress has been given an ieffportant| tion picture director scars, i aaay oben ta aeataae T past in “Woman of Conquest,” Wil }liam Christy Cabanne’s next produc-| Thomas tachi appe with 5 ; Pauline Frederich her latest! “Why Announce Your Marriage | | screen offering, “Judith of Blue Lake| i# the 15th picture Elaine Hammer- | | ‘The screen rights to “Under the| Ranch.” |stein has made for Selanick, | Skin,” a South Sea story by seen in the Liberty News opening at the Liberty Saturday morning are | | Views of the logging train smash up| near Olympia recently 4) the flood from the Cascade moun taina, roads in the White River valley, also | should be of interest to Seattleites | Goldwyn. was produced under the personal di-| — ‘| LOCAL DANCERS AT STRAND ) | able jot the acreen.” | Incidentally, Charles Ray receives | to entertain thru the medium De Mille Has Expensive Day Ceci! B. De Mille lost exactly $6,397.60 one day last week. The director general of Para so many thousand letters from ad. | mirera that he haa to employ aecre tartes to handle his mall his letters are Many of from parents telling } j him that they send their ehtidren to mount pictures was summoned as |) | seo a Ray picture without question a witness in a civil case and spent || | tne name is sufficient the day in court Louise Fazenda in a typical makeup. She's the. feminine, “Ne” d the young star, or this he received $2.40. In. he hasn't yet got t money, but that is assumed to be | Buster Keaton of the screen. The reason you don't see her |g laugh is that the cameraman stops when she starts to laugh. |PRODUCERS AFTER cidentally BRYANT WASHBURN forthcoming. a <i 1 in actuat ||. Beant Washburn, who is now DE MILLE STAR ie time te ligurec aanee laying at the oldwyn studio ir ] figures at $6,400 per day. Thus | isiungry Moarts,” was reminiscing | he is out all but Rival producers are wishing Cecil the other day about the old days in 5 * BK. de Mi « long and joyful trip in ion pictures, “The actor who ad doy . Europe. It gives them a chance to could rant the most and make th | dard the nent, |secure the services of beautiful Edith ap gpics ond og gene erate aiaaaad who has just completed k in the de Mille film, “Saturday ht.” J. Parker Read is the first secure Miss Roberts for his pro-} LIBERTY NEWS Some of the special items to be} verta, [he vouchsafed. REAL JUDGE | A real judge d for ments at the ture, the | ing made at the Lasky | n Judge Henry D. Clay: | Ala., visited the | Pictures of rn and! ¢ fense,"” now | studio, wh MeKee's grand father, Samuel Vetter, is 98 years old, but is just starting to farms covering many Raymond Rupert Hughes has become a An old series of two-reelers, star Loia Wilson is Wallace Reid's lead | ing lady In “The Champion,” Wilson, have just been purchased by “Famomelet” is the title of a film | n “Hamlet.” STRAND ORCHESTRA. ;=~, Playing , “Hungarian Fantasie Under 8. K. WINE- LAND burlesque ‘The and willing samples of bi “STUNT” ACTOR An air of gloom has surrounded the John Griffith Wray company owing to the jeath at Yuma, Ariz, he ¢ r day of “stunt” actor, who was working with Mr. Wray’s ompany while th neenes for Thomas H. no blame that ducer or Betty Blyt crand opera actre sert daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Desmond. “no amount of success on the stage 1 make me feel superior to the t the 3— Agnes Ayres, Strand. 4-—Scene from “The Son of Wallingford,” Liberty. /EXTRA ENTERTAINS VITAGRAPH PLAYERS other empk ae the past few week y Hindus hired for the of nuine mused in action quite ight all comers wit de art MEETS DEATH re making desert pieture being made for Ince, All accounts agree attaches to the pro. director for the a nt BETTY BLYTH! 1 the title x special, “Queen of to have a try at Blythe studied for tend to de nereen ‘iver ing of the films or the w wide public that |i “The have given me #o splendidly of their Lo: affection. wat 1% lke’ to try my|—O™ e again on the stage. That's! Mouse. natural, hit w 1 be learned from the screen,” ian’t 11? And if I suc largely due to w “The Owl and the Grasshopper” First National Kinograms | [AT BLUE MOUSE] Leatrice Joy. She is play-| ing the leading feminine role!jorie Seaman. Chaney at <caieg 4 ans girl and has been in the films since 191 —Olive Tell, Rez. 6—Herbert Rawlinson, ~ |MAGISTRATE DENOUNCES PRODUCERS OF COMEDY McAdoo of New York indecent and pur © pom the comedy, . “They Demi-Virgin,” which has been rune: ning in the Eltinge theatre in Mi J hattan. The play purported to reum veal the doings of Hollywood movie =, stars In their leisure hours and s 4 grons libel on the vast * istrate munced a r normal lives, STORMY WEATHER Bad weather has held up the final” ts of the great Vitagraph special, “The Prodigal Judge.” For an enti week the large t reported |morning at the steamboat wi | make a location trip up the Huy |river, only to be dismissed 2 | the sky was so blackly overcast, eighth day was clear, so the trip made and some beautiful ext scenes ere taken, RICHARD DIX Richard Dix avers that the of credulity is believing that can’t cut yourself with a f And Cullen Landis wants know when a star has time to razor. |they are so busy writing jarticles for the magazines, . Bai i | Ben Turpin and Phyllis Haver will play together in a series of two-reel comedies, ; Choosing between duty and pleame ure has been a difficult task for Mare Immediately +8 >on oncgp completing her engagement as Night Rose” with) cearured player in “Free Air,” @ » Blue| version of the famous book by 4 the Bi Me | air Lewis, Miss Seaman took. yo is a@ New Or-|ing trip to the West Coast to jommay her husband, Ralph Graves, no working in R. Walsh's “Kindred the Dust.” 4 She With Rudolph Valentino (Star of “The Four Horsemen” and Agnes Ayres Half the world is reading the book! All the world will see the picture! —the spectacular raid in the desert! —the subjugation of a. proud woman’s heart! —the terrific sand storm! —the matchless scenes! —the gorgeous color! Magnificent Prologue! Caird Leslie's 3-—Dancing Girls—3 in the Oriental Dance from “Aida” Sylvia Bernhard, Lillian Greenberg and Irene Irwin, dancers from Caird Leslie's studio, who are appearing in the prologue for “The Sheil’ at the Strand in an Oriental dance a ranged by Mr, Leslie, / ‘

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