The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 20, 1923, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Stren TODAY’S PROGRAY SCREEN Norma Talmadge of Vengeance.” Kirkwood and the Bagie’s s COLISEUM — “Ash: LIBERTY Mary Feather, BLUE MOUSE—George Arties and Alice Joyee in “The Green Ged- dona” STRAND—Glorta Swanson tn “Zara.” COLUMBIA—Warren Kerrigan, Anna Q. Nilsson and Winifred Mrysoa in “Thandering Dawn,” WINTER GARDEN—John Gilbert tn “A California Romance”; Sunday, Age.” et in ~ James Alden in Darrymere and Enemies of Women. STAGE ORPHEUM—George Nash; Sunday, William Seabury heading vaudeviile ditt. HEILIG—Will King and company ta "What's Your Husband Dein NTAGES—Varlety vaudeville, f MIT—Vaudeville and pho Her Fatal Millions, — Bannister, masical comedy the payetio, ‘and’ photoplay, Goddess” . —Gloria Swanson, Strand. 2—~Norma Talmadg * | 7—Alma Rubens, Colonial. ay | wal Ph » Mouse. 4—Warren Kerrigan, Columbia, 5—Mary Alden, Liberty. 3 6¢ A SHES OF VENGEANCE” on Second Week; Gloria Swanson’s “Zaza” Here; ‘“Western’’ Picture at Liberty; Blue Mouse Features George Arliss’ ; “The Green “Thundering Dawn” at Columbia; Other Features Are “Enemies of Women,” “The Critical Age,” “Her Fatal Millions.” sue 6—James Harrison and Alice May, Winter Garden, eed Se eas COLISEUM oo aa Norma Talmadge's “Ashes of Ven geance,” the big picture which has been delighting Co audiences | during the last SEE Sea ae STRAND ot wee “ one of the most famous of rench stage plays, in its picture on, featuring Gloria Sw ow b presented at the Strand In the role of th ing show {girl in a popular e: cabaret Miss Swanson does some of her beat She is ably supported by a jc H. B, Warner and um week, is now on its | F second week at that theater. A ro-|* mantic drama of France in the d of Catherine de Med when the country was in a turmoll, ts present ed in the story, which tells of a love that conquers over pride and an in herited hate. The picture ts right fully called Miss Talmadge’s master plece, and the acting of tho other members of the cast, principal Conway Tearle, is also especial good, 3 BLUE MOUSE & ee —* COLUMBI & — aR gland of Java, notorious as ra people go when get tired of life and want the tropics to kill fs the locale niversal mele which st tumbia Saturday they ed pearance on retu’ in support of compelling melc * erest aro promised Goddess,” ently picked the|story in which Anna Q. Nilsson, National Board of Review as one| Warren Kerrigan ar of the 10 “exceptional photoplays”|son take the leading parts. © of the season. The picture opened | X-— — —_———1 an engagement at the Blue Mouse||) WINTER GARDEN turday morning. ‘The story is of | he rae sesame * an Oriental prince who enenares| John Gilbert was being presented the wife of a British officer, but is|in “A California Romance” at the finally subdued by the woman's|Winter Garten for the last times real lover after the husband has|Saturday, A romantic love story, deen killed. Besides Arliss and|“The Critical Age,” is to be the Miss Joyce, Harry T. Morey, David |new attraction. Powell, Jetta Goudal and other cap- | & eed able stars are in the ca || COLONIAL = Vincente LIBERTY il Blasco. Ibanez’ great | story, “Enemies of Women,” ts now being presented tn its screen ver- dtbaee artim noel ‘at the Colonial. Lionel Barry- - | : head the sned. in “The Eagle's Feather,” which |™0r Sp4 Alma Rubens head opened an engagement at the Liberty | Saturday morning. It ix a picturiza-|* tion of Katherine Newlin Burt's ta-|| mous story of Western ranch life which appeared not long ago In the Cosmopolitan magazine, In. its, tell-| x i jg on the screen Mary Alden and|the lg i t mah = mebird eee ie cone. ot Drinelpals, | em Wiltam Dudley Pelley’s story while Lester Cuneo, Elinor Fair, y ey's ator George Seigman and other well and ocuitaing -zobsetos aid Stren known stars support them. ture as well as human st. PALACE HIP | ee enatd ‘Viola Dana is tho star of a new comedy-drama, “Her Fatal Millions,” | PHOTO WON HER JOB n, |{PHOUSANDS and thousands en deavor to get into the movies ond fall. A few who try It the grade, Then the | few—v few, who are sought o |by producers mak: | ‘The latter road was that which | | broug' Ut | Six months a earning Jher wa ua a Now York college. |Now s ares feminine lead h jors In the forthcoming W! is, “Cameo Kirby” Jean 17, In v n | ) ‘ollowed a suggestion by that tu a friend IV ‘OVIB producers, coming |4¥L contact w photographers as they do, heard glowing accounts of the new find. They with her beauty, It Fox, however, w material qualities, gave her a scre test and subsequently a contract. Mise Arthur was sent to the Fox studios In Los Angeles and cast in small parte. She made good. Her instinctive aptitude before the cam- era led to her film debut tn a femi- nine lead, all {nside of six months. wero wa. ts largely dus to her tenacious will, mental keenness, vivid beauty and that which they call screen material. Sho is five feet three, slende a brunette. | A‘stirring novel of the divorce evi! |{x promised in Basil King’s coming special for Vitagraph, which he calls, “Let Not Man Put Asunder.” | © are those 1 more in struck | Her meteoric rise to prominence | |MARY PHILBIN IS CLIMBING TO TOP Knowing h he | |fore the camera taken Mary | Philbin rapidly toward the populari And, it 8 all been ac complished in a short time, ad movie | stars climb, Following to put has her good work in the | “Merry Go Round, * gho ta b |in the leading feminino role in “The | |Temple of Venus," a William Fox A few years ago cago achool ¢ Her the movi es on ¥ was a Chi ing-stc BEN ALEXANDER GETS LONG TERM CONTRACT Ben Alexander, 12-year-old mov now holds a long-term coi os, Inc. It {s in recogr of his sterling work in the lea role in “Penrod and Sam.’ Ho will soon appear in thers and Young Sons, Booth Tarkington story, to bo pro- cod by J, K. MacDonald and di-} |rected by William Beaudine., Firat | | National believe Ben is| dentined for the highest honors the screen can give. someone | executives Jean Arthur Imagine Douglas Fairbanks with @ marcel wave, halrnet and rib- bon! Mary Pickford, his wife, thought that should @ part of! his makeup in lef of Bag- dad” and, of ¢ CELEBRATE NAVY DAY) Adapted to the celebration of Navy day, October 27, the birthday | of ex-President Roosevelt, the show ing of “The Silent Command,” a Fox screen production glorifying |the naval service, will be part of the | |ceremonies in various parts of the Exhibitors are preparing | ure wherever it 6 be 63, tells fon by sel. soon be as elderly women as Sho recently was 80 re- Wallace Hopper, Griffith, refuven country, false teeth. juvenated. | COUNT THEM Joan Standing the boy movie star, who has always claimed to be more be-freckled ‘one in the mov- . now 1 for such hon orn. sex, either. Miss Joan Standing ts known as |“the girl with a million freckles.” Shoe has challenged Wesley's posl PICTURE TO HELP |tion ag the Hollywood freckle mon-| arch. Her first starring role “Win the Man You Love Productions film. She coming to the front. was in a Choice is rapidly Licoyd Hamilton says music, but test news he loves would rather hear the on arrival at a tion from which ho has been ab-| sent, than to hear a band such as greeted him. . It was the occasion of his return to Los Angeles. And the rival isn’t of the male} LYTELL should join they nes to see tho world. His| ta roles in movies have taken|lin’s p Italy and 4 were Suddy, a pet ht to nibb ockets, w the It in | recent nere cabbage leaves jhim to certain comedy tt National Christie.” The goat paycheck cabbage and all retrieve Was “and 00-100." tects The real new at last come screen. In the past picted as a sort of about shoving a lary and pe under the person he shown more near Marshall Nellan's Production work on Richard B: thelmess’ latest picture, “The En chanted Cottage soon to start at | the Inspii Fort Lee. | Reducing became too |Babe London, corpulent starlet with Christie Comedy Co. She had ur Gang”|to do it for her latest comedy and been sign-| now she bars any such comedies for the future, Saturday. had discov | tasted as goc Conklin was a corner wh ad: note book of the Ho 4s| as he is in o dnd Get It.” . A Los Angeles church has been ‘em porarily ned into. @ studio es in “BMis- lerstood,” Donald's pro- duction, ; serious for comedienne “Farnia,” y of Hal Roach's famous comedy aggregation, ha has ed under a long-term contract. oe the du It has been a that Joseph & Norma Talmadge |coming film ve | Juliet.” nounced definitely} A new theme in moving pictures Is idkraut will be|seen in “Eyes of the Forest,” being. “Romeo” in the! made at the William Fox studios. Tt on of “Romeo and| deals with the airplane fire patrol of | California, | In order to retire gracefully from| *phomas H. Ince {s preparing to the “Leather. Pushers,” the fourth] em Vaughn. Kester’s novel, "fhe series of these phenomenally, suc-| Just and the Unjust.” |cessful prize fight stories will start AE SES with a story in which Denny, as ‘Kid| Roberts, gives over his champlgnship GHOSTS WILL WALK AT LIBERTY to Billy Sullivan, The other five in Fun-seekers of Seattle are the latest series by H. C. Witwer} will star Billy Sullivan, cousin of the great John I . promised a real treat in the Hal loween entertainment to be of fered at the Liberty theater Wednesday night, October Si, It will be a sort of high jinx and will include all kinds of specialty® novelty entertainment. The time will be 11 o'clock—just after the last show. oe | A new star has been created.| Laura LaPlante, one of the most} beautifull screen ingenues ever devel-| oped by Carl Laemmie, after serving | an apprenticeship of some two a half or three years at Univ: City, will be starred in her own right. | Her first starring vehicle will be} “The Thrill Girl," by Crosby George. Despite the — high cities, there Is ¥ TIVELY 3 AD- VANCE IN PRICES here? int the First National romance of love and intrigue— T; with Conway Tearle and Wallace Beery COLISEUM CONCERT ORCHESTRA will play the following poPular one-hour concert, Sunday, at 12:30 o'clock: zugamarsch der Bojare®” .,... Sextet from the Opera “Lucia di Lammerm Arranged by Mr. ¢ “Wedding Dance’ oeeceesen “Salut d'Amour Fantasia, ‘ sees Halvorsen or’, ..-Donizett! aries Morris, -Lincke -Elgar . -Langey \ 4 fy Old Kentucky Hom M, Jacques Beaucaire, Director Informatio eurrent or coming c or Liberty NOW HERE— Gorgeous Grand Glorious in the role she has always wanted to portray— in Paramount's “ZAZA” with H. B. WARNER and MARY THURMAN —and how she makes ze love— OH BABEE! TRAND ORCHESTRA under WINELAN Playing Selections From “Cavalleria Rusticana” and the Popular Fox Trot, “Love Tales” Also—Keen fun— “Three Cheers’ A Juvenile Comedy LDIRECTION JENSEN §& VON HERBERG Where the Public Kuows it Sees, Good Shows NOW PLAYING— LIBERTY NEWS Great jorthern —_ officers, President Budd and Louls W. Hill, visit Seattle. A how-to-drive lesson for. autoists, T. of W. vs. California foot- ball game of Saturday after- noon will be on The Liberty screen Saturday night as well an interesting shots of Stad- fum day ac- Uvitles. The smashing Western production of a world wanderer who comes into his own— “THE Eagle’s Feather” with JAMES KIRKWOOD and MARY ALDEN supported by ALLACE Elinor Fair AT THE Lester C URLITZER Ee tae George Siegmann Added— The boy with the misleading eyes— BEN TURPIN me 5,000,000 latts— “ASLEEP jy, SWITCH’ i Sd aie ein bs eis nrescusenaoeraarnons

Other pages from this issue: