Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 October 1938 — Page 12
Shaw Heeds
Plea, Turns
Film Writer,
Gabriel Pascal Realized Life Ambition When G. B. S. Agreed.”
By SUTHERLAND DENLINGER . Times Special ‘Writer NEW YORK, Oct. 24—“—1I1 asked the old man to write a new __dialog for the reception scene. He wrote a whole new reception and invented a new figure, a caricature of a Hungarian aristocrat. The old man wrote this with such a gay spirit—"
That’s Gabriel Pascal talking, the |, in where Sam|-
man who rushed Goldwyn trod in vain (not that Mr. Goldwyn is an angel, and obviously Mr. Pascal is no fool). The man who not only persuaded George Bernard Shaw to let his plays be filmed but attually put him to work -on the script. The “old man,” of course, is G. B. S. Mr. Pascal always calls Mr. Shaw “the old man,” with affectionate respect. “The old man, he’s not impressed from money at all. You cannot bluff him with any checks. For me he is -the greatest human being and after him Toscannini. I came on the boat with Toscannini and he said to me:—‘Being a great conductor is not important, but being a great human being; that is important.’ This, is exactly the philosophy of G. B.S Always Been Fanatic
~— Mr. Pascal is a native of Transyl- ” yania, a Hungarian whose roots are - Basque. He has a brother who is a - shipbuilder in Italy. For himself, he has always been a fanatic, first about the theater—he was with the Imperial Theater in Vienna—and then about the motion pictures. He has directed and produced in Italy and Germany and France and in - England. A while ago Mr. Pascal, who “had always dreamed to do Shaw’s plays,” came to the incisive old master and propositioned him. Mr. Shaw had turned down Sam Goldwyn despite Mr. Goldwyn’s promise to do the plays “on a high artistic plane,” remarking: “You are interested in art, Mr. Goldwyn, I am interested in money.” «I told him,” explained Mr. Pascal, “that my dream for years was to make ‘The Devil’s Disciple, and that I had come to him for this. I told him how I proposed to make it.
First Make ‘Pygmalion.’
“He said, ‘No.’ He said, ‘No, first make Pygmalion,’ it’s more popular. “The Devil's Disciple,’ if we. gave it to them first, might frighten them. Let us give them first the real entertainment and later the ‘Devil's Disciple’.” Mr. ical is the physical antithesis of his hero; a short, bronzed, stocky, energetic man with a round, attractive face,. gray-brown eyes and a habit of reinforcing fluently imperfect English with forcefgil gestures. “Was Shaw difficult?” Mr. Pascal jaughed. “He came the first day to see the sets. I had built St. Paul's Cathedral and Covent Garden in exactly the same grandeur. He said: «I do not purpose to interfere in the direction of this picture since I cannot, at my age, do it myself.
Terms Him Great Actor
“You know, in four or six weeks the picture is to be distributed in America by M-G-M. I asked him before I left England to do a trailer for Louis B. Mayer. He is a great actor. He walked on and said: ‘Well, my American friends, you want me to make a speech for you. All right, “ here I am’ .. His timing was perfect.” Mr. Pascal said that he was flying to Hollywood to see “L. B.” “I gave my promise to L. B. that - Tawould make my next Shaw picture for Metro,” he said. “After we discuss it I will know whether I shall make the next picture in England.” The next picture will probably be «gt. Joan,” Mr. Pascal said. Others on the schedule are “Anthony and Cleopatra” and “The Devil's Disciple.” «If I make ‘The Devil's Disciple’ I will make it a real American pic-
ture, just as ‘Pygmalion’ was a real |:
English picture,” Mr. Pascal said. “If
I must, I will go to New England |"
“ and live there and I won’t go as a producer; I'll go as a farmer. » Had ‘St. Joan’ Ban Lifted Mr. Pascal said that while in Rome he called on the Vatican sec-
retary and was successful in having the ban against “St. Joan” lifted.
From the dispatch case he drew a|.g
letter from Mr. Shaw in which the playwright remarked that he had
counteracted the effect of “the scur- [Moan
rilities of Mark Twain” on the * Saint’s reputation and that, indeed, many had thought his play an indication that he was a convert to Catholicism. There was more, too, in Mr. Shaw's best satiric manner, but Mr. Pascal thought that enough was enough, in view of the fact that the Vatican secretary “say ‘no objection’. ” Mr. Shaw's letters to Mr. Pascal, many of them dated from the Impaney Hotel, Droitwich, Worcestershire, invariably. began “My Dear Gabriel” and sandwich affairs between appetizing layers of humor. After the Leicester Square Theater premiere he wrote that it was not necessary for Mr. Pascal to come down to the country, that he (Shaw) already knew “everything that has been made public” and congratulated the producer-director. “Also,” Mr. Shaw wrote, “I congratulate several people who would -- have spoiled the fiim for you, if - they could.”
DIRECTOR SHARES $25,929 VERDICT
© HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 24 (U. P).— "William Dieterle, motion picture director, his wife, and mother-in-law - held a $25,923 judggpent today . against Felix La Force, a taxi driver. © A re decided Mr. La Force was to blame for a collision, caused allegedly when he disregarded a
boulevard stop sign.
1 BEST OF THE ark ‘Gable
SEVITZKY HERE FOR NEW SEASON
Tibbett Sings Here Tonight
Lawrence Tibbett, Metropolitan Opera baritone, and Stewart Wille, has accompanist, were to arrive from Detroit early this morning to open the ninth annual Martens Concerts season with a recital at English’s tonight at 8:30 p. m. Mr. Tibbett was soloist on the Detroit Symphony’s broadcast concert last night. During his brief stay here he will be entertained by Bomar Cramer. Mr. Tibbett is one of the Bomar Cramer Studios’ sponsors. Following the recital, the sing-
for an appearance tomorrow night. His program this evening will include the following:
“Bois Epais” . “Gia il sole dal Gan ‘Hear Me, Ye Winds nee Waves”.
IL
‘Nacht und Traeum Schubert Meine Liebe ist Gruen. 11! Erne ot Allerseelen”
Sca ..Handel
III. “Sonetto No. 104 del Petrarca’ “Traeumerei” Rhapsody, Opus 11, No. 3 Mr. Wille.
VI.
“cotiigiant. vil razza dannata’ (Rigoletto Verdi
“pilgrim’s Song” . In the Silent Right” y ‘Death. the Commander”
Tschaikowsky Rachmaninoff Mussorgsky
Y n’ Edward Harris “Betsy's Jacques Wolf Hanoman, Slack on de Li
EE folk song adapted by Harvey Enders
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
APOLLO
“That Certain Age,” with Deanna Durbin, Melvyn Dou as an Jackie . an Year.” wit b Diss i Wn ear. Xie N= bar, Wiliam Sundigsn, at 11:15. 2:30.
5:40 and 8 CIRCLE
The Arkansas Traveler,” with Bob Burns, Foy Bainter, Irvin 8S. Cobb, 4: 7s nd aye.
Army.” John Howard, May Carliste, at kts 3s, 03:25, 6:15 and 9 NOAA
Sisters,” with Bette Davis, Aljta Louise, at 12:35,
of Annabelle,” with Lact iis Ball, at 11:25
“The
3.45. 7 a 7 “The A airs Jack Oakie, 2:40, 5:55 and 9
LOEW'S
“Stablemates,”” with Wallace Beery, Mickey Rooney, at 11, 1:49, 4:35, 7:25 an “Vacation From Love,” with Dennis O'Keefe, Florinee Rice, at 12:35, 3:25, 6:15 and 9:05.
LYRIC
Vaudeville. with Pepper Martin end hiss Mudcat Band, on stage, at 1:07, 3:53, 6:49 and 9:35. ra A Pasiaers. with Mar=fast Lindsay. Ann Sheridan, Marie fier. Ld screen at 11:33 2:19, 5°15. 8:01 and 10:30.
Refreshed after a European vacation and anxious to begin work, Fabien Sevitzky, Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra conductor, and Mrs. Sevitzky ar-
“Rest, rest, perturbed spirit.” Broadway’s current, popular and unabridged Hamlet, in the person of Maurice Evans, takes a reviving cup of tea during the 30-minute supper recess of the five-hour drama.
Some American Customs Still Puzzle to Miss Wong
By PAUL HARRISON HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 24.—Anna May Wong said, “I'll have the eggs S
er is to leave for Ann Arbor, Mich.,]
SLL
| entirety, in New
a la Reine and the salad supreme. ever sits down and thinks up such
Times Photo.
rived at Union Station this morning from New York. Mr. Sevitzky said his principal aim this season will be to “put the Indianapolis Symphony on the map.”
With him is Katherine Locke, the play's Ophelia. Mr. Evans, the first actor ever to do Hamlet in its
York, appeared at English’s last
season. in Shakespeare’s “King Richard II.”
Who in the dickens do you suppose names? Chinese names for dishes
always explain what's in 'em.” I took the crooner’s mixed grill and the potatoes Colbert. Then I asked Miss Wong whether she now thinks of herself as an Oriental or as an American woman, Or perhaps just as an international actress.
“That’s the question that sent me packing off to China,” said the Los Angeles-born Chinese.
“I found myself in the middle of subconscious conflicts. I wondered whether I was losing my racial instincts, and whether I wanted to lose them. Hollywood is the most hectic place in the world, and no good for making up one’s mind. I
Y | thought that going to China would
help me decide—either I'd love it or
I'd be reconciled to the western
world. I loved it. emotional thrill.”
An American institution that Miss Wong can’t get used to is the gossip column dealing with who’s about to marry or divorce whem. “So much is untrue!” she exclaimed. “They sald I was engaged to Philip Ahn, the Korean actor. He's terribly self-conscious about it.”
She’d Write—
I asked ,Miss Wong what she'd write if she were a Hollywood correspondent, and she said she’d write more about acting and less about off-screen personalities. “So much attention to their own personalities makes actors believe they are more important than their characterizations,” she continued. “You can think of several stars who always try to play themselves on the screen, sod Whoo lay an egg in character par
“Now, in this last picture, ‘King of Chinatown,’ I was a woman doctor, and I tried to handle it obJectively and I believe I was freer than ever before. If I succeeded in getting into that character, maybe I would have different slants on
Sr ~ NOW 15¢ & CITE
. Dorothy Lamour—George Raft “SPAWN OF THE NORTH" Alison Skipworth “Ladies in Distress’
NOW 15 vie hE
It was a great
“LONE . RANGER’ Je
“PAT” TALKS ABOUT “ARKANSAS ' TRAVELER"
ing Bob’s first outright starring attraction and he acquits himself nobly in the: well-remembered Will Rogers manner.” Corbin Patrick—Star
: LIA HH
ST
“It is, we believe, plain-speak- |.
things than ordinary Anna May Wong wculd have.” * “And did it work out that way?” “Partly,” said Miss Wong. “For instance, I arranged to watch a major operation so that I could get a better idea of my role. A hard-boiled press agent went with me and he kept asking if I could stand it all right. I found that I really didnt mind it. But right in the middle of the operation, the press agent turned kind of green and said, “This 3s where I came in,’ and he had to eave.”
MUD IS PROP IN JESSE JAMES FILM
HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 24 (U. P.).— Two Hollywood studio officials were back today Irom superintending the removal of 3000 truckloads of dirt from the streets of Pineville, Mo. The earth was spread on the nice new cement pavemsnt of the little town to simulate the muddy
thoroughfares of early days for the filming there of “Jesse James,” “by Twentieth Century Fox.
AT LONG LAST
Bette Davis, who lost George Brent in “Jezebel,” will get him in “Dark Victory.’
TOMORROW NIGHT
AMOS OTSTOT.
ONE NIGHT ONLY
CLYDE McCOY
And His “Sugar Blues’ Orch.
a FLYNN em DAVIS
in the Novel {08
TEACHERS MEET HERE THURSDAY
La Guardia, Van Zeeland Also to Address Annual State Parley.
diana University will be the prin cipal speakers for the 85th annual Indiana State Teachers’ Association. Convention in Cadle Tabernacle and the Murat Temple Thursday
and Friday. Herman B. Wells, head of Indiana
University, will speak at the opening session Thursday night follow-
of Richmond as Association president. Paul Van Zeeland, ex-premier of Belgium, will speak Friday afternoon and Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia of New York City will speak Fri-
day night at the closing session of the two-day convention. Meanwhile, the State’s elementary, secondary and college instructors will consider proposals already drawn up by the Resolutions Committee. They include a single salary schedule, clarification of the retirement problem, a more efficient distribution of State school funds, provision of a system for research information and statistics, employment’ of legal counsel and revision of the organization’s constitution. The opening session starts at 7:30 p. m. Thursday in the Cadle Tabernacle. Committee reports will be heard: Friday morning, while the afternoon session will be divided into two sections. Dr. Jesse Adams of -the University of Kentucky. and Mr. Van Zeeland will speak at\the Cadle Tabernacle, while Dr. Thomas Alexander of Columbia University and Agnes Macphail, Canada’s first woman member of Parliament, will be heard in the Murat. In the evening Mayor La Guardia and Dr. John L. Davis of the Washington Square Methodist Episcopal Church in New York City will close the convention at the Cable Tabernacle, At 4:30 p. m. Thursday, district meetings will precede the general meeting at the Claypool Hotel, Severin Hotel,/ Lincoln Hotel, Cadle Tabernacle and Y. M. C. A. Departmental programs will be staged Thursday morning and evening at the John Herron Art Institute, Cadle Tabernacle, Washington High School, Y. M. C. A. Building, Masonic Temple, Spink Arms Hotel, ‘Hotel Lincoln, Meridian Street M. E. Church, Antlers Hotel; Ayres’ Auditorium, Columbia Club, Murat Temple, War Memorial Building, Central Christian Church, School 60, Shortridge High School, Claypool Hotel, Severin Hotel, -Manual High School, State Library Building, Rob= erts Park M. E. Church, Block's Auditorium, James E. Roberts School and Tech High School.
Stiver Will Speak to
Junior High Section Don F. Stiver, State Department of Public Safety director, will talk on “The State’s Program for Safe at the Junior High School Section f the Indiana State Teachers’ As-
sociation convention Thursday afternoon in the Murat Temple.
be a demonstration of choral reading by the Dramatic Club of Woodrow Wilson Junior High School of Terre Haute under the direction of Miss Ruby Fuhr. Dr. Forrest E. Long, professor of secondary education at New York University and editor of the Clearing House magazine, will talk on “Guidance in the Junior High School.”
WELLS TO SPEAK
of Belgium and the president of In-|~
ing the installation of Rose E. Boggs | -
Included on the program also will|
3 Plan Initiation at Manual
Miss Louise Maier (right) is president of the G. L. M. Club of Manual Training High School, which was to initiate freshman girls
and boys new to the school today.
Other officers are Alma Childers
(left) secretary, and Nadejda Popcheff, vice president.
SUSPECT SLAIN BY POLICE CHIEF
Louisville Boxer Resisted Arrest, Mount Vernon Officer Says.
EVANSVILLE, Oct. 24 (U. P.).— Chester L. Gainer, Louisville, professional boxer, was shot when he reportedly resisted arrest in Mt. Vernon Saturday night and died here late yesterday at Deaconess Hospital. He was 28. Police Chief Basil Cox, sad he sent a fatal bullet into Gainer after the boxer had knocked him down and beat him with a pair of handcuffs which he allegedly had taken from the officer. Patrolman Burgess Biven also was in the fight. Gainer, who authorities said was wanted on two robbery charges in Louisville, started fighting as the officers entered a house where Gainer was talking with friends. The three went into a clinch. and rolled outside in an alley where Chief Cox was knocked down. Patrolman Biven attempted to
wrestle with Gainer but the boxer
pulled away and dove for the prostrate police chief it was reported. Chief Cox saw him coming and sent a revolver bullet crashing through his spine, he said.
2 SUPERINTENDENTS NAMED FOR REMC
Times Special WASHINGTON, Oct. 24.—Appointment of two superintendents for Rural Electric Membership Corp. projects in Indiana was announced today by the Rural Electrification Administration. Elmer D. Evans, former office manager and county tabulator for the Agricultural Adjustment Administration, was appointed superintendent for the Decatur County REMC, Greensburg, and William A. Orr, former office manager for the County Agricultural Conservation Association, for the Kosciusko County REMC, Warsaw.
NINTH ALL-STAR
ANNUAL SEASON
MARTENS CONCERTS, Inc. ENGLISH 237m
8:30 P. M. OPENING CONCERT
LAWRENCE TIBBETT
BARITONE Seats on Sale Today Until P. M, Martens Office, Room 201, 8s Monu6 P. M. Theatre Box
DEADLINE FOR CORN LOANS IS EXTENDED
LAFAYETTE, Oct. 24 (U. P.).— Lee Patrick, Indiana Corn Loan supervisor, today announced the deadline for making AAA loans on 1937 corn at 57 cents a bushel has been extended from Nov. 1 to Nov. 15. Eligible Indiana farmers who did not sell their corn last spring or summer for the 50-cent a bushel loan will be allowed the 57-cent rate, if their corn is eligible as to moisture content and their cribs pass inspection, Mr. Patrick said. Those farmers who did sell their corn at the 50-cent loan, Mr. Patrick said, can either turn the corn over to the Community Credit Corp, in payment of the loan or resell it as 57 cents a bushel.
FORMER LOCAL OIL - MAN TRANSFERRED
PF. H. Fillingham, former sales manager of the Indianapolis branch
named assistant general manager
of the company at Chicago, it was announced today. Mr, present post as manager of the branch at South Bend to take the new position. He came here in 1926 as assistant sales manager and was promoted to manager in 1929. He was transferred to Evansville in 1933 and to South Bend in 1935.
KELLY ESTATE SUED A suit for $250,000 damages was on file today against the estate of Thomas J. Kelly, former Indianapolis business man. The suit was . brought by Charles Enochs, Indianapolis, who charged a breach of contract in connection with the operation of a river barge line.
of the Standard Oil Co. has been |:
in charge of the western division];
Fillingham will leave his:
in Probate Court]?
PURDUE LEADS l: U, IN AMOUNT OF PWA GIFTS
91 Colleges in 35 States Are Given Awards for Improvements.
Times Special WASHINGTON, Oct. 24.—Purdue University has received nearly a million dollars more in PWA grants than Indiana University has, according to a tabulation issued today by the Public Works Administraion.
Since the start of the 1938 PWA program, grants for improvements or new buildings have been ape proved at 91 colleges and universie ties in 35 states.
Thirteen of these projects were at Indiana schools. Purdue grants amounted to $1,716,492 and I. U. grants were $792,997. Those for Purdue were $271,584 for an engie neering building to cost $603,520; $474,545 for a $1,054,545 dormitory addition; $504,000 for a $1,120,000 music auditorium, and $466,363 for a $1,036,650 dormitory.
I. U. received four grants for new buildings at Bloomington: $24,480 for a dormitory; $213,545 for a dormitory; $495,000 for an auditorium, and $2700 for a greenhouse. ° Indiana State Teachers College, Terre Haute, received a $191,783 grant for a Student Union building’ and $165,272 for a service building,
Ball State Teachers College, Muncie, received a $42,750 grant for gymnasium improvements and $130,500 for a dormitory addition,
at MOSKINS
Bes? Values ir Towrr- On Cred
FUR FABRIC that looks like
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131 W. WASHINGTON ST.
Directly Opposite Indiana Theatep Open Saturday Evening
aa
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Engagement of
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THURS., 0CT. 27, 9 A. M.
NGLISH—WED.
_CORNELIA-OTIS
SKINNER
In a Triumphant-Return
“EDNA HIS WIFE"
fer own dramatization of the novel by
MARGARET AYER BARNES ‘Saitings by DONALD OENSLAGER © Musical Score by ELLIOTT JAcosY Costumes by HELENE PONS
ENGLISH NOV. 10-11-12. MAT. SAT.
The Most Sensational Musical Show Ever Produced in America-—Direct from its New York Triumph!
SAM H. HARRIS presents
EOM COHAN
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Starts 1:30—15 10¢c Randolph Scott
A “BULLDOG DRUMMOND’S PERIL”
i} ollywood 1500. Roosevelt
Mickey Rooney Judy Garlan Ove FINDS ANDY LL GIVE A MILLION”
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