The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 17, 1921, Page 3

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TODAY'S PROGRAMS STRAND —Reid, Swanson, Dexter in Don't Tell Kverything. in “Cappy Bi | | BLUR MOUSH—Deris May in “The | herine MacDonald | ee! i—Feart White tn “The oman.” ae. Sam Fairbanks in “Wi ern Pep. AR Sane Crepe “The Us FL THA) . STRAND | “DON'T TELL EVERYTHING” j (Paramount) Cullen Dale Marian Westover Harvey Gliroy Jeaniod Ramany . &PF)ONT TELL EVERYTHING,” the photodrama at the Strand, is the story of a town girl and « Wwoodsy girl—a sportive young man his philosopifical friend. They 2 entangled in a love situation Which results in mix-ups that keep the spectator wondering how it can come out right. TBLUE MOUSE “THE FOOLISH AGE” (Rodertaon Cole) Margy Carr....... ‘ Homer Dean Chadwick Lester Hicks. One of the cleverest comedy-dramas of the year, with Doris May, a local actress, starring, is now showing at the Blue Mouse. It is fittingty titled “The Foolish Age,” which brings It up to the minute. The plot weaves itaelf around a young girl whose father wants to marry her off to a man of wealth, but—well, she has ideas of her own in that direction. x T'WINTER GARDEN | sta \RDEN } “CAPPY RICKS” Wallace Reid Gloria Swanson Elliott Dext Doris May Hallam Cooley Otis Harlan . Arthur Hoyt Thomas Meighan's clever starring vehicle, “Cappy Ricks,” Is showing at Rtg. Winter Garden until Tuesday — onty. It is an interesting filled with thrilling scenes of | land and sea. Thomas Forman directed the pic: ture, and Agnes Ayres is the leading woman. ! CLEMME “A PARIStAN SCANDAL” orge Pertolat Liane Coumt Louis Oudott : a Countess Oudoft Basi} Hammond... Marie Prevost is now at the Clem mer in “A Parisian Scandal,” a breezy comedy drama, in which she appears as a baby vamp. Her pet victim is @ young college student who attempt# to reform the litte Parisian flirt—with very little success. COLIS “HER SOCIAL VALUE” (First National) Marion Hoyte......Katherine MacDonald Jamen Lodge... os. -Roy Stewart Ciittord Treat. . Bertram Grassby Bertha Harmon. Betty Ross Clarke ‘That & wedding ring adds nothing to social value is proven in Kathe MacDonald newest picture, Social Value,” now at the Coli- seum. The ring ts what raises the heroine from salesgiri to society, but society never permits her to come be- yond the fringe of things, and pro- mulgates the drama, providing unique entertainment —e | LIBERTY || ‘FIGHTIN’ MAD” (Metro) .- William Desmond -Virginia Faire . Doria Pawn Bod McGraw... Peggy Hughes Elieen Granam “Pightin’ Mad,” tow showing at the Liberty, is a picture of a red- blooded young American who finds the course of ordinary life rather too Lceenic and seeks adventure by be v'gbs » member of the border pe rt ie and Easy” is the title of a SMirmaia comedy, which is also fea- tured for the coming week. : “THE MOUNTAIN WOMAN” (Fox) ‘The Girl Pearl White ¢ Colonial theatre is showing Pearl White in “The Mountain Wom an,” a picture laid in the heart of the Kentucky hills, which introduces some quaint, delightful characters as well as some sensational teats of dar ing. i’ % bhava £ “WESTERN PE (Western Btar) William Fairbanks Florence Gildbe How Jen-hearted big cow puncher in winning the heart and hand of the prettiest girl in the West in spite of the objection of the girl's brother, who is a crook. @d ofl speculator, is told in “Western Pep,” the William Fairbanks picture now showing at the Rex BIN Warren Natalie Reid a go succeeds OAK f U: P. TRAIL” (Patho) uty Stanton Kathlyn Williams Jose Durade Robert McKim A love story of surpassing sweet ness, built on the old, true, tried tri angle combination between two women and a man, is the foundation of Benjamin Hampton's photoplay, “The U. P, Trail,” showing at the Ouk today and tomorrow, EUM || 1—Thomas Meighan, Winter Garden. THE SEATT | Glory to Gloria! This Interview Was a Tough One to Get] BY JAMES W. DEAN NEW YORK, Dec. 17.-Just re turned from a reception at the Rita |held for Gloria Swanson and myveif Or #0 it seemed to me. The fellow who “fixes thingy for Gloria told me that she wouldn't be busy. So I anticipated a coxy tete-a. tete over a cup of tea. (Interviews | with movie queens are usually held in that manner) When I arrived at her suite at the Ritz I was introduced to an artist, a sculptor, a production manager, four photographers, a girl reporter, an ordinary girl, a box of candy, a box of cigarets and a box of cigurs of «| grade better than I am accustomed to smoke. Glorious Gloria would soon be fn. | She was shopping—in the next room. | Seems the stores do @ Mohamet-to- the-mountain with Gloria, They send their wares to her so she can shop at home. I had had one chocolate, one cig aret and one fade-out of Gloria In the other room when the bell an nounced two more feminine inter- | viewers. More introductions. Like. | standing in line at a reception. Then entered Gloria, glorious in dressing gown, or something-or other, In two tones, old rome and gold. Stockingless feet no bigger |than a minute, in Harding-blue alip- pers. |The photographe= | than the interviewer. They snapped jher in 17 poses and rushed out as} tho they were trying to make an edition. were quicker viewers, friends and second counins | of Interviewers, While introductions | wer®¥4ing of afiother photographer sneaked in and set up his eamera.| Eleven more photographs. Buses! More interviewers! ] Be-r-err! The telephone | At last the feminine contingent of [pencil pushers swept down upon | |their victim. All I heard was Gloria | saying, “Well, when you know Elinor | Glyn intimately you like her. You'd | like her, too, if you knew her as j well as T do,” , Being a mere man I awaited the departure of my professional sisters before trying an interview. ' I had just started in on the fourth Edith Roberts will be Wally Reid's heroine in “Across the Continent.” cee Rudolph Valentino will be Gloria Swanson's leading man in “Beyond the Rocks.” . Maivine Polo, daughter of Eddie Polo, is to play in @ picture to be |filmed in Berlin. . This may not be so, but its worth telling. Cecil DeMille ts going to hunt with a falcon from the back of a racing camel when he visits Biskra, in northern Africa, ° | “The Count of Monte Cotas a Tell bes been completed. @irector, say# he ire sooh to take up a college course, . Charles Graham Baker has suc- |ceeded George Randolph Chester as editor-in-chief of Vitagraph. eee “The Triple Cross” is a Northwest police story being filmed with Art |Acord as hero. “The Double Croas” j would be a good title for the many |pictures which change titles. | oe |}. “Fool's Paradise,” heralded as the | greatest picture ever made by Cecil | DeMille, is soon to have a Broadway prices. Dorothy Dab agel and Mildred Har- ding roles. ris are |RICHARD BARTHELMESS AS “TOL’ABLE DAVID” Richard thelmens is «going to have a right merry Christmas this |year. He has every reason to cele- brate, for the handsome and popular young screen actor is now }a star in his own right. Dick, by the | way, recently completed the filming of his first starring vehicle, “Tol’abie |David,” by Joseph Hergesheimer. |It's his Christmas present to the pie. ture going public this year, Some present, too, if all the advance re ports are to be believed. “Tol'able Davia” will be an early First Na- | tional release, It is declared to be not only the finest picture in which young Barthelmess has yet appeared, but it is also said to be one of the greatest photodramas ever produced anywhere in too, Madge Evans is to be starred in “On the Banks of the Wabash.” | Gloria Swanson. [Picture Patter} ithe production for stardom. |meneration of ancestors, who wert | either Swedish or Ltallan, or both, when three jewel canes were brought ith for Miss Swanson's selection. She asked me whieh one I liked and I said the dark-blue one, githo }the ght blue matched her eyes. | Evidently it isn’t essential for jew jelry cases to match the eyes, liked my taste in jewelry cases, for she took the dark blueone. I declared time out for this inter. | ruption and picked up my interview in the future tense. or | She first gained notice in “Male and Buseez! Another troep of inter.) Female.” Since then she has risen to the highest ranke of) 1 She is now at the Strand with Elliott Dexter and {Wallace Reid in “Don't Tell Ex ] rything.” | “T lke the ‘Shulamite’ hetter:than | @my picture 1 have made,” Glorte | gonfided in me. “It will either be ar Unusual success or a miserable | fail—" } Hun222! Some of Gloria's relatives | arrive. A little niece who looked Just | Uke Gloria when she was five. Eirrrrr! The telephone } 1 maid farewell, after « jenough to learn that ¢ | picture will be called “The Hush | Trademark,” Silly title, 1 thought, an@ Gloria's such a nice girl! BILL HART AND BRIDE ¥ William Hart, two-gun {man of the movies, who has just been married to Miss | Winifred Westover, who is in his supporting company. MAKING GooD of quickest sereen ever registered has Claude Gillingwater. Mary Pickford for role in “Little Lord and since then pro clamored for his ser: One connes that went to first film ‘auntleroy” ucers have me: been He his of DOROTHY DALTON In “Tharon of Lost Valley," Dor othy Dalton again has one of those Far-North roles which made hor famous. Paul Powell in directing Paramount, ovie Quizzes {Conducted in co-operation with | Associated First National Pictures, | Ine) | W. BE. M.-Wyndham Standing ts | married. His wife gave up her pro- fenajonal career on the stage to be-| |come Mra, Standing. He has been | | leading man to many of the beautiful | | women of the screen. rma and | Constance Talmadge, Naomi Child ers, Pauline Frederick and Elsie Fer. | euson ‘nre a few to whom’ he has played lover or husband. ee Pauline.—Edna = Purvianee has @ray eyes and very light brown hair, which is quite fair and golden in the sufishine, /She Shas’ played dpposite Charlie Chaplin ‘ever since her first appbrarancé with the worldfamous comedian, She is'g7. Her address i care of Charles Studios, 1416 La Brea ave, Los An a, Cal. ee Zeruah—Lila Lee has a_ sister, Margaret, with whom she lives in Hollywood, She may be the Mar- garet Lee to whom you refer. Dorothy Phillips is married to Allan Holubar, They have one daughter, Her latest picture was “Man, Woman, Marriage.” At prea ent she and her husband are work ing on “The Soul *. Flic. Petrova was born of Finglish parents, in Liverpool, England. She is appearing on the stage this season. No, I hardly thin! that she hag left the sereen perma nently. Mannie.—Olga . X. Y. Z—The a o- dress of Rudolph | Valentino is 7159 Hollywood bive. | Los Angeles, Ca He is not married at the present time, EDWARD PEIL | JOINS GOLDWYN Edward Pell, famous for his inter- | pretations of Chinese roles on the screen, has been engaged by Goldwyn |for an important role in “The Dust! Flower,” by Basil King, Mr. Pell, | however, will Jay aside his Oriental | makeup and will be seen as a Cau-| casian, He distinguished himself in Chinese roles in Griffith's “Broken Blonsoms” and “Dream Street; in eldentally, he is the father of Johnny Jones, the boy actor featured in Booth Tarkington's Edgar comedies Relations.” next. “Domestic MasDon “i's Katherine | tate Mollywood was vernal} bandit chine the euin, LE STAR | 2—Scene from comedy, Liberty. 3—Scene from “A Parisian Scandal,” Clemmer. Derothy Cumming | son, Strand, 7—Doris May, Blue Mouse. 8—Pearl White, Colonial. | Colleen Inspires Song Writer Colleen Moore, who is now be 4 in Goldwyn pictures, jon of & new song entitled which Arthur Freed is writing. F , who in t uthor of “When Buddha Smiles,” "°C “Hindustan” anen, has been by which Col on playing the music leon emotes in scenes for “Sent Irish story by Rw pert Hughes. He and Alfred Green, the director, are close friends. The song follows the theme of the story for Out,” an BARBARA BEDFORD Bedford ht, by driving Rart at oked, near she Unt by the ma Then studio boulevard bandit while car to the She encaped the slerator, being thrown off the by jt lurch forward. star drove on to the and faintéd. on a her studio. “stepping on’ A NOV “ Clanic 4: L, SETTING gyrate waist deep bubbies Ta. “A Blind Bar starring Lon Chaney Jeaigned by Cedric a similar in Frank Tinney’s “Tickle Me.” in soap net Was However, ployed idea w In her picture, “Beyond the Rocks," by Elinor Glyn, Gloria Swanson weary a coat of Ras- in muble said to be worth 040. 4—Katherine MacDonald, Charles Ray Forced to Break Rule | Charles Ray has always maintain. led that many motion picture stars make a grievous mistake in yielding to requests for personal appearances that involve speeches. Public speak ing, he maid, ie an art that must be | Claims to have discovered his great-| learned like any other, and when | film stars, untrained in it, essay to jtry the “spelibinding’ ‘they are apt |to make sorry exhibitions, Case of shoemakerandlast proverb, you know it was a surprine when Charlie, on his first visit in New York, broke his own rule and got away with the infraction nicely, It was at a mon ster benefit at the Casino theatre. Ray was in the audience when he was xpled by artists on the stage and audience, too, | pelled to make a sper But he showed conststency, for he cut the talk short and sprang some. thing new. He borrowed a hat and canvasned the audience for a collec and not only gathered In an extra large sum, but gave the thousands |the heart of a million fans such as \po star had ever done before. |" ‘The delighted audi¢nee found him quite the antithesis of the shy rustic lhe characterizes on the screen, hut linstead, @ tall, erect, debonair, , Coliseum. no he was com |““American Beauty” Receives Present Hoot, mon Can picture Katherine Mac | Donaid, in kilties? | She has a pair of ‘em—or a set, jor however you classify the Scotch you the beautiful, | national toggery | They arrived the other day direct |from heatheriand and were sent to |the First National star by Angus) | MacDonald of Glasgow, who, after | consulting with a heraldry specialist, reat-grandfather was a forty second usin of Katherine MacDonald's enth second cousin Unfortunately, Miss MacDonald was naking a South Sea island ple ture, “The Infidel,” and the kilties were of little use to her at the time, Rupert Hughes, the novelist, seems to have gone completely over to the movie camp and is now a full-fledged director for Goldwyn. He is producing only his own stories, however. smartly groomed chap, who could, if he chose, affect as much the blase attitude as any Gothamite—which he jtion for the benefit fund in hand, | doesn't choose, for affection is the| the last thing in Charlie's lexicon, From Mayor Hylan down, the New SASS present a close contact with that | Yorkers have been lonizing the pop- |frank, engaging nmile that has won | ular star. Besides doing the new shows, which has meant a succession |of ovations, he has been making scenes for his current production of Bob Wagner's story “Smudge,” in and around New York and Boston. | He will finish it in California. 5—William Fairbanks, Rez. 6—Gloria Swan-" TALMADGE STUDIO pe ATTRACTS SOCIETY, Mrs. Lydig Hoyt’s plunge inte” filmdom has ‘attracted a swarm of dios, Among those appearing with Com- — nie in her latest starring vehicle, “Polly of the Follies,” are Viscount ~ H. H. F. De Frise, Miss Elaine Re- valles, daughter of a famous New York specialist, Dr. Henry | Cogge- shall and Miss Jean Meredith, whose” first histrionic experience was in the! | Junior League show last year, _ THEY CAN'T TEMPT HOPE They can't tempt Hope Hampten 4 jaway from the silver sheet, try aw they will. stage offers lately, but she has turned a deaf ear to them all. Hope s | going right ahead with her plans to film “White Faith,” a novel by ¥ ‘ iam Dudley Pelly. “BLIND HEARTS” “None so blind as those who not see.” So reads the Old Proverb. And verily ‘tis true. Hobart Bosworth as Lars deep-chested hero of * | Hearts,” closes his heart to all giveness and understanding unt But wait ti! you see it with music. Emory Johnson is will know her? Why dainty Ella Hi COLISEUM CONCERT ORCHESTRA “Seattle's Symph SUNDAY F at 12:90 anne Orlentale” marrying a society man? mi BZ NGF, eS. | l HA Has she a different value because she is a salesgirl before = KATH MacDONAL umbomirky chulkowsky ARTHUR KAY Director “The Adviser” in her wonderful role in Snobs think so—but see the American beauty— B ye i “HER SOCIA Lioyd Hamilton Comedy Bruce Scenic—Pathe News First National Kinograms VALUE” The charming star of 7% “Star Dust” has received a flock of) 7)

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