Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 December 1939 — Page 6
PAGE 6
MOVIES
Greta Garbo and Paul Muni Featured in Week's Offerings
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
SATURDAY, DEC. 2, 1939
NOW HE WANTS TO BE ALONE:
1 {
APOLLO—"The Return of the Frog.” with Gordon Harker, Una
O'Connor. Also "The Demon Barber of Fleet Street,” Slaughter CIRCLE—"We Are Net Alone,” with Paul Muni, Jane Bryan, Flora | Robson. Also “Private Detective,” with Jane Wyman, Dick Foran. INDIANA—"Destry Rides Again,” with James Stewart, Dietrich. Also “Laugh It Off,” with Johnny Downs, LOEW'S—"Ninotchka,” with Greta Garbo, Melvyn Douglas “Joe and Ethel Turp Call on the President,” with Ann Sothern.
with Tod |
Marlene |
Also
LYRIC—Shep Fields and orchestra; Lum and Abner on stage. Also]
with Richard Arlen, Andy Devine,
“Man From Montreal” n n 5
jeven when the film gets to mean-
/ | Loew S [dering toward the end.
| It might seem odd to find the Greta Garbo has made her great- Austrian-born Mr. Muni doing an| It is showing! Englishman and the American Miss|
est picture to date | y : this week at Loew's and she is as- Etvan ro the, Lue Sustian Hau sisted by Melvyn Douglas, Ina, hentic accents of each are only Claire and a group of good but not , peginning of their flesh-and-blood, “name” players, three-dimensional portrayals. Miss Garbo comes alive In| private Detective.” with Jane “Ninotchka.” To say simply that wyman and Dick Foran, completes she laughs is understatement. She {he Circle's dual offering. —J. T. is the most live person one can, : & 8 think of. Somehow that is not act- | ing. It is the spark in little Greta : Gustafson that no Tolstoi effect Lyric could quite Kill Lum and Abner cum all the way It comes out in Ninotchka Ivan- frum Pine Ridge, Arkansaw (by way ovna Yakushova, the girl with a of payton, O.), to let the Indianlovely singing name of old Russia.'anolis folks see their little store this She carries the name of Comrade week at the Lyric. Yakushova, hiding the rest under & They share honors with Shep grim tailored suit Fields’ rippling rhythm. And Mr. She is in Paris fo rescue three pieiqs shares honors with his piano-
comic opera Soviet agents sent njayving songstress, Claire Nunn. Miss there to sell the Russian Crown nynn js easily the highlight of the jewels for the Soviet Government. n,cjcal portion of the stage show. | She would have been successful She can really play a low-down | except that she meets Count Leon. arorvieans piano. | She allows herself to love him. It =; 0. wha's known off-stage as! is the first breath of springlike love o.actar Lauck, and Abner, known she's had since she (ook over the ,o Norris Goff, do a typical radio cause of the Soviets. Not until ity, aqcast, with the store, the tele-| is too late does she learn that he phone and the checker board im-| is her enemy, that he is trying to portant adjuncts to the gags. | get back the jewels for the Grand " agier the “in costume” bit they | Duchess Swana take the stage in “store clothes” | The story is interesting, but tt ..4 introduce their well- known | depends on Garbo. She can be friends of Pine Ridge, Dick Hud-| sad and your heart will break. She jiacton Squire Skimp, Cedric Wee- | can be happy and a rainy day iS yng and Grandpappy Spears. The| something to be forgotten: it is only |a\,qjence was entirely responsive, | promise of tomorrow's sun especially to Master Weehunt,| can be deliriously hysterical and] ‘played to the last embarrassed bow you will guffaw. She can be drunk py pum. and you will be intoxicated. If you're a radio listener, you'll| Mr. Douglas is competent, whim- |e}, joy" hearing the Pine Ridge char | sical and man-of-the- worldly. The acters in the flesh; if you're not movie itself is funny. you'll enjoy seeing the show that The other movie is Damon Run- made a million people laugh. van's “A Call On the President,” | Danny Gay plays a competent with Ann Sothern. —H. M. | jitterbug trumpet, a new way of say--n ing he is very hot on the horn. . Beverly Hull, 13-year-old IndianCircle
apolis eccentric dancer and con- { tortionist. makes her professional Two uncommonly good perform- debut on the stage. ances by Paul Muni and Jane| The movie is one of Universal's Bryan grace the poignant, if rather new Richard Arlen-Andy Devine co-long-winded and sometimes im-|starrers. Called “The Man From plausible story which James Hilton | Montreal,” it's about fur traders and tells in the Cjrcle’s “We Are Not hijackers in the North and tells Alone.” about how a Northwest Mountie gets! Mr, Hilton tells us, in short, that his man.—H. M truth is stranger than the fiction of | » vicious imaginations. His story re-| volves about mankind's unfortunate desire to believe the worst of their | fellowman, to doubt fidelity to the marriage vow where doubt is possi- | ble to turn and twist the trutk under legal scrutiny until it seems like a monstrous falsehood. Specifically, the plot
Indiana
James Stewart, who just took Mr Jefferson Smith to Washington, now buckles on his guns, leaps to| horse, and takes Thomas Jefferson | | Destry to Bottleneck, the wildest of concerns Wild frontier towns. And though David Newcome, a patient, kind he wears six-shooters and a neckerEnglish physician: his obtuse, un- Chief in the Indiana's “Destry Rides sympathetic and neurotic wife Jes- | Again” he still is Mr. Stewart sica; a little Austrian dancer named | Being Mr. Stewart means being Leni, and the Newcomes' sensitive ye Smith, young Mr. Kirby of young son, Gerald. ‘You Can't Take It With You,” and
Jessica's nagging has reduced the all the other shy young men that boy to near-hysteria when Leni|the lanky actor has portrayed. Just comes into the household. She is a DOW James does it remains a myshomeless youngster whom Dr. New- tery. But he digs into that bag of come has met as a patient when she |Ingratiating tricks again and again, tried to commit suicide, Taken on and his loyal following loves it. as governess, she immediately works| As for “Destry Rides Again it wonders with Gerald. But the New-|Vas a vehicle for Tom Mix in its| comes’ neighbors plant suspicion in |1ast screen incarnation. But that | Jessica's mind. She demands that Stalwart wouldn't know the old | the girl be discharged and, when Sagebrush opry. It now has a cork- | her refuses. takes Gerald to her ing cast which puts its tongue in| brother's home. |its collective cheek, chaws on Sone
The hysteria of August, 1914, hbignt new lines, and really goes to
strikes the Newcomes' English ham- |") * ¢ plot, it's the same one let. So David fleas JO J6IS en which has been serving since the | on his bicycle to the nearest train.| oc’ Broneho Billy Anderson. A: . . i . Jigany hie Bead, coming Joe, such, it need not detain us long. If as tpy ? aE vou like your Westerns straight mother's headache pills and an- jae is a dandy. An- if vou don't other bottle of poison in his father’s yo .11 be able to find “Destry Rid : nursery. He crams all the tablets jo... doing a swell satire on rt in the one bottle. Jessica dies that pe night, as David and Leni are riding Somehow . | Somehow, the players do everv-
to the train { a |thing with a straight face and still
The evidence, of course, is damning. And to keep his son from he-|MADAEe fo spoof the daylights out of the picture, in a subtle sort of
ing “psychologically scarred” by the Wa court proceedings, Dr. Newcome re- > fuses to have the boy called as a oS for a few cheers directed at witness. The two are sentenced to Marlene Dietrich La Dietrich. death. And only in a brief last after too many seasons in the hotSeetnd Goes Leni confess het love | Houses of glamour, has come back and David realize his own. David he} OW Dreeny. TC ay medium. gives her his first and last Kiss, | Unquestionably, she has the pretcomforts her with the thought that | ie derpinnung nd the un: at the moment they die, thousands Re ging pi CE in Holly weod. of others throughout the world will " b RY ie dance nail gal, A be dying with them. “We are not oc, 20 Yo best advantage. The pi | result would melt a celluloid collar I find it hard to believe that any-| at 3 piece. one, saint or sinner, would await Of course you have seen and | death as Dr. Newcome does. with heard of the fight which Marlene | no more anxiety nor excitement and Una Merkel stage. Well, the | then as if he were waiting for a skull-cracking is all it's eracked up street car. But Mr. Muni makes him (‘0 be. It makes the Russell-God-believable, and holds the interest dard go in “The Women" look like
ee —— —. a pillow fight. NOW! 235¢ UNTIL 8 To keep things moving, the cast | jalso has Charles Winninger, Mischa | | Auer, Brian Donlevy, Billy Gilbert. | Allen Jenkins and others, including | the usually staid Samuel Hinds as | the top-hatted, plug-chawin' mavor. All of them, from the stars on | down, would rather steal a scene! than eat. Under George Marshall's | expert direction, they collaborate on | | some I8-carat hokum which is a joy. Only a sourpuss can miss a good | time with “Destry.” To complete the bill, he Indiana also has “Laugh It Off” a saga of | four aging chorus girls who are still | looking for social security in the bald-headed row.—J. T. CI
1,200 Seats 30¢ After 6
Read the Review on This Page—Then Hurry te Laugh With—
Apollo
Don't be frightened by all that blood and thunder the Apollo management is handing out with their Edgar Wallace horror double-fea- | ture. The movies are surprisingly | good mystery stuff. | One of them is called “The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.” It has a barber with itching fingers whose favorite phrase is: “My dear sir, you have a lovely throat for the razor.’ | With that beginning there's noth- |
GARBO. NINOTCHKA
Recording Contest Tonight LHL HN OI J. Saye LIS SNe JOY
COME UP AND MAKE
JA RECORD ter Welcome. Beers: Nigh
Ww and Ethel Turp on the President”
| cago {story some way,
Maybe Gayelord Hauser wishes he hadn't made those wisecracks,
HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 2 (NEA) — outspoken diet expert of HollyMr. Hauser wants to be alone. The | wood, Vienna and the Swiss Alps. Garbo influence seems to have Reported to be the new Don
made its impression on the once ! Juan in the life of the mysterious
NEICHBORHOODS
Lost Articles Are Problem To Movie Houses in Winter.
With winter weather around the corner now is a good time to think about Lost and Found departments at the neighborhood houses. The two most unusual articles found in recent months at the neighborhood houses are a baby bottle half full of milk, found by Jim Kennedy at the Ritz, and a | — —— . pair of shoes left at the Rivoli. The general run is scarfs, hats, gloves, overshoes and women's belts. Each house has a different system of getting rid of the articles. Most of them hold the articles a couple of months. The Cantor houses make a listing of all things found and after three months, if theyre not called for, give them to the Salvation Army. Other houses have similar charities. & 4
The week-end calendar follows: AVALON — Tonight: Alp oughbleds Don't Cry" : 4 AR dy.’ Tomorrow : Lady "ihe Tropies” and “Frontier Marshal.’ BELMONT-—Tonight: “Everything on Ice” and ‘Western Caravans.’ Tomorrow through Tuesday: ‘They Shall Music” and “Dancing Coed.’
CINEMA--Tonight: “The Man in jhe Iron Mask’ and ''‘Sorority House morrow through Tuesday: “Dust Be My Destiny” and ‘Thunder Afloat. DAISY—Tonight: ‘Coast Guard” and “Wanderer of the Wasteland." Tomorrow and Monday; I'he Rains Came” and “Parents on Trial
EMERSON — Tonight ‘Beau nd ‘Day the Bookies et, through Wednesday Each Dawn and ‘Thunder Afloa ESQUIRE--Tonight: and ‘Four Fetahers through Wednesday “Dust Destiny’ and “Thunder Afloat.’
FOUNTAIN SQUARE donight through Tuesday: Hollywood Cavalcade” and I'he Escape GRANADA-—Tonight The Old Maid" Hobby."
HAMILTON —Tonight "Stanley and Livingstone’ and Dav the Bookies Went, I'omorrow through Wednesday. In Name Only” and "‘Rlackmatil IRVING—' Chicken Wagon Famille" Tomorrow through Tuesday Holly. wood Cav alcade * and “All Quiet on the Western Fron MECCA Tonight; “Frontier Pony "and “Island of Lost Men’ show tonight Gambling ! Tomorrow through ,, Women” and ‘Titans D
Tomorrow through
"Timber Stampede’ 4 Only” and “The
Tuesday In Name Underpun.” RITZ-—Tonicht and tomorrow wood Cavalcade” and ‘‘Chicken Family RIVOLI—-Tonicht and tomorrow lywood Cavalcade and They Have Music Las t Sho tonight Before SAR ST, ATR Tonight and tomorrow “The Zora Hour’ an Honor of the West Tomorrow and Monday Wizard of O2 Blondie Takes a Vacation.” SHERI J The Rai a 8 Came and My Destiny morrow through Tuesday Phunder Afloat’ and ''Nurse Edith Cavell. SPEEDWAY-— Tonight News Is Made at Night” and "Man from Sundown.’ Tomorrow through Tuesday: ‘The Rains Came ' and “'Ladv and the Mob STATE—Tonight Saint in London" and ‘Mysterious r Midnight show tonight: "Gamblin® With Souls.” Tomorrow through Tuesday: ‘Each Dawn I Die’ and "Honeymoon in Ball." STRAND — Tonight and tomorrow: ‘Hollywood Cavalcade’ and “They Shall Have Music.’ STRATFORD -— Tonight: “California Frontier’ and “Trappe in the Ry Tomorrow through ‘uesday And, Livingstone” and “Naughty
‘Tacoma Tonight: ‘The ‘These Glamour Girls." Tuesday: ‘Man in 1d “Hawaiian Nights ALB(C BT T-—-Tonight Five Little Pepors ‘Blackmail. Tomorrow through Tuesday Man Iron Mask and Dust Be My Destiny." TUXEDO--—Tonight: “In Name Only" and Mr, Moto Takes a Vac ation Tomorrow through Wednesday; Dancing Co-ed’ and ‘Each Dawn I Die. UPTOWN - Tonight Dancing Co-ed’ and “Dust Be My Destiny.’ omorrow through Wednesday ‘Hollywood Cavalae and ‘Man in the Iron Mask." GUE—-Tonight ifth Avenue Girl” Thunder, Aftoat Tomo, ow through sda The Rains Came’ and
‘Wizard of Oz" Tomorrow through Have Music” and
“Holly Wagon
Hol Shall “Love
”
of
Have
Stanley But
Hurricane Tomorrow the Iron
Geste'’ in the Tomorrow
I Die”
“Winter Carnival” f'omorrow
dit Wedne Blac kmail.’ ARING “Tonight and Quick Millions.” Friday Thev Shall Cowboy Quarterback.’
tomorrow
and and “Evervbhodyv's
"HEN DOES IT START?
APOLLO
“The Return of the Frog." Gordon Harker, Una O Connor 12 the 2, * ig 1047
Street,’ with Tod Slaughter, 1:35, 4:10, 6:45 and 9:20, C RCL E We Are Not Alone” with Paul ' Jane Biyan, Flora Robson, at , 3:30, 6:45 a 10 “Private Detective, man, Dick Foran, at ne 25, and 9
Ex.
Mid - w it th Tubsday of
with at he Fleet ORIENTAL Tonizht: at 11, Tropies’ and Charlie Chan on Treas ure Island.’ Tomorrow and Mondav Pie ) Rains Came” and “Home on the rairie PARAMOU NT — Tonight; Lady” and Mountain To morrow and Monday he Star, Maker" and Blondie Takes a Theat “i KER—Tonight through | The Women 6000 Enemie REX—T ‘Souls _At Sea”
"Lady of the
ina nama
(Rhythm with Jane Yi
2:35, 5 Monday ant 0d, INDIANA S— “Destry Rides Again,’' with James Stewart, Marlene Dietrich, Charles Avinninger, 12:42, 3:47, 6:52
Mae h It Off’ with Constance Moore, Ro nnny Downs, at 11:39, 2:44, 5:49 and 8:54
__and
at and
ing for him to do but drop a half dozen of Fleet Street's better citizenry through a trapdoor and re-| lieve them of their very best pearls. | The locale, naturally is London, ! (and the time is about 200 years ago. | F'od Slaughter, billed as “The Hor- | President,” with Ann Sothern, Lewis [ror Man of Europe,” plays the Stone, at 11, 2:15, 5:35 and 8:50. bar | LYRIC fum and Abner; Shep isles 4 orchestra, on stage at 2 5:05. 7:16 and 9:25, “Man From Montreal” ard Arlen, Andy Devine 1:42, 3:52, '6:02, 8:12 and |
LOEW'S “Ninotehka,'”* with Greta Garbo, and. 10. Douglas, at 12:15, 3:30, 6:50
and ‘Joe and Ethel Tur Call on the
“The Return of the Frog" is based | on the “India Rubber Man.” Tts| locale is also London, its time al-| most contemporary, Inspector Elk comes out of complacent semi-retirement to round! up the cohorts of the Frog. who is doing a numbe* of nasty turns on {the Thames, robbing banks. blowing up telephone booths and kill[ing a number of innocent persons. Mr. Ek, with the aid of a Chitough who creeps into the winds up the case (in great style. There is also a beaut girl in the movie, Rene Ray. Not meant to be amusing, but satisfying nevertheless, are the bits by the Chicagoan. He specaks English in a manner never heard in England and certainly never heard in the Middle Wegt. You never listened to more “O. K's, “swells.” “you bet's,” or “joints, dumps and dives” in your life.—H. M. i m———— EY
“Skate for Health” RIVERSIDE
AMUSEMENT PARK
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Skating Daily 2P. M. 8P. M
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LESTER HUFF sy
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Also Orchestra
Tes) Thur, Sat, Sun. Eves,
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o wan
GIRLS |
Matinee 2:15 Two Shows at Night 7
—By HARRY MORRISON
Swede, Bengamin Gayelord Hauser prefers the seclusion of his Seattle hotel to affirming that he had placed a diamond on the Garbo ring finger. Earlier he had denied they were anything but “just friends.”
Mr. Hauser once told a New York newspaper, on the basis of his first meeting with the star, that Greta Garbo had “large hips, fat calves and thick ankles.” He refuses to answer calls inquiring whether the nutritious vegetable diets hrought a change in this condition, or new found love makes him see things in a different light.
Mr. Hauser came to fame a few vears ago when he began prescribing diets for Hollywood stars, He claimed to have helped Mae West, Alice Fave and Jean Har- ® low with his menu miracles, but he admitted he could do nothing about Myrna Loyv's freckles, Two years ago he was investigated by the American Medical Association when he was indorsing products manufactured by a “health” company. Products of this company, found to contain seaweed, alfalfa, beet and rhubarb leaves, were declared misbranded and fraudulent by the U. 8S. Food and Drug Administration in 1937.
The A. M. A. declared in its journal that Mr. Hauser was “not a doctor of medicine, not a Viennese and certainly not a scientist.” He has now cast off the title “Dr.” used when he was head of a Chicago health school in 1926, and once admitted he didn’t “know beans about medicine,” the Journal reported,
Mr. Hauser is a personable looking, youngish man of 33 with a leading-man stage presence and a flair for the Baron Munchausen type of dialect (“smashed pota=toes” for “mashed potatoes”).
8 TO . M. NOW NIGHTLY MIDNITE § TONIGHT
STARTS 11:30 P. M,
COLORED | JITTERBUGS
130 M. GENE RT ADMISSION 40¢ MANUFACTURERS’ BLDG.
STATE FAIRGROUNDS
GENERAL ADMISSION 400
This Ad and 150 Service Charge for Each Person Will
ADMIT TWO (2) To General Admission Sections Good Until 10 P. M, Sat, Dec. 2 (Not Good for Midnight Show.)
IN PERSON Creator of Rippling GLI
A SHEP FIELDS
EXIT
Bete Schecoe » Romance With the Mounties! “MAN FROM | MONTREAL”
Richard Arlen : Andy Devine
ER ——
hvy-\E
STARTING AT SATURDAY MIDNIGHT SHOW—HELD OVER ©
DOLORES SHAW—Queen of the Dance With
N BLUE
and FAST STEPPING CHORUS
and 9 £ M. Continuous on Sunday
w
There Is a Treat at Murat Tonight— Feuermann and Interesting Program
come into his own. And it is a
clever recollection of the rollicking fugue from his “Schwanda.” Not only is it reminiscent in form and tune; it even has a polka rhythm to it. Nobody in this day of swing and jive can touh Mr. Weinberger as a polka producer, Which may be why the applause crashed around the orchestra's
By JAMES THRASHER
THERE IS A BOUNTY of good things in store for the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra's audience at the Murat tonight. is the appearance of Emanuel Feuermann, that prince among cellists, as the season's first soloist. Likewise, Mr, Sevitzky has compiled a pro- | gram of beautiful, familiar music and interesting compositions Which
are new to our ears. Mr, Feuermann always is a welcome visitor. And on this oceca-
he is giving of his time and talent with more than the traditional generosity. A Minor Concerto, a beloved work brimming with typical Schumannesque lyricism, the soloist is play-
a Dvorak Rondo and Tchaikowskys Pezzo Capriccioso. At yesterday afternoon's concert, Mr. Feuermann right to a place among the world's few great cellists. His are the attributes of the consummate artist, a tone of luscious yet virile beauty, a technic that masters difficulties with an olympian ease, a flawless sense of style and phrasing. Throughout the cello’'s somewhat awkward compass, his playing retains a clarity of articulation and a tonal richness. And one is so accustomed to a hit-or-miss intonation in the instrument's upper reaches (even when played by famous virtuosos) that Mr, Feuermann’'s unfailing accuracy deserves a special word of admiration, 4 » THE TWO SHORT solos were of slight musical weight, perhaps, but entirely enjoyable, Though unpretentious, they bore evidence of the masterly talent that created them, and under the visiting artist's ministrations, they partook of an added charm. The Tschaikowsky work was new to Indianapolis, as were the Weinberger Variations and Fugue on “Under the Spreading Chestnut Tree,” which had their first performance anywhere in New York a little more than a month ago. And Anis Fuleihan's "“Fiesta” received (its world premiere, no less, at yesterday's performance. On more familiar ground were the program's first two numbers, the Overture to Berlioz’ “Ben=venuto Cellini” and the Mozart G Minor Symphony, Mr. Sevitzyk according the first the highly dramatic reading which it demands. And the symphony emerged in a careful and devoted interpretation, with judi=cious tempos and an excellent sense of formal and tonal architecture, Mr, Fuleihan's new work is in= teresting and, as “Fiestas” go, original. It is as far removed from Debussy’'s “Fetes” as it is from Converse's “California: Festival Scenes,” heard here a fortnight ago. The composer is not always trying to catch the danc-
graphie accuracy. Rather, description is impressionistic. Italian comic in spirit
akin to an overture,
is opera harmonically. in broad melody, which the aver«
despite Mr. Fuleihan's extensions of diatonic harmony. ” ” ”
“FIESTA” Mr. Sevitzky, who likewise con-
sion he is doubly welcome, since |
Besides the Schumann | ing a second group consisting of |
reaffirmed his |
ing in the street with a photo- | his |
The opening’s bustling busyness |
if not | The piece abounds |
age listener should readily enjoy, |
IS DEDICATED to |
ears like thunder at the work's conclusion. This comment could not he called complete without another mention of the orchestra's splendid playing. What Mr. Sevitzky has done with his young players in this short time is no small miracle, Their playing is cleaner, less constrained and more inci sive, The strings are gaining a greater sonority. Full-bodied climaxes come when they are called for. This progress, too, in Mr. Sevitzy's conducting, The players beneath his baton nn longer are a strange instrument In consequence his interpreta- | tions, in fact, even his platform manner, reveal a new poise and assurance which should increase as time goes on.
Among them
ducted the initial performance of the composer's First Piano Concerto in Philadelphia. Doubtless you know the story of how Mr. Weinberger happened to write his new variations. They were inspired by a newsreel of Britain's democratic King George VI singing the old folk song, “Under the Spreading Chestnut Tree,” with a group of youngsters in a boy's camp. So Mr. Weinberger, lately come from the late Czechoslovakia, decided to write variations on the tune which would be as English as roast beef and Yorkshire pudding. He titled them “Her Majesty's Virginal,” “The Madrigalists,” “The Black Lady” (the “dark lady” of Shakespeare's sonnets), “The Highlanders,” “Pastorale,” “Mr. Weller Sr. discusses widows with his son, Samuel Wel- | ler, Esq.” and “Sarabande for Princess Elisabeth, Electress Palatine and Queen of Bohemia” (also daughter of England's James I), Mr. Weinberger has plenty of precedent in his musical tribute to a strange land. Mendelssohn, Liszt, Tschaikowsky, Strauss and several others have sung Italy's praises in an acceptable manner, and a host of composers, including Rimsky-Korsakov, Chabrier, Debussy and Ravel have done as much for Spain. But somehow, the beef and pudding don't seem to be among Mr. Weinberger's better recipes.
1S
reflected
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INDIAN A
Marlene
»y 7» FIRST OF ALL, the theme itself is not too pregnant with possibilities. And the variations, | linked together by some very | banal piano interludes, show no | great ingenuity, though they are brilliantly orchestrated. Only in the fugue does Mr. Jenveger
(HTH. TTT SLL Downs
AT 1 1558 "0 BETTE DAVIS, “THE OLD MAID" AT 10:31=1:46—5:01—8:16 Artie Shaw and Band “DANCING COED" “Hollywood Cavaleade’” TOMOITOW. ..Cnicion Wagon. amily”
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“DUST BE MY DESTINY”
Wallace Beery—Chester Morris
“THUNDER AFLOAT”
Tyrone Power, J. Garfield,
SUN.
ON 1 FR
Norma Shearer “THE WOMEN. Walter Pidgeon “6000 ENEMIE
| CINEMA "i. & Mat. Daily Cont. from 1:30 Aus 15¢c—Children 10c Before 6
| uis Hayward—Joan Bennett |
“MAN IN THE TRON MASK” : ATER
| Anne Shirley “SORORITY HOUSE” | Durethy Lamon “HURRICANE”
Sunday—John Garfield—Priscilla yane yvres—Lana Turner
“DUST BE MY DESTIN Wallace Beery “Thunder at? “THESE GLAMOU R GIRLS" Sunday—Louis Hayward—Joan Bennet
SOUTH SIDE “MAN IN THE IRON MASK"
GRA N a | A Plus “HAWAIIAN NIGHTS”
1045 Virginia Ave.
TONITE Starts at 6 > SUNDAY Adults to 6 15¢
George ° Bette BRENT DAVIS
““The Old Maid"
Plust IRENE RICH “EVERYBODY'S HOBBY”
~=Lucile Ball--Allan Lane
“PANAMA LADY”
—Gene Autrv—Smiley Burnett
“MOUN TAIN RHY THM"
CONTINUOUS FROM 1:45 TODAY Jane Withers “ ke Wa on Family® Dead End Kids * ITCHEN
h Plus “All Quiet on the Western Front” 733 N. Noble
The Mecca Roy Rogers
" DN R PONY EXPRESS" ™" SLAND OF LOST MEN
MIDNIGHT SHOW
TECHNICOLOR at 11:30—Don’t Miss It!
Kond Micky Mouse «GAMBLING WITH SOULS”
“The Escape’ and Micky Mouse d ~—Joan Crawford—Norma Sheare? Sunday HEplihien “TITANS OF THE DEEP”
g— —— 4020 E, New York T UXEDO ’ Carole Lombard rv Grant “IN NAME ONLY” “MOTO TAKES A VACATION" Sunday “DANCING CO-ED” “EACH DAWN I DIE”
Today, Sun. Mat. Today
Mon., Tues. Adults to 6 15¢ Atice INE Don AMECHE
1108 Prospect Starts at 6 Ends Tonite Adm. te All 10¢ Otto Krueger—* ‘ZERO HOUR’ Bob Baker—‘ HONOR OF WEST” New Serial Tonite SUNDAY-MONDAY
WIZARD OF 02”
——
i0c i5¢
~Judy Garland | a JR HBREDS DON'T CRY” Yo ; : and-—0 't It DY ANDY" RSE AL” Rh btah
pencer Tracv—Richard Green
«STANLEY & LIVINGSTONE” “DAY THE BOOKIES WEPT” Sunday “BLACKMAIL” “IN NAME ONLX
