Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 91, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1934 — Page 2

PAGE 2

'THE SCARLET EMPRESS/ STARRING MARLENE DIETRICH, NOW AT CIRCLE

Life of Catherine the Great Is Brought to Screen Goers Reproduction of Court Scenes of Eighteenth Century Brings Stirring Pageant to Screen: Historical Tale Played by Beautiful Actress. "The Scarlet Empress," Marline Die’rich's latest starring spectacle, bnnzs to the screen In a furiou.’' sweep of pageantry and clamour a reproduction of the eighteenth century of Russia under the tyrannical iron heel of the mad czars.

The story concerns the early childhood and later marriage of Sophia Frederica, played by Marlene Dietrich, to the heir to the Russian throne. Grand Duke Peter, half-witted grandson of Peter the Great. Sophia Frederica is taken into the Russian court as a child filled wi?tv the beautiful and whimsical thought* of childhood as she contemplates her coming union with the royal family. She is told that her future husband is tall and handsome and the envy of all the men of Russia. Os course the story is quite different as told from the diary of the real empress of all the Russians, Catherine 11, whose life gave the material for "The Scarlet Empress." When she gets to the court, she Is given anew name. Her religion is changed and she receives in marriage an abnormal man who hates her with all the fury of his feeble mind. How Catherine 11, played by Marlene Dietrich, becomes truly Russian and bears the royal family a son and finally seeks the power of the throne through court intrigue and many lovers, is told in this spectacle. The reproduction of the Russian court of the eighteenth century filled with grotesque figures representing the moods and fancies of those half barbaric people of the f*r north and the musical accompaniment for the picture, brings to the screen a stirring pageant. “The Scarlet Empress" is now’ on view at the Circle. mam 'Hide Out' on View Second of ’ Loew s Greater Movie Season of Hits" is now on view at Loews Palace theater, under the title of “Hide-Out," starring Robert Montgomery and Maureen O'Sullivan. Mr. Montgomery’s ability to play a gay yet sincere part won him the coveted star role. "Hide-Out” is said to be his happiest, gayest picture. Maureen O'Sullivan plays opposite Mr. Montgomery and furnishes the love interest, this being Miss O Sullivan's first picture since completing “Tarzan and His Mate." Edward Arnold is said to give a vivid characterization of McCarthy, chief of detectives. Mr. Arnold will be remembered from his recent success, “Sadie McKee." in which he played the philandering millionaire who married Joan Crawford. Others in the notable cast include Mirkey Rooney, C. Henry’ Gordon. Muriel Evans and Elizabeth Patterson. W. S. Van Dyke, director for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. is said to have retained much the same type snappy, witty dialogue as was prominent in “The Thin Man.” Montgomery plays the part of self-assured “Lucky Wilson." bigshot gambler, and press agent for a big-town shakedown racket. While forcing his gang's "protection" on one of his victims, he is shot in the shoulder and is forced to escape to the country. Quite by accident he comes into the Miller homestead and immediately is taken in by the country people, who believe him to be a victim of gangsters. Follows his love affair with Pauline, the Miller daughter, and his eventual reformation. , . Also on the program is seen The First Roundup." an Our Gang comedy. a travel talk, and news.

MOTION PICTURES

BOEW S NOW / Ij*t g|gg^ RJoi— "Ir MONTGOMERY Maureen. O^Suluj^ari HIDE-OUT With Fdard XrnOlH and Thrilling M-G-M •. • Annri* joy • Our Gang Comedy w travkltaik £ >EW

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Model Revue" New Feature at Ripple Pool Indianapolis girls and women are invited to attend a "Captain Kidd's Mode; Revue at Broad Ripple park tomorrow afternoon, an added feature to the "Treasure Hunt" amusement stunt at the big recreation park along White river. The “revue" will be open to any girl or woman who appears in a bathing suit on the beach, and the six best looking girls will be selected by an anonymous “one-man” jury, according to an announcement by Ralph L. Bennett, park manager. The judge in the novel contest will make his way through the crowd on the beach between the hours of 2 and 4 p. m., looking over the girls and women who are present, and without making any announcements until after the contest is over, he will make his own decision regarding "beach beauties.” Each girl selected for the "Captain Kidd Revue" will receive by mail an appropriate award. Rules of the contest require snappiness of costume, personality and physical figure excellence, according to Manager Bennett. “We shall make the winners in this new contest ’honorary members’ of our ‘Treasure Hunt’ crew,” explained Bennett. “The Treasure Hunt” will open its third week at the park Sunday, w r ith another basketful of metal medallions buried in the sands of the big concrete bathing pool to entice romantio souls, who like to be surprised at what they find." All persons who discover the medallions buried not more than six inches beneath the surface of the sand will be able to redeem them for cash at the park office beneath the grand stand, Bennett stated.

Unique Contract Peggy’ Fears, whose first assignment with Fox Film is a leading role in "Lottery Lover,” with “Pat” Paterson, Lew Ayres, Ned Sparks and Sterling Holloway, is the possessor of a contract calling for her services as wTiter, producer, director and actress.

Lloyd Movie at Apollo Abandoning the adolescent roles, the stunts and paraphernalia which helped to make him one of moviedom's favorite sons, Harold Lloyd is appearing upon the screen of the Apollo theater in “The Cat's Paw,” which is said to have afforded the star anew field of production possibilities. In making “The Cat's Paw,” Mr. Lloyd for the first time in his iong screen career worked from an original story. The new film is the adaptation of the Clarence Bud-* dincton Kelland best seller novel and magazine story. Mr. Lloyd depends more upon the story, situation, characterization and dialogue, rather than on fast-run nlng gags. He appears as the son of an American missionary, who has spent virtually all his life with his father in the interior of China. At 27 his father decides it is time for him to return to his native land and seek himself a wife. He is thrown into the maelstrom of life in an American city of 400.000 at first like a fish out of water. By a strange series of stunts he is elected mayor of the city and the fun really begins. Helping the comedian in his laugh-provoking efforts is a sterling cast of players, including Una Merkel. Cieorge Barbier. Nat Pendleton. Grace Bradley. Alan Dinehart. Grant Mitchell, Fred Warren. Warren Hymer. J. Farrell MacDonald. James Donlan, Edwin Maxwell. Frank Sheridan, Fuzzy Knight and Vince Barnett. Sam Taylor directed “The Cat's Paw" from the screen story prepared by Lloyd himself. Danee numbers were handled by Larry Ceballas. The music was written by Harry Akst and Roy Turk.

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1 BURLESQUE THEAltrt SS; MIDNIGHT; Virginia Jones AND HER HI-STEPPERS

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Warner Stars' Newest Film Nearly Ready By Times Special HOLLYWOOD. Cal., Aug. 25. Riding high on the well-known cycle of musical pictures which began a year and a half ago with “42nd Street,” Ruby Keler, Dick Powell, Joan Biondell. Guy Kibbee, Hugh Herbert, Zazu Pitts and numerous other screen players are about to make their bows in Warner Brothers latest, “Dames.” Os the principals named, three are veterans of “42nd Street.” It was that film hat started the team of Ruby Keeler and Dick Powell off on the wave of popularity that has made them the leaders in fan mail at the Warner studios. Guy Kibbee also was in “42nd Street,” and he has appeared in those other successful musicals, “Gold Diggers of 1933,” “Footlight Parade” and “Wonder Bar.” “42nd Street” was Ruby Keeler's first motion picture, with the exception of a one-reel short subject which she had done for Fox several years previously. She wasn't extremely anxious to go on the screen, and it was only the persistence of Warner officials that finally persuaded Ruby and her husband, A1 Jolson, that the experiment was worth trying. In spite of her career as a dancer with Texas Guinan and later as a musical comedy star with Ziegfeld before her marriage to Jolson, Ruby was not at all self-confident when it came to stepping into one of the leading roles of a motion picture. "I'm not an actress,” she earnestly explained over and over again to studio representatives who were dangling a contract before her. “I can tap-dance, but that's about all.” They refused to believe her, and at last she signed the contract, and what followed is an interesting chapter of screen history. Dick Powell, when “Forty-second Street” started production. w r as one of the newest Warner recruits; he had been a master of ceremonies, and also a popular crooner in Pittsburgh when he was discovered bv a studio scout and summoned to the coast. One of the big surprises of “Gold Diggers of 1933” was Joan Blondell's debut as a singer, her rendition of “Remember My Forgotten Man” haring been one of the high spots of the show. She sings again in the new picture. Guy Kibbee and Hugh Herbert are among those who have borne

/'ok keo/Kimif/ INDIANA THEA T R E FRIDAY AUG.3I IWfA f/?e season'* fnesf rfTllK CROSBY jjt CSHILOYES ME NOT" Hit No. 1 pf thP sm*sh of Hie world'a finest motion

1. Marlene Dietrich is all dressed lip to vamp the soldiers in “The Scarlet Empress,” now at the Circle, 2. Robert Montgomery and Maureen O’Sullivan in a back-to-the-soil scene in “Hide-Out,” now on at Loew’s Palace.

OH, THAT PAIR ON THE FLYING TRAPEZE!

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The song most often warbled at the Variety Club is “The Man on the Flving Trapeze.” To make that tune Variety Club history," Will Harvey Hunt of the John Herron Art institute designed a miniature acrobat on a trapeze. To keep the gentleman company, Mr. Hunt went one better and designed a woman on a flying trapeze. This picture shows Mr. Hunt and Joseph L. Cantor, president of the Variety Club, getting ready to hang the new ornaments in the tap room. Mr. Hunt's work will be dedicated officially tonight during a dance and a midnight lunch in the clubrooms at the Claypool.

a generous part in the success of musical pictures without singing a note themselves, save perhaps now and then in moments of exhilaration demanded by the script, without orchestral accompaniment, Herbert entered the musical series with “Footlight Parade” and continued in "Wonder Bar” and "Fashions of 1934.” On the shoulders of these two comedians, together with those of Zasu Pitts, lies much of the responsibility for the comedy angles of “Dames.”

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

3. Harold Lloyd, George Barbier and J. Farrell MacDonald in a scene from “The Cat’s Paw,” now' at the Apollo. 4. Bing Crosby, Miriam Hopkins and Edw’ard Nugent all have a problem to solve in this com-

George Nicholls Jr. has been assigned to direct Anne Shirley, the new star he helped bring to screen prominence, in RKO-Radio’s picturization of the Action classic, "Ann of Green Gables.” Five years ago Nicholls edited a Aim in which Miss Shirley, then known as Dawn O’Day, played an important child part. He was deeply impressed by her work and has since followed her career with interest. Recently, he suggested her for the important part she played in his RKO-Radio production, ‘"Finishing School.” Nicholls also is credited with having suggested the former child actress as an ideal Anne Shirley for •‘Anne of Green Gables.”

I STABLES GARDEN Dancing 9:30 Till? ? Every Night Except Monday Best Music in Town j *Jf rm 10c J lt s Coo! at the Stab!es Road W V 2.V } 4-RI

Named Director

YE OLD GREEN MILL 3101 East Thirty-eighth Street AXNOUNCEING ENTIRELY NEW PLAN RED HI'FFORD AND HIS BAND * BIG FI.OOR SHOW Dancing ETerr Eremii*—Corer 25c Saturday Nightc, 75c Fer Couple. t Call (H-IIM for Reservation

edy scene from “She Loves Me Not,” which will open the season at the Indiana next Friday, 5. Leslie Howard and Binnie Barnes in a pensive scene from The Lady Is Willing,” now at the Lyric.

Arts School Is Formed Here

Two women prominent in Indianapolis musical circles, Jane Johnson Burroughs and Nellie Strain Jackson, announce the establishment of the Burroughs-Jackson School of Fine Arts on the fourth floor of the Marion building. The new fine arts school will open formally Sunday, Sept. 9, with a tea from 3 p. m. to 6 p. m. Registration and enrollment for the first term will open the following day. In addition to the applied subjects. courses will be offered in theoretical subjects. Play production, pantomime and pageantry will be taught in a dramatic art course. The school will be incorporated with Mrs. Burroughs as president and director; Mrs. Jackson as vicepresident and treasurer; Etta Thompson as secretary and registrar and Fred W. Martin as business manager. Mrs. Jackson will head the children’s department of the BurroughsJackson school. She formerly was educational director of Pearson Piano Company and a member of the faculty at the Metropolitan School of Music. Her musical training was received at Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, Northwestern university and the Eastman School of Music. The school has obtained as artist teacher of piano j. Russell Mclnnis, formerly of Toronto, who holds a degree from the Toronto conservatory, which is affiliated with the University of Toronto. In addition to his teaching experience he has had many successful seasons on the Lyceum and Chautauqua concert platform, at which time he toured thirty-six states and seven provinces of Canada. Violin instruction will be given by Herman C. Berg, who holds music degrees from Kansas State Teachers college and the Eastman School of Music. Mr. Berg is teaching violin at De Pauw university, but will come to Indianapolis twice weekly to give lessons. He is a member of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia and Kappa Delta Pi fraternities. Others on the faculty of the school will be Alice McCauley Rayburn, student of Laurence Goodman, Ward-Belmont college, instructor in piano; Fred W. Martin, former student of Mme. Marguerite B. Steinhart, also instructor in piano; Helen Louise Titus, Mus. B. De Pauw university, instructor in voice; Joseph R. Ragains, A. 8., Indiana Central college, instructor in orchestral instruments; Bess Larcher Mclnnis. graduate pupil of Elias Day, Bush Conservatory, Chicago. and Elizabeth Carter Whetzel. graduate of American Academy of Dramatic Arts, New York city, instructors in dramatic art.

Gary Cooper Is Enamoured of Baby Stars Gary Cooper enjoys working in pictures with children —the more capable they are the better. “I like having children around.” he says, “and it’s always a pleasure working with one who does a good job and doesn’t speak his or her lines like a parrot. “Some actors and actresses are afraid to work with a child—they fear it will steal the picture. But I think that's the wTong viewpoint. Children are the natural centers of interest for a film audience, and if they turn out good jobs the audience is completely satisfied with every one else in the cast. But no matter how good the child is, it doesn't detract from the performances of the adults a bit. In fact it puts them on their mettle. “Take Shirley Temple, for instance. She, played with Carole Lombard and me in ‘Now and Forever’ and proved herself surprisingly able. She made it a better picture. and I think it really helped the rest of us. “Off the set Shirley was a constant delight. She and I had a grand time.” To which all the rest of the company can testify. Shirley and Gary were together all the time. He taught her to draw (he was once a cartoonist), he frequently wheeled her around the lot on camera dollies, and when the cast went to Lake Arrowhead for the filming of location scenes, he taught her to fish and ride a horse. Taylor Wears Mustache, Kent Taylor is one of the few leading men wearing mustaches today.

All Nite Dance TONITE FREE BEER Broad Ripple Johnnie Ward's Orchestra Admission 15c before 8:30

DANCE RIVERSIDE v| Sat., Sun., Tucs. and W ed. I RAY PRUITTS ORC HESTRA Admission 10c before 8:30

MANILA CAFE DINE AM> DANCE Featuring Bob B-dferd, Soloist and Bill l,ynf h'n Qrrhetra ) Go tVhore the Crowd* Go? | \ iricinla and Delaware Right at the Point

RED KEY TAVERN NIGHT CLUB Prevent* EDDIE LAND and Hi. Orchestra lit. Mile* X. E. of Fair Ground* State Road IS. Allioonvilie Road

CooleM f Open Air or Dance Spot BV V Covered in Town. m I Convertible HARBOR CAT ••: to 3:00. *3e rouple. wall Only 50e eOllpl- after 12:00 SIX.. 3e* Couple—9:ls to 12:30. THLRS. 20e Couple. 9:15 to 15:30 Draught—Beer—Bottle One Block Sooth Municipal

AUG. 25, 1934

Aerialists to Perform at Riverside \ Double Balloon Ascension to Be Staged at City Park. The climax of the aerial shows being staged at Riverside amusement park this summer will be reached tomorrow afternoon, w’hen a double balloon ascension will be staged and five parachute leaps will be attempted by the aeronauts. Mack Thompson, an old stager at the parachute game, will try to rut three parachutes, and his partner on the trip into the skies will be a novice, Ray Wholrey, a young farmer boy near Clermont, who long has cherished an ambition to “ride a balloon.” The ascension will be under the direction of “Mile High" Ruth, who has supervised the Riverside aerial spectacles for many years. Today is 3-cent day at the park, and the bargain rate will be in force until midnight. The occasion is the annual outing staged by the Indianapolis Railways and the Taggart Baking Company. Every ride and other fun concession in Riverside will be operated at the 3-cent rate, and the management is stressing the fact that none of the rides is withheld on the popular 3-cent days. There is no charge to enter Riverside at any time and there never is any service charge in the two beer gardens. Tonight the Riverside roller rink will open for the season w’ith a brand new floor and many other improvements made during the last month. Public skating sessions will be held, as in the past, on Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday nights, and also on the afternoons of these days. The rink is available for private parties on other nights, and many of the leading clubs, fraternities, sororities and other organizations already have booked the floor.

Hollywood Notes

Ginger Rogers stooping down to give autographs to three tiny tots waiting for her to come out of the studio gate. . . a little boy, selling magazines, is left speechless when Joel McCrea buys out his entire supply and distributes them around the “Richest Girl in the World” set. . . . Jean Hersholt celebrating his birthday by giving a party. . . Erik Rhodes, who has played his Italian role in “The Gay Divorcee," in New York and abroad and is now playing it in the RKO Radio picturization of the play, laughing because an Italian film company offered him a role in their picture. . . and he can’t speak a word of Italian. . . but they didn’t know that. . . Marie Osborne, the former famous baby star, who is now “stand-in” for Ginger Rogers, resembles her very much . . . Dorothy Grainger doing a marathon down the lot to the comedy set where she is working. . . Julie Haydon getting a great kick out of looking at the fashion pictures in a bound volume of a magazine of some fifty years ago. . . Edward Everett Hortdh walking back and forth behind some scenery . . . saying his lines over to himself. . . . Raft’s Merry-Go-Round The paternal grandfather of George Raft, soon to appear in Paramount’s “Limehouse Nights” with Anna May Wong, introduced the first merry-go-round into the United States. De Mille Once Writer C. B. De Mille, Paramount director, was the author of the hit play, “The Return of Peter Grimm,” written for David Warfield and produced by David Belasco.

Sane Request Marlene Dietrich, star of Paramount's “The Scarlet Empress,” has received a postcard from Rosware Jiyalangha of Java, requesting an autographed photograph and SSOO, which the “correspondent wouid be highly honored to receive if it were given in the spirit of supreme magnanimity.”

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