Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 March 1941 — Page 18

PAGE 16 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1941

. . . . ‘| . | Greek ‘Tag | High Spots in the Downtown Field of Entertainment |Stokowski Msughsm Signed F020 ken Day'Mar. 22.» "W i EET TTY To Ald id Youth Dn In

| way run of “Arsenic and Old Lace,” HOLLYWOOD, March 13 (U. P.). Man Will Get You.” (—David ©O. Selznick, Academy

Award winning producer, has an- ems AR TENS CONCERTS, INC.

Variety Ciub to Sponsor, Sha x" ; 3 p Quits Philadelphia Orchestra nounced that W. Somerset Maugh- | Se : 3 i 3 ; . v am, British author, will write an War Relief Giving. TY » LN Rp SHE 3 For Emergency Work. | original screen play for the Pro- ; : bs ducer's hewly formed company

lane or an YAlile |v CHICAGO. March 13 (U. P).—| Mr. Selznick said Mr. Maugham Basso of Metropolitan Opera Plans for an Indianapolis “tag will come to Hollywood within the yy lah JPY

av” be helt the 'w J ie ot CF A 3 eopol Kowski n + of day” to help the war-stricken peo- RE = X ; : y * Ei I nex month or six weeks to. begin ENGLISH THEATER X EC oo ; |the Philadelphia Symphony Orches- work. *

ple of Greece were launched today | 3} ; 3 by the Variety Club : } : | i : tra, arrived in Chicago yesterday | ! Although Mr. Maugham never has SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 3 P.M. A week from next Saturday. 4 and told reporters thet he is retiring doris chia! EN Im, $2.10. $2.20. $2.35. $3.30. Seats Now. March 22, young women contri-| [irom that organization to devote his je, edapte to films, among them Martens Ticket Office efforts to training “the youth of our “Of Human , Bondage.” “Rain” and Rm. 201—33 Monument Circle LI, 8921 tioned over the city from 8 a. m. | country for music.” The Letter to 6 p. m. They will take dona-| J : : The white-haired conductor would | tions al nd contributors will be] § Si 3 \ Ts RS : k oy not reveal his plans further. G oh Cs ye) Won ) Th 3 i iE i 3 5 WE “I'd rather not talk while I'm in! and Civilization ’ : = BF . Fl - SR : 3 . Chicago,” he said The drive is nation-wide, a proj i : § Mr. Stokowski put his hands in ect of the am isements industry di-| § as : ; g front of his face and threatened to pon sr ons a : PF & Ah SS yo ! . |have a newspaper photographer arriety Club. it will be directed bv rested when the photographer tried Dick Frank, chairman; Ken Col-| NY : a i ; \ kat : : to take his picture lins, co-chairman; Mark Wolf, gen- | SS b ! - — 2 BS 4 Sa lke | This statement was given out by |

buting their services will be sta-!

eral co-ordinator; Harold Marshall,| 3 3 : ; i B IMr. Stokowski: publicity d tor Bar Claude Mc- ; Ea i 3 ; i L i A a BroRowsil { Kean con i i . | “I wrote the board of directors] Butler ni al about two weeks ago thanking them | readv have pledged their services {for offering me a contract for next and several other groups Will help season, but in view of the national in the one d tageing ’ . {emergency which daily is growing the Girl Scouts (more serious, I would like for a peAdolph Zu Ror of Hollywood is hia] {riod to hold myself free and availtional chairman and money de-] ha lable to serve the Government and rivec fro m the campaign will be jour country.” turned r by him to the Greek | He said he had seven more con‘War Rel und. All expenses of {certs with the Philadelphia orchesthe “tag dav” h re to be borne |tra, with which he has been associthe Variety Club, all receipts be- | (ated for 29 years. He said he had ing given to Greek relief | had no differences of opinion with {the directors of the orchestra re-

NE We Th Ny OE ; E [cently. AID FUND FORMED RRR : § a § wu y E ; | Mr. Stokowski came to Chicago HOLLYWOOD, March 13 (U A \ 8 3 Sa aay Rb k {to hear the final eliminations for ~The “British Distressed Areas, 8 ON SEE : ’ Al ? E [the all-American youth orchestra d” has been incorporated in N \ } Le 3 on - which will tour North America in ywood Ww ith Constance Bennett : i D Ne i aa 3 J : E {May and June. He will conduct the Douglas Fairbanks Sr ; F ag 3 3 &@ he {youth orchestra.

n among charter members, The gro up

iF. Ly ANTIQUES FAKE|

HOLLYWOOD, March 13 (U. P). > mt | a LN \ : s ; | —Actress Jean Parker has decided In "LAST DAY! « a 3 : ; : W—_— » [not to furnish her new home with | [ “Son of Monte Cristo” | a EN N a « . X° her antiques. | 3 3 } NS She invited a house guest, an authority on antiques, and learned {that her prize collection was not antique, at all, but a fake. Worse, & she was told that a table she had § not considered worth keeping was |a valuable specimen

“Keaping Company”

1. Charley Grapewin and his irrational Georgia clan stay for another week at the Indiana in “Tobacco Road.” 2. Margaret Sullavan and Glenn Ford contemplate the uncertainty of their quarters in “So Ends Our Night,” opening tomorrow at ! Loew's. | ks 5 3 oh 3. Papa Robert Benchley explains a thing or two to daughter | » § *MARJORIE RAMBEA Deanna Durbin in “Nice Girl” at the Circle. PETE DAVIS VOTED | Be: ul. : v ' . and ano ALL-AMERICA GIRL'|

4. Ray Kinney of the Hawaiians snuggles comfortably among four of the five Aloha Maids, who are scheduled for some grass-skirting at Andrews « Slim Summerville + Word Bond

the Lyric. U'ime: Special , Ro £ : Grant Mitchell » Ze ffie Tilbury +Screen Play by Si | HOLLYWOOD, March 13 —Bette ; Nunnally Johnson + Directed by JOHN FORD Davis is the all-America girl in Wie | Produced by DARRYL F. ZANUCK

RL ! | f the Stephens Coll FOR THE MILLIONS fo 5 g HOLLYWOOD | Spinion or The” Stephens Colles

who have found in Erich 3 La As the winner in the survey on! \ 8 NE NN " the Columbia, Mo., s. Mis R l d N Rd You'd Never Guess It, But the Studios Davis will = Poe in 0 Added Attraction emarque s novels a deep- x GN A . . : . award when the Stephens girls pay -_ re Having Hard Time With War Films WENDELL WILLKIE

| Hol lywood a visit next Sunday. The

| ; RIC R reaching heart-thrill.. Ta PPR a a = | presentation will be made by Maude | REP nN MA Ho Rh By PAUL HARRISON | Adams, now a Stephens professor. | star of "A Star is Born’ RE 3 3 vy PAUL H! SON ————————————— | as Steiner »» Tee . MARGARE SULLAVAN : Times Xnecial Writer | . | 3 v rr » N ’ star of The Moet Storm y | HOLLYWOOD, March 13.—After all the talk about defense com- ALBERT NOW STAR il as Ruth. 3 4 ror a " : ¢ : 3 mittees and Goverment co-ordinators and assurances of mutual aid in : ; 2 x y of E . star. ™ § | picturing stories of preparedness you'd never guess the troubles Holly- icaRvalion 0] ace ee Pear FOR THE MILLIONS § | wood is having with simple things such as training camps and tanks. |e" Sone Fa lc Tl 1 he 4 | 3 | Time was when a location manager could grab a telephone and get rin & the Studio's wr of stars ISL, -_ a hattleship or a squadron of bombers or a _Tegiment of infantry for a ter BY a to 21 the hi Ba ; ; : new movie. But not any more. It's ——_——" vecord ) Migliest on the fateful meeting of these i |all right if a studio wants to film | Hope, although right now it isn't — — Da —_—_. ee . 3 R i atmosphere shots of routine events aple to buv enough lumber to com- STARTING TOMORROW 3 T_ i 1at flying bases or army camps, but plete the barracks out on the

at stars..: ' ) : great IS..3 {there's nothing in the schedule studio ranch.

who have eagerly awaited

5 he ® i about holding up activities while a ® 8&8 = | - ’ Re : S e buck private ‘eas PATTI »» ead 3 handsom wh B : lo ih rea Re UNIFORMS can be rented from » { | paint plays a comedy scene with a 0s 2 | cutie identified as the general's costume supply houses, and the . - i 1! To : o : “'® company arsenal has lots of old ne FRANCE yy looks as if the studios ‘will Springfield rifles. After checking | S DEE 0 S Et | So it as if the st > it ; i ot t “Wells Paras” FOR THE MILLI N GLE FORD : : | have to build their own canton- off ibe ig prop gota i eh the screen’s newest romantic ments, hire their own soldiers, uni- | Ment began looking around for a

. J - y +» hac 99 tr rd | as Marie who are ever-searching for discovery, as Kern. i | form and arm them. At least that's | /ADK- Republic has a 22-year-old : 4 one which wouldn't do even if it

lee, . : i what Paramount is doing for | ny a the pertect love story. EER i | “Caught in the Draft,” with Bob could be made to run ; BIG SISTER

Metro has remnants of a Russian model which it used in “Comrade was stage Crasy ...

X.” It was a Hollywood version as-|

(94/5 FIRST FUSER | | Bic Oromo | 2a EE Ki SISTER

NE aa } NN ’ d by Andre Tolstoi, a technical ROCKEFELLER CENTER vided by THEATER | was boy crazy... . . built over a Diesel tractor,

~ RO adviser, the armored body being VE TRIUMPH! > Fg Something Entirely New First, Paramount put in calls to | POOR PAPA

ES A ( - Ly u ana Chrysler, asking if the studio | TI ¥ | | 0 please could rent, borrow or even | b N 1 We 0 buy a tank—a good, fast jugger- | 25¢ to 6. ® 1200 Seats 30¢ RN : { \ naut capable of knocking down a A After 6. PLUS TAX ANNA STEN i 10 LD few trees and prop buildings. The | Oo ea/Nia the man vou love Yo hate, glamourous ster in her ! manufacturers thought it was a rib hide] HY TO oo : Entire Original Cast of 100 at first. When the studio insisted |

Sonja Henie-Arthur Wirtz present outfits such as Baldwin Locomo-

| . . tive, American Car and Foundry, | was going crazy...

ERICH VON STROHEIM

A ——— "

as Brenner greatest screen role!

it really needed a tank, the reply | Beautiful Girls and Costumes (was, “Brother, you aren't the only | 8 JOIN IN El, FU N—

anil i SS i one! Everv tank we make is] ani ; i |} WITH JOE CO00K AND 1 stamped and sealed for somebody's | 3 \ ela FV Pe : : STARRING army.” NEL ; ¥ : 3 % Hedi Stenuf * “Skippy” So finally Paramount followed LoL present i * Edwina Baxter Metro's example, except that it was : § Biades % Jo Ann Dean || able to buy the chassis of an ex-|

% Caley Sisters % LaVerne perimental machine built in Indi-

% Atkinson and % Rona and ana. With no plans except some | Haines Cliff Thaell pictures torn from current maga- * Mary Jane Yeox Gene Berg zines, studio workmen began to a make the superstructure out of ND ure reverything from old automobile WORLD'S GREATEST frames to hunks of boiler plate ICE COMEDIANS They're still at it, riveting and

welding and cussing. The whole * Freddie Trenkler job will cost well over $10,000 but * Fritz Dietl % Lee and Slagle } should pay for itself in rentals for | * Dr. Douglas Nelles future war pictures n n n

and

THE SENSATIONAL VETERANS of the last war look

too old to be 1941 conscriptees, FOUR BRUISERS so the studio is hiring youngsters NEW SONG HITS! Anyway, close-order drill is unlike it used to be, so the rookies are

BROADWAY NO. i being taught at $11.50 a day—half

a month's pay if they were in| BOX OFFICE HIT! service.

For Current Season Potatoes are another item hard | cise : for the picture's budget to digest. BESGRED BY A mountain of peeled spuds is re-|

starring : NORMAN BEL GEDDES quired for the old KP gag, and | since they quickly turn black] AT COST OF $225,000 under the hot lights, plenty of FREDRIC MARGARET FRANCES : fresh ones have to be on hand. Tt

Largest Icetravaganza to Ever wouldn't be so bad if they could

Appear at Indpls. Coliseum just round up some Idaho-skinners ® ® from the kitchen of nearby resMARCH 25 } 30 taurants for the job; but that 0 would send everybody in the place

Nightly 8:30 P. M. on strike. Potatoes are props, and | they must be peeled by property

win Glenn Ford + Anna Sten anc Erich Von Stroheim | messmo ats mammmig | men, 2'S187 an nour. ©

On Sale Coliseum and L. Strauss & Co.

Directed by JOHN CROMWELL - Screenplay by Talbot Jennings - From che Bs Ne cm Hen WHATTA RUN

novel “Flotsam” by Erich Maria Remarque - Released thru UNITED ARTISTS Indpls. COLISEUM i iS rE y oN | $13,500 for one movie.

Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra

PLUS THIS FINE COMEDY MIT! MA ISIE ABE SEVIER, Concer LOEW'S BIGGEST ‘DOUBLE’ SHOW! 230 P. Mosul at RP

STARTS TOMORROW [/ 8 | LAD a IGOR GORIN hii

LUT y

ALSO THE INDIANPOLIS SYMPHONIC CHOIR

14 | 3 wa 3 ANN SOTHERN ers op wo" me MABEEN CSULLNAR SE ew. San mo ror ew Tr ms LAST “TIMES TODAY—“BUCK PRIVATES” & cii'fiia? Curis

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