Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 August 1941 — Page 12

PAGE 12

Ready for Some Dive Bombing

Technicians Ralph Bellamy (1

eft) and Errol Flynn adjust a pressure oxygen suit on Fred MacMurray

in “Dive Bomber,” coming tomorrow to the Indiana.

MONTE WOOLEY RETURNS AS STAR

Times Special HOLLYWOOD. Aug. 28 —The hypothetical red plush carpet was laid down for Monty Woolley's to Movietown as the star of “The Man Who Came to Dinner.” The bearded actor is appreciative, but he also is mindful of the other time he came here under promising circumstances For his movie debut, in “Live, Love and Learn,” he stoed four days under a sprinkler. And for his last film during that unhappy period, he was tossed into a pool.

HURRY! LAST DAY! TTY gto ART MAT

NEVER A 0B

return

Pha Co © RE pees

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

THURSDAY,

4

Bob Questions Greer

Beauty Salon

Dorothy Lamour closes her eyes,

beauty salon in “Aloma of the South Seas,”

AUG. 28, 1041 in the South Seas

holds on to her pareu and gets the full treatment at a South Seas

opening tomorrow at the Circle.

——

WHEN DOES IT START?

: \ . . | { | ak ing Fi Ims! CIRCLE | “Man Hunt,” with Walter Pidgeon. i Joan Rennett and Geo Sanders, i at 12:25. 3:35. 6:45 and 9:55. { “Pance Hall,” with Carole Lands and A Somers. at 11:15. 2°38,

5:35 and INDIANA “Kiss the Boys Goodbye,” Marv Martin, Don Ameche, Levant. Connie Boswell and Rochester. at 12:28 3:40, 6:52 and 10:04. “parson of Panamint.” with Charlie Ruggles. Ellen Drew and Philip Terry. at 11:04, 2:16. 5:28 and 8:30. LOEW'S “Life Begins for Andy Hardy,” with Mickey Rooney, Lewis Stone, Judy Garland. Patricia Dane and Fay Holden, at 12:30, 3:30, 6:40 and 9:45. “Ellery Queen and the Perfect Crime,” with Ralph Béliamy and Margaret Lindsay, at 11:10, 2:10, 5:15 and 8:25.

Players Now Ignore Bombs

| Unless They're Close

HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 28 (U. P)— In Hollywood, when the leading lady doesn’t show up for work, some one checks to see if she is piqued at 'the director, maybe, or is in poor [health for one reason or another. {In London some one checks to see if

{a bomb has landed on her house in

{the night. ‘George Bernard Shaw play, took | So says Gabriel Pascal, director, jong time to produce. It had land producer, who has brought to just been started when war broke the United States the picture out pull production was not [race Ea ® England | reached until about the time the | “I was like an old hen” he said, | British Expeditionary “with a large family of chicks and evacuated from Dunkirk. the air full of hawks. When they| Pascal said about 125 bombs fell were out of my sight I worried, and in the vicinity of the Denham when they came to the studio I] Studios, outside London, during procounted them anxiously and said to duction. At first every air alarm | myself: sent the entire company scurrying | ‘Well, there is another night | to shelter but after a time they [when nobody got hit by a bomb.’ ” learned to take shelter only when “Major Barbara.’ from the the raid was close.

SO DANGEROUS!

NEVER A PICTURE SO THRILLING!

Warners made it with

RALPH BELLAMY - ALEX Robt. Armstrong

IS SMITH Fi

Regis Toomey + Allen Jenkins

Directed by MICHAEL CURTIZ

“1 don’t like quarrels; I don’t like scemes; If the Navy's too busy. I’0 ery the Marines!"

Screen Play by Frank Weed & Robert Buckner « Music by Max Steiner From @ Story by Frank Weed + A Warner Bros. First Net't Picture

bxbia

4

TOMORROW

MARCH OF TIME! “PEACE? i ADOLPH NITLER

INDIANA

1

Force was).

| week attend

DOWN TO || CENTS AND NO SYMPATHY

HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 28 (U. P).— Victor Mature came to crash the golden gates, he landed with only 11 cents and sent a collect wire to his father in Louisville. No funds came back, but there was a message that fortified his determination better than any money order could have done. The wire said: “When I came to his country 1 had only 6 cents and couldn't speak English. Good luck.”

FOR THE FAMILY TRADE

June Preisser, currently playing the feminine lead in “Sweater Girl,” has just completed filming of a one-reel 16 mm. Western, “Wastrels of the Wastelands,” in which all members of her family appear.

CHARM BRACELET

Her visit to Guatemala five years ago has yielded Virginia O'Brien a startlingly different charm bracelet. While there the young singer collected a dozen rare coins, some a century old. These have been strung on a heavy silver chain for her latest jewelry novelty.

STONE LEADS NEW EMERGENCY SQUAD

HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 28 (U. P.).— Actor Lewis Stone, the Judge Hardy HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 28 (U. P.).— of the film series, has donned a | When Olson and Johnson first ap-

badge and uniform as colonel of a Pear on the screen in “Hellzapoppin” they'll be seen getting out of a taxi.

special motorized unit formed by| ; ; Sheriff Eugene Biscailuz for use in |cab with two skunks, four pigs, a emergencies. Mr. Stone, hoping | calf, a quartet each of ducks and for a total of 500 vehicles in the|geese, a flock of pigeons, two St. brigade, said 189 station wagons al- Bernard dogs, two Great Danes and

ready had been enrolled. a pair of bloodhounds.

F. D. R., CHURCHILL SHOWN ON ‘SCREEN

Motion pictures taken during the | Atlantic conferences between Presie dent Roosevelt and Prime Ministe® Churchill will be shown tonight and tomorrow night at the Fountain Square. The regular bill includes “Thieves Fall Out’ and Jimmy Stewart's “Navy Blue and Gold.” ee ne

"HELLZAPOPPIN" FULL OF ANIMALS

|

had almost disrural sections, a

watch and winding

hog

Robert Taylor, just out of “Billy the Kid” chaps, poses a question to Greer Garson in “When Ladies Meet,” tomorrow at Loew's. S D | PIANIST qua re ance Walter Pidgeon is an &ccom- . | plished pianist. When he is workCal ls Echo Ng»e on a picture, he “keeps a piano jon the set at all times. It provides | a with relaxation, he says. 'Hoe-Down' Has Come Back] SER To Olishores, TWO FILMS HELD OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. Aug. OVER AT ESQUIRE 28 SD) Sulre Sivies eat Brought back a second time witha familiar sound out © e past, |. " ; ce in villages and cities or eyin two weeks, the double bill of Sooner State these days. “Pride and Prejudice” and “Block- | «Granny, will your dog bite? ade” again is being held over toNo, child, no; | night at the Esquire. a Cut his biter off a long “Pride and Prejudice” is Jane This little verse and hundreds Auste’s novel starring Laurence more like it are being heard on | Olivier and Greer Garson. “Blockmany a Saturday night. lade” stars Henry Fonda and MadeThe “hoe-down” has come back leine Carroll, to a land which once knew little other music than the timeless ballads of its Kentucky. Tennessee and Arkansas hill country forebears. At least 75.000 Oklahomans each | square dances held | under the sponsorship of the music | education department of the Works Projects Administration. Weekly Feature in 12 Towns Twelve Oklahoma cities and towns have regular weekly square dance festivals. Uncounted other thousands clap their hands and swing their partners to the mellow tunes of the old-time fiddlers. Square dancing appeared, even in few years ago. Now, according to WPA music education officials, it has been revived and is meeting with growing popular favor. Despite the trend | toward revival, the tunes and] “calls” remain the same as they] were a hundred years ago—songs like “Turkey in the Straw.” | One call which reveals its age goes like this: “Waterbury ey, “Sally got stung by a goggleeved bee.” | Then, this one may follow: | “Dance, dance, it ain't no sin; “Dance out of church, you can join ag'in.” Or perhaps: | “Lead your partner, meet her with a smile: “Once and a half and go wild.” | Shawnee is the scene of the largest WPA-sponsored programs. As many as 3000 persons have attended dances at an outdoor plat{form on a single night and 500 couples have been counted on the | floor.

Old Timers Participate

Many of the dancers are elderly and remember the songs and steps from their youth, but young people of teen-age and even smailer children form an unusually large per-| centage. i There are no distinctions. Society women and business and pro-| fessional men rub elbows with tanned farm folk, oil field roustabouts and truck drivers. A crew of old-time fiddlers from the WPA music education depart-| ment provides music at the Shaw-| nee programs. They are led by W. S. Collins, who has been selected | several times at Oklahoma's cham-| pion fiddler. Similar weekly dance programs are held at Granite, Clinton, Ard-| more, Chickasha, Muskogee, Coalgate, Kiowa, Red Oak, Antlers, |Sallislaw and Tulsa.

am | coor. ETI:

) Thrill te Betty's Now Thru Sat. Thrill te Bettys

dergarden Conga”

+ ANECHE- Betty GRABLE Robt. CUMMINGS NANCY KELLY

CRT

Final Day! “Rawhide Rangers” Frank Morgan ‘Washington Melodrama’ Tomorrow! What an Action Show!

Screen Play by S. K.

HERBERT MARSHALL

wih SPRING BYINGTON

Lauren and Anita Lees

Directed by ROBERT Z. LEONARD

Produced by Robert Z. Leonard and Orville O. Dull A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Picture

racy, romantic entertainment as

great as its bright stars!

‘ ¢ DUB TAYLOR WITH ‘WILD’ BILL ELLIOTT

—PLUS— RICHARD ARLEN ANDY DEVINE we Anne Nogel Extra! JUNGLE GIRL ® News

STARTS TOMORROW

I —

HE

Charles WINNINGER

260 fo 6. 1,200 Seats After

A

Keep Your Eye on a Beautiful Brunette!

« Donna REED + Neary O'NEILL « Ban BALEY. k. COOL—COMFORTABLE!

LOEW'S

with Robert STERLING

HURRY! HURRY!

TODAY—LAST TIMES!

“LIFE BEGINS FOR ANDY HARDY” —— Plus —— “ELLERY QUEEN AND THE PERFECT CRIME”

6, 30s (plus tax)

ME

pos ER a