Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 November 1937 — Page 4
PAGE 1
ERE ERR
HE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
SYMPHONY
MONDAY, NOV.
ORCHESTRA PREPARES FOR OPENING CONC
Loew's Second Feature, t's All Yours, Proves
Light and Amusing Film
Madeleine Carroll Gives Faultless Performance in New Role: Francis Lederer and Mischa Auer Provide Comedy's Zest.
If you go to Loew's this week primarily to see Garbo and expect to | be bored by another second feature” in “It's All Yours,” the | other attraction, you're in for a pleasant surprise. For “It's All Yours” is one of the most delightful and amusing of the numerous comedies | which the film capital is producing these days. ! One of the most pleasing features of the picture is the faultless ! work of Madeleine Carroll in a licht comedy role. Usually seen in roles | of a more serious nature, Miss® rm— Carroll in this picture demonstrates | her versatility as an actress and | : : +. [nation of her scheme establishes herself as first-rate | Evian TCDD. 2s t-rate | She orders the inheritance turned over to Jimmy and he, upon learnFrancis Lederer ar S g S FRE Hi Hg cha Aer lio of the reform plan, retracts his impart to their roles the zest and |nroposal. However, she has sucgayety which always characterizes |ceaded in making herself so attrac1s Y ig aotne: ye wh ter RPh ng 10 | tive to Rene that he is willing to Ne ad a Sone Qe “ol edi ety her even without a moneI ‘the ‘memorable “My Man God- |tary inducement, And this he al4 . " : {most does when Jimmy, realizing his rancis Lederer is a made-t0- ljove, intervenes just in time at the order Jimmy Barnes, the madcap | City Hall ceremony. young heir to his multimililonaire| The actors impart the light treatA FA ¢ | uncle's fortune. Tt is hard for us to | ment which the theme demands and believe that Jimmy was ever the | seem to have enjoyed ‘making the shy, foreign bred youth his uncle | picture as much as the audience | describes him as once being, espe- | does viewing it. One comedy secially since our first view of him is | quence is especially deserving of | after his arrival from an all-night | mention. That is Mischa Auer's ex- | party | planation — while picnicking with | Secretary Gets Fortune | Miss ‘Carroll—of the proper bull Jimmy, in five years time, evi- | Rehting ne. Tis is accom- . | plish roug he unknowing ¢oently has responded well dently ha ponded well to his | haration of & ‘placidly feeding cow uncle's schooling in the ways of lon whom Auer demonstrates. You the world. So well, in fact, that | Will find many other scenes of “It
Just
money, Linda sees the happy culmi-
S the uncle decides the only way to |All Yours” just as amusing, It's put ® ‘stop ‘to ‘his ‘nephew's ‘wild good clean fun straight through. escapades and “to make a man of | {C.'C) him” is to cut him off in the will. : After the uncle's death, to the O surprise of both Jimmy and the | rphanage Gets elder Barnes’ young secretary, Linda | | Gray (Madeleine Carroll), the will —- i discloses Linda as the recipient of | Fun House SI ide the fortune. | Linda accepts the inheritance, intending to renounce it as soon as |, HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 15 (U. P).— Jimmy settles down. Of course, | A circular slide that once ‘was a Linda's action is not purely altru- | [im prop was furnishing fun today istic for she reasons that now with | 2% the Vista Del Mar orphanage. his money in her possession he ‘will | It Was part of a “fun house” ‘set at least notice her—a thing he | [TOM & Fred Astaire picture. Acnever did before. | tress Joan Fontaine presented it to | Wie orphanage. Starts on Spending Spree Linda goes to New York, meets the fortune hunting Baron Rene de CONNIE SUED BY Montigny (Mischa Aner) and with PORTRAIT ARTIST his competent aid starts on a spend- ey p— ing spree that makes Jimmy's erst- | iy WOOD, Nov, 15 (U. P).— while extravagance appear as ihcon- | Jonstance Bennett, blond ‘movie sequential as matching pennfes, |Sar, orderad a life-size portrait of Jimmy, as Linda had hoped, sets out herself in oils, and then never paid for New York to save the vestige | Or it, an artist charged in a damof the fortune which he still has |®E¢ Suit today. Willy Pogany, the hopes of regaining. Linda hires him | Printer, sued her for $35,000. as her secretary and Jimmy stops drinking and gets a job in a lawvers office. When Jimmy proposss marriage in what seems suspiciously like an attempt to foil the Bar- |] on's admitted plan to secure the
COMING! NOV. 19-21
COLISEUM Fairgrounds See This ido All-Star
PAGEANTRY OF COLOR ROMANCE-—DRAMA
Rare” Briel "Hook HIE
STonumeht ‘Cirele, until 5:00 ufter 6:00 p. m. at the theater.”
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Jed TN
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
APOLLO
“Uncivilized,’ rh Dennis Hoey og ot Rhy s, at 12:54, “3:57,
“She Asked for It,” with William Gargan, Orien Hayward and Vivienne Osborne, at 11:45, 2:48, 5:51, 8:54.
CIRCLE
“The Barrier,” with Leo Carillo, Jean Rarker and James Ellison, at 12:40, S90... .¥. 10:10, “Night Cub Srandal, " with John Barrymore nn Ove erman and Louise Qampbels, at 11:30, 2:40, 5:50,
CIVIC "ag of January J¥6.”—Curtain “80
INDIANA
“Second Honeymoon, » with Tyrone Power, Loretta Young, Stuart Erwin ane Marjorie Weaver, at 12:59, 4:08, ‘ +i. “45 Fathers,” with Jane Withers, Thomas Beck and Louise Henry, at 11748, “2:52, “5756, 9.
KEITH'S
Barney Rapp and His New Englanders on stage 1:30, 4, 6:50, 3: :20 “Wallaby Jim of the Islands,’ with George Houston and Ruth Col cman. at 12, 2:30, 5, 7:50 10:20.
LOEW'S “Conquest,” with a
Charles Boyer Owen, at 12:10,
Garbo Reginald 3:30, 6: ‘45 and 10, “It's Al Yours,” with Madeleine Carroll, Francis Lederer A Mischa Auer, at 10:45, 2, 5:20 and 8:40.
LYRIC
SHanywod Band Wagon” on stage at 1:05, 3:55, 6:45, 9:35 “Alcatraz Island,” with Ann Sherldan, John Litel and Mar Maguire, at 11:42, 2:32, 5:22, 8:12, 10:3
OHIO
“Easy Living,” with Jean Arthur and Edward Arnold. Also “Mr. Dodd Takes the Air,” with Kenny Baker,
AMBASSADOR
“Varsity Show,” with Dick Powell and Waring's Pennsylvanians. Also “Hotel Haywire.
ALAMO “Arizona Gunfi hier,”
Steele. Also, hink Moto,” with Peter Tk
‘Cantors to Give Concert Sunday
with Fast,
Mr.
Cantor and Cantoress Aaron Richman are to be heard in a concert at the Knesseth Israel Congregation, 1032 S. Meridian St.,, on next Sunday evening.
Mrs. Richman is said to be the only American woman to have become a “chazente” after mastering the difficult technique of the Hebrew chant. She and Mr. Richman will be heard in solos and duets of both concert and liturgical music.
MUSIC CLASSES TO HEAR SALKIN
Jules Salkin, principal viola of the Indianapolis, Symphony Orchestra and an instructor at the Arthur Jordan ‘Conservatory, will give a recital at 4 p. m. tomorrow in the
lconservatory's Student Hall, He is to play before Mrs. Lenora ‘Coffins music appreciation classes.
With the season's opening concerts set for Friday afternoon and Saturday evening, The Times photographer found the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra hard at work when he dropped in at rehearsal. 1. The conductor, Fabien Sevitzky, warms to his task as he gives the brass section the cue for an entrance. 2. Important members of any orchestra, the first violinists, shown here hard at work on Weber's “Euryanthe” Overture. 3. A young Indianapolis veteran of the orchestra is Miss Helen Dauner, cellist, 4. This might be either Ray or Harold Siegel of the double bass section. You may take your choice, for the Messrs. Siegel are identical twins. 5. This shirt-sleeved gentleman is Boris soloist and the orchestra's new concertmaster. dressed up for the first public performance. 6. An Indiana girl who, having made a name for herself as a harpist, now returns to her native state. She is Miss Marjorie Call, a graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, where she studied with Carlos Salzedo.
First lce Skating Revue To Be Opened Here Friday
are
rr eee
Schwartz, well known He'll be much more
|
With comfort promised through the installation of six open-hearth, |
iron-hooded furnaces, Indianapolis is to see its first skating carnival when the Black Forest Ice Revue comes to the Fair Grounds Coliseum for a | three. day engagement opening Friday.
| > | |
Major Films Are Booked
2 Neighborhood Theaters Buy From All Studios.
for the Century of Progress in Chicago. After two seasons there, the troupe has appeared at expositions [in San Diego and Dallas. In addition to keeping the cus-
crew must provide ice for its per-
ries a motorized ice-producing plant from city to city. It quickly manufactures a skating floor of real Products from all ‘major studios | ice capable of withstanding the onhave been purchased for showing in |'slaughts of speed and figure skaters. the Fountain Square and Granada | a, international corps of ‘perTheaters during the coming season, | formers is headed by Miss Melitta
according to announcement by Earl | Cunningham, general manager. Brunner, who hails from Europe and Pictures have been secured from | Who, like Sonja Henie, Is an atthe 20th Century-Fox, Metro-Gold- | tractive blond. gig ha My ter Besides the soloists, there is to ros. an I's ational, ra- | : : mount, RKO-Radio and Columbia | os 2 CINE ot ; gil S Hope» studios. | routine of precision skating. SpeEarly bookings at the Fountain | cial scenery and music Is included Square include “Life Begins at ‘Col- | in the program for the Indianapolis (showing, which is the opening en-
lege,” “Dead End,” *‘“Vogues of 1938," “Wife, Doctor and Nurse” gagement of the Black Forest skaters’ ' present tour.
“Ali Baba ‘Goes to Town,” “That CG BS 0 3 3
Certain Woman,” “Heidi,” “Danger, Love at Work,” “They Won't Forget” and “The Perfect Specimen.” Granada patrons soon are to see “Stella Dallas,” “The Bride Wore | Red,” “Double Wedding,” “The Life of Emile Zola,” “High, Wide and Handsome” and “The Prisoner of Zenda.”
PLAYS HUNCHES
Tyrone Power, ‘who became a star overnight, believes in hunches. Everyone he has followed has been to his advantage, he says.
GARED LI CONQUEST,
‘MANY GREAT ey JE STARS OF a Cs //
Plus Gay Comedy! 'WADELEINE CARROLL FRANCIS LEDERER ‘MISCHA AUFR “It's Al Yours”
[opening attraction, | Middle-Western | troupe made such an agreeable im-
This company of 40 was organized | 4 | pression
S.R O. Sign
May Go Up For Dancers
Jooss Troupe Is Ranked Among Biggest Drawing Cards.
The Jooss European Ballet is expected to play to a standing-room-only audience at English's tonight, Mrs. Nancy Martens said today. Coming here last year as the with almost no reputation, the
that it now is ranked among the five greatest drawing
{cards in Martens Concerts history.
tomers warm, the revue’s technical |
| Vienna,” { year. | program are the comic ballet,
There is more than ordinary interest in the evening's piece de resistance, “The Mirror,” because it is a sequel to “The Green Table,”
formers. For this the company car- | received with enthusiasm at last
season's Only
performance, one ballet, “A Ball in Old is being repeated from last The other new dances on the “The Seven. Heroes,” after one of the Grimm fairy tales, and “Pavane,” a dance in an old Spanish court setting done to Ravel's music.
Plus Exciting Comedy!
JANE WITHERS in
Plas Mystery Drama!
“NIGHT CLUB SCANDAL"
John Barrymore
I] Il
A STR ANG
3)
—
ALL-ANGLE SET BUILT FOR FILM |
HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 15 (U. P.).— [The first motion picture set ever | constructed so that cameras can record it from all angles was nearing completion today at Universal Studio.
for a Deanna Durbin picture. | Usually Such sets have an authentic
| for {other
It is a Swiss Alpine girls’ school | of
front but no back. The cameras circle the set for this picture. A complete lumber mill and | wood working plant were installed the construction of this and sets for the picture, “Mad About Music.”
BROADWAY NOVEL Janet Beecher is writing a novel Broadway personalities she [ knows. The actress has tentatively titled it, “They Are Broadway.”
smaller than this one is!
Ordinarily, ‘our advertisement on Monday is much
Today, WE'RE
however,
RUNNING AN EXTRA LARGE AD. WE HAVE AN EXTRA GOOD SHOWI!
Ih Blue and
Tonights Presentation alt Your
Neighborhood Theaters
EAST SIDE
3155 E. 10th S Doors Open at n: ‘45 Ronald Coleman “LOST HORIZON” “GIRL SAID NO”
2442 E. Wash. TACOMA Double Feature Alice Faye “You CAN’ T HAVE EY RY, THING” RIDING ON
TUXEDO 4020 E, New York
Double Feature Kenny An “MR. DODDS TAKES THE Pat O'Brien ‘‘SAN rh
IR Vv N & 5507 Wash St.
Daunte Feature Barbara Stanwyck “STELLA DALLAS “I, OVE UNDER F IRE’
EMERSON 4620 E. 10th
Double Feature Don Ameche “LOVE UNDER FIRE " Wilson “SPEED TO SPARE Dorothy. a MARCH OF TIME
GOLDEN ¢116 E. Wash,
Double Feature Paul Muni “THE GOOD EA “HOTEL HAYWIRE"
HAMILTON 2116 E. 10th St.
Double Feature “STELLA DALI
Barbara, Stanwyck Fred Stone . AW 3y”
a Tha 2 E. Wash St S T R A N D Double ure Dick Powell SITY SHOW" VARAGR IN CIRCULATION”
Joan Blovidell 3 411 E. Wash, Doble Feature
Pa ramount Jane Withers
“WILD AND WOOLLY" Andy Devine “ROAD BACK’
114 E, Washington BI1JOU
Double Feature BE “DON'T TELL THE i "ov TCASTS OF POKER FLAT’
WEST SIDE
HOWARD ~ Howard & Blaine
Double Feature ELEN Dix “THE DEVIL Is DRIVING Sonja Henie Ho ICE”
STATE
2702 W. 10th St. Dovblo Feature Claire RT E_FROM HEAVEN" “MOUNTAIN MUSIC”
“ONE MIT. Martha Rave WwW. Wash. & Belmont Double Feature
BELMONT CL Durbin
“100 MEN _AND A GIR THE GIRL SATD NO”
4 2540 W. Mich. St. DAI A | Ss Y Double Frature Pick Powell “VARSITY SHOW" George O'Brien “WINDJAMMER”
Speedway City SPEEDWAY Biren Capt. Casewell “KILLERS OF THE SE " Dick Powell “VARSITY SHOW SOUTH SIDE
ORIENTAL 1105'S. Meridian
Doubly Feature r
MARRIED BE SIA Aras :
URCOLN Bin
New Garfield vowrie
MECCA
SOUTH SIDE
FOUNTAIN SQUARE
Downie F CRiute Bing C rosby UBLE OR NOTHING” Horton “WILD MONEY"
At Fountain Square Double Feature Vill Rogers
E Ai =
SANDERS
“DAVID HARY Ne Jack Oakie “SUPER SLEUTH”
THE GROVE "Beech Grove
Royble Xa Fea tifa ker “MR. DODDS TAKES THE AR Jones Family “HOT WATER”
AVALON "ii geste
‘REPORTED MISSING” Gable<Loy “PARNELL”
Shelby Eentife aye “You CAN'T HAVE EVERVEHING “WINGS OVER
NORTH
Pros, & © Burch Double Feature
2203
SIDE
30th and Ilinofs Youble Feature
GARRICK SE
“DANCE, CHARI CIE DAN ‘DEVIL IS DRIVING’
Noble & Ma Double Feature Richard Dix ar 1s DRIVING”
. ET THE MISSUS Stratford
— 19th & College Double Feature “ROARING Boris Karloff
Jack olt TIMBER’ : “NIGHT KEY” DREA M STELLA LLAS AID AND WOOLLY" linois at 84th RITZ D
2351 Station St. Doubil Feature "BROAD AY MELO
“avy
Double Feature Jarhars, Stanwyck aE Rao: Powell DY OF 193%” ND THE WRLNERS' — 1500 Roosevelt Rotible Feature ph HR my
Hollywood
“IT CAN'T LAST POR: VE PRANSATL ANTIC MERRY-GO- ROUND”
Central at Fall Ork, ZAR ING Double F Cafe Carole Lombard “SWING HIGH, BN I LOW" “LOVE UNDER FIRE"
CINEMA 16th & Delaware
Double Feature ‘AS GOOD
John Boles AS MARRIED" Kay Francis “CONFESSION® Continuous from 1:30 17nd & College UPTOWN subifdin ona olem “LOST HORWON” h Jones Family “HOT WATER"
ST. CLAIR St. Ol, & Ft. Wayhe
Double Feature Bobby Breen “MAKE A_ WISH” n Sonja Henfe ‘THIN ICE” Talhott & ona TALBOTT Se Feature inh Bellamy “IT CAN'T _LAST FOREVER" Pat O'Brien “SLIM” R E X 80th at No: Edward Arn “TOAST OF NEW XY: Guy Kibbee “BIG '
