Winnetka-Northfield Public Library District

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 18 Feb 1928, p. 37

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WINNETKA TALK February 18, 1928 del Lago in "No Man's Land" Sheridan Road Between Wilmette and Kenilworth Ph. Kenilworth 3980-3981 MATINEES SATURDAY, SUNDAY SATURDAY 8 SUNDAY Doors Open 1:30 Show Starts 2 p. m., Continuous Evenings During Week Doors Open 6:30 Show Starts 7 p. m. PROGRAM FOR WEEK ENDING FEBRUARY 24, 1928 Saturday, Feb. 18 "MAIN EVENT" Vera Reynolds "Easy Street" Chas. Chaplin Comedy "01d Swimmin® Hole" Oswald Cartoon "Review No. 5" Pathe Sunday, Feb. 19 "THAT'S MY DADDY" Reginald Denny "There It Is" Educational Comedy "Color Classic" "Fox News" and "Daily News" Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 20-21 (Double Feature) "SAILORS' WIVES" Lloyd Hughes and Mary Astor "The Harvester" "Smith's Model Shop" Smith Family Comedy "Paramount News" WED., FEB. 22, MATINEE "TWO FLAMING YOUTHS" W. C. Fields and Chester Conklin "Fantasy" Color Classic "Everybody Flying" Fable "Fox News" Thursday and Friday, Feb. 23-24 "VALLEY OF THE GIANTS" Milton Sills "Do Detectives Think" Hal Roche Comedy "Paramount News" Coming Attractions LET 'ER GO GALLAGHER Harrison Ford THE FOURFLUSHER George Lewis THE GORILLA SERENADE Adolphe Menjou PIONEER SCOUT Fred Thompson e Reviews | oe At the North Bill-O-Fare Saturday, February 18 "Valley of «GIantsT... ius nas Norshore "That's My Daddy'? .......coink-es Varsity "Wedding 'Bills?' ......... New Evanston "Main Bvent' L000. kK. Teatro del Lago Sunday, February 19 Sheer A RO, TIS er Norshore "That's My Daddy?...... Teatro del Lago Monday, February 20 "Spite Corner? 00 1... New Evanston The. Gorilall. son asi. ahi. Varsity "Sailor's Wives" .. Teatro del Lago "Shepherd of Hills" ....... 7" ..\ Norshore Tuesday, February 21 "Sailor's Wives'. ........ Teatro del Lago "Shepherd of Hills" Norshore "Spite Corner"... re. -- New Evanston "Small Bachelor" ...... Community House "The Gorilla' .......... ......0... Varsity 'Wednesday, February 22 "Two Flaming Youths". .Teatro del Lago "The Gorilla" Varsity "Spite Corner". ...". 0 a%.. New Evanston "Shepherd of ills? 0 ..... a Norshore Thursday, February 23 "Valley of Giants' ...... Teatro del Lago "Spite Corner'! .....x 5 New Evanston "Shepherd of Hills? .... ...-.... Norshore Friday, February 24 "Cat and Canary" ....Community House "Valley of Giants" ...... Teatro del Lago "Spite Corfer'" .......5.5.. New Evanston "Shepherd of Hills" .......... Norshore "Spring Fever"... Glencoe Union Church COMMUNITY HOUSE Tues., Feb. 21 Fri., Feb. 24 Barbara Kent Laura Andre Beranger g Tappan re on Hale "The Small Sig Bachelor" The Cat 9» Collegian and Canary". "Dazzling Stage Co-eds" Prologue "The Small Bachelor" at Community House Tuesday The Community House curtain rises next week on "The Small Bachelor" on Tuesday and "The Cat and the Canary" on Friday. As a prologue for "The Cat and the Canary," Burton H. Atwood Jr., director of Community House movies, has arranged a brief stage sketch of fitting 'atmospheric nature. > P. G. Wodehouse wrote "The Small Bachelor," which, as a short story, was carried in the Liberty magazine. Bar- bara Kent and Andre Beranger are the featured actors: "Dazzling Co- eds" of the Collegian series will also be shown. "The Cat and the Canary" is one of the best mystery dramas shown -in recent years. It is an adaptation from the recent stage success by the same name and is just as convincing and entertaining as was its predecessor. Laura La Plante and Creighton Hale are co-starred. Give Lecture-Recitals on Gilbert and Sullivan A series of lecture-recitals on "The Mirth and Melody of Gilbert and Sullivan," is entertaining a number of Chicago audiences during February, presented by Abram Mendenhall and his daughter, Miss Helen. Opening the program, the former briefly sketches the lives of the three great Savoyards, William §S. Gilbert, Arthur S. Sullivan and Richard D'Oyly Carte, followed by a discussion of the motif of every opera they pro- duced from "Thespis" to "The Grand Duke." The lecture is illustrated by musical numbers, Mr. Mendenhall singing the comedy songs from "Pinafore," "The Mikado" and other operas, and Miss Mendenhall singing the soprano songs, with Miss Lois Magoffin at the piano. "THE FOUR SEASONS" W here the Best--Meet the Best WAUKEGAN 14 Miles North of Glenview, 4 Miles West of Wilmette. DANCING Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday Nights Music by ROAD Four Seasons Orchestra CHICKEN, STEAK and CHINESE DINNERS. NO COVER CHARGE. DINNER $7 50 Phone Glenview 126 for Reservations Bring in your may win you a prize. The exclusive use of the Ballroom Parties, Banquets and Dinners, any and Sunday. Open all year round. party. Directions: How to reach the 'FOUR SEASONS'--Winnetka, Wil- low Road to Waukegan Road. 7% mile south to "FOUR SEASONS." Exceptionally wonderful Music offered by the FOUR SEASONS Orches- tra and our special group of Bird songsters. Fe ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ UNIQUE CONTEST oldest Dime. Your oldest Dime Cash prizes offered. may be had FREE of charge for night except Wednesday, Saturday Come here on your Sleigh ride Ann Dere, Richard Ward Come in For Extended Comment With a limited amount of space at my disposal, it is always difficult to give the individual members of the Evanston Players the credit that is due them. The current production, "Wed- ding Bells," affords an opportunity to comment at greater length on the work of two of those who have been giv- ing Margaret Fuller and Charles George such excellent support during the present engagement of the Players. Because she has always played minor character parts in the offerings of the company, Ann Dere has not been fea- tured in reviews of the various New Evanston shows. Miss Dere has con- sistently done remarkable work and the necessitous elimination of much comment on it is as much regretted by the reviewer as by anybody. In "Wedding Bells" she takes the part of Mrs. Hunter, mother of Mar- cia Hunter--Rita Zane--and again proves her great ability as an actress. She is the most versatile of all the members of the cast and is the one who most fully lives her part the whole time she is on the stage. Whether she plays a slatternly Mexican cook or a female high hat she is what she plays and she convinces her audience that she is. Her stage presence is always pleas- ing, her voice is good, her lines carry to everyone in the audience. It is to be hoped that Evanston playgoers will soon have the opportunity of seeing her in a leading role. Richard Ward, one of the latest ad- ditions to the company, is one of its mainstays. He is a better all around actor than Charles George because he acts less and has considerably more assurance. As yet he has not had an opportunity to demonstrate any great versatility but in the parts allotted to hita he has made good and more than good. Perhaps he is one of those ac- tors whose parts must be chosen with the greatest care but who, when they are properly cast, quickly earn the plaudits of their audiences and build up an enthusiastic following. Ward is rapidly accumulating this following and merits a column of special praise. These two do by far the best work in the current show, a comedy that gets funnier as it develops, ending in a rapid fire laugh act. Miss Fuller and Charles George play the leads, Rosalie and Reginald Carter, whose romance, which ended in marriage and later divorce, began when Rosalie's dog chewed up Reginald's shoe. (The dog appears on the scene in the last act and a rather rustic audience was child- ishly amused by whistling at the beast on the opening night.) Three couples are tangled up in the skein of the plot and who is going to marry who, who has married who and who's who furnishes no little suspense. Other members of the cast are George Pembroke, Lew Welsh, Maynard Brooks and Beatrice Leiblee. GLENCOE MOVIES "Spring Fever" with William Haines will be shown at the Glencoe Union church next Friday afternoon. The 1927 Illinois corn crop is 42,- 000,000 bushels more than was esti- mated in August. It is more than 9 per cent of the nation's total. (ie The Chicago Surface Lines leads the nation in number of miles of track re- constructed by urban electric railways during 1927.

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