The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 1, 1922, Page 3

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. SATURDAY, JULY TODAY'S PROGRAMS i] / | LineRTY—nichant Dix and Helene | | | Chadwick in Xe! Men and | | tel” | cOLUMBIA—Chio Sale tv “itis | | | Nite." WINTER GARDEN — "The ne Way.” Coming Sunday, Mary An- demon in “Mluebeard, Jr.” COLISEUM — Thomas Meighan in | “One Lew ba Stole OAK--Merbert Rawlinson in “The Serapper.” Coming Sunday, Rime Lincoin In “Under Crimson Skies.” LIBERTY YELLOW MEN AND GOLD” Richard Dix 'T IS not a pleasant experience to row a small boat en the ocean and have sharpshooters firing so | close to you that the bullets pepper the water all round the boat, Yet that is but one of the experiences that Rosemary Theby is called upon | to undergo in Gouverneur Morris’ adventure photoplay ow Men and Gold,” which may be seen at the Liberty. COLUMBIA, | sae _ =a 1S NIBS” } ptional) ‘The Boy . Chic Sate ‘The Giri Colleen Moore Pretty little Colleen Moore bios-| seme forth as a comedienne in “His / Nibs." the new comedy picture star ring Chic sale at the Columbia. She appears as a small-town girl, but the daughter of a wealthy man, so she has several very charming frocks of the type so dear to the flapper heart. Her love scenes with Chic Sale, as “The Boy,” are a delight. — [WINTER GARDEN || — “BLUEBEARD, JR.” (American) ¥ Mary & Connolly - George Hernandes . Laura Ansen Anderson | Nan Beech... A timely subject--high rents, | greedy landlords and troubles of apartment hunting, furnish the de lightful plot of “Bluebeard, Jr.,” the | comedy-drama starring Mary Ander-| gon, which is scheduled to run four! daysat the Winter Garden commence: + ing Sunday. The story dealy with/ a young wife and husband, and) eventually the problem becomes no home—no place to go-—no wife. However, the ending ts a happy one —..—* COLISEUM “OUR LEADING CITIZEN” | (Paramount) Thomas Meighan Daniel Bentley Matherine Fendie Lots Wilson Col, fem Theodore Roberts Oglesby Fendie William P. Carleton One of the most charming pictures seen here in many a day is “Our; TOM FORMAN WITH | KATHERINE McDONALD |""-— s ciorn nave compietea BARBARA TENNANT M°? | 1—Thomas Meighan, Coliseum, 2 oO LP BL a ene OF aacgaamt “Missing Millions” New Favorite Alice Brady, who is at present playing the star role in Par mount’s pictureization of Jack Boyle's crook romance, Millions,” sends us the f OTHER “MISSING M The ones paid to float com panies that propose to sink oil wells in the Bronx Those who spent on the girl the other fellow married Expenses for lessons learned in Wall st War loans to the Allies. Income taxes The difference between the act wal salaries of movie stars and what their press agents say they get Captain Kidd's treasure. ‘Movies Are Catching Up to Literature By James W. Dean are beginning to catch tp with lit erature. Heretofore, producers have been content to wait until the vorue of a certain style of literature had passed before attempting to film it Then they sat back and wondered why the picture wasn't a success and began to talk about the “14 year-old intelligence” of the public. “Miss Lulu Bett" was an excep tionally well done movie, but It was not an extraordinary box office suc cess. That, because the story was fot filmed at the height of its popu- Katherine MacDonald's next # preparations for the filming of ring vetticle for Associated Fire “Main Street.” but no matter how tional release is to be “The Lonely | weft it is done it probably will not Road,” an original atory from the! prove ag popular as the producers pen of Charles A. Logue, who has| expect. The “Main Street” era in written two other recent MacDonald! public taste for entertainment bas film stories | passed. The picture will be directed by| The popularity ¢ Brass," by Tom Forman, who was responsible! Charles Norria, ‘ for the direction of “The Woman} and Wallace Worsley, director, is al Conquers,” and who is now directing | ready in conference with the author Mise MacDonald in “White Should | on the pholodramatization of it inues unabate ers,” an adaptation of a Saturday ‘The bulk of the work on “If Win Evening Post story by George Kibbe | ter Comes,” by A. 8. M. Hutchison, urner sti! om best seller, is completed. ra” Forman is In “White Shou William Fox is produe not only directing. but is playing «! Eogiand principal part—that of a screen bro-| Tom Terrias has ther of the heroine ng that tn or Eng. land to produce Ethe « “Top of the World” for Metro, Aftér that Doug Changes Sets _«,™\!| fim Hail Caines “The Prod Son” and several stories by A for “Robin Hood” nan bos Architecture and i@t, realism and| Production of the film based on | symboligm have clashed in the mak Scott Fitzgerald's “The Beautiful ing of “Robin Hood.” And sym-)&nd Damne Hi) sta 1 bolism has won | It seems me the photo Fairbanks started to make) 4ramatization of “Brass ‘The Leading Citizen,” the photoplay star fing Thomas Meighan at the Coil-| seum. The scenes of the story are laid in a small town and Meighan ts seen as a humdrum lawyer who ulti mately makes good and wins the love of a pretty girl. “Our Leading Citizen” is a George Ade story. eo | STRAND |) eae! “OVER THE BORDER” (Paramotnt) npaon Moore Betty Compson, star of “The 1 Minister The Gr tion,” and Tom oore, famous for his romantic charac new but welcome Penryhn 8 ay See “UNDER CRIMSON SKLE: Captain Barstow Elmo LA © Clayton Harry Von Mete Helen Mabel Ba Pee an ast A terrific storm at sea, giant Crimson Skies which will be shown at the Oak Sunda and Monda Di waited three weeks one hund a miles off the Golden Gate for the proper weather conditions to lend at —~——-— L mosphere to the produ [ COLONIAL | yh Valentine MOMENTS’ (American) Rodolph Valenting has r his Jeading woman in “Stolen Moments,” the photoplay attraption at the Co-| lonial beginning Sugday, Marguertta | Namara, the populhr young opera| tar This picture marks the sing: er’s debut into silent drama, and ad-| vance notic speak highly of her| Gramatic act ability | MAE BUSCH y | Mae Buse tif. proud owner of al Belgian police day n her by Peter | B. Kyne, author rothers Under the Skin,” in wifich Miss Busch has one regret at z to Hngland to play in “The Gthristian” for Goldwyn Was that gb epean's take her dog with ber, ful and Damned,” “If Win’ and “Top of the World” ha ne public will architectural detail of | # "i detail, | Come been should | be walting to see them, if they are as a twelfth century cast! be built he found was getting | not exhibited under some filly title architect but not art sracy,| that will not be recognized but not atmosphere . So the scheme of things has been) WILLIAM DeMILLE changed. . The settings are being) William DeMille ts scheduled to be changed to meet the romantic na-| gin next k on “Clarence” ture of 8 his “du , amount Vast turrets tower up until they | The promising Exaggeration in| most notable ever ax Incty It takes exag lary atmos nd Kati what the despite the Londoners gasped when arc lights Hit up the Ni Col ot, for the filming of night se for “The Christian.” Maurice 1 ur was the first director to gain permission to shoot «| movie scenes in Trafalgar | Square. [European Production Coming Soon| Marie Louise Iribe, feminine lead in “Missing Husbands,” o picturization of Pierre Benoit's “L-Atlantide,” said to be the best film play which has yet come to America from France. It is scheduled for an early showing in Seattle, 'W YORK, July 1.—The movies) TION picture theaters offer a fine variety of new attractions for Fleet Week. Betty Compson, Tom Moore, Chic Sale, Mary Anderson, Thomas Meighan, Theddore Roberts, Lois Wilson, Rodolph Valentino, Helene Chadwick and Richard Dix are popular stars to be seen on the screen. Mary Anderson, Winter Garden. 3—Colleen Moore, Columbia, 4—Helene Chadwick, Liberty. 5—Rodolph Valentino, Colonial. 6—Betty Compson, Strand, : |Lloyd Bacon With | | Ray in “Smudge? isi. In the cast of “Smudge,” Charles Ray's latest for First National re lease, is Lioyd Bacon, a son of Frank Bacon of “Light’nin'” fame | Frank Bacon of “Lightnin'” fame photoplay and has some telling neenes with Charles Ray when as Opposition newspaper proprietors they clash. He gives an excellent | performance, it is said. Y na Ba- on, who baa been in pletures for jsome time, ix regarded asx one of | the best character actors and heavies jin the profession. Apart from hin jactlyg he has been gullty of several scenarios and is rapidly extablishing e for himaelf as a writer for the screen, In his private life he is anything but “heavy” and is one of the many householders of Hollywood who spends most of his time with his family be a nar RETURNS TO FILMS | Ten years ago, when a two-reel| picture was @ feature production one of the film's brightest stare was a Tenant, then with Ectair absence of seven years, she rning to the screen) Tully’s produc Masquerader,” filmed ont as the atar Added interest in Misa Tennant return in the fact that,, Georges Benoit, her cameraman of the old days acted ax cinematographer for Masquernder,” in which she will be seen as Robins, a de voted landlady Valentino as Youthtul Rajah | in New Picture’ vin Ric The Young Rajah,” Rodolph ntino’s latest pleture, Paramount has assembled a cast which reaches allstar proportions: | Wanda Hawley wt completing her featured role in George Melford's production, “Burning Sands will play Molly Cabot, the American girl n whom Amos Judd (the adopted me of the young Hindu) falls in love while attending Harvard Bertram Grassby, character artint who played the Hindu heavy in “For the Defense,” a Paramount picture tarring Ethel Clayte hkain por ays « colorful “Hindu villian—a| maharajah who usurps the throne He ts assisted in his villianous de signs by J. Farrell MacDona J se and Sarah Judd, the kindly | old New Englanders who adopt the boy, are played by two,noted charac |ter artists, Charles Ogle 1 Fanny Other important Hindu “ are enacted by George riotat, George Fi and Edwin | ens. Amon id as a youth is} rtrayed 1 Moorp, brilliant | child actor | } ‘OH! DADDY” ! 10 Va est Mack Sennett comedy to} comp! New 1, cut, titled and shipped k for distribution thru| the ex « of the Associated First | National Pictures, is “Oh! Daddy | directed by Roy Del Ruth, featuring | Billy Beven and Mildred June | | This picture te sixth of the series lof twelve two-reel comedies with Bevan and Miss June | HURT BY FALL | Br ng his ankle in a 200-foot | n oliff, Reginald Denny screen star, is at the Universal hos pital The star was working in “Jaws of Steel a short feature of the North west Mounted Police. ‘Thernetion re. | |quired him to roll down a sheer | | slope; he tripped, fell and his ankle snapped | rts FLIRT" Bileen Perey and Helen Jerome Eddy wil thave the principal femi nine roles in “The Flirt,” to be filmed | at Universal City as an all-star pro. | duction from Booth Tarkington's epic | of small-town life |“HOME-MADE MOVIES” TURPIN’S LATEST} Ben Turpin's latest two-reel fun- fest, made at the Mack Sennett studios under the tentative title of “The Frozen Trail,” has been de-| |“The Frozen” Trail," has been re! a lot of cold stuff fn this pleture, ac: cording to advance Inf tion, and} it ought to go good during the month jof July, when it is scheduled for re: | |The fa Phyllis Haver plays oppos | Ite th om favorite. quint-ey | | Angel Child—Marie Mosquine ts 23) years old, Her address is 921 Seon] t., Los Angeles, Antonio Moreno is 34, « WHAT MARY THINKS of stars will bec and the permanent dinc his one ought to be the last for personal Norma Talmadgé will wear aret has yet worn in pict equal that in “Smilin’ Through." )What We Know VALUE OF AN ACTOR ' | When Buster | Hal Cooley started in the movies Keaton Smiles be coco he ne fed ithe money About Fla nere’s no doubt about that f Sa eae IS debut was at the Selig studio in sup-| Gladys Walton seldom: reams port of a big lion. When Cooley en-| Stoy, and can't quote a line of Kht fans who have had oc-| tered the cage he asked the brute's! Whitman's poetry, Nelther eam casion to watch Buster at | the/ trainer if he had a kun reidy in case | prege agent. This may Full Bee skiy boxing bouts in lollywood | the lion becam suddenly hungry the cognoscenti, assuming that mys Jare the “frozen face” shows evi-| “Hell, not" the trainer shouted. | ‘"® Cosno* , ic the ee “That iion is worth more than any | 0¢ knows who they are, but it does | n't affect the growing success Of her” | i ——~ | pletures. She's working on another They say Buster Keaton never ami But de denew of thawing out whenever his man delivers the "K. 0.” The ¢om- | actor that ever lived.” edian admits that he at least sm ~ a inwardly because it gives him a feel-| stunts in “The Blectric House,” his| one, “Top O' the Morning” at” ing of relief to see somebody else! latest First National attraction, re-| versal City under the direction Of |take the count just as a jot of hia suited in shooting stars for him ard Laemmie es NOTE: Whoever doesn’t like this show is mean enough to kill a baby or drown a litter of kittens stage today, in the most unique quvaintly humorous motion picture the screen has yet shown . ue REGINALD DENNY THE LEATHER PUSHERS “PLAIN GRIT” An Added Attraction of Quality COLUMBIA ORCHESTRA UNDER DIRECTION OF LIBORIUS HAUPTMAN Master Pianist amd Conductor INTERNATIONAL NEWS ENINCS 355

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