Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 April 1942 — Page 21
THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1042 __
Corning to Roof
Deacon Moore and his dance
RECORDINGS
| novel interpretation.
| with three handclaps instead of |
" 'Sabre and Spurs'
| the second phrase. | will revolutionize
By Richard Lewis
THE STRUGGLE OF the nation’s bandieaders to outdo each other | with unique interpretations of that great tap-room anthem, “Deep in | the Heart of Texas,” is becoming a musical epic this season. After some research I have located a musical organizations with a |
It is Woody Herman and his Woodchoppers, |
with Bing Crosby, on Decca. Messrs. Herman & Crosby do the trick |
four.
Until they pioneered with the |
three handclaps,
no one dared, |
apparently, to deviate from the standard four-handclap heat after |
“Deep Heart of Texas.”
I think this | in the |
The secret of their success with | | the three claps, which represents |
considerable economy of effort
| and much saving of strength, is | syncopation. It goes: clap-clap...
orchestra come to the Indiana |
roof with a new bag of gags temerrow,
dian will make his first appearance here.
MARINES TO HAVE
Saturday and Sunday | nights. The band leader-come- |
i { | i |
| one-third claps.
i
BOOTH AT INDIANA
THE NEWEST VICTOR musi- | cal smart set album is a collec~ | tion of songs of the service. It |
includes “Semper Paratus,” of the coast guard; the army air corps “March”; “Sabre and Spurs” of the cavalry; “The Caissons Go Rolling Along,” of the infantry;
| “Song of the Signal Corps”; the
clap. The dotted line represents | | what might have been the third
clap, only you breathe, stamp your foot, scratch your head or grunt in this interim. Actually, each clap in the three-
clap series represents one and |
four-clap measure runs: clap-clap
clap clap. 2 ® » \
The regulation |
navy's famous “Anchors Aweigh”; the coast artillery’s “Crash On! Artillery”; the army song and “The Marine’s Hymn.”
You'll like the air corp’s march
which is the latest. 4 s 2 SCREEN ACTOR BASIL RATHBONE has made an album of poetry recitations which may be
of interest to lovers and students
engineer's |
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Mating ithiller at Indiana Galloping Autry Leads All
John Payne tries to drag Randolph Scott off a target raft in an
HURRY! FINAL DAY!
'a=———| In Hollywood Fame Survey oh THE MOST PHENOMENAL per-| SOMEBODY SENT Dorothy To) tL sonage in Hollywood today, ac- | mour a sarong made of rabbit fur—| BETTIE] cording to the scribes who know bit «oo 3 Sdsawsy night | § ow about these things, is Gene BUH rg Spires a nin) i141]
strips of defense Ek. JIMMY DORSEY ?
{the cowboy cavalier who receives stamps which are sold to the cus-| ond his ORCHESTRA
N°... Betty Hutton
william
| fan mail from whole classrooms. He tomers. ™ |has just complet- ” je His Seen star. -— | Synopsis of the Month otra tb | TARZAN AND HIS MATE, Sage.” ll | Maureen O'Sullivan, have taken on As nearly as : | their biggest adversary yet in the] |anybody can fig-¥ {Iorreaming film, “Tarzan Against | |ure, sales of : : : J LS oN & | Seems that Tarzan's foster son is| reached 10,000,000 EX by a circus and taken to | |
” =
—ahead of Bing New York, The lord of the jungle | M Crosby, his near- and mate follow in a hired airplane. | | lest competitor. Jelmny Weissmuller, of course, On the radio plays Larsan.
In this one, Tarzan gets involved | | | continuously since 192 : ; Sel Yeu 1 5 ] 926, Autry has |; , murder case, busts out of jail
© | built up a sizable listening as well as | : y [a screen audience. gh more jand Qives on he Wt until j fan mail, it is said, than any other [Srockiyn bridge. Fi i LON CH |two Hollywood heroes. jens Detics Brae all ; DIE al | Recently, the four-millionth Gene | .°, %¢3¢ h ] “ : | Autry toy pistol was nn 0,0 Taraan~Atier TREAT EM BOUGHT | the star by the delighted manufac-|® chase arousty | turers. Against the pleadings of | the Jungle fronds |his associates who predicted he °f New York © would lose his fancy shirt, Mr, hight clubs, he | Autry started up his Houston Fat finds his foster ° | Stock show this year and 15 of the SOn locked up in
Gene Autry
Mon.-Tues.-Wed, Mat, ENGLISH “007500 wea. BOX OFFICE SALE NOW
MAURICE JUDITH
idarsaftesssr eave.
EVANS -ANDERSON MACBETH
|17 performances were sell outs. 4 cage of lions, . TR ;
opening tomorrow at the Indiana, is a thriller of the U. S. marine | wollywood still is trying to figure| Lhe return to Mis O'Sullivan “ hy ’ 2 SS yr!
| | corps. {out how he does it. icivilization pro - i » {vides Maureen O'Sullivan a chance
A marine corps information booth | will be set up in the lobby of the! Indiana theater tomorrow during! the week's run of “To the Shores
The 'Yoo-Hooer
NOW HORACE HEIDT and his musical knights have recorded a
| exciting sequence from “To the Shores of Tripoli.” The picture,
| of poetry. Mr. Rathbone, of course, gives polished recitations and his work may be of value to persons
|
of Tripoli,” Capt. Ralph E. Boulton,'
marine corps recruiting officer for
Indiana, announced today.
{
The information booth will be] manned by a recruiting officer while the theater is open. Pamphlets and] general information on the corps)
will be available, Capt.
said.
WHEN DOES IT START?
CIRCLE
ullet Sears,” with Regis Toomer dee Longmire, at 11:30, 2:35.
Animal,” with Henry Havilland and 3:35. 6:45 and
: an 133. “The Male ia, Olivia de ] t 12:30
INDIANA * with Dorothy tra. at 12:48.
vith Nancv Relly at 11:37, 2:43,
LOEW'S
nk en the Burma Read.” with 3 v and Barry Nelson, at 112, 5:24 and 8:36 e Were Dancing,” with Norma and Melvyn Douglas, at , 3:45, 6:57 and 10:09. nday—“Yank” at 2:09 § 3 helnz” at 12:30,
LYRIC
“Ghost of Frankenstein,” with Lon Chaney, Ralph Bellamy, Bela Lugosi and Evelyn Ankers. at 11, 1:25 3:30 6.15. 8:35 and 10:50 “Treat Em Rough,” with Albert and Peggy oran, at 2:50. 5:15, 7:30 and 9:50.
=
Eddie 12:25.
BARGAIN MATINEE HOR. Tors FRL—1IARIDR.
—
Boulton |
| who busts in with a wild “Yoo- |
| tles. | Somehow, Mr. Heidt has worked |
spectacular interpretation on Co- | lumbia. Their version, using the | starts |
standard four-clap beat,
out like the usual piece of sweet |
music.
Suddenly a yoo-hooer enters the | picture. This is, to my knowledge, | | the first time a yoo-hooer has | been introduced in “Deep in the |
Heart of Texas.” For your infor- | | mation, a yoo-hooer is a fellow |
hoo, yip-yipee-yay” and also whis- |
| Padraic Coolum;
| on a theme from the “Indian Love |
Call” and a pattern or two remi-
| niscent of the “New World Sym- |
| phony”
of Dvorak. I can't be
sure,
He also injects a bass speaking |
voice asking: “Where do mean?” replies: Texas”
“Deep and the yoo-hooer let's
you | Whereupon, the chorus | in the Heart of |
| loose while a trombone mumbles |
in the background. Wayne King on Victor opens
| with sweet-smooth sax and clar- | inet. The vocal is carried by some |
| weak-voiced character, { Mr.
King himself, abetted by a trio.
probably | aided and He, too, uses |
| the four-clap beat, but you do | | not feel much like clapping. Somewhat on this order, also, | is Guy Lombardo’s rendition on | Decca. Using the standard four- |
clap beat, Mr. Lombardo carries the theme with sax, clarinet and
studying speech as well as verse. The album includes such classies as “On the Late Massacre in
Sevitzky Guest
Piedmont,” by John Milton; “Stu- |
pidity Street,” by Ralph Hodgson; “In Memorian,” by Robert Louis Stevenson; “Sonnet,” by Brooke; “Prospice,” by Robert Browning; “The Waste Places,” by James Stephens; “Sav Not the Struggle Nought Availeth,” by Arthur Hugh Clough; “Invictus,”
by William Ernest Henley: “The
Woman of the Roads,” by “My Own, My Native Land,” by Sir Walter Scott; “America,” by Sidney Lanier. “The World Is Too Much With Us,” by Wordsworth; by Edna St. Vincent Millay; “On First Looking Into Chapman's Homer,” bv John Keats; “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love,” by Christopher Marlowe: “Go, Lovely Rose,” by Edmund Walter;
Old
Rupert |!
|
“Travel,” |
“To the Virgins to Make Much of | i Time,” by Robert Herrick. “Ode the West Wind,” by Percy | Bysshe Shelley; a portion of “In | Memoriam,” by Alfred Lord Ten- |
nyson; “To a Waterfowl,” by Wil=
liam Cullen Bryant; “About Ben |
Adhem.,” by Leigh Hunt; “Hate,” by James Stephens; “Sonnet 29,”
| by Shakespeare; “The Arrow and
a tinkly piano. The whole is easy | and rhythmical and once, again, |
you do not feel much like clap- |
ping. Good listening, though.
| i
the Song.” by Longfellow; “Sonnet
43” by Elizabeth Barret Brown- |
ing. “God's World,” by Vincent Millay; Tries,” by A. E. Housman; “The Vagabond,” by Robert Louis Stevenson, and “Ode on a Grecian Urn,” by John Keats,
T= SEE WHAT NAPPENS WHEN “||
— 5
Wall
FULLLENGTH
HIN
In i
A BABY ELEPHANT FLIES—
DISNEYS
FEATURE PRODUCTION
cluding: . “Casey Junior”, "Pink Elephants”
“Clown Song”
{1
{ Mili Nii an
\
Edna St. | “Loveliest of |
Fabien symphony |in Philadelphia where he is direct-
In Philadelphia
Sevitzky, orchestra conductor, is
the Philadelphia
the simfonietta is the
* STARTS *
JOMORROY
ARGENTINE HONORS Boy Meets Girl DISNEY, CHAPLIN| THE INITIAL boy-meets-girl | ~g
{Charles Chaplin film, Chamber Dictator” were honored with String Simfonietta, a musical group cial awards today by the Argentine {he founded in 1925. Composed of members of string sections of the Philadelphia pest Argentine motion pictures of | her. (orchestra, oldest organization of its kind in {the nation. Its concerts are given {in the ballroom of the BellevueStratford hotel. Mr, Sevitzky will return to Indianapolis following a children’s con‘cert April 18.
‘academy of cinema arts and sci- Bruce meets Robert Paige with a
| WERE | ” the ances in its announcement of the round-house left . . . ‘cause he Kisses | DANCIN | .
1941. i It was recalled that despite the Stops Barbara Stanwyck with a]
award, “The Great Dictator” banned shortly after it was first exhibited, smashup. | at the behest of the German and| ITtalian ambassadors.
to wear the latest wardrobe cre-| ations, we are informed. i
Eves., $1.10 & $2.75. Mat., $2.20
{ siaiRe. irs
| situations, it is noted, are getting
| : BUENOS AIRES, April 9 (U. P.). rougher, In “Forest Rangers,” Fred | Indianapolis _ walt Disney’s “Fantasia” and the MacMurray meets Paulette God- |
“The Great | 981d when she is thrown by a| | bucking bronco and knocks him off | SP€-| his horse. In “Pardon My Sarong,” Virginia |
But soon they are married.| ~~ with GAIL PATRICK
LEE BOWMAN : MARJORIE MAIN/ 50 REGINALD OWEN A YANK ox 7p ALAN MOWBRAY
25¢c to 8
7 QPS (Plus Tax)
{In “The Gay Sisters,” George Brent |
was Steamroller and in “Saboteur” Bob| "Cummings and Priscilla Lane make | Argentine! their acquaintance in an automobile |
HE BURMA
throughout eX ’ elson
CRIME TO tr ‘Do nN TES Nor PAY.
Couldn't it be: “Miss Blow, may 1 TALK»
| present Mr. Doe?” just once?
NOW the
inside, on-the-scepe story of the reckless leathernecys . who’ve Made Amer.
€a’s most glorigys history)
Don't Miss It!
hg E
-O’HARY .
with
