Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 September 1936 — Page 13
SPECIAL
SHOW OUTLINED TO CELEBRATE
Eigh Films
COMMUNITY
THEATER
PROJECT PREPARES FOR
in Color on Loew's Bill
Entertainment World Pays Tribute to Cartoon Creator.
A noted authority on, criminology, | recent returned from Spain, said | that the only thing which would | ever bring the two warring factions iogether in that country would be Mickey Mouse. | The fellow is not far wrong. | Mickey is exhibited in practically | every country in the world, runs] in cartoon strips in hundreds of | newspapers, and is the subject of | scores of manufactured novelties. | Saturday morning at Loew's, in | answer 10 many requests, Manager | i. Ward Farra to going to cele- | brate Mickey's eighth birthday with 2 a special morning show beginning al 9 o'clock. |
v
r fe - is
Eight Cartoons to Be Shown The
ity ent
program is to consist of | Mickey Mouse cartoons in Technicolor. Those to be shown “The Band Concert” which won the 1335 gold medal at the Venice titaly) exposition, “Mickey's Gar- ™ "Fire. Brigade.” "On Ice” “Cookie Carnival.” “Music Land. | | “Water Babies” and “Three Orphan i Kittens” The entire program will |
are
aden,
BIRR,
1. Mrs. Elizabeth Bogert Schofield played the “Polyxena” the first production at the Civic Theater. of its stanchest actresses. : 2. Here is a scene from “The Bishop Misbehaves” one of last season’s outstanding plays ,which featured Dr. John Ray Newcomb, shown seated at the table with Mrs. Schofield. Standing are Jack Chesterfield and Ruth Lucky. 3. A graduate of Yale's drama send where he received excellent training under Alexander Dean, Frederick Burleigh, the Civic director, comes of theater-minded stock.
title role of She is still one
21 Years’ Progress Noted by
run about one hour and 20 minutes. The special birthday song, “Mickey | Mouse's Birthday,” written especially for the occasion by Irving Berlin, was heard last night on the Community Sing radio program and is io be featured by Lennie Hay- | ion s orchestra, Friday. Sept. 25; on | Fred Waring's program. Tuesday Sept. 29, and by Andre Kostelanetz’ band, next Friday. Kate Smith. George Burns and Gracie Allen are aiso scheduled to feature the song during" the birthday week. Mickey Mouse made his first pubfic appearance at the Colony Theaier in New York, Sept. 28, 1928, a cartoon called “Steamboat | ranch Wills Donald Duck was intro- | g duced June 10. 1935, and the first | eonlor-cartoon, “The Band Concert.” |
: { Every Made Hs appearance Feb. 21, 1935. | descends on his peaceful abode
| they bring along art directors to | transform it into the movie version creator of | : of a house. Art directors nose Mickey : s : | : ick and his pals, has always | around the place, finding more been interested in cartooning. He | fatlts thar a new bride renting was born in Chicago, just 35 years | : ®
&20 next December, used to draw | 8h apartment, pictures while in Chicago public | schools. : e He was a free-lance wsreel ma : for a while. Tir Dewsrest ihe | amiable Mr. Ashcroft agreed, if the idea of animating cartoons for: the | art directors would get together on movies. The war broke into his | what a house should look like. pians, however, and for several | The latest transformation vears he was an ambulance driver | near the front. Back in 1923, he and his brother, Roy, with less than $500 capital, started into the animated cartoon field. The first series was called “Alice Cartoons.” The cartoon idea was ciaborated upon by double-exposing a live character in with the ani- | - mated cartoons of animals. After a couple of years on his own Walt | went to Universal, where he orig- | inated the “Oswald, the‘ Rabbit” series.
By United Press
Tim
pr"
Disney Born in Chicago Walt Disney, the
Directors Disagree
in America, | the new Mae West picture.
In the film, Miss West portrays
| typical Pennsylvania farm while | her imported town car is being re-
unexpected rest’ for romance. Changes Nature thought Pennsylvania Art
Apparently no one ook for a typical | farm house, or else maybe
Barly Reception Discouraging Director Bill Thnen selected It was during the production of Oswald's cartoon comedies that | ; Wait first conceived the Mickey | Practice his art. Mouse idea. It was a long, up-hill | the damage he did: fight. frying to get the public in- | Transplanted a half acre of corn. A py boy. But | pemoved 300 feet of fence along once he got in his popularity has the roadway and replacéd it with been increasing vear by year. . | shrubbery. : Mr. Disney is married, owns his i own home, which is about five minutes drive from Hollywood. His best pal. he says, is Mrs. Disney with a Chow dog, “Sonny,” running second. His only hobby is his work. Even nev. his hours set aside for recreation are given over to visiting various new movies, in hopes an idea for a Technicolor cartoon starring | qyy pits of scroll work and cornices Michael Mouse will show itself. decorating the roof and eaves. Starting Friday at Loew's will be aie “Dodsworth,” starring Walter Hus- Doesn't Know Own House ton, Ruth Chatterton, Mary Astor! what last touch was too much and Paul Lukas. The second fea- | for Mr. Ashcroft. ture is to be “Sworn Enemy” with | «Mavbe vou know Joseph Calleia, Robert Young. Flor- | doing,” the rancher informed ence Rice, Lewis Stone and Nat thnen, “but these ornaments were Pendleton
Anyway,
{and hung synthetic blossoms and leaves to simulate an orchard
bloom. : Built two wings on the front of
ing the road. And, to top it all, removed sun-
Clubs Are to Hear Civic Theater Talks
{ movie company that used it. { they put in that fence in front, too. {I wish you fellows, would make up your minds as to, how my house should look—it’s getting so I can't find my wav home.” At any rate, the rural setting should conform with Miss West's corn-fed curves. Warren William, Randolph Scott, Lyle Talbot, Brady, Isabel Jewell,
Waiter E. Jackson, general chairman of the Civic Theater's annual membership drive, announced today that members of the Civic speakers bureau had been booked | nrise her supporting cast. to appear before 11 local clubs dur- ——— ing the next two weeks.
Headed by Toner M. Overly, the speakers committee includes Wil- Overman Borrowed
iam Rowland Allen, Horace F. Hill | f C d F III. Elizabeth Bogert Schofield. Alec | - Saxton, George Binger, R. Kirby | or ome Y Whyte, Ricca Scott Titus, Sherwood | Times Special Blue, Katharine Pantzer and Dr. HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 21.—Lwynn William Cook. | Overman has been borrowed by Hal { Roach from Paramount for a fea-
im
| Roberti full-length comedy.
WHERE, WHAT, WHEN
APOLLO “Stare Struck” with Dick Powell. Biondell and Prank McHugh. 21:33, 1:38 3:39. 5:42. 7:45. and i
CIRCLE “Swingtime” with Fred Astaire ans Ginger Rogers. at 11:05, 1:15, 225 5:38 7:45 and 9:55. KEITH'S “Mrs. Bumpstead-Leigh ™ a Federal Pisvers production under the direc-
of Gus Meins. Rosina Lawrence will ‘have a part in the production.
2 al ¥
OUT OF RETIREMENT
iment to appear in
time a picture company |
the leaves off the trees| Blew | begin at 8:15 p. m. Recital dates
fiom of John Cameron. Curtain at 8:15
LOEW'S “The Great Ziegfeld’ with William Powell, Myrna lov and Louise Ranier. at 11:20. 2:35. 5:45 and J. LYRIC Vaudeville with Johnny Perkins, on Stage ai 12:55 3:46 6:37, and 9:28 © in a Crowd’ with Joel Mathe
Joan Bennett, on :56, 7:47, and
Crea and screen at 11:14 2:05 4 038,
: ALAMO “Small Town Girl” with Robert Taylor and Janet Gavnor Also “Cavalcade of the West’ with Hoot Gibson.
AMBASSADOR " with Jean Harlow Tone. -Also “Meet " with Edward Arnold. =. OH10 “Butier's Gold” with Lee Tracy ‘and Edward Arnoid. Also “Sky Pa- ‘ with Jimmy Allan,
and Nero
|
to |
, the Triangle A was for | Geer a4 e 2 | by George Newton, bass, to be pre-
Making Typical Ranch Typical Hard Task for Art Directors
California Rural Resident Rents House for Movie Work, Never Knows What It'll Look Like.
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 21.—If it weren't for Hollywood art directors Ira Ashcroft’s typical Western ranch might look like a typical Western
Mr. Ashcroft owns the attractive Triangle A ranch near Corona, Cal, and picks up spare change by renting it to moving picture companies.
Civic as Season's Work Begins
Initial Performance Given Oct. 30, 1915, on Improvised |
Stage at Local Art Museum.
BY JOHN W. THOMPSON
From cheese-cloth drops to realistic canvas sets: from a ‘“‘soap-box” stage to a modern theater; from speak-your-piece elocution to big time | drama—that's the life story of the Indianapolis Civic Theater which | celebrates its twenty-first birthday this season. Prof. William E. Jenkins is given credit for the first public expression of the idea of developing a community theater in the city. In February, 1914, Prof. Jenkins, speaking to a group in the Herron Art Museum, made an eloquent plea for a real civic theater. Several members of the group were in accord with Mr. Jenkins’ idea and supported
| | |
It was only after a year of hard work that the small group got ‘any
2 . | wasn’t adequate. Players had to run sort of co-operation out of ¢ivic
across the alley in the rear of the
Newton to Give Song Recitals
That would be all right, the Second Season Announced
by Bass Singer.
A second season of five intimate song recitals has been announced
| sented in the Green Parlor of the
| a motion picture star on a personal | | appearance tour who stops af a]
Y. W. C. A. 329 N. Pennsylvaniast. Walter Whitworth will be the accompanist for the series, Opening Oct. 30 with a recital
I aciradea. romptly utilizes the| of Schubert songs, Mr. Newton is paireg—-and prompul; | to continue his concerts with an | evening of | Beethoven on
to |
songs by Mozart and Dec. 11; Gabriel Faure, Castelnuovo-Tedesco and others on Jan. 15; a. Mussorgsky concert, Feb. 26, and Vaughan-
| Williams songs and Somervell's “A
the !
| Western ‘ranch house so he could | here's |
Shropshire Lad” on April 2. Mr. Newton, teacher of singing
at Ball State Teachers College in |
Muncie, is beginning his third year
i as teacher at Tudor Hall School for
Girls, and also maintains a private class in-the ciy. There are to be specially priced
| tickets for students and for the en-
in
the house as well as another chim-
Installed a gasoline station front- |
tire series. All programs are to
are subject to change.
Edna May Cooper
Gets Movie Data
Bu United Press
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 21. — Edna
| May Cooper, woman flier, today was | discovered working in pictures as an
extra to gain material for a series
| of articles on Hollywood.
what you're
lice | Elizabeth | Patterson and Margaret Perry com-
| tured role in the Patsy Kelly-Lyda | “No- | | body’s Baby,” which will shortly go! | into production under the direction |
"|Chap
Maurice Costello, who emerged | from a nine-year period of retire- | “Hollywood | | Boulevard,” says he'll like to make |
{ more pictures, now that he's started | tall over again as a character actor |
| rather than a matinee idol.
EXTRAS’ HEALTH GUARDED
{ two talkies in which he will not { appear, | ette Goddard, his leading lady in
| _One hundred men and women, | bound for Wyoming and Montana | | for location scenes of “The Plains- | | man,” starring Gary Cooper and |
{Jean Arthur, were
inoculated |
| against spotted fever before leaving |
| on the expedition.
i
HER DRAWL ACQUIRED
Louise Beavers, playing the role |
{of a colered maid in “Wives Never | Know,” co-starring Charlie Ruggles |
and Mary Boland, was born in the { North and had to study for months
3 i i
|
to acquire a true Southern “darky” drawl,
She has not piloted a plane since she was injured when a chandelier dropped on her in a store a year
| plastered on my house by the last | ago. And |
Miss Cooper, former co-holder with Bobbie Trout, Los Angeles, of the women's endurance flying record, says she will return to aviation as soon as her physical condition permits.
Jail Is Confining, Young Reid Learns
| By United Press
HOLLYWOOD, : Sept. 21. — Wil-
| lam W. Reid, son of the late film star, Wallace Reid, today promised
he would emulate the snail in his automobile driving as he was re-
| leased after serving two weeks in| county jail on a reckless driving |
charge. Young Reid, a film colony musician, declared he had been well
treated at the jail, but found it!
“very confining.”
lin Studios Wired for Sound
Times Special
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 21. — The
Charles Chaplin studios are being wired for sound. The comedian plans to produce
Instead they will star Paul-
“Modern Times.” The first is known only as “Production No. 6” and the second one is to be based on “Regency,’ the D. L. Murray
novel. MATINEE
KEITH 'S SATURDAY
TONIGHT AT 8:15
Federal Players "Mrs. Bumpstead-Leigh"
Night Prices, 15¢, 25¢, 40c. Sat. Matinee, 10c, 20¢ ole
next week -“‘Blind Alley”
leaders. Another meeting was held at the museum and definite plans | were laid. A board of directors, in- | cluding Herbert Foltz, chairman, | Mary H. Flanner, Eldena Lauter, { Hathaway Simmons, and Mrs. W. O. | Bates, was chosen.
| Elliott First Director
| The board's first problem was the | selection of a director. In 1914 a | “civic” theater director was a thing | almost unheard of. So it was somewhat of a triumph when the board members finally announced that they had secured the services of such a distinguished figure as Samuel ‘E. Eliot, grandson of the Harvard president. Mr. Eliot had had a great deal of experience in the East and was especially interested In community drama. The first Little Theater was established in the art museum. The natural stage in sculpture court was selected as the background on which the plays would be presented. On Oct. 30, 1915, the first bill was produced. It was of one-act plays, presented to a small but appreciative audience. The title of the first of these plays was “Polyxena” and the title role was played by Elizabeth Bogert Schofield, who played two roles at | the Civic last season. bringing her total to more than 30. The theater carried through that year’s program undef great hardships, presenting, among others, one original play by Max Parry, called { “Dad.”
| . | establishment of the drama organization. | | | |
George Ade President
The second season was launched with George Ade, famed humorist, as. president of the theater. Carl Berhardt, a native Hoosier, returned from the East to direct the second season's output. Then came the war.
During the two seasons immedialely following, only two plays were produced as a part of the theater's program. Instead the group gave gratis performances at Fort Benjamin Harrison and for local war | agencies. | Following the war the Civic The- | ater took a sudden turn for the bet- | ter. George Somnes took the helm {as director. Mr. Somnes had had | experience with Stuart Walker's | stock company which was then oper[ating at the Murat Theater. The | first permanent. address of the the- | ater was in a downtown business building where a rehearsal room, store-room and offices were set up. | The show group had outgrown the | Sculpture Court stage and present- | ed its dramas at the Murat and the | Masonic Temple. Among the plays { presented that year were “Mary | Broome” and “Emperor Jones.”
i
Returns After Tour | The next season took Mr. Somnes away from his directing job to play { in one of his greatest successes. “The | Life of Job,” which toured for the next two seasons. At the end of that time he came back to the Civic with elaborate plans. : A complete program o | plays was produced by t Civic | group on Mr. Somnes’ return) Funds were sought for the purpose pf constructing a new playhouse ahd before the next season started the walls, were up. Before the season ended, one of the Civic’s most pretentious undertakings, the staging of “Treasure Island” was presented in the new theater. Ten sets and a large cast complicated the production. Although the theater was new it
LOEW'S = ” NOW! Ng
A SENSATIONAL HIT!
A THE GREAT E ZIEGFELD E
WM. POWELL MYRNA LOY LUISE RAINER fae
— : = 35¢ to 6 @ 55¢ Nights ~ — { ! | | = i |
i ans | — nn a aA al
Incl. Tax
[ FRIDAY:
building in order to change costumes between acts. But such rapid progress was made during the four years after the completing of the present theater building, that the board of directors ordered the construction of an addition to the building, providing ample room for dressing, business and enlargement of the stage. That was in 1929. The next year the rival of all legitimate organizations, the movies, took George Somnes to Hollywood where he became a director for Paramount Pictures.
MacKeen Takes Post Hale MacKeen was chosen as the new director and carried the theater successfully through its most
trying period as far as finances were concerned. : During Mr. MacKeen's second year Lucille Bomgardner was appointed business manager for the theater and the Civic officials give her most of the credit for the present success of the project. Mr. MacKeen resigned his post in 1934, and after touring England returned to this country and is now producing new plays on the West Coast.
Burleigh Enlarges Activities
The hoard of directors then obtained the services of the present director, Frederick Burleigh, a the-
ater department graduate of Yale, under the tutelage of Alexander Dean. During the two years Mr. Burleigh has been at the Civic he has introduced many innovations. He has expanded the activities of the Children’s Theater, a Civic subsidiary, and has added sparkle to the repertoire by deft selection. Last year he opened a school for apprentices to the theater, offering young people interested in the drama a chance to learn about it right din the playhouse. It has been a long, hard road, the path that the Civic Theater has traveled, but it now stands secure, one of very few outlets for the “living” theater.
Director's Hands
Most Photographed
Times Special HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 21. — The most photographed hands in Hollywood belong to William Wyler, director. who makes no claim for their beauty or artistic value. Sitting directly under the camera lens during the shooting of ‘Dodsworth” he shouts “Cut”! for the sound men and then slips his hands over the camera lens. When he views the “rushes” of the picture later in the day the hands tell him where he wanted to stop the action even though the camera may have rolled on for several feet.
L t 4 FRED Days! ASTAIRE
GINGER
in the climax of their young lives,
1
Being Placed in Royal Suite Was Big Thrill to June Lang
Star of ‘The Road to Glory’ Says She's Just a Holly-
wood Kid Who
' HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 21.—June
Got the ‘Breaks.’
Lang, the young Twentieth Century
Fox discovery, is getting what she calls the breaks of a lifetime. “I'll never have another chance like my role as Monique in ‘The
Road to Glory’,” says June. “I was male players.
I did my best to live up to the honor.
one girl surrounded by a cast of fine Up until a few
week ago I hadn’t seen much of the world. “I was born in Minneapolis, came here when I was 7 and hadn't
even been to San Francisco. When and I should hop to New York in a
New York, of all places, and to|
the opening of ‘The Road To Glory.’ I spent a miserable night on the plane—being air-sick, but when I saw the tall buildings of Manhattan the next morning I forgot the long night. ; I suppose the greatest thrill should have been going to the theater for the ‘first night,’ but it wasn’t. When a host of bellboys, a hotel clerk and the assistant manager of the Waidorf led me into a suite of rooms on the fifteenth floor and asked if ‘these will do,” I—well—I just stood and giggled. There was Park-av and the whole city of New York at my feet. And there was I, a silly kid from Hollywood, who wanted to say: ‘will these do? ... I am just June Lang—not a queen of the movies « « » Or anything.” ” ” »
In Tijuana, Mexico, a donkey, decorated with banners, was haul-
ing a little cart. In the cart a Mexi- |
can boy yelled through a battered megaphone in Spanish: “See Dolores Del Rio—tonight in—‘'Caliente.’ ” ” ” At the Universal Studios 1200 people sit down to a banquet. Stage 12, a dreamland of white drapes, decorations and flowing refreshments. A parade of young players, Universal’s youth marching and George Jessel, master of ceremonies, runs
the show with wit, appeal and canny
memory. ” ”n »
Jeanette McDonald and Gene Raymond, trying to enjoy a Hollywood Bowl performance, held hands
in the moonlight between onslaughts |
of autograph seekers. " ” "
Gracie Allen, voice low and serious, was seen telling George Burns she was going home from the party —and there was no silly giggle; she meant business.
n » »
Dixie Dunbar, trying to eat lunch while a host of studio folks insisted on asking questions just to hear her delightful, southern drawl. Mae West again is the ‘hardboiled gal’ in a scene from her latest. :
WANTS SINGING ROLE John Beal, who plays a condemned. convict in “We Who Are About To Die,” hopes to do a romantic singing role in a musical picture as his next vehicle.
“A Ton: of Fun"
MISS AMERICA Others!
sewer + MECREA RAE CROWD LAL I8 HTT] 3%
EVELYN (USHWAY IT)
Lo] EVRY RN ASSN PRESENTS
the studio called to say that mother plane, I could hardly speak.”
‘Works on Three Movies at Once
Times Special HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 21.—Alfred Newman, United Artists’ musical director, is staging his own ‘hreering musical circus, working concurrently’ and single-handed on three movies at the same time. In addition to furnishing the score for “Dodsworth,” Mr. Newman has been loaned to M-G-M to direct the music for Eleanor Powell's “Born to Dance.” and to Twentieth
“Ramona.”
KNOCK-KNOCK FOR LUCK Akim Tamiroff, cast as the Chinese war lord in “The General Died at Dawn,” admits being one of | Hollywood's most superstitious actors. He always knocks on his dress-
leaving for the set.
Carole Lombard-Fred MacMurray “PRINCESS COMES ACROSS” Chas. Ruggles-Mary Boland “EARLY TO BED”
WEST SIDE 2702 W. 10th St. Double Feature Lionel Barrymore
“DEVIL DOLL” 3 Irene Dunne “SHOWBOAT”
W. Wash. & Belmont BELMONT Double Feature Joe E. Brown “EARTHWORM TRACTORS” “MEET NERO WOLF”
D A I S Y Robert Taylor
“THERE'S ALWAYS TOMORROW” “SPECIAL INVESTIGATOR"
NORTH SIDE Hlinois and 344h Double Feature Bing Crosby THM ON THE RANGE" ‘EPUCATING FATHER” Central at Fall Crk. Double Feature W. C. Fields “POPPY” ‘WOMAN TRAP”
| UPTOWN Shirley Temple
“POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL” _Cartoon—Ma jor Bowes Amateurs—News
GARRICK 30th and Dlinois
Double Feature Spencer Tracy “FURY” “THE MOON'S OUR HOME"
ST. CLAI R Clark Gable
“SAN FRANCISCO” “MINE WITH THE IRON DOOR”
"2 2 Udell at Clifton UDELL ~~ Double Feature Errol Flynn “CAPTAIN BLOOD” “GIRL FROM MANDALAY" So a tans . Taliot- & nd TALBOT | Double Feature Kay Francis “THE WHITE ANGEL” “HIT AND RUN DRIVER” 30th at Nerthw’t'n. Double Feature Jane Withers “GENTLE JULIA” “THE BIG NOISE”
=. a2 : & College Stratford ble Feature “SEVEN KEYS TO BALDPATE” “POWDER SMOKE RANGE” Noble & Mass. MECCA pouble Feature “DEVIL'S SQUADRON" __ “MURDER BY AN ARISTOCRAT” 2361 Station St. DREAM douse restore “THE BORDER PATROLMAN" EAST SIDE
RIVOLI
2540 W. Mich. St. Double Feature
42nd & College Special Feature
‘St. Clair & Ft. Wayne Double Feature
REX
19¢ De Gen,
335 E. 10h Double Feature
DARLING OF BURLESQUE J 40
“REYTHM
§
i i
Noted Singer ls Forgotten in Filmland
Mme. Schumann-Heink Is
Disappointed by Lack of Work.
BEY RUTH McTAMMANY Times Hollywood Correspondent HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 21.—Mmae, Schumann Heink came to Hollywood 10 months ago from New York, enthusiastic, happy. “I am going to be a star,” she said. “I am going to begin a new career.” A pale, somber, disappointed Schumann Heink greeted me yes terday. “I have been waiting here 10 months and I do not know when they will let me make a picture. Yes, I have been ill and it was the first time in my life. But the peo~ ple here don't understand. I want to work. Since I first went into the theater, when I was 15, I have been working. I am only sick because I sit and wait, wait. Maybe now they think IT am too. old. Perhaps they have forgotten me. “All over the country there are war veterans who would go to see me in a picture I would be happy to play a very small part, anything, I don’t want to be an opera singer or a grand dame. Let me play an old lady with a big family; let me play in a comedy with Wallace Beery. Ach, perhaps I have been spoiled by my big audiences of friends all over the world and now I feel sad. This city. this motion picture business is so big and I am just old Mme. Schumann-Heink waiting for a studio call which never comes.”
I SAW: : Jean Hersholt just back from Canada and the Dionne Quintuplets. He was wearing a broad smile as he told the Fox boys all about “his babies.” Virginia Bruce lunching at Beverly Brown Derby after attending the Thalberg funeral services. She was dressed in black and was obviously deeply affected by a personal loss.
» x»
Century-Fox to score the color film.
| Tickets now on | Theatre News { Inel. tax, till 6 p
|
|
-
{ ON THE RANGE” “TWO AGAINST THE WORLD”
Bill Gargan, anxious to get started in his role as a young priest in “You Only Live Once.”
A with auto the
flashy, blue-green touring car all the trimmings made for mobile decoration shining in sun. It was coming full speed
down the main street of Culver City. At the wheel—the smiling face of
Joe
E. Brown—just back from a
European tour.
> Jeanette McDonald hurrying to a vocal lesson which she takes every
day
that she doesn't work at the
studio. :
0
NE NIGHT ONLY!
NEXT SUNDAY
GLEN GRAY
and the
CASA LOMA
Sunday. After that $1.10. ing room door three times before; Make Reservations Now
ORCHESTRA
sale Ind. Shop, 80c, m. next
DANCE TOMORROW
Emil Velazco
Featuring his $20,000 Pipe Organ
AND HIS ORCHESTRA 25c Before 9 P. M.
TACOMA
TUXEDO
IR.
EMERSON
EAST SIDE
2442 E. Wash. st. Double Feature ay Francis “WHITE ANGEL” “DEVIL'S SQUADRON” — 4020 E. New York Double Features Jean Muir “WHITE FANG” “WE WENT TO COLLEGE”
V - 3507 E. Wash, Sg | N G Double Feature ay Francis “THE WHITE ANGEL” “WE WENT TO COLLEGE” 4630 E. 10th SL, Double Feature Jean Harlow “SyzYy”
“SHE COULDN'T TAKE IT”
HAMI
PARKER
STRAND
Paramount
—— a 2116 E. 10th St. Double Feature Ro
LTON $ bert Young
“THREE WISE GUYS” “EDUCATING FATHER”
2936 E. 10th St, Double Feature Clark Gable “SAN FRANCISCO” “EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT” — ee — 12332 E. Wash. St, Double Featurs Clark Gable “SAN FRANCISCO” “EDUCATING FATHER” SpE 411 E. Wash. Double Feature W. C. Fields
“POPPY ” Spencer Tracy “FURY”
BIJOU
114 E. Washington Double Featurs Joan Marsh “BRILLIANT MARRIAGE” “THE LION MAN"
SOUTH SIDE
FOUNTAIN SOUARE gh Ry TO KILL”
SANDERS
“THE FRISCO KID” “CASE AGAINST MRS. AMES”
AVALON “Sonchpichmas
Double Feature “UNDER TWO FLAGS" “AUGUST WEEK-ENDS”
ORIENTAL *
05 5. Meridian St “IT'S LOVE AGAIN" “BORDER FLIGHT"
At Fountain Square Double Feature James Cagney
Double Fea Robert “BO
Youn GARFIELD Tpiliituns “SAN i ta
