Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 March 1941 — Page 14
PAGE HY nmr
S—
MOVIES
Benchley Sparkles in a Cast of Stars; Loew's Has Story of Nazi Aggression.
| ——
CIRCLE—“Nice Girl?” with Deanna Durbin, Franchot Tone, Walter Brennan, Robert Stack, Robert Benchley, Helen Broderick and Ann Gillis. Also “Melody for Three” with Jean Hersholt.
INDIANA—"Tobacco Road” with Charley Grapewin, Marjorie Rambeau, Gene Tierney, William Tracy and Slim Summerville. (Second week.) Also “Play Girl” with Kay Francis and James Ellison
LOEW S—"So Ends Our Night" with Fredric March, Margaret Sullavan, Glenn Ford, Anna Sten and Erich Von Stroheim. Also “Maisie Was a Lady" with Ann Sothern. Lew Ayres, Maureen O'Sullivan and C. Aubrey Smith
LYRIC—"The Great Mr. Nobody” with Eddie Albert and Joan Leslie. Also “International Forum.” On stage, Ray Kinney and his Hawaiian Orchestra and other vaudeville
Circle
FROM THE very first scene in “Nice Girl?” you are an amused and | sometimes convulsed friend of the capricious family of Prof Oliver | Dana who is none other than our good friend Robert Benchley. The picture moved into the Circle Theater yesterday for a week's stay and it'll be too short. It isn't every day you can find such a| thoroughly amusing comedy on the screen, with such good acting and| sO many sparkling scenes = Deanna Durbin has the title role his promise of betrayal, he grabs of Nice Girl Question Mark and|his Gestapo pursuer and together proves she's a triple threat young they crash through a glass staircase lady—beauty, music and acting. She tg their death. has quite a flare for light comedy. Relief comes at last to the young | Nevertheless, Mr. Benchley sparks pnes when they see they will be, the picture from beginning to end | able to make it to America. which is one of the neatest tricks of! The film has its suspense, though| Hollywood since he has Miss Dur-inot of the “Escape” intensity, and! bin, Franchot Tone, Walter Bren-|jt has moments of excellent acting | nan, Helen Broderick and Ann Gillis and some not so excellent. Mr. | to contend with. : March capably handles the role of | Ann Gillis, you will recall, Was'a man on the verge of capitulation, | the “wonder Miss” of Tom Sawyer” stil] living for but one pathetic goal. | and “Little Men.” And Helen Brod- But the death bed scene in Berlin, | erick has been stealing comedy|where he sees his wife die as the! scenes in some of the best films Gestapo waits at the door, seemed for years, now. Whereas Mr. Bren- unfortunate ’ All is not so serious, however, on
nan recently won the Academy Award as a character actor | the Loew's screen this week, for the The introductions over, it still is gyxiliary feature is “Maisie Was 5 a great pleasure to present You a pady.” with Ann Sothern and Lew! Ayres. It's the story of a headless!
man who, as a doting professor and {woman in a sideshow and a rich
| el
The recital is Mr. Pinza's
Ezio Pinza, the Metropolitan Opera's leading basso, will appear on a Martens Concerts, Inc, recital at 3 p. m. tomorrow at English's, first Indianapolis performance.
the father of three of the most unpredictable young ladies ever as- inehriate and how they settle their! romantic differences.—F. P
sembled in one family, can give you a laugh and sketch of his character with a lifted eyebrow, a single re-| . mark, a sly wink. | Lyric Mr. Benchley perhaps is the fun- | niest when he is telling his family] IF A PREMATURE robin sets off
NEIGHBORHOOD
By David Marshall
about the various schools of soup your spring fever or travel agency eaters. Thats typically Benchley, posters give you incipient wander- | and our guess is that he wrote it lust, the Lyric is no place for you into the film himself this week. Certainly he and Miss Gillis steal] Ray Kinney's langourous music of | biggest comedy honors in their the islands is just the sort to make! sequence near the end where the you wish you were any place but in! Nice Girl Question Mark sets off a busy city. And the lovely, dark] more village gossip than any other quartet of hula exponents, the Aloha punctuation mark in histor) Maids, are as alluring as a color| What Robert Stack, Deanna's boy, travelogue friend lacks in the art of comedy, Kinney's music is much like his! himself, is furnished by his car—a native Hawaii where the mercury is super-super delux and fuller of a lazy fellow who seldom gets gump- | gadgets than a magician’s supply tion enough to move higher than 85 | store. (Incidentally. that car is very /c; lower than 55. It's a land of] talented, indeed, and we'll right leisure where the Pacific breakers | now nominate it for an Oscar when- caress the shore with the fluid grace] ever theyre due again.) of the Hula Maids’ rippling hands Now, if we've missed any and swaying grass-skirted hips. tunity to tell you, you should, if you| Among the islands you'll likely | want to be warmly amused, see find colorful palm and bamboo set-| “Nice Girl?" [tings like that behind the Kinney —J. C. [orchestra at the Lyric Silhouetted | against the Pacific sky there should| be tall, slim tenors like Gece! Kainapau to sing “Sweet Leilani” and "To You, Sweetheart, Aloha” or | warthy Alfred Apaka singing “Down | Where the Trade Winds Blow” and |
of movies is the nation's
autos) 7 o'clock,
houses get first crack at the films 42 days following the downtown showing , The life of a current attraction before it plays all over the nation is less than a vear. . . . Some are held in reserve for repeat bookings. the rest are scrapped for a $3,000,000 annual silver nitrate recovery. A reissue (different from a repeat) is a brand new print off the master print. . . . Film travels about 90 feet a minute through a projection machine with 16-18 separate frames making up one foot of film. . . . The machine speed is governed by the sound thus a “speed up’ as in the old silent days to get a quick turnover of patrons is impossible, . . . A film “master print” is a negative, that in the projector is a positive. . . . Families of dead stars sometimes buy up all the master prints of that star's pictures. . .. Some theater operators believe third-dimensional pictures would act as a rejuvenator for the industry. The sound on the film runs ahead of the picture because light travels faster than sound. Gloves, scarfs, pins, pockethaoks and trinkets are most often lost in theaters and most patrons don't even remember that they had the article so they seldom call the theater. Lost articles are kept two months and then given to the Salvation Army.
oppor-
Indiana
CHARLEY GRAPEWIN and his degenerate Georgia crackgy family play on for a second week at the “Moon Over Burma. Indiana in “Tobacco Road.” “Play| Then, too, there must be gaver Girl” stays. too. moments as the ones when one of | There is an added feature, how- the Aloha Maids tells you in dance ever, and it stars Wendell Willkie injahout a “cock-eved mayor” of one another of the “Information Please” | of the island cities or “Hilo Hattie,” 3 shorts. | who must have been quite a gal. Should you be there long you | doubtless would hear the pulsating! | war songs, shouting songs, ancient chants and the old native rhythm songs which Kinney plays better | than either the Hawaiian love songs | [or modern American music. | Though most of Hawaii is rest-| ful there should be times of horse-| play of the Emerald Sisters type,| the skittishness as presented by | Walter Chambers, one of the most| versatile of recent WFBM Indiana Talent Parade Winners, or of the! {absolute zaniness of The Three! Pitchmen.—D. M.
|
Loew's
LUCKILY, THE screen is the closest come thus far to the horrors of war. Starting with “Escape,” the film industry has attempted to portray to America what happens to civilians abruptly routed out of their domes-| tic routine. Whether they're war propaganda or whether they're not, such films have portraved in graphic detail, stories no more horrible than| those told by every day's front page Among the latest of these portrayals is “So Ends Our Night,” the
motion picture most of us have monotonous
” ” ” THERE ARE SEVERAL pictures which won Academy Award honors now making the rounds of the neighborhood houses. “Thief of Bagdad,” which was voted tops for special effects, art direction (color), and color cinematography, is on tonight at the Strand,
'Sea Wolf' to Get tomorrow through Wednesday at
* screen adaptation of the Erich Re- Preview at Sea the Zaring and Rivoli, and tomor-
marque story, “Flotsam.” The movie] opened yesterday 5 row through Tuesday is at the Herein is the story of those Eu-| HOLLYWOOD, March 15 (U. P.).| Belmont. At the Rex tonight you —The first world premiere at sea of | can see “Strike Up the Band”
ropean peoples who, when the] Nazi hand of aggression fell upon a motion picture will be held next which earned fer Douglas Shearer (Norma's brother) the Oscar
them, found themselves without Friday night aboard the luxury| passports and thus have no home- liner America, between Los Angeles| for sound recording. Also at the land. From capital to capital they and San Francisco, Warner Broth- | Belmont the last time tonight is roam-—no destination, no hope. |ers Studio and the United States| the picture voted the best of the “So Ends Our Night" starts in the Lines announced today. year—"Rebecca."” Vienna of 1937. The Nazi army has| A special preview party of stars | » President Roosevelt's speech at
not yet moved in but the Gestapo and newspapermen will board the| already is well established | America in the afternoon. The pic-| 8.30 o'clfck tonight will be broada former German officer forced into London's famous novel. will be cast fram the Slafte oi each of political refuge and in a Vienna shown in the ship's main salon in Esquire, Parker, Rivoli and SherBee ; , . Ford) who unfortunately is not of| Before the premiere, the party | Kan, 100 per cent Aryan stock. The prin-|will visit the LAST CHANCE] plight of his wife, whom he has — been forced to leave in hostile Ber- iD 'DEAD END KID' garet Sullavan) is the youth's prob-| lem—that once he learns his REVEALS MARRIAGE three live and roam in fear of ar-|__pajv t - rest, and in faint hope that some-| ember Senter, Dod ‘Bod ia The two young ones reach their|znd Peggy Garrick, of Roundup goal, but the ex-officer is not so Mont, were married last Dee. 17 in his political friends, the officer is| They met two months previously allowed to see his wife on her death in Boston, where he was making [attending finishing school. Chester [is the third of the “Kids” to CONCERT SET A concert by the orchestras of for the Blind will be given under Miss Kiler's direction at 3 p. m. The auditorium is located at 7725 College Ave,
” ” n THE GRANADA, now back to regular prices after the GWTW showing, has for tonight and tomorrow a combination musical
and comedy program, “Go West.” starring the Marx Brothers, and “Second Chorus” with Fred Astaire and Paulette Goddard.
iS,
o THE RIVOLI's extra “last show only” picture tonight is “Ice Fol-
lies” which has in its cast Jimmy Stewart, Lew Ayres, Joan Crawford and the International Ice Revue.
PREVUE NIGHTS are still going, strong at the Fountain Square, according to Earl Cunningham. Next Tuesday's prevue program includes Ida Lupino and Humphrey Bogart in “High Sierra,” Jackie Cooper in "Life With Henry” and “The Texas Rangers Ride Again.” ” ” ” REQUESTS at the Parker have
Fredric March plays the role of ture, “The Sea Wolf,” from Jack the Cantor Theaters—Emerson, jail he meets a young fellow (Glenn|the evening cipal problem of the officer is the SALOON, London’ favorite bar. lin. A beautiful sweetheart (Marfather chose suicide. Together these HOLLYWOOD. March 15 (U.P) time they will reach a free country.| of the movies, has revealed that he fortunate. For a promise to betray Maine bed. Then, rather than make good| personal appearances and she was marry. { Olive Kiler and the Indiana School tomorrow in the school auditorium.
ayy HT “Melody for Three"
KAY FRANCIS » JAMES Aeon Playgirl”
WENDELL WILLKIE “Information, Please"
OUR OWN ALMANAC OF FASCINATING FILM FACTS: There are 42,000 seats in Indianapolis theaters third greatest . The bulk of downtown attendance usually enters before just the opposite at the neighborhoods. . . theaters have programs booked 60 days ahead alhough the second-run
. The making
industry (after steel and
. Most outlying
caused the management to return “Four's a Crowd” which ran for 18 days at the Esquire recently. 1t'll open tomorrow for two days with “Blondie Plays Cupid.” o ” 5 THE WEEK-END SCHEDULE:
BELMONT. Tonight Give Us Wings Tuesday High Sierra” Bagdad.” CINEMA Tonight: “Sandy Gets Her Man" and "Dr. Kildare's Crisis.” . Tomorrow through Wednesday: ‘Santa Fe IT'rail’ and "Bank Dick."
DAISY Tonight: “Lone Wolf Keeps a Date” and “Diamond Frontier." 0morrow only: “Flight Command’ and "Hudson's Bav." EMERSON Tonight: “Comrade X'' and shorts Tomorrow through Wednesday: “Four Mothers'' and "Go West.”
ESQUIRE— Tonight: “Tin Pan Alley" and ‘Long Voyage Home Tomorrow through Wednesday: ‘Marked Woman' and “Submarine D-1 FOU NTAIN SQU ARE Toni ht Tuesday: “High Sierra” Wings. GRANADA Tonight “Second Chorus’ and HAMILTON —Tonight and “A Night at Earl Carroll's.” Tomorrow through Wednesday: “Love Thy NR G- and “Lucky Devils.” -Tonight and tomorrow: “High Sierra’ and ‘Second Chorus.” ORIENTAL-—Tonight: ‘Little Bit of Heaven” and “Trail of the Vigilantes i» Tomorrow and Monday: ‘Escape’ and “Melody Ranch!’ PARAMOU NT- Tonight: “Mexican Spitfire Out West” and ‘Wildcat of Tucson.’ Tomorrow and Monday ‘Dreaming Out Loud” and “Trail of the Vigilantes." PARKER Tonight: ‘Arizona’ and “Gav Caballero.” Tomorrow and Monday “Four's a Crowd” and ‘Blondie
PI C “Strike Up the Band" through Tues‘Hit Parade
‘Rebecca and Tomorrow through and ‘Thief of
Jhrouph “Give U
and tomorrow: "Go West.’ “Santa Fe Trail”
u Pod ight A bet) s Tomorrow day: “Melody Ranch” and of 1941." RITZ Tonight and Thy Neighbor” and RIVOLI—Tonight “Li'l Abner,’ Last Follies." Tomorrow day: "Give Us Wings"
Bagdad ST. CLAIR--Tonight and tomorrow "Victory and Hudson's Bayv.' SANDERS-—-Tonight “Wildcat Bus" and ‘Ghost Valley Raiders.” Tomorrow Find Out” and
and Monday ‘You'll ‘Melody Ranch"
“Men Against the Sky SHERIDAN Tonight: Parade of 1941." Tomorrow ‘Four Mothers" and
and ‘Hit through Ww ednesday “Li fe. “Diamond Frontier.’
Bank Dick ' SPEEDWAY -—Tonight: Arizona”
Henry” and morrow through Tuesday “I'm Nobody's Sweetheart Now.’ STATE-—Tonight ‘Devil's Pi and "Roaring Guns’ Tomorrow through Tuesday “Four Mothers’ and “Submarine D-1.° STRAND Tonight: “Thief of Bagdad” and Hudson's Bay." Tomorrow and Monday High Sierra" and ‘‘Victory." STRATFORD Tonight Devil's Pipe. line’ and ‘Covered Wagon Days." morrow thrcugh Tuesday: “The Letter” and ‘Angels With Dirty Faces TALBOTT Tonight Tin Pan Alley” and ‘‘Margie.” Tomorrow throuzh Tuesday Santa Fe Trail” and “Go West TUXEDO Tonight Hullabaloo “Murder Over New York they gh Tuesday: ‘‘Santa Fe Trail” Kildares Crisis TPTOWN Tonight: “Life With Henry" and “Texas Rangers Ride Again.’ Tomorrow through Wednesday: ‘“‘Hudson's Bav'' and ‘'Victory.” VOGUE—Tonight: and "'Skv Murder.’ ZARING - Tonight: Murder Over New th onon Wednesday ‘Thief of Bagdad.”
DOWNTOWN
ALAMO Tonight through Mondav: “Trail Blazers,”
“Flying Wild" and "Caktaln, Marvel
YA D 0 R—Tonight through Wednesday: “Back in the Saddle” and “Arkansas
ANNOUNCES 3 BIRTHS
HOLLYWOOD, March 15 (U. P)
tomorrow: “Love "Go West "High Sierra" and show only ‘Ice through Wednesand “Thief of
With Toand
eline'’
and
“Christmas in July”
“Chad Hanna" and York.” Tomorrow "High Sierra’ and
—Actor Victor McLaglen has re-|
ported the birth at his ranch of three “grandchildren” of Man O’ War. They are War News, War Kit and Lady Kay. Their sire is War, | son of Man O' War.
CONTINUOUS 11:00AM ST (IEA
EE
Daily Matinee EEN EEE (3117 1)
SATURDAY MIDNITE FROLIC
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Met's Basso Sings Here
and | Tomorrow
|
SEATS RESERVED—Call LI. 9092
MUSIC
By Fremont Power
FABIEN SEVITZKY presents a program of springtime fresh ness this week-end, one of those concerts capable of giving you a lilting lift. The music ranges from fanciful Haydn to comic Rossini and to rousing Borodin, The occasion is otherwise significant for it marks the first ap pearance this season of the Symphonic Choir, with handsome Igor Gorin, the young baritone, as soloist. It is obviously a herculean program and Mr. Sevitzky, never one to shirk big tasks, directs it energetically. Mr. Gorin may not have a voice of operatic stature, but he does possess an actor's undere standing of the possibilities of his selections. He puts this quality to good account in the Figaro aria of Rossini's “Barber of Seville.” It has always been a favorite with fun-loving audiences and Mr. Gorin exploits this excerpts’ buffoonery to its full extent. His first contribution to the program is the Eri Tu aria from the Verdi “Masked Ball” opera and he did this dramatic bit at yesterday afternoon's concert in rich, well-phrased tones,
” ”
THIS WEEK'S PAIR of concerts presents, among other items, a first playing of David Van Vac-
”
tor's Overture to Comedy No. 2, commissioned by Mr, Sevitzky only last spring. After an uncertain rendition of this rippling music, the orchestra swung into the other purely symsphonic offering, the Haydn Symphony in D Major, which, for catalog purposes, is tagged the London Symphony. It is light and gay, of the chamber-musiec variety, and it is aptly directed and played. The fulsome melodies of the composi tion have been given minute attention by Mr. Sevitzky and the minuet section was done in a magnificent ballroom style, The choir makes its first appearance in the Rachmaninoff Springtide Cantata, with Mr. Gorin as soloist. The selection is asterisked as a “first time in Indianapolis,” and the meeting, it seems to me, is a fortunate one. Rachmaninoff wrote beautiful melody into this piece and we may devoutly hope that Mr. Sevitzky will have Elmer Steffen and the choir try it again some time soon Following two Gorin—the Lord's Prayer with contemporary music by Malotte, and the rollicking Hopak by Moussorgsky—the choir and orchestra combine in the Polevetzian Dances by Borodin This rousing Oriental music with a Russian touch makes a well-timed finale.
5
songs by Mr.
” o
EACH YEAR, you know, Mr Sevitzky invites his listeners to choose one complete program. And here is the one chosen for the season's finale March 28 and 29: Tschaikowsky's Symphony No. 6 in B Minor (the somber “Pathetique’). The Aria for Strings, by Foote. The Blue Danube. (Need I say more.) Ravel's Bolero. | We could have guessed about the Bolero. It seldom fails to appear on any popularly chosen program, The Tschaikowsky choice should be particularly gratifying to Mr. Sevitzky, who more and more is being ranked as a foremost in-
Direct Recital
Miss Lynne Wainwright (top) will direct the Jordan Harp Ensemble and Joseph Lautner will
conduct the Jordan-Butler Phil-.
harmonic Choir in a joint recital next Tuesday night. The time s 7:45 o'clock and the place is the Roberts Park Methodist Church auditorium.
SATUR
Mexico Sets Film Festival
Premier of Roosevelt Movie To Promote Good Will.
Times Special MEXICO CITY, pan-American premier of James Roosevelt's new movie, ‘“Pot-o-Gold,” will be held here April 12, the first event in a three-day motion picture festival under Government sanction. The announcement came from the office of President Manuel Avila Camacho. It stated that “for the
good will between Mexico and the United States, a motion picture festival is herewith proclaimed from the days for April 12 to April 15.” Representatives of the American motion picture industry are invited to attend as guests of the Mexican
March 15.—A
DAY, MARCH 15, 1941) Sings for Irish
Linda Page, with the Ayres La Mar orchestra, will sing for the Irish when the Ancient Order of Hibernians holds its annual dance tomorrow night at the Indiana Roof.
vocalist
republic. A United Artists representative said that President Camacho personally would invite several movie stars and producers. Among the feminine contingent scheduled to make the trip are Paulette Goddard, co-star in the Roosevelt movie with James Stewart, Ann Sheridan, Heddy Lamarr and Dorothy Lamour.
RAMONA WILSON IN RECITAL AT DEPAUW
Miss Ramona Wilson, Indianapolis pianist and a student at the] DePauw University Music School, |
will present a recital tomorrow at 3:30 p. m. in Meharry Hall on the] university campus in Greencastle. Her program will include “Chro-| matic Fantasy and Fugue” (Bach),| "antasy and Sonata in C Minor" || Aida (Mozart), “Oiseaux Tristes” and || “Toccata” (Ravel) and three etudes| by Chopin.
2 NEW FILMS OPEN AT AMBASSADOR
Two first-run movies, “Back in| the Saddle” and “Arkansas Judge”
WHEN DOES IT START? ||
CIRCLE
“Nice Girl?” with Deanna Durbin, Franchot Tone, Walter Brennan, Robert Stack, Robert Benchley and Helen Broderick, at 12:32, 3:39, 6:46 and 9:52 “Melody for Three,” with Jean Hersholt, Fay Wray, Walter Woolf King, Toscha Seidel, Astrid Allwyn, Schuyler, Standish and Maude Eburne, at 11.25, 2:32, 5:30 and 8:46
INDIANA
“Tobacco Road,” a Charley Grapewin, Marjorie Rambeau, Gene Tierney and Elizabeth Patterson, 12:49, 4:06, 7:13 and
10:2 Girl,’ with Kay James 5 Eisen and Nigel 11:32, 49, 56 and 9 03. Fudi nd Please,” dell Willkie, at 11:05, 2:12 8:36
holdover with
at
Francis, Bruce, at
“Play
with Wen- , 5:29 and
LOEW'S
Ends Our Night,” March, Margaret Glenn Ford and Frances 11:05, 2:35, 6:10 and 9:45 “Maisie Was a Lady,” with Ann Lew Ayres, Maureen O'SulliSmith, at 1:10,
with PFredSullavan, Dee, at
“So erick
Sothern van and C. Aubrey 4:45 and 8:20, LYRIC Ray Kinney and his Hawaiian or-
terpreter of the great Russian, a distinction he richly deserves.
MARTENS CONCERTS, INC.
iS SONGERTS
Ezio Pinza
Basso of Metropolitan Opera English Theater Sun., March 16, 3 P. M. $1.10, $2.20, $2.75, $3.30. Seats Now.
Today Till 5 P. M. MARTENS TICKET OFFICE Rm. 201-33 Monument Cirele LI. 8621 Tomorrow After 10 A. M. ENGLISH THEATER, LI. 6884 |
| | | | | | | | |
MAIL ORDERS NOW! DIRECT from New York Rockefeller Center Theater
Something Entirely New Sonja Henie-Arthur Wirtz present
Rg Te sp ON ICE"
Entire Original Cast of 100 Beautiful Girls and Costumes
with JOE COOK 2ra THE SENSATIONAL FOUR BRUISES
NEW SONG HITS!
BROADWAY NO. | BOX OFFICE HIT!
For Current Season
Designed by
NORMAN BEL GEDDES
at a
COST OF $225,000
Largest Icetravaganza to Ever Appear at Indpls. Coliseum
MARCH 25 to 30
Nightly 8:30 P. M. Tickets—Boxes $2.75, Mezzanine §2.20 and $1.65, Gen. Adm. $1.10. On Sale Coliseum and L. Strauss & Co. Box Offices. Mail Orders given prompt attention.
Indpls. COLISEUM
BURLESQUE
AS YOU LI IT
BEAUTIFUL FASCINATING
RLS IN BL
PEARL LAWSON
BLONDE With
[fk ano
CHORUS OF GLORIFIED AMERICAN GIRLS
Matinee 2:15. A 5 bt Shows Up a Party and Att
7 and 9. u r Late Saturd
REX
SOR hone on Sutigay. Nigh t phos at 11: 15
chestra, other v Budevijle, on stage at 5 and 9: 43
12:2 27, 2:46, “The Great Mr. Nobody. with Eddie Albert, Joan Leslie and Alan ° Hale, at 11, 1:19, 3:38, 5:57, 8:16
and 10:33.
open tonight at the Ambassador. | | The double bill is scheduled to run| | through Wednesday.
The Nation's No. 1 Cowboy and His Comic Side Kick! New Songs! New| Laffs!
featuring
WEAVER BROS. & ELVIRY
\Wi,
JUDGE sen
wih BOB LIVINGSTC BOB STEELE - RUFE DAVIS
2. Leo Gorley, “FLYING WILD" 8. “Adventures of CAPT. MARVEL"
AMERICA'S NO. | HAWAIIAN ORCHESTRA
“IDOL OF
AND 6b HIS
»
OTHERS *
my . ~1Szo0p Ee
5 44 Linton Wells
THE ISLANDS'S Musical Ambassadors Te Mainland” |
50
® On Stage Next Friday ®
“SCREWBALLS OF 194(" A COMEDY RIOT
“INTERNATIONAL FORUM”
First ROUND TABLE of the Screen With Dorothy Thompson
® Wythe Williams
® William L. Shirer
DISCUSSING HITLER'S WORLD! Predicting What Will Happen in 1941!
NORTH SIDE
we Today : Wi
SOUTH SIDE
7 1105 S. MERIDIAN WE [TTS hg:
Gloria Jean, “LITTLE BIT OF HEAVEN" | “TRAIL OF THE VIGILANTES"
At 8:30 srontcast in =ry : 1 Bety Grave “Tin Pan Alley Jone. “Long Voyage Home”
Wayne “MARKED WOMAN"
SUN Bette Davis * Geo. Brent “SUBMARINE D-1"
THRU SUN, JACK BENNY FRED ALLEN
“LOVE THY NEIGHBOR”
Marx Bros. “GO WEST”
La le & SY. CLAI
SA RY {0 MARCH, aut 111)
HUDSON BAY
wil i) AU L x |] & i
Stratford 't.. 20C
Richard Arlen, “DEVIL'S PIPE LINE” COVERED WAGON DAYS” SUNDAY —Jas. Cagney-Ann Sheridan “ANGELS WITH DIRTY FACES” Bette Davis, “THE LETTER" Alice Faye
Talbott Betty Grable
“TIN PAN ALLEY" Nan Grey, “MARGIE” 42nd & COLLEGE
1) ho TR, Less]
LIFE WITH HENRY”
John Howard—Ellen Drew “TEXAS RANGERS RIDE AGAIN"
N Paul Muni “HUDSON'S BAY” SU . Fredric March “VICTORY”
Talbott at 22nd
Jackie &# Cooper
College at 63d Free Parking Lot
xX Dick Powell, “CHRISTMAS IN JUL Marx Bros. “GO WEST”
Central at Fall Crk. ZARING Henry Fonda Dorothy Lamour “CHAD HANNA" “MURDER OVER NEW YORK" SUN Ida Lupino, “HIGH SIERRA" . “THIEF OF BAGDAD" 16th & Open Daily
CINEMA Dela. at 1:30 p. m,
Adults, 20c—Children, 10c—Before 6 Baby Sandy—Stuart Erwin “SANDY GETS HER MAN" Lew Ayres, “DR. KILDARE'S CRISIS" SUN “SANTA FE TRAIL” . C. Fields, “BANK DICK" 3st & Any
Northwestern Time 20c¢
Mickey Rooney—Judy Garland “STRIKE UP THE BAND” SUNDAY—Gene Autry-Jimmy Durante
“MELODY RANCH”
“HIT PARADE OF 1941”
Ww.
[an
ACLU VN)
Seats | Oc ow IL ne; CAT BUS" Tonite “Ghost Valley Raiders” SUNDAY~—Kay Kyser-Boris Karloff
+E.. Wash, St, cat New Jersey
Adults 15¢ ARS 5) S—Kiddies LS DOORS OPEN 5 o'CLOCK Lupe Velez—Leon Errol “MEXICAN SPITFIRE OUT WEST” Bill (Wild Bill) Elliott “WILDCAT OF TUCSON" COUNTRY STORE TONIGHT
Complete Show as Late as 9 o'Clock
“YOU'LL FIND OUT” “MEN AGAINST THE SKY”
Mat. Today
Today, Sun. Adults to 8
Mon., Tues.
LUPINO BOGART HIGH SIERRA \™
Plus the Dead End Kids, Victor Jory in “GIVE US WINGS”
20c
1045 VIRGINIA AVE.
BIGGEST BEST ide fr
Last Times Today
Mat. Today 12:45 to 6
®
; 20¢
President's Speech At 8:30 Broadcast in Theater Humphrey Bngart gL: . 3 Ida Lupino High Sierra FIRST CITY SHOWING
Daisy Mae, Mammy & Pappy Yokum Li'l Abner
Salomey in “i Abner” EXTRA! ADDED TO LAST SHOW .
TONIGHT ONLY! joan Crawtora ICE FOLLIES” SUN DEAD END KIDS .
“GIVE US WINGS” In
Color “THIEF OF BAGDAD”
Tonite & Tonight 5:00 Tomorrow to 6:00 Adults
20¢
ALL FUN & MUSIC SHOW THE MARX BROS.
“GO WEST”
Fred Astaire—Paulette Goddard
“SECOND CHORUS”
~ WEST SIDE Jackie Cooper
Speedway City
'SHERIDA}
EVERY THURS.-FRL-SAT.—ADULTS,
SUN.
6116 E. Washington Doors Open 6:45 At 8:30 President's Speech Broadcast in Theater 200 Gene Autry, ‘MELODY RANCH" Kenny Baker “HIT PARADE OF 1941" AND! “LONE RANGER RIDES AGAIN" Lane Sisters, “4 MOTHERS" W. C. Fields, “BANK DICK"
Speedway Aldrich Family
“LIFE WITH HENRY" Victor McLaglen, “DIAMOND FRONTIER" 2702 Ww. Adults
STATE 10th Any Time 20¢
Richard Arlen, “DEVIL'S PIPE LINE” Tim McCoy, “ROARING GUNS" SUNDAY —Lane Sisters-Jeffrey Lynn “FOUR MOTHERS" “SUBMARINE D-1"
PARKER
2030 E. 10th St. Doors Open at 6:43 At 8:30 President's Speech "Ww Broadcast in Theater Jean Arthur, “ARIZONA” Cesar Romero, “GAY CABALLERO” SUN The Bumpsteads . “BLONDIE PLAYS CUPID” Errol Flynn—Olivia De “lavilland Rosalind Russell “FOUR'S A CROWD"
Pat O'Brien, Belmont and Wash, Belmont Laurence Olivier Joan Fontaine “REBECCA” Dead End Kids, “GIVE US WINGS” 2540 W,
DAISY Michigan
Warren William—Frances Robinson “LONE WOLF KEEPS A DATE” Victor McLaglen, “DIAMOND FRONTIER"
SUN. ONLY “FLIGHT COMMAND”
“HU DSON’ S BAY” EAST [ SIDE EMERSON. i." 20c At 8:30 Bese enys Speech L Th Clark Gable, “COMRADE oer
ALSO SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS
SUN Lane Sisters, ‘4 MOTHERS” . Marx Bros, “GO WEST”
READ THIS
COLUMN DAILY It’s a short cut to the best
TUXEDO
HAMILTON
IIE
1300 E. Wash, Free Parking
STRAND
“THIEF OF BAGDAD”
“HUDSON'S BAY”
SUN Ida Lupino “HIGH SIERRA" . Fredric March And "VICTORY" —— 1020 E. Any New York 20¢ Time 1—Frank Morgan, “HULLABALOO" 2—“MURDER OVER NEW YORK” 3—“THE SKY RAIDERS" SUNDAY—"DR. KILDARE'S CRISIS" “SANTA FE TRAIL” 2116 E. 10th FINAL NITE! “SANTA FE TRAIL” “A NIGHT AT EARL CARROLL'S" SUN Jack Benny-—Fred Allen ’ “LOVE THY NEIGHBOR” Rich. Arlen-Andy Devine, “Lucky Devils"
———— 20¢ 1:00
to 6
wy
507 E. Wash. Mat. Today
Tonight an Tomorrow
Fred Astaire IND CHORUS"
Paulette Goddard §9 Humphrey Bogart “High Sierra” ""1 Lupine
Neighborhood Shows.
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