Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 January 1938 — Page 2
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
MONDAY, JAN. 81, 1088
$1000 Prize Awaits Play
On Lincoln
Story Must Be Based on His Early Life in Indiana, Sponsors Decree.
By JAMES THRASHER On Feb. 12 the Southwestern In-
STARS WHO WILL DESCEND ON LOEW'S DURING FEBRUARY
diana Civic Association is inviting | 3 the ‘world's playwrights to enter a |
contest for
$1000. The award will |
go to the best play based on Abra-| @
ham manuscripts must be submitted by Jan. 1, 1939.
Lincoln's Indiana years and |
Lincoln plays have heen few, and |
good Lincoln plays may be summed | up in the one that the Englishman, |
John Drinkwater, the biegraphy by
fashioned from | another English- |
man, Lord Charnwood. The Amer- | ican President has suffered the dra- |
matic neglect of most of the great historical figures. and Beethoven, to take only two ready examples, he has been a favorite subject of biographers. But most attempts to dramatize their achievements have met with failure. Why this has been so opens a rather broad field of speculation which involves audiences as well as playwrights and actors. The fact remains that few writers since Shakespeare have been able to put the great deeds of history successfully upon the stage.
More Difficult Task
Mr. you may
recall,
Drinkwater's play, dealt with Lincoln's life
Like Napoleon |
in |
Illinois and his years in the White | House. But the task confronting the | entrant in this contest is more dif- |
ficult.
For the dramatist must leave |
his hero on the threshold of man- |
hood. The Lincolns left Indiana, after 14 years, in 1830, when Lincoln was 21.
There is, however, the opportunity |
to project the ter of Nancy pick out rectitude, and good humor most uninspiring environment.
Hanks Lincoln, gentleness,
So
remarkable charac- | and | § the growth of Lincoln's | temperance | in a rough and |
many able writers should find the | contest a tempting as well as chal- |
lenging invitation. The sponsoring Civic Association
suggests that entrants might peruse |
Heggleston's “The Hoosier Schoolmaster” to advantage. Carl Sanadburg’s “Abraham Lincoln — the Prairie Years” certainly should not For Mr. Sandburg has written of Lincoln's youth with enough sympathy, imagination and artistry to fire any playwright's ambition.
Many Biographies
From the on the subject,
voluminous
also is a book that] be overlooked. |
suggested the biographies of Beve- |
ridge, Ketcham, Herndon, Wheeler, Lockridge, Nicolay, wig, Lord Charnwood, Whipple, Tarbell, Hill
Warren, | Iad- | Whitney, | and Sand- |
burg as recommended research ma- |
terial.
Already some aspects of the play |
have been decided definitely. For one thing, it must be of two and a half hours’ tain three or more acts. acters and settings must southwestern Indians of Lincoln's residence there. ‘Poetic license,” ciation has decided, will missable in order play's interest along the
he
lines of
playing time and con- | The char- | be of | in the time
the Civic Asso- | perto heighten the |
romance, drama, comedy or tragedy. | As stated above, the contest is of |
international scope and, say sponsors, Canadians are especially welcome. Already word has spread about concerning this competition and many hundreds of letters have been received from nearly all the states, from Canada and a few from Mexico. Copies of the rules may tained after Feb. 12 by writing to Ernest W. Owen, Secretary, South- | western Indiana Civic Association, 242 E. 12th St, Indianapolis. And | don't forget to inclose a self-ad-dressed, stamped envelope.
Piano Team
the |
be ob- |
|
Coming Here
Youthful Pair Play Sunday.
Russian
Martens Concerts, Ine. will pregent one of the most highly-praised
first Tndianapolis appearance in English's Sunday afternoon. They are Vitva Vronsky and Victor Babin,
voung Russian artists who made |
their American debut in New York on Feb. 14 of last vear. In private life, the piahists are Mr and Mrs. Babin. TIndianapolis already has seen, ih the case of Ethel Bartlett and Rae Robertson, that marriage and a career at two pianos can be combined successfully. Like the Robertsons, these pianists were established as soloists before they met, married and began their dual concertizing. Both are
Russian-born, Miss Vronsky being a |
native of Kiev, and Mr. Babin of Moscow. Fach studies with Artur Schnabel in Berlin. Basides being an interpreter, Babin is a composer, having a piano concerto, works for one and two pianos, and songs to his credit. On the Indianapolis program will be heard three of Mr. Babin's studies and his arrangement of the Polovet-
| him. | served the surplus.
to |
[sugar
literature | : | the sponsors have |
| flicker based on the history of Hud-
i | spectacles on the same subject. § | Preparations are | Paramount
i | Deanna Durbin i | ography
IN NEW YORK ==3, corse ross
When It Comes to Spending, the Brothers Sanchez Rate First; Shoot $56,000 at Night Clubs.
NEW YORK, Jan. 31.—Of all themselves to the owners of hot are regarded more affectionately
spots, than others.
“Big Spenders” who have endeared | the Brothers Sanchez of Cuba | Brothers |
There are four
Sanchez—Julio, George. Marcel and Emilio—ahd when they are out on a
spree in New York, fun, not economy, The playboy antics of George and Marcel are recorded regularly |
when they are on a spending bat;
less prodigal with their $1000 bills and Conseyuently, |
But they do well enough. . To cafe solons around here, the four Sanchezes literally are the “sugar daddies” of the night life. | For their wealth derives from a vas: mill in Cuba and the wealth | rolls in fast. Too fast, The excess | burns their pockets. Once, the legend runs, George Sanchez made a routine excursion to Manhattan in order to dispose of a mountain of sugar. When the deal was closed, he found himself | with $56 000 more profit than he anticipated. His conscience bothered | He didn't feel that he de-
Spent Tt at Clubs with characteristic good will, night clubs, re- | four successive |
So, he phoned four served them for
[nights and threw an equal number |
. lof champagne celebrations in them of modern two-piano toams in their |
| ing from around the corner.
Total bul: $56,00C. One could al- | most hear the revolution approach-
Between their sugar milling in
| Cuba and their gold mining in Costa |
| Rica,
| hurly-burly
the Brothers Sanchez allot | themselves four flying trips to the of Manhattan every | vear. They commute via their pri-vately-owned planes from their own landing field at Senada and they! have been known to soar over here
|'with a flying squadron of their own
| guests. | York last | pressed for
frantic visits to New a month; sb being they must. per- |
Their but time,
| force, hurry through their bankrolls.
Mr. | | the airport and fly them down to
| Helen Morgan
sian Dances from Borodin's ° ‘Prince |
Igor.” The New spoken of their plaving as that of “two Romantics, almost vocal in style, for sing like matched voices.” And, earlier, the famous Josef Hofmann had said of them: “I con. sider them the most extraordinary two-piano team I have heard
Europe.”
Yorker magazine has | | cafes, aN | tice that the folk at the adjoining | They Mmke Wher pianos eight tables are suffering along on
| scotch
Being hospitable fellows, the Brothers Sanchez not only bring their Cuban friends to New York It is not unusual for them to round | up a group of Broadway notables in the small hours, transfer them to!
HfVana for a week-long houseparty. is their most fre- | quent house guest on these impulsive | expeditions.
Bubbling Generosity
When the Brothers Sanchez sit in | it breaks their hearts to no- |
and sodas. Such chureh- |
| mouse libation reflects upon their | reputation as self-appointed hosts. |
in |
And so, they like to summon the |
| izenship papers,
is the object.
Julio and Emilio are rate less pubheiy.
the Messrs.
the best champagne in the house to |
| be served to people they don't know. |
When the convivial spirit warms up and they make new acquaintances, the Brothers Sanchez in-
| struct the proprietor to send up a
case of champagne to each of their newly found friends’ apartments— at night club prices.
Put the Senors George and Mar-
| cel in a cabaret with a floor-show | |
and a bevy of showgirls and they are in a spendthrift heaven. Fore | is where they can show off their
| magnanimity to the utmost.
A call to Sherman Billingsley to |
| rope off half his Stork Club, a fleet
of cabs to transport the girls, a | dozen cases of excelsior Veuve | Cliquot and the party is in progress. | | For their gracious participation in | these amiable Touts, the ydung |
ladies are rewarded with $100 bills.
Mr. Billingsley does all righy,
100.
VICKI BAUM NOW
AMERICAN CITIZEN
HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 31 (U. P)— Vicki Baum, blond novelist and scenarist, has renounced her native
Austria to become an American eiti- |
zen. The writer, Herwig Lert,
whose true name is | received her final cit- | joining the parade of foreigh members of the film col-
only who have taken similar action. |
Most notable was Marlene Dietrich.
RADIO ENTERTAINER
GETS MOVIE JOB
HOLLYWOOD. Jen. 31 U. P)— Another radio star, Tommy Riggs, [the double voice who talks with imaginary Betty Lou of Rudy Vallee's program, was at work in the movies today. He has been signed by Universal Studio for a role in ‘Goodbye Broadway’ with Charles
| Winninger and Alice Brady.
[wine ® Steward and | order magnums of |
CHILD STAR GETS R ROLE |
Marilyn Knowlden, major screen roles to her
who has $3 | credit at |
the age of 10, today was cast as the | daughter of Norma Shearer in “Ma- |
rie Antoinette,” a production
Tyrone Power. The child star is famed for her roles in Adverse,” “Lies Miserables,” “Little
Women” and “David Copperfield.”
in which Miss Shearer is starred with |
“Anthony |
LAST 2 DAYS! Loretta Young
“Second Honeymoon”
Joel MeCrer—Byivia Sidney
“DEAD END”
ailment. the star's first
Here are three scenes from as many pictures booked for February showing at Loew's. At the left | is Wallace Beery, who will be taking it on the chin | in “Bad Man of Brimstone, beginning Friday. | Tracy, Above. Robert Taylor, in cap and gown, joins an |
GINS HRS Bfecivanic the bicycle's banner
in SingnIsne
Studio Rivalry Causing Many Film Juplications,
By PAUL HARRISON HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 31. —Studio rivalry in the scramble for is resulting in a lot of duplication and some hard feelings between the various lots. Warners have eompleted a straight dramatic Hood,” and Metro is planning an operatic version. Twentieth Century-Fox has an-¢ nounced plans and casting for a;
version of “Robin
SBVS | the girl.” a | ‘Here's
fsounds:
son Bay Co. and Paramount
: / jut Oeoil DeMille will do one of his how the Piute
“Meoyk-h'n-da-to-cun-under way at | ceugh.” for an aviation epic, | “Men With Wings.” Twentieth-Fox | Dead-Pan Buster | has schedulpd “Women With | The once-great Buster | Wings.” The same studio expects | | to film a youthful biography of | Disraeli with Tyrone Power in the { lead, although Warners starred | George Arliss in “Disraeli” and worn |g director now, and he is starting [an Academy Award with it. lout ‘modestly with Likewise, Universal plans to put | “Life in Sometown.” into a screen bi- | {and freak laws which are on various ‘statute hooks, and it doubtless was suggested by that eastern town which started out to enforce all its
Back Keaton is
the other side of | time. He's as dead-pan as ever, but
of Marie Antoinette as a | young girl, although Norma Shearer ‘already is working at Metro in a |‘ complete biography of the same | | character. Take Your ‘Choice ordinances.
In Keaton's short, for ‘example,
There are at least two striking | People get arrested for shaking a | allowing dogs |’
rug from a window,
‘Jezebel,’ lout at night without
parallels between in tail-iights,
| ‘which Bette Davis fs working, and | | sprinkling lawns and dampening | “Gone With the Wind,” which David | sidewalks, and eating from a chipped |
| Selznick expects to ‘make some day. | 4iSh. When men escort women
The periods are about the same, | church they must carry guns to pro- | and Miss Davis plays the role of a | tect them from Indians. Club- | girl ‘whos very like Searlett| Women are pinched for holding a (O'Hara in personality, A third film | picnic without a permit, and for not of the old South may be a remake, | wearing petticoats.
Re amers wm ous || NEW TEACHER
| | | | | | | |
Nation.” Recently Warners den of the Moon,” a night [story laid in Los Angeles’ Cocoa- | nut Grove. Meanwhile Paramount | | has written a story titled “Cocoa- | | nut Grove.” And recently we've | seen rival Metro and Warner pic- | | tures dealing with Alcatraz. You pays your money and you takes your choice.
Plenty of Help
Small studios that make westerns | | usually have two directors and two | | cameras on the job, so that all the | | Players can be kept busy | minute, { Out at Metro, though, they" re | | fiming a musical horse-opera on a | (grand scale—“Girl of the Golden | ve st.” And so far, eight directors | [have participated, which is a record. | Robert Z. Deonard directs the | story; Albertina Rasch directs the | dances; Reinald LeBorg directs the | | festa activities; Dave Weber | reets Jeanette MacDonald western dialect; Joe Rodriguez directs the cast in Mexican dialect; | Studios. {Chief Blackwater directs Nelson | [Bea in a few lines of Piute which he has to speak; Father John | | O'Donnel directs H. B. Warner in | his role of a Franciscan priest, and | also serves as technical director on | | missions of that period; and Mark | [Smith directs all the cowboy action. Chief Blackwater supplied the | [sounds for ¥Eddy's Indian speech, | {but it fell to George Macon of the | | research department to phoneticize | the lines so that the actor can learn | | them. He hopes he can learn them, | anyway. All he is SUPDoRa to say |
“Gar- | club |
bought
every |
in Wi Catherine Bell is to join the pi= ano faculty of the Bomar Cramer 1431 N. Meridian St. at the opening of the schools second term on Thursday. The new teacher is the daughter of Mi. ahd Mis. Arthur Bell of Elwood, aid has studied with Mr. Cramer for the past seven years, She is to work with Nina Havs Dutton in the school’s primary department, THREE DAYS Beg
ENCLISH faning NEXT THURSDAY NICHT
GEORGE ABBOTT'S
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463 LAUGHS NIGHTS: Orch, ¥2.75, 2.20. Balke,
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stories |
Crawford, Alan Curtis, who will week beginning Feb. 11. month of the year.
| | | |
s “Go away so I can be alone with ea version
| daa-nahuydjuh- heuyamatch - ada -
back in the picture business, but on | the cameras this
a short celled |
The picture pokes fun at old laws |
| Jaws in protest against certain blue |
po LW Rate Sis
The scene is from “A Yank at Oxford,”
English picture. Below are Joan a newcomer, and Spencer in “Mannequin” for the This would sean to be the
appear
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
ig
“Hollywood Hotel’ Goodman, Dick Bowell Lane, “at_12:2% 343, 6 49 and 0.55. ‘The Jury's Secret,” with Fay Wray, at 11:21, 2:37, 5/43 and 8:49,
CIRCLE
“IT Met My Love Again,” Bennett, Henry Fonda, at 12:01, 5:01. 7:31 and 10:01 “Crashing Hollywood,” with Tracy, at 11, 1:30, 4, 6.30 and 9. INDIANA “Happy Landing,” Henie, Don Ameche, at 11:50, 2:20, 4:50, 7:20 ‘and 9:50. “Marck of Time feature, ‘Inside Nazi Germanv-—1938," 1:50, 4:20, 6:50 and 9:20 LOEW'S “I'l Take Romance.” with Grace Moore, Melvyn Douglas, Stuart Frwin, at 12:45 3:50, 6:56 and 10. “Boy of the Streets,’ with Jackie Cooper, at 11:15, 2:20, *:25 and 8:30.
LYRIC
Monte Blue, Mary 3:50, 6:40 and
with Benny Rosemary
with Joan 2:3,
Lee
with Son Jean Herano,
at 11:20,
Vaudeville, with Des, on stage at 1:10, 30 with Humphrev Bogart, Frank RACH uh., Weaver Brothers and Elviry., on screen at 11:31, 2:1, 5:01, 7:51 and 10:21.
KEITH'S Second Honeymoon.’ ' with Loretta Young. Also “Dead End.”
OHIO
‘“Ali Baba Goes to Town, Eddie Cantor. Also ‘‘T'wo for night,”’ with Bing Crosby.
AMBASSADOR
“Stage Poor,” with Ginger Rogers. Also “Living on Love.’
ALAMO “Partners of the
William Boyd. Also with Teo Carrillo.
‘Swing Your Lady,’
with To-
Plainy,” with ‘“T'ne Barrier,”
to |
Autry Involved
In Pay Wrangle
| | HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 31 (U. P.).— A salary wrangle today involved | Gene Autry, singing cowboy actor, and Republic Studie. Mr. Autry, en [personal appearance tour, wired | back to Hollywood that theater | owners told him that his piciures | were being used as a lever to iorce them to accept inferior films | said that the tour convinced him
| that he is so popular he shouid have |
|‘ more money. Producer Herbert Yates at Re- | public said Mr, Autry had two re-
| cent raises. | The producer said he would peti- | tion for a court injunction halting | Mr. Autry’s personal appearance | tour, which caused al the trouble.
Ni i883
BENNETT FONDA
[wir my LOVE AGAIN
mre
4 IL ob addel
BENNY SHOUMAN LHS SWINE BAND [OUELLA PARSONS SOHNISE DAVIS GLENDA FARRELL WOK POWELL ROSEMARY LANE HUGH RERBERT
ny RLY WR NOrECRO RAN
TY HENIE DON AMECHE
FREDRIC MARCH a) ATES
did a
Sound Film Perfection To Give 18 000 Musicians
Jobs, Says Stokowski
New Movies Require Services of Expert at Controls To Assure Proper Reception, He States; Dramatizes Dukas Work.
HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 31 (U. P.) .—Leopold Antoni Stanislaw Boleslawowicz Btokowski, who has a record of musical achievement as long as his name, compeited a trick orchestra job today and predicted that it would be the starter in opening Bh entirely new Held for America's depression-ridden musicians. The white-haired Mr. Stokowski, conductor of the Philadelphia Or- | chestra, and movie actor who talks | on the screen mostly with his hands, credited Walt Disney's shadowy mouse with the developments which he believes eventually will result in| 18,000 jobs for musical men.
“Every movie theater in America | will have to have a first elass musi- | cian at work, controlling the sound | equipment,” he said. “Otherwise | forthcoming musical films won't | sound right on the screen and the | public will be dissatisfied.”
Mr. Stokowski has produced the
Disney Film Here Feb. 1]
"Snow White" to Show at Indiana Theater.
One of the most eagerly awaited
films in recent years, Walt Disney's
musical accompaniment for the | pretentious “Snow White and the newest Mickey Mouse picture, en- | Seven Dwarfs,” has been booked for titled “The Sorcerer's Apprentice,” | showing at the Indiana beginning which when released next fall, will meh, 11, Kenneth T. Collins, mans have two kinds of prints, one for | aper announced today. use in ordinary movie houses, and | The picture, two years in the make the other for showing in those thea- | ing, contains some 300,000 separate ters equipped with machinery mod- | yrawings and was produced at the ern ‘enough to reproduce perfectly | ans of one million dollars. It is the music of a full symphony or- | paced on one of the Grimm fairy
He |
DAISY
chestra. tales It's an Experiment This is the first full-length picture
“There are only a handful of the | Put out by the Disney stuidos, and | Initer kind of theaters in the whole | the first to employ a reproduction country,” he said. “Our new picture | of human characters. “S n 0 w | ‘admittedly fs ‘an ‘experiment, but it | White” is now in its third week af | is one Alm which will be readily | the Radio City Music Hall in New satisfactory only in those houses | York, where it has won the unani= properly ‘equipped and staffed to| mous and unstinted praise of Man= | handle it. The other print of the | hattan reviewers. sound track, for use in the majority | —
te wind min of GIRL, 5, SIGNS FOR $100-A.-WEEK JOB
| really modern theaters.”
He said that other studios also | were beginning to produce sound | HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 31 (U. P) A 5-year-old girl came to the res=
| pictures of high fidelity, which were | | cue of her sick mother and jobless
| ruined in the unreeling in a vast majority of theaters. » we | father today with a $100-a-week he : movie job.
| “That ean't go on forever, | said. “A few theaters y 7 ; BERS HinNaY Tavel The girl is Janet Kay Chapman, | only child of Mr. and Mrs. Burl B,
installed the proper equipment, and hired musicians to control it, and | Vit od the public is beginning to fock to | Chapman, formerly of Cincinnati. them. Other houses will be forced | Lne blond, blue-eyed, little girl was chosen for the title role in a picture realistically titled “Little Lady
—
| to follow suit. Dramatizes Dukas Work | Luck The job, and a contract with War= ner Brothers Studio which will pay the controls is more necessary still. | her $750 a week by the time she is | Most theaters control the sound | 12, came when her mother was | from the projection booth, where critically ill and her father hunting the operator ean't hear it properly, & job, the Studio said. | and wouldn't know what to do about| — | it, if he could. “What there must be in every {| movie house is a musician sitting | in the audfence with the sound con- | trol dials before him. He must | watch the picture before him and he must play upon his amplifiers as | he would an organ. There are | 18,000 movie theaters in America and T am certain that before many years have passed, a musician will | hold an indispensable job in every | one.’ The new mouse picture is a car- | toon dramatization of “The Sorcerer's Apprentice” by the French com- | poser, Dukas. Mr. Stokowski’s orchestra recorded the music, and Mr. Disney will draw | the pictures to fit it. His staff now is going full blast on thousands of | colored eartoons which will move | in rhythm to Mr. Stokowski's ve- | | orgie. “Tf it's a success,” Mr. Disney | said, “it should give us still another | field upon which to work. There [are hundreds of musical works which tell stories and what we hope | to do is picture them so the eye can see what the ear hears,”
“The proper sound amplifiers are | necessary, of course, but the man at
4 LAST
SAYS!
p E
roll
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