Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 January 1943 — Page 9

Times Amusement OPENING TODAY : Ar INDIANA lan Nights,” wit ioe = h Jon Bal,

3a Sei] ae bu, at 12: SH Groove,” with

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: CURRENT SHOWS LYRIC “George "Sen: A Slept 1 Hotes

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Army Sargooi with Hiton -and Ja Wya » on pL; ane yatt, at oe CIRCLE

It Seems That Greer Garson ‘Has Two Chances | in Two of Getting Academy Avoid

By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN the stage in London in 1957, when| iw Hollywood kniweshe Bad. He was aying havos with the casi c i craters. This was Garson, | role, was United Press Hollywood Correspondent |], B. Mayer of Metro-Goldwyn-|a Britisher named Alec Abbot Snel- | tomers pl tomers’ handkerchiefs. she said. At st shed make a [The vg n= s arson wn HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 6—If the| Mayer saw her, signed her, brought|{son and the kind of a man, she funny movie. pleted before his parents , star of “Mrs. Miniver” doesn’t get|her to Hollywood under contract{told a sympathetic judge, who She thought without benefit ofthat he and Miss Garson were to the Motion Picture academy award|and kept her here twiddling her|never took her anywhere except on reports from the writers’ building/be married. Miss Garson let it be next month as the year’s best|pretty thumbs for a solid year. long cross-country walks. at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. There known that when she got ready fo’ movie actress, _then the star of|° Then he shipped her Jack to! Miss Garson made so many pic- the experts were rooting all the|inarry again, she’d make the ane Random Harvest” is dead certain|England, Where she made “Goodbye | t,res in hoop skirts, bustles, fluffy laughs out of the story and weaving|nouncement herself, - to receive the academy’s. gold-plat- Mr. Chips.” It was her first movie|,- ffles and dust catchers that the ,{in the dramatic impact and the| Young Mr. Ney joined the navy. ed statuette. and a smash hit. Miss,Garson hur- | cynics among the movie makers emotional punch inherent in the|last November he and Miss Garson Since the star of both of these ried ‘back to Hollywood and she’s presumed she was bow-legged, or lives of ordinary citizens under applied for a marriage license. The: movies is a red-headed Irish girl| been hurrying from one picture to|worse. They never got so much as constant bombing attacks. Miss|still haven't used it and the ‘bride. name of Greer Garson, we'd better|another ever since. ; a glimpse of the Garson ankle, as Garson starred in it, anyhow;|to-be, if that is what is to be tell you what we know about her: In 1941 she went to court to get|she went from film to film, sor- Richard Ney, & 29-year-cld actor continues to say that when she is

IEilm Shows Nazi Cruelty

"Hitler's Children" to Open Here Jan. I5

If you don’t like brutal reality— if you can't take truth straight from the shoulder, you won't like RKO’s latest war picture, “Hitler's Children,” based on Gregor -Ziemer’s

These rolés didn't suit Mis: Gare son. She said 'd made her frst in as a8 ronedienne and that she was prting weary of the tear-jerkers. Sli said she’d rather laugh. She was, therefore, when her studio, pu Struther’s slim little book on fu essays about life in war-time Er yd land. Mostly it concerned Mrs. Miniver’s misadventures with fre

over, 0)

FN Le EN I

a

8 Henry Bu b at LIE, Eo Sam ”

e, at 11: ih EH To 5: 05, 750 30 ‘and 10:3. LOEW'S ~ : By for Action,” with Robert Taylor. Charles 1 he

Laughton as Brian 30 Dénlexss at 10:30, 1:23, “McGuerins From ona Ifax

with William Baer, at 12:34, a 6:10 and 9:08

Hedy Sues For All Pay

Star Wants to Meet Taxes

Herself.

HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 6 (U. P.).— Hedy Lamarr is suing her studio for the part of her salary the government won't let it pay her only because she wants to pay her taxes ‘herself.

~¥ She isn’t mad at anyone and has

no objection to a $25,000 limitation

on her salary, she said today in explaining the suit she filed yesterday against Loew's, Inc., to force the company to pay her the full amount of her contract—$2000 a week for 40 weeks or $80,000. It was the first court test of the order of Economic Director James F. Byrnes limiting individual incomes to $25,000 a year. The suit brought to a head all the manifold difficulties caused here where stars, technicians and directors object to the stockholders of the companies geting the money the order prevents the studios from paying them, despite their contracts. - Miss Lamarr is working on a contract signed in 1937. It calls for $12,750 aboye the limit.

HUMANE SOCIETY TO MEET

The Indianapolis Humane society will meet at 8 p. m. Monday in Room 206, Holliday building, Presi- . dent Roy E. Freeman will preside.

wed St. Joseph SAFER ELL

% | may schedule a broadcast here on

book, “Education for Death.” It’s not a story for the molly-coddled, eltered person. Rather it's for those not afraid to face facts and see the world as it is today. Conflicting ideologies of democracy and = dictatorship are portrayed by Bonita Granville as Anna Miller, an American studying in the American Colony school in Berlin, and Kent Smith as Karl Bruner, Nazi and student at a Nazi school across the street. : -As a film opens in 1933, “Hitler's Children,” all those educated to the brute force of naziism in Huler schools, are seen in a great’ circle taking an oath to die for their fuehrer. The atmosphere is grim and foreboding. Germany is not completely given over to the new order, but the growing strength of the Nazis is symbolized in fights between students of the two schools.

Forced to Serve Nazis

Although their ideas of political rule are as far apart as the two

The green-eyed Miss G. was on'a

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rowing and shedding tears, and

wardens, ration cards, and

bomb

playing his first important movie'ready to marry, she will say so.

WHATEVER YOU RE »ome °c oo NERES EVERYTHING

iH {i IE y HA

For it is

So

poles, the freedom-loving Anna and Karl become friends. Following German's march of aggression, Anna is forced to serve the Nazis because she was born in Germany and “considered” German. Her hate of naziism is swiftly brought to light. With her increased resistence to the Nazi yoke as a political agitator duly recorded, her punishment, top horrible to contemplate, becomes imm’nent. The film minces no words about that punishment either.

Strictly for Adults

The climax of the film comes with Karl's realization of what naziism stands for. As the picture ends with Hitler's children standing in a circle, those children are not so sure of the cause for which they are fighting. Here is probably the nation’s No. 1 propaganda picture to date. Bonita Granville turns in her best acting performance yet, supported by an able cast. provides plenty of food for thought, but not for children. The film is strictly for adults. An advance showing was held here this week. The world’s premiere will be in Cincinnati Jan. 14 and the Circle will open with the picture the following night. Special broadcasts on the film are being arranged by station WLW, which

Jan, 15.—VIRGINIA HATFIELD.

Ro) Ene

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Disney's Fay Bainter—Edw. Arnold

“War Against Mrs. Hadley” BIGGEST BEST

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Tonite ® 20¢ BING CROSBY cin.

“DR. RHYTHM” Joan Benneti—Randolph Scott

Brennan - THE TEXANS”

THURS Errol Flynn—aAlexis Smith . “GENTLEMAN JIM” Richard Greene “FLYING FORTRESS”

1168 Open 6:45 Sheridan; wun h-s0 FIRST IRVINGTON SHOWING Rosalind Russell—Brian Aherne | “MY SISTER EILEEN" {John Howard “SUBMARINE AIDEN:

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tte Colbert—Gary Cooper ude 'S h A WIFE”

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