Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 16 Nov 1933, p. 46

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Elissa Landi says that the kilss Ron- ald Colman gaves ber in "Tbe Mas- querder" is ber first experience of thhticind with a mustache. >Wftb al -due respect to Mr. Colman, Miss Landi doesn't ke it-the'mustache, that is. COMMUNITY flOUSE FRIDAY - SATURDAY ~VNIOSONILYr, NOV. 17-18 JAM9S CAGNMEY MADGE EVANS "TEMATà« or Admta 2. ChiMies UMe $AT. MATINEE ONLY «RENO THE MAGICIAN 10Shomm.-Pome Uni. 3444 15 M. te S&L t. 6:30 Mec EVENINGS and a te 2:30 on Sudys Lest. Times. T.dy-Nov. le K.y Fra.*ci-]Ly T.Ib.et GleumdmFamili "'MARlY STEVES, MKD." Ais. Mm-aiu & MeIE %o,.y * Reno, the magician, will perforni at. Saturday's, matinée, the second of tbe series of children's progranis sponsored by tbe junior 'auxiliaey of 'tbe Win- netka Wornan's club. James, Cagney and Madge Evans take the leads in "Tbe Mayor. of Hell," a story filled with thrilling drama and pathos. Cagney, hîmseif a gangster, is made superviser of a teform scbôoi.. A. ward héeler, lie bas little interest in tbe schol-but when lie learns of the. cruelties practiced on the boys, Cagney goes about, reforming thé place. He. uses strong aim metbods,, finaly throwing ouf the graffing ring i con- f roi and seffing up self-government ini the scbooi. "The M4ayor of. Hell" ranks witb sucb, pictuires as "Little Caesar," "The, Public Enerny" and "*I>Arn a Fugitive Frorn aChain -Gang." «Sea Fever Frequently> rDisturbs Ronaki Colman rRonald Colman bas a sailor's feel- ing for tbe sea. The eventlessness if offers f0 rnost 'people is excifing ad- venfure fo bim. He has sailed into every nook of the California and Mexican Coast. After he finished "The Masquerader" for Samuiel Goidwyn iasf spring, Col- man left with a few f riends t0 spend dreaxned of home. "HFome,"t in the case of Colmian, won'f be Hollywood, for f riends report that the Inglîsh star doesn't expect to re- turn f0 the motion picture colony for at ieéasf two years. GUIDE-LECTURE TOURS "Indians of Plains and Deserts" at 3 o'clock on Mondav. November 20, Ronald Colman and Eliçsu Lundi are surPrised-and so is the audi- cnce-at he suddenPlot develop- met:s in "The Masque roder,> drame of contrasting personalities, to be show,, ut the Wilmette thea- ter Sunday and Monday, Noveit- ber 19 and 20. Co'ao plays a dual 701e. Valencia Presents Cinema Triumphs .A talented cast,~ able .directîon and a powerfully dramatic story feature "Mary Stevens, M. 1).," starring Kay Francis and Lyle Talbot at the Val; the thrier, -J1efore Liaw ni". story of a detective wbo employs supernafural aid in tracing a crime. Gifted wjfh psychic powers, a girl sleuth is estab- ished in a bouse where several mur- ders have been comrnitted, and she, meets the iurnan demon hirnself in the clinmax. Stuart Erwin and Dorothy Wilson have f eatured i-oIes 'in this story by the late Edgar Wallace. Katharine Hepburn is at her superb. best in "Morning Glory." the drana~ %PA ILAL £ 11109K "Laugbing at Life," now showing at the WVihette theater, packs enough dash and action to inspire its star, Victor McLaglen, te> what. many con- sider bis finest performance. Ford Beebe, the director, wrote hic own story and, thrust' al bis verve and in-, genuity. into turning out a production unexcelleed for sheer action and thrills. The picture moves se fast that.it's, time to go te the theater now before it is to0 late.. A detective, who employs super- natural powers in tracking down a clever killer, cornes -te the Wiltnette theater for the first tirne Saturday, November 18.. Tbe film-guaranteed 'te f0 make everybody jitter-conscious. -is "Before.Dawni." Dorotby Wilson, Stuart Erwin and Warner Oland1 play the leads. *Cobsan uM*et&s Himelf" Sunday and Monday, Novernber 19 and 20, Ronald. Colman stumbles througb the. London -f og and into the living' image of himself. Thus starts the. story .of "Tii. Masquerader," in which Colman brilliantly plays a dual i-oie. Elissa Landi and Juliette Comp- ton cross the lives of tbe two charac- ters wbom Colman portrays. "The Masquerader" teems witb mys- tery and thi-ilîs that remind one of "BtulldoK Drummond." OId Chicago Reviv.d Packingtown - the name given to the ai-ca: of ilth, squaior and misery in which thousands of workers in the Chicago meat-packing plants of the mette theater T1uesday, Wednesday, Thursday and' Friday, Noveniber 21- 24. Weeks of résearcb and the careful sfudy by experts, of scores of photo-. graphs, newspaper andrnagazine pic- tures - and verbald,àescripitions 'of old Packingtown were necessarybefore the long-vanisbed siurn district could be flawlessiy re-created on tbe studio lot. "Flawlessness," in fact, is the word' for this great picture in its vr E LfTLE PIGSS" 'T1. Bis, B" Wolf- ~ * U Ai »M aud the red-baired Star to be'a. prof essional .............

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy