Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1937 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Unusual Photography Is ‘Lost Horizon’ Feature;
Movie and Novel Differ
Utopian Tale Is Back in the City for Showing at | Popular Prices.
By JAMES THRASHER |
Once again the picture of “Lost Horizon,” James Milton’s story of a Tibetan Utopia, is with us. Here last] April as a road show, the pieture has returned to Loew’s
for a week at popular prices. This also is the second time a we have been able to see “Lost | Horizon” and “The Good Barth | within a short time of each other. | And the film treatment of two popular but contrasting books still | makes an interesting comparison. “The Good Earth” followed the | book with almost unbelievable, fidelity of mood as well as sequence. | “Lost Horizon” changes not only | the plot and characters to some extent, but the very tone of Mr. Hil- | ton’s volume. Much of the book was given oy to a delightful contemplation of an ideal existence. The excitement was saved for the beginning and
Perhaps, too, if Basil Rath-
| singer, also take part.
Talent in Breen Film Might Be Used Better, Reviewer Thinks.
Perhaps if Oscar Straus stays in Hollywood long enough, he will have a chance to contribute the musical score to a worthwhile picture.
bone stays around, he will be given something again which | fits his admitted talent. Meanwhile, both these gentle~ men's careers mark time in a picture called “Make a Wish,” now at the | Circle, in which Bobby Breen is starved Straus, who wrote the meloMil “Chocolate Soldier,” was
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
i A AH A So A I AA SAT SMES SAN wor i ¢ AN i
Wh ng
A ra ”
SATURDAY, SEPT. 4, 1937
M'KAY MORRIS IN 'TOVARICH' CAST
State Fair
brought from Vienna to do the songs for “Make a Wish.” Mr. Rath- I | bone has the principal adult part. | Ralph Forbes and Marion Clare, | who is a well-known light opera |
Gertrude Berg, who wrote and | starred in that seemingly interminable radio serial, “The Goldbergs,” is responsible for the plot of the
end, and it was created largely by | inference and personal reaction. |
Photography Is Unusual A love story, not too strong or too |
picture in question. It is about an operetta composer who meets a | youngster from a boys’ camp across | | the lake from his Maine cottage. |
meaningful, replaces the book’s more | Letters Bring Love. | abstract middle portion. But the | The composer reads letters from | excitement comes from what is per- | the boy's widowed mother and quite | haps the most remarkable photog- | falls in love with the lady, sight | raphy in the screen’s history. unseen. She comes to the camp with The picture's real heroes are | her fiance. It is discovered that she | Director Frank Capra and his quar- has a lovely singing voice. But the | tet of mg yaad | fiance objects to careers. ra ri 1 ar: The dey breath- | They take the boy and Jeave i taking scenes on the glacier are un- | New York. The I ae forgettable. The setting for the | Written “his operetta in the monastery of Shangri-La is mag- | time, gives
nificent., The whole thing has a | DO ie | visual splendor anda power entirely | —destination unknown. The butler, |
its ‘own | who has ambitions to be a libret- | } he : » | tist, loses the third act and with a However, “Lost Horizon” is not a | A perfect picture. Interest is likely to | cquple of hack SO wee. el hang like a hammock, taut at each | to Pa gD a 3 end with a sag in the middle. Some producer calls off the thi may consider it overlong as well.| Then the youngster fixes things And vet there are moments which = re hy Sh a) ie | ate its faults. | third ac V more ‘than ‘compensate its fa | goes on with both of them featured, | | though it means breaking the lady's | | engagement. On the opening night the composer reappears, of course. A Doubtful Blessing Child prodigies are a doubtful taken unwillingly—and by airplane | blessing at best. Their chief virtue | —to the remote Tibetan lamasery of | is the unaffected “cuteness” that | Shangri-La. Here they find a col- | 80es with childhood. Young Master | ony of persons who have chosen to | Breen doesn’t have that. He is albe lost to the world. They spend | lowed to sing with the simpering their time in quiet contemplation, | mannerisms, moist lips and starry | discussion, pursuit of the arts. eyes of a coloratura prima donna. They attain great antiquity, yet | I also think that Master Breen’s | maintain the appearance of youth. | voice is as unpleasant as his stage Death comes seldom and quietly. | presence. But 50 million radio listHuman pain and fear and passions | |eners can’t be wrong, so I must be. | are forgotten. | “Hideaway,” the Circle's second | The High Lama chooses one of | picture, is a routine melodrama in the newcomers. Conway, to succeed | a rustic setting. Fred Stone is the him. Conway's brother, however, | star, Marjorie Lord and William insists upon the dangerous attempt | [Corson the youthful hero and of escape. The elder Conway duti- | heroine. : fully gives up thought of Shangri-| It's about a shiftless old codger La to accompany them. With them | who helps capture a gang of hoodis Maria, whom Conway knows to | lums without knowing it. Also presbe 70, but who insists that she is ent is your old friend Charlie With20 and that she loves the brother. | €rs of “Withers’ Opry” fame. (By Their guides desert them on the | J. T.) treacherous glacier. The woman, | away from the protected valley, |
grows old and wrinkled and dies | John Ba rrymo re in a few moments. Then the broth- . ; : Is Enjoying Life
Story in Brief everyone knows the story by now. But for | four Britishers | find themselves |
Nearly of “Lost Horizon” a brief reminder, and an American
|
er is lost in a snow slide. Grimly Conway turns back to regain Shan-gri-La. Outstanding among the excellent ” wo players are Sam Jatie as the High | ‘"°8 Svein Lama, Ronald Colman as Conway | HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 4—A few | and H. B. Warner as Chang. The days after he had started proother principals are Edward EvV- | quction work in Paramount's “Bullerett Horton, Margo, Jane Wyatt, doe. Dri dC kK,” sith | Thomas Mitchell, John Howard and ES rumor omes Bac With | Isabel Jewell. Wining Howard and Louise Campbell, | ee, | John Barrymore, according to studio | { attaches, made this observation:
New Zea lander | “I've settled down to a serene | | and satisfying existence for the fi t | In Freddie's Role
time in my life. I can sit in my | favorite armchair with my pipe ana | HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 4 (U. P.).Freddie Bartholomew's vacated
| a baak and enjo’ an evening at home with Mrs. Barrymore with | heretofore unexperienced satis- | place in motion pictures was filled today by another boy from the | British Empire, Ronnie Clair,
faction. “Still, if T had my life to live over | 13, of Dunedin, New Zealand. The New Zealand boy, son of
probably I'd do—well, let's just say | I've enjoyed life. Of course there | Arthur Hould, retired shipping man, was signed by Metro-Goldwvn-
have been interludes of disappoint- | ment. Every normal person enMayer Studio for the starring role in the picture, “Thoroughbreds
| counters them. but, on the whole! T've lived and that's what here for. Don’t Cry.” Freddie Bartholomew €rally is expected.” had been scheduled for the part he- | fore his aunt and the studio got | into an argument over salary.
St
SANG IN OPERA
feminine role of “High, Wide and Handsome,” was, at one time, member of the Metropolitan Opera Company.
GRANADA
1045 Virginia Ave. TONITE—SUNDAY
FIELDS MAY SEEK | FEE FIGHT APPEAL
| HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 4 (U. P).—| W. C. Fields, bulbous nosed movie | comedian, after losing a second round in a fight to avoid a $12,000 | medical fee for his recent serious | illness, indicated today that he will | fight on. Superior Judge O. K. Morton in| Riverside, Cal., denied Mr. Fields | a retrial of the suit which resulted | in a judgment for Dr. Jesse Citron. | The judge did, however, eliminate | interest charges. Mr. Fields in-| dicated he would appeal.
JEWELS ARE HEAVY
*
Adolph Zuker presents
SEAN ARTHUR - Edward ARNOLD EASY LIVING |
| RAY MILLAND - JOE E. “RIDING BROWN ON AIR”
third act to the butler and departs |g
|ler’s son,
play.”
‘use it for a new play?”
| boy.
we're | At least that much gen- |
Indianapolis’ theater season is
lish’s Sept. 23 with the international comedy success,
“Tovarich.” Eugenie Leontovich (I
to open at Eng- | pany's star,
eft) is the com=-
EW YORK, Sept. the country playhouses, ready their way.
IN NEW YORK —; ctoree ross
Actors Head for Rialto, but the Scriveners Stick to Farms.
4. —The actors soon will be trudging home from |
for whatever theatricals may come
But the literary folk who write the Rialto’s shows apparently prefer |
plays done.
shack far back of the house in the country. | amidst a pastoral Connecticut setting where she makes her home. Sinthe recently finished | clair Lewis retired to a recluse’s hideout in the Berkshires while he wrote
new play which is reported to be ar Most stage scriveners, in fact, | choose hill and dale. Excursionists | | to Bucks County, Pa., say that there | are more playwrights, per acre, in | {that part of the farm country, Sn} {in any other Eastern pasturage. | Among the farm owners thereabouts | are George S. Kaufman, Moss Hart, Sam and Bella Spewac (they wrote | “Boy Meets Girl” and “Vogues of | 11938"), Edwin Justus Mayer, Pearl | | Buck, Dorothy Parker and her hus- | band, Alan Campbell, Bavard Veil- | Anthony, a well- -known | | Hollywood scenarist; Lillian Hell- | | man and Edna Ferber. Do they attend to the crops, too? They do, and besides writing shows, they also raise chickens and goats. Few countrysides within distance of New York bemoan the absence of a dramatist. Sidney Kingsley | (“Dead End’) tells friends that he | will hibernate at his country farm [until his next show is finished. Phil Dunning and George Abbott like the woodlands while ideas germinate in their heads. Irwin Shaw, the brilliant young author of “Bury the Dead,” bought a country place with the first proceeds of his Hollywood toil,
” td ”
IZZIEST of the week's yarns— that of the playwright who had one of his dramas made into a movie—now comes out in a new version. He saw a preview of it the other day and, afterward, congratulated the producer. “It's a great movie,” he exclaimed, “but where did you get the story?” “Don’t vou recognize it?” queried the film mogul. “It's from your
“I think it's a terrific idea,” countered the writer, “do you mind if I
“It's O. K. with me on one condition,” replied the magnate, “you've got to let me have the screen rights.”
u ” »
| the high hedgerows and fresh-mown lawns until they can get their | Maxwell Anderson does his best work in a tumble-down | Rachel Crothers works |
nticommunistic.
George, do majored in football, baseball, track, crew and ballroom dancing. Since “Old Mike” could make no practical suggestions after his son's graduation, George's dancing gravitated in the natural direction of the show business. He'll soon [turn up in “Broadway Melodies of 3.” ”
» 5
T HAPPENED the other night on | the Mall in Central Park during | | the Parks Department harmonica "contest.
One of the entrants hailed from the East Side and brought his own personal claque with him. The moment be stepped up to the stage they whooped it up tremendously and immediately dashed down to benches behind the judges’ stand. As the fellow played the clague made favorable comment as to his mastery of the instrument and his brilliant technique. When the contestant finished, they almost deafened the audience with applause. The judges were tipped off. The entrant didn’t get the prize.
Shooting Starts On Beery Film
Times Special HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 4. — Five hundred Hollywood film workers have started on “Bad Man of Brimstone” in Zion Canyon, Utah, to spend weeks shooting scenes for this
| Wallace Beery starring film. Ranch- | 100
ers supplied 600 cattle and horses for scenes. Mr. Beery's supporting cast includes Virginia Bruce, Guy Kibbee, Joseph Calleia, Noah Beery, Raymond Hatton, Cliff Edwards, Mitchell Lewis, Warren Hymer,
groomed as
OW being
| lover of the cinema is George | | Murphy, who danced his way | through several New York shows before the film scouts picked him up. by the way, George Murphy's father
fessional letics and coach of at least five Ovmpic teams. It was “Old Mike” who vertently made a dancer of For he had a theory that | swell to harden up | and
dancing was the muscles
beef-brigade to do a graceful ga- | votte throughout the entire train- | son, |
|
| ing period, He made his
' Irene Dunne, now in the leading |
a |
FRANK CAPRA'S
LOST HORIZON
RONALD COLMAN
JANE WYATT ¢ MARGO EDWARD EVERETT HORTON
EXTRA! Exclusive
LOUIS
vs. FARR FIGHT
A Loew's ‘New Movie Season Winner’!
Fifteen pounds of exotic jewelry | are worn by Rochelle Hudson while dressed in the native costume of a Rajah’s harem favorite in ‘Look Out, Mr. Moto.”
THE ONE AND ONLY
ATTRACTION EXTRAORDINAR
> 4 AS THRILLING TOGETHER . AS YOU KNEW THEY'D BE! NEW YORK'S SUPER FEATURE
SUNYA smi
SA. (6]
P OW E Io
SONJA
mld
EXCLUSIVE BURLESQUE MIDDLE WEST
THE 10,000 DOLLAR BEAUTY
Held Over for
State Fair Week
Les SLANE
i GIRLS "+=
THE Mat. 2:15~Two Shows at Night,
2L 2:15—Two Shows at Night, ¥:15, 0 P. M._Gontinuous Sunday SPECIAL MIDNIGHT SHOW TONIGHT " X
FOLLIES MIMI
LYNN 7:15, 9 P. M.—Continuous Sunday
Prince Charming and poiished |
inad- | his |
compelled his |
| Robert Gleckler and Arthur Hohl. The film is the first to unite the | Beery brothers since 1916 and first | in years to co-cast Hatton and Wal- | Tace Beery, former comedy stars.
If his employers look into it, | they will find that | was the | famous “Old Mike,” the first pro- |} trainer of college ath- |
reOrT
wren: "GOGETTER”
PLUS—“THERE GOES MY GIRL”
Ann Sothern-Gene Raymond
TOMORROW-—D
‘SWING HIGH, SWING Low’ Fred MacMurray Suro!
Lombard
Prominent in the cast will be McKay Morris, for many years a local favorite in the Stuart Walker stock companies.
. | ers to the country’s major symphony |
the same while he |
legs |
|
DANCING CLASSES
BALLROOM (adult elasses) Gyan Wed. : m
TAP lie "
classes) Ovens Fri. 7 P. M,
COMPLETE COURSE 10 Lessons 87.50—Terms
Phone Rlley 1610
STOCKMAN DANCE STUDIOS
“Indiana’s Largest and Finest School of Dancing”
Frolic Acts Are Varied
1. U. Singers Win Credit For Tuneful Turn At Lyric.
The good old State Fair Frolic, headlined by O’Connor Family and the I. U. Glee Club, is having its way on the Lyric stage this week, and it is likely that tired fair | goers will feel they have had | their money's worth bv the time the hour-long show is | completed.
The O'Connor Family—the mother, two grown sons, a smail son,
ter, Patsy, who steals the show-— presents tap dancing, singing and | general fun in an informal man- | ner.
billed as having appeared with the
film work,
two big brothers and makes smart answers a
Add Eight To Faculty
nor, described by one of her sons as | “54 and well preserved,” does a short
| mirth- -provoking skit astride dummy | ponies,
the |
|
| Brothers’ opus, “Footloose Heiress.
| Boston advertising man.
| birthday is over, Donald and an even smaller daugh- |
| animals and a medley of college tunes, Park and Clifford, two husky and tanned youths, do a series of refined and remarkable acrobatics. As one | spectator remarked, “It sure took a | lot of practice to learn to do that. Marjorie Greeley, the Butterfly | Girl, sings while being wafted about above the orchestra pit and the audience in a contraption with colored lights resembling—you guessed ita butterfly. The Swingettes, a chorus which opens the show, do a graceful butterfly dance during Miss | Greeley’s number. Kirk and Lawrence, comedians, burlesque a Wild West show with a
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE APOLLO
“Thin Yee,” with Sonja Henle and Tyrone Power at 11:44, 1:42, 3.40, 5:38, 7:36 and 9.34
CIRCLE “Make a Wish,” with Bobbv Breen,
at 11, 1:45. 4:30 7:15 and 9:45
“Hideaway with Pred Stone, 12:45, 3:30, 6:15 and 9:05
LOEW'S
th Ba.
at
Ronald Colard Everett 25 7:10 and
“Lost Worizon" wi man, Margo and Horton, at 11, 1:40 9:55 Louls-Farr fight at 12:55 3:40, 6:25 and 9.05
LYRIC Fair Frolic” nn 6:42 and »:30
Heiress.” at
pletures
They make them act like real animals with wills and whimsy of their own.
Hobo Meets Heiress
On the screen, Ann Sheridan and Craig Reynolds cavort in a Warner
“Slate siage al
08, 3:54 “Footloose Sheridan, on screen 5:20, 8:17 and 10:27
AMBASSADOR “A Day at the Races.” with the
Marx Brothers Also “Born Reckless,’ with Rochelle Tiudson,
ALAMO
“Slave Ship,” with Wallace Reervy Also ‘Devils’ Saddle Legion,” with Dick Foran,
1 Ann
2:41,
with 11:53
Miss Sheridan is a spoiled heiress | Whose father, played by Hueh | O'Connell, can't control her, Mr. | Reynolds appears first as a hobo who has come to town riding the rods, but is the wealthy son of a
recent twins’ convention at Ft Wayne and of an airplane landing on a platform attached to a speeds ing auto at the Democratic Yio
meeting at French Lick. (By J. 3H.
Ann makes a bet she'll
of $5000 that be married before her 18th Craig manages to block the marriage. Enraged. the
| spoiled heiress makes things hot for
Patsy, petite and blond, and ap- | pearing to be about 5 years old, is | lam Hopper,
late Jean Harlow in “Saratoga” and |
also is reported to have done other | | Fox newsreel,
Donald is roughed around by his |
|
la Charlie McCarthy. | Patsy sings and dances. Mrs. O'Con- |
dance number, The elder sons dance |
land wisecrack with nimble feet and | fairly nimble wit,
I. U. Glee Club Performs Well
‘Jordan Conservatory Staffs From Orchestra.
| | I —. The I. U. glee club, under the di- | | With the appointment of several | rection of Prof. D. D. Nye, performs |
new “first-chair” players of the Tne |in a creditable manner in the clos-
dianapolis Symphony Orchestra to | its faculty, the Arthur Jordan Con-
a song of the Barbary Coast, a hum-
| servatory hopes to establish itself as | | a center of orchestral instruction | | |
Dance Open-Air
Suiurday or Covered
wir SKY sms: HARBOR
Sat., 60c couple before 9:30; 80c couple 9:30 to 12:00; 50¢c couple after, 12:00 Sun. 35¢ couple before 9: 50c Couple After 9:15 One Block South Municipal Airport
No Dance Labor Day
| capable of graduating young playorchestras. | The new appointments, an- | nounced today by Miss Ada Bicking, | director, includes Boris Schwartz, | | the orchestra's new concert-maste®, | and Mark KXondratieff, violin in- | structors; James Hosmer, flute; Julio Mazzaco, clarinet; Paulo | Gruppe, cello; Charles Munger, | cornet and frumpet; Simon Kara- | sick, trombone and euphonium, and | Jennings Saumenig, percussion. Fabien Sevitzkyv, conductor, was appointed during the summer to head the school orchestra and teach conducting. Mr. Sevitzky is to arrive in November. His conducting course will not begin until the second semester. Another recent faculty addition was Harold Triggs. well-known duopianist, who is to head the school’s piano department. A two-piano
Idk FRED STON
| Ing spot. Among their numbers are |
orous ballad about Noah and his |
the pseudo-hobo. They develop a hate for each other which results lin triumphant love. Supporting players include WilAnne Nagel, Teddy Hart, Lois Cheaney, William Eber- { hardt, Frank Orth and Hal Neiman Indiana gets a double play in the with scenes of the
SWIM- SARCE]
WESTLAKE
PAUL COLLINS’ ORCHESTRA Farewell Dance Labor Day Night RA S
TONIGHT ONLY
25¢, 50¢, T5e,
WLS
NATIONAL BARN DANCE
Regular NBC Broadcast
WITH UNCLE EZRA—LULU BELLE HOOSIER HOT SHOTS and OTHERS IN FRONT OF GRANDSTAND—#6 to 11
$1.00—ALL SEATS RESERVED
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
SEE THE AIRPLANE CRASH THROUGH A HOUSE AND OTHER THRILL STUNTS
IN FRONT OF GRANDSTAND-2:30 I. M. Reserved Seats—25¢ & 50¢ (Admission Included)
INDIANA STATE FAIR
Septemberd4 to 10
studio for the new teacher has been prepared in the Administration Building, 1204 N. Delaware St. i Classes are to begin Sept. 13.
ROONEY TO DON FIRST 'LONGIES'
Times Special HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 4.-—Mickey Rooney, dons first long trousers in his next screen assignment, as Joan Crawford's younger brother in “Mannequin,” Me tro - GoldwynMayer picture co-starring Spencer Tracy. Frank Borzage is to megaphone the film which starts as soon | Double Feature
{as Mr. Tracy returns from a Cana- O 1 | dian vacation. riental | Laurel & Hardy el, il VE -kMA;PeRPe “WAY OUT WEST” “CHINA PASSAGE” Double Feature—Jane Withers
“ANGEL'S HOLIDAY” “DODGE CITY TRAIL” Double Feature
{ Li nCo n Dickie Moore
“LITTLE RED SCHOOLHOUSE” Pat O'Brien “SLIM” Sun, Double Feature—Claudette Colbert “I MET HIM IN PARIS” “LOVE AND KISSES”
Fountain Square
Our New Cooling System RR. You Comfortably Cool Alw Double Feature Richard "pix
“DEVIL IS DRIVING” “NORTH OF THE RIO GRANDE” Sun. Double Feature—Wendy Barrie, “WINGS OVER HONOLULU” Jack Haley “PICK A STAR”
Sanders At Fountain Square
Double Feature Tony Martin “SING AND BRE HAPPY” “STEP LIVELY, JEEVES”
SOUTH SIDE
A | 0 N Fy Yo - va Bob Allen “RYO GRANDE RANGER” “MAMA STEPS OUT” Double Feature—Edw. G. Robinson “THUNDER IN THE CITY” “AS GOOD AS MARRIED”
Sun,
1105 S. Meridian
Sun,
HOME OWNED MOME OPERATED
Cd Ad:
8. East at Lincoln
O'CONNOR Family
and
Patsy O'CONNOR
Indiana University
GLEE CLUB
Sun. Double Feature—~Astaire-Rogers “SHALL WE DANCE?” “A FAMILY AFFAIR” NORTH SIDE Talbott & 22nd Westinghouse ” Air-Conditioned Double Feature James Dunn
“VENUS MAKES TROUBLE” “RUSTLER’S VALLEY” Sun. Double Feature—Lew Ayres “LAST TRAIN FROM MADRID” “BEWARE OF LADIES”
REX © 30th at Northwestern
“SWEETHEA RT of the NAVY"
with Erie Ceetle Parker
Newly Decorated Two Ace Hits “FIFTY ROADS TO TOWN” Wm. Boyd “TRAIL DUST” Sun. Double Feature—Warner Oland “Charlie Chan at the Olympics” Pat O’Brien “SLIM”
T IPNI"1 1 Udell St. at Clifton U DELL Double Feature Conwav Tearle “JUDGMENT BOOK” “THE QUITTER” Sun. Double Feature—Barbara Stanwyck
“BANJO ON MY KNEE” “DON'T TELL THE WIFE”
Garric k © 30th and Illinois
Double Feature Anton Walbrook “SOLDIER AND THE LADY” “WEST BOUND MAIL" Sun. Double Feature—Chester Morris “I PROMISE TO PAY” “T'HE GO-GETTER”
] Noble & Mass, M ECCA Double Feature Lily Pons “THAT GIRL FROM PARIS” “CHEROKEE STRIP” Double Feature—Edw. 'G. Robinson “KID GALAHAD” “WHEN'S YOUR BIRTHDAYS & vollere Stratford shri “CAPTAIN BLOO “RACKETEERS IN EXILE” Sun. Double Feature=Guy Kihbes
Sun,
Linden and
} | New Serial “SECRET AGENT X-9" |
Hollywood wr
This Week-End’s Best Attractions
At Your Neighborhood Theater
NORTH SIDE
N A 2361 Siation Bt. DREAM Double Feature Madge Evans “THE THIRTEENTH CHAIR” Ann Dvorak “MIDNIGHT COURT” Double Feature—George Brent “THE GO-GETTER” Pat O'Brien “SLIM”
R TZ fllinols and 84th
Double Feature Lee Tracy “BEHIND THE HEADLINES” “THREE SMART GIRLS” Sun. Double Feature—~Wm. Powell “EMPEROR'S CANDLESTICKS” Jack Haley “PICK A STAR" 10m velt Ave,
Sun,
Double Feature Roscoe Karnes “A NIGHT OF MYSTERY” “YOU CAN'T BUY LUCK” Sun. Double Feature—Rosalind Keith “CRIMINALS OF THE AIR’ Gable-Loy “PARNELL”
Zari Cs Feature ’ a ri ng Joe E. Brown “RIDING ON AIR” “LOVE FROM A STRANGER” Double Feature—Robt, Montgomery “EVER SINCE EVE” “Case of the Stuttering Bishop” C . 16th & Delaware Sta. Nema oo Fave “THE GO-GETTER"” “ANGEL'S HOLIDAY” Sun. Double Feature—Boh Burns Martha Raye “MOUNTAIN MUSIC” | “THE CORONATION" |
(In Tear) 2n go Feature
Sun,
& Collere
Uptown Robert Wilcox “THE MAN IN BLUE" “LET'S GET MARRIED” Sun. Double Feature—Marx Brow, “A DAY AT THE RACES” “WOMAN CHASES MAN”
5t. C air > Toh at Tne . a r Preston Foster “OUTCASTS OF POKER FLAT” “HEAD OVER HEELS IN LOVE” Sun. Double Feature—Gene Raymond
“THERE GOES MY GIRL"
GOLDEN;
__ Wallace Beery “SLAVE SHIP” > EAST SIDE :
RIVOLI om
Doors Open at 5:45 Double Feature
Comfortably Cool Allison Skipworth “TWO WISE MAIDS Return Engagement of Fred Astaire in “TOP HAT” EXTRA! Last Show Tonight Only!
Pat O'Brien~-James Cagney Stuart Erwin—June Travis
“CEILING ZERO" |
Sun. Double Feature—Frances Langford |
“HIT PARADE"
“WHITE BONDAGE" | Tacoma “om Tout
44! S Double Feature Spencer Tracy “THEY GAVE HIM A GUN” “THE LADY ESCAPES” Sun. Double Feature—Laurel & Hardy
“WAY OUT WEST” Gable-Loy ARNEL)
Tuxedo [oh
ol Feature Alice Brady “CALL IT A DAY" “LAND BEYOND THE LAW” | Sun. Double Feature=Errol Flynn “PRINCE AND THE PAUPER” | “THE LADY ESCAPES” Follow THE TIMES Daily Neighborhood Directory for your favorite programs
E. 10th St. |
- Howard
| | |
EAST SIDE
RVI N 6607 E. Wash, Sb
Double Feature Native Cast “ELEPHANT BOY” Will Rogers “DAVID HARUM" Sun. Double Feature—Kay Francis “ANOTHER DAWN" Bob Burns “MOUNTAIN MUSIC” Comfortably Cool
Emerson oors Open 5:45
George Brent—“THE GO-GETTER" Jones Family “BIG BUSINESS” Starts Sunday<——Wm, Powell “EMPEROR'S CANDLESTICKS” Laurel & Wardv--Jack Waley Patsy Kelly “PICK A STAR”
630 E, 10m,
6116 E. Wash, se oy Feature G. Robinson
“BARBARY COAST" Roscoe Karnes “CLARENCE” Sun, Double Feature—Claudette Colbery “I MET HIM IN PARIS” “IT'S IN THE AIR” 2116 E, 10th a Dele Feature am
Hamilton rata
“VENUS MAKES TROV BLE” “FLY AWAY BABY” Sun. Double Feature-Joe Penner “NEW FACES OF 1937" “MEET THE MISSUS”
1332 KE. Wash, Kt. Sat x Strand Wm 8 “EMPEROR'S CANDLESTICKS" Jack Haley “PICK A STAR" Continuous Matinee Sunday Starts Tursdav—Will Rogers “STATE FAIR" Native Cast “ELEPHANT BOY" wh, nubile Paramount jm: rai ‘MOTOR MADNESS” “SMOKE TREE RANGE" Dothle Feature—lLareita Young “CAFE METROPOLE” “IT HAPPENED out WEST”
— 114 E. Washington B J ou Double Feature . Grace Moore “WHEN YOU'RE IN LOVE” “SING, COWBOY, SING” Sun, Double Feature~Joan Arthur
“MORE THAN A SECRETARY” Boris Karloff “NIGHT KEY”
WEST SIDE
STATE Boule Fortuny
“Double Feature “RED WAGON"
Sunday
Ss
Chas. Bickford
| Dick Foran “CHEROKEE STRIP
Sun. Double Feature—Spencer Tracy “CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS” “LOVE IN A BUNGALOW”
Belmont ™ Wetter
Westinghouse Air-Conditioned Double Feature Lee Tracy “BEHIND THE HEADLINES” “RUSTLER’'S VALLEY” Sun. Double Feature—Wm., Powell “EMPEROR'S CANDLESTICKS” “PICK A STAR"
DAISY 540 W. Mich. Sh
Double Feature Karen Morley
“GIRL FROM SCOTLAND YARD®
“SING, COWBOY, SING” Double Feature-~Marion “EVER SINCE EVE" “THE DEVIL IS DRIVING”
Roward a Blame: Double Feature Gene Autry “SAGEBUSH TROUBADOR" Plus Another Feature Kun. Double Feature—lames Nunn “VENUS MAKES TROUBLE" Gable-Loy "PARNELL"
Sun, Davies
