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The Miami News from Miami, Florida • 13

Publication:
The Miami Newsi
Location:
Miami, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

AMUSEMENTS MIAMI DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 6, 1942 ON THE NIGHT SIDE Men Mentioned Here Are Doing Things For You And You And You By LES SIMMONDS Li- i 1 fe I VV.i! i J- THIS GERTRUDE REED IS A REMARKABLE PERSON Maybe You Know The Irish Lady Better As Gifted Madam Zaza lly Jess Carver Gertrude Reed is a lady of ample proportions, both physical and mental. Miss Reed also is Irish, as Irish as ham and pot distilled whisky, with all the deep and passionate feeling of the Irish in her soul and endowed with "the gift' the gift of being able to peer into the hearts and minds of her fellow men and women and read there things which the subjects themselves may not be aware. .:) r. 0 ed to take over Command of the coming European Second Front. Harry Hopkins, perhaps closest of all the men in Washington to the President, is himself a resident of the White House.

Washington's director of Civilian Defense, Dean James N. Landis, was loaned to Washington by the Harvard Law School. Admiral Emory S. Land, head of the War Shipping Administration, is at his best in a tight spot. In the 1900 Army-Navy football game he scored the winning touchdown.

General Marshall, Chief of the General Staff, U. S. Army, was chosen over 24 other brigadier and major generals to be Chief of Staff. its SI 11 vs. ''J.

I I 'J. LANDIS CO. Lloyd Nolan catches Carole Landis, but doesn't put her out. The extras are Dodgers or the Dodgers are extras. Your preference.

"It Happened in Flatbush" opens at the Lincoln and Miami Tuesday. 1 I (aaiaB I (I V' March of Time," generally accepted to be the top-ranking two-reel feature for movie houses today, has been running in Wo-metco theaters since, if our memory is right, 1934. It has proven such a terrifically popular series that Womctco often pays more for a "March of Time" rental than they do for a feature picture. That may give you some idea oi tne importance oi M. O.

T. "Men in Washington" is the newest release. It is now show ing at the Lincoln and Miami theaters. Here a some interest ing facts culled from a M. O.

T. pamphlet on the men who are making history in Washington today. Donald Nelson, head of War Production Board, is no stranger to produc i and purchasing. Sears, Roebuck thought enough of his ability to pay him a salary as executive vie president in his pre Washington days. Dr.

T. V. Soong. Foreign Minister of the Chinese Government, feels right at home in the U. S.

Nelson This brother of Madame Chiang Kaishek and of Madame Sun Yat-Sen, widow of the father of the Chinese Republic, holds a degree from Harvard University, Class of 15. Even the dignity of his new title Co-ordinator of the Office of Information doesn't fool Colonel Wm. J. Donovan's old buddies. They remember that in World War I he was known as "Wild Bill" Donovan.

OPM's Leon Henderson was always a hound for work. Even back in the days when he was In high school, he was holding down 14 jobs at the same time. Paul V. McNutt, now mobilizing manpower in war industry, followed General MacAr-thur's campaign with more than ordinary interest. He himself was formerly High Commissioner to the Philippines.

Milton E. Eisenhower, assistant to Elmer DavLs, isn't the only member of his family in government service. His brother. Brigadier General Dwight D. Eisenhower, former Chief of the War Plans Division of the General Staff, has just been appoint GENE TIERNEY Recently finished "Thunder Birds," a drama woven around Arizona, planes and the war.

Gene is now "single for the duration." Her husband, Oleg Cassini, enlisted as a private after turning down a commission. WEEKLY WEEP FOR MEN URGED BY CRY MAESTRO (Special by the New York Herald Tribune to the Miami Dally New.) Why in the name of all the nake the good Saint Patrick chased from the Emerald Isle Gertrude Reed ever adopted the name of Mat am Zaza. when, after the crash In '29. she went into the business of capitalizing on her gift, we'll never be able to fathom. Zaza fits Gertie Reed with about the same degree of authenticity as white tie and tails would fit a Seminole 'gator hunter.

Miss Reed explains, and somewhat apologetically, that an acquaintance back in New York decided she should have an exotic stage name and selected Zaza, and still somewhat crushed and bewildered by the stock market explosion, which blasted her life savings, she adopted the moniker and has carried it ever since. Not that Gertie Reed hasn't done well by her business name, and it by her. She's made plenty of money and she's made a host of friends. There is some excuse for her using the name Zaza, for it Ls Persian for Goddess of Sight, which Gertie Reed certainly is. Miss Reed is not a fortune teller, a soothsayer or a phony in any sense of the word.

One sits before her, tongue in cheek, waiting to be pleasantly fooled, and winds up with said tongue flopping in amazement and wondering how in the blazes this one-woman FBI possibly can know so much about what one would have bet the rent were strictly private affairs. Miss Reed knows the science of reading hands, as any trained psychologist does, but without going into any elaborate or staged trance, she can FIVE STAR CLUB SHOW rXTRAOKOINART cat sric KH CO KB NO MINIMTM riNES UQ.10K9 SERVED W. tTW T. an ATE. PHONE OR THE BEACH AIR-CONDI.

TIONED STARRING r.REAT COMEDIANS CHAZ CHASE B'f fr ra Jtl'a HiR Kiakara NOVELL BROS 2 Craty Lovt Birds DINNER tXEfiXL. $1.25 DE LUXE CI fin OWNERS QliWd IXNCHEONS Popvlir Driflki 40c IMnraln B. ifi. Brt. Mich.

A VISIT THE Where NEW YORK, July 6. Edmund Goulding has a facade of chill reserve, but he has a sentimental side, too; in Hollywood he is known as a woman's director, specializing in MOVIE TIME TABLE Admiral Ernest Joseph King, Commander in Chief of the U. S. Fleet, came up the hard way. He first saw service as a mid shipman in the Spanish-Ameri can war.

Byron Price, Director of Cen sorship, dislikes any form of censorship. Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller, Co ordinator of Inter-American Af fairs, once spent a year in India on a fellowship won for scholastic merit. His memories include a chat with Mahatma Gandhi. Kyser Kids Kyser In All Except Music Department Kay Kyser. who comes to town this week for Paramount in "My Favorite Spy, is smart enough to realize he's neither a Gable nor a Walter Hampden.

So Kay gives his writers the full go sign to kid his acting ability. personal appearance or to engi neer a physical beating for him in the interests of screen comedy. With each succeeding picture the boys have poured it on thicker. In his fourth, "My Favorite Spy," Kay really goes to town on the rough stuff. As produced by Harold Lloyd, the film sees Kay fighting a losing battle with two U.

S. Marines, taken for a ride by crooks and generally mistreated, knocked out by blows on the head, and taking part in a rough-and-tumble chase through a deserted theater. In his role of a popular orchestra leader who is pressed into secret service work for the government, he permits himself to be kidded as a poor soldier and discharged from the army because of flat feet. Only his music remains above ridicule. TOWER "The Magnificent Dope," 2:00, o.oi, o.is.

NEGRO THEATERS ACE "The Spoilers," 7:35, 9:40. HARLEM "Helltapoppin," 2:56, 8:14, LYRIC "Date With the Falcon." 6:45 "Take My Life," 7:48. 9:57. RITZ "Mayor of 44th Street." 3:03, I AV6-. at "Mats Harl" vita rata Barkt Ltvit Staaa I 1 1 1 1 Jk I 6-30 I I a I ill 4 '1 II Ckiltrta 10c A mmLAlil3iJkJmJUl Malta 9te It Coral Way at 12th TJROSK POWER fiKNK TIKKNKV SON OF FURY TrrH MrMnrrny Mary Martin "NEW YORK TOWN" TODAY "Look Who's Laughing" Edgar Bargee Charley McCarthy Fibber Molly Meiiee MARCH OF TIME NEWS and SHORT SURJECTS Adults 30c, Tax Inc.

Chlldrtn lie DANCING ENTERTAINMENT BEER OX TOP lOe KOTTI.K BKKR IJQVOR FROM MIXED IRINKS lXii JEOM 10O ETootllght Alt Meairay jThe Horreshowj iff I On Miami Beach! Jl (tVV Maxine Coleman AL FERGUSON Jl rjyBig Beauty Chorus 'jfi Behind Cameras the ambition to become a director: Miller worked his way up from of fice boy through various phases of motion picture making; Sidney is the third generation of a noted theatrical family; Lederer graduated from newspaper and scenarist ranks; Wilcox went from a newspaper to become Vidor's script clerk, and Newman got his start as an M-G-M office boy after leaving high school. QUimpia 25 1 30 40 En. Ploying With Lora la Biaky Bui What Fan! SHEAKEB-TAYLCil LOVEITSS VS in iwii iHaBu mn i LAST OAT HUMPHREY BOGART "TIIE BIG SHOT" IRENE MANNING TOMORROW John Waynt Binnit Earnts "In Old California i i ib I ACT AAV BARBARA STANWYCK vS JOEL McCREA 'The Great Man'i Uif TOMORROW OABT.F.S BOIXrVAKD iaiwrll "fair Anna" Takat litre" LAST I)A1 Opfa :15 f. SC. ANN SOTHERN RED SKELTON "Maisie Gets Her Man" tAST DAY Opra IAS F.

M. ANN SHERIDAN RONALD REAGAN "JUKE CIRIi" PJUflsiilN Lt Dn 0m 9:45 A. Ta Richir CariMB Raacr Kail "FLY BY NiriUT" 1 tlmU m. I iRET IFE" la. i Last Dav.

2 I "IN THIS OUR LIFE Zj 6: 30. Ta Air CMtiticrcO LaiE oav. I. 2 f. M.

SKELTII iY" Ta tut. ELEAROR MWEIL RFB "SHIP aurtv i a 30. Last Da. 1 p. UROBE rtWEI CEBE TIERBET "SON OF FURY" 25 All Day.

Tax In. iJJj" Lart Oai! a. i ABBOTT aai COSTELLt Dln DITAIf Alt 25. Tax Im. Last Da.

(4 H. i ALLAB JONES JUDY CABOVA "TRUE TO THE ARMY" EXTRA -OUR BU5SIAB fROBT" tj Starts FRIDAY! Unci Sam's Haroaa In Oraralla! 1 adMOattnUhal ara I AT POPULAR PRICES! I I Sawr Tracr "Tortilla Vim-" i. reach into the unknown and pluck facts and even figures which astound her subjects. Miss Reed makes no attempt to tell subjects what she thinks they would like to hear. She either is brutally frank or refuses comment.

No, she has no idea of the winner in the third at Pimuco she won try to pick the American league pennant winner and the only thing she knows about the stock market is that it is, in her own words, "the diva" of a fine place to stay out of." But Miss Reed can sit with you, fold your hands over her crystal, tune in on those mysterious thought and sensation waves which roll just over the border of reality and she can call you a lot of turns. "You wanted to be you should have been, a doctor, a surgeon," she'll tell you, with no way in the world of having known that you took a pre-med course in your college days. Your blunt, spatulated fingers, the fingers usually attached to a surgeon, may have helped her to draw such conclusion, but she had to have even more than that to make such a statement. Safe crackers and locksmiths and jewel cutters have sensitive hands and fingers also. Miss Reed has read for many famous persons, persons such as Col.

Edward House and Jimmy Roosevelt and Mrs. Wendell Will kie and the Duchess of Windsor and Jim Farley and Peggy Joyce and Sonny Lehman and Al Vander-bilt and Louise Ranier and the late John Barrymore. But not Al Smith. "Al doesn't go in for the she says, "he's a different sort of an Irishman." Miss Reed Ls staying with us in Florida this summer, at least for the time being. She's at the Club Bali and she's not working too hard getting caught up with her visiting and driving back and forth daily from the home she re cently purchased in Hollywood.

Naturally, the question she is asked most concerns the war when will it end and who is going to win? Miss Reed believes the months of July, August and Sep tember will tell the story she's pa triotic enough to hope the Allies will emerge the victors and some how she feels the end will come much sooner than any one now imagines. We trust she's on the beam there, DAIIGUIG MORRIS KING His Violin and Mtmum Am. MUSIC BOYAR BAR N. To Dine IS N. E.

3RD AVE. Gronn4 Floor Elk. Crafc Bids. PCT Cr TO TAKJt OUT PHONE 2-2277 ouun OINKM $1.50 tf A Cow CfclMM Saaaialtias P1Q AND SAX UBEACIHI DINNERS S00 From Daner Dancing Nlfhily Enferfafnmenr Catering to Luncheons. Banquet and Wedding Parti t- Faaaoaa For Charcoal Broiled Steaks and Chops Cbefs Daffy Special "Where the Gonrmets Dine" IVInea Uqaora Telephone t-4114 Air Conditioned 68 mm Eight Newcomers Keeping pace with Hollywood's brilliant array of newcomers be fore the camera are an equally promising group of young directors behind the cameras.

In recent months Metro-Gol- dwyn- Mayer has developed and in troduced eight new directors, each with their first feature pictures, I and given two other initial fea ture assignments. They are Jules Dassin with "Nazi Agent" and -The Affairs of Martha," Fred Zinnemann with "Kid Glove Killer," David Miller with "Billy the Kid" and "Sunday Punch." George Sidney, Charles Lederer with "Fingers at the Window," Joe New man, directing "Gambler's Choice," Fred Wilcox, who is to direct Eric Knight's story. "Lassie, Come Home," and Herbert Kline, as-j signed to direct "Journey for Mar garet." Their backgrounds are widely divergent, but they have three assets in common, creative minds, screen training in various fields and technical skill of a high order. Their success stories are colorful in the typically American manner. Dassin began life in Middleton, as a stage-struck barber's son; Zinnemann tried music and law before seeing King Vidor's "The Big Parade" fired him with 7' AT BOTH THEATRESO tii-Gnn miESi ill arr -in LINCOLN ROAd fc.

fLAoUH AT iHH 35. t. 1. vwrm IMI. III.

LAST TIMES TODAY Ten Gentlemen EXTRA tF wasM- iNSTtM" OF TIHE" From West Point MONTGOMERY-OUARA -SUTTON THEY CAU. IT BASEBAIX. tit (t'l MFr Yoi'll Howl! In. Miami Avi. AT ikQ 6iC Stva at ioIm I 20 NOON Ta 1 OPEN 6:45 LAST 1)AV JOAN CRAWFORD MFXTIN DOUGLAS "THEY ALL KISSED THE BRIDE" 1Mb EASIL Al-gAMi BFAt-J i.

fLAGUR AT wf 20 to 1. lacl. Tax -SWEETHEART OF THE FLEET" with jon oavis. JINX MIKFNBUHG. HUH WaODBURY 1 WASH AVfc.

AT id S. W. 0th ST. AT IM FED 2:45 25 2 Tl ilrIHAGlFICEiVT POPE fSa-eari-amecheP 1 14 Avi. AT 9U LAST BAY 2-11 "SrBMARIXE RAIDER Itk JBHM HOWARD Extra! It.

JAS. STEWART "Winnin Vw Winfj" MMN.W. toAVE. FREE PARK- 1 I RITA HAYWORTl. MUSICAL MIT Teehnlelr "MY SAL" "NOONTIDE JEAH CABIN a UST OAT 2-11 I0A LUPIBB 3 30 a.

Bit. 7 ft 9 1 1 Lait Bit. 7 ft 9 I "THE WIFE II CHARLIE I Tr.KvEcS.nA II CHAPLIN I FLYER" JI GOLD i JW BEBBETT BUSH" OA AT N.E. 7rt AVE.P 6r5vP Good Food Is Good Health MIIAMIl the principle that life can be Iunch Follies A Huge Success Revue For Shipyard Workers Spurs Men To Extra Production NEW YORK, July 6. Without invoking the Sherman anti-trust act, Broadway has taken upon itself the task of breaking up one of the biggest monopolies ever to flourish in these parts.

we rerer to tne musical revue an institution heretofore attended almost exclusively by the tired Dusiness man, wno got that way by swiveling around in a chair all day while counting his money. Now the musical revue, which consists of skits, songs and snappy patter, has been found to pep up the tired business man no end, and Broadway, as the purveyor of this magical tonic, recently started thinking: ii tne musical revue does so much good for the white-collar gents, what would it do for such men as shipyard workers, who labor seven days a week and who must really get tired?" So the American Theater War Wing thought and thought, and fi nally emerged with "The Lunch time Follies," a nimble, fast-mov ing revue, and yesterday betook it over to the Todd Erie Basin Dry Docks in Brooklyn. No tickets were needed by the 4,000 shipfitters, iron workers, welders, caulkers, rissers, steam litters, carpenters and engineers who gathered around a makeshift stage in the middle of the yard at the sound of the noon whistle. They saw dancing by Sunny O'Dea and Harrison and Fisher sketches by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart, and heard songs by Ann Francine and jokes by master of ceremonies Alan Reed.

And between bites of lunch-box sandwiches and sips of soda pop, they told each other: ims is swen great won derful makes life easier ten, later acting with Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree for three years. He was a comedian in a London revue, and his first three-act play, "Ellen Young," was produced at the Savoy theater in London in 1914. His initial experience in motion pictures capne as leading man in Para-mount's "Three Live Ghosts," which set him off on a Hollywood career as actor, director and writer. In recent years he has been devoting all his time to writing and direction. i.fc.a 310 S.

E. FIRST ST. PH. 3-0647 L.a.;a ACTHEXTIO Chincso Dishes IXTfCHEON 4ft Dinner. up ORDEBS CLUB Phono 2-I5SS AIR BEACH "Sergeant York.

2:20. 4:50,. 10. BII.TMORE "Tha Wife Takea a Flyer." 7:40, BOULEVARD "Th Great Vjn't Lady." 2:10, 4:05, :00. 7:55, CAMEO 'Th Magnificent Dope.

3:38, 5:36. 7:36, :36. CAPITOL VLadv In a Jam," 12:02. 1:53, 3:44. 5:35, 7:36, :37.

CENTER "Mr Gal Sal," 2:48, 5:04, 7:20, :3. CINEMA "Bi Shot." 3:00, 4:40. 6:25. 8:15, 10:05. COLONT "Maiaie Geta Her Man," 7:40.

9:45. CORAL "In Thia Our Life," 2:00. 3:50. 5:45. 7:40.

:30. DADE "Ship Ahoy," 2:05, 4:00. 5:55, 7:50. 9:45. DRIVE-IN "Look Who'a Laughing.

9:00. 10:30. EDISON "Footlicht Fever." 9:20. Ma- Hart," 10:26. GABLES "The Great Man'a Lady, 2:10.

4:10. 6:05, 8:00, 10. GROVE "The Gold Xlf HI ALE AH "True to the Army. 7.50. 0 "50 LINCOLN "Ten Gentlemen From Welt Point." 3:21.

5:38. 7:55, 10:12. AYF AIR "Lady in a Jam," 7:40, 9:35. MIAMI "Ten "'mr" JY Point." 11:30 5.55 10:15. March of Time, 1:15, 3.25.

5.J. 7:45. 9:55. OLTMPIA "Her Cardboard Lover. 11:30.

1:35. 3:40, 5:45. 7:50. 10. PARAMOUNT "Sergeant York," 11:30, 2:00, 4:35, 7:10, 9:45.

PARKWAY "Son of Fury 7:00, 10:13. "New York Town," 8:58. PLAZA "They All Klsaed tha Bride," 3:43. 5:39. 7:35.

9:31. REGENT "Rio Rita." 7:30. 9:30. HEX "Tortilla Flat." 10. 12.

2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10. ROSETTA "Eubmarine Raider." 1:39. 4:27. 6:15. 8:03.

9:51. ROXY "Son of Fury," 1:30, 3:35, 5:40, 7:45 9:50. ROYAL "Loat Horiaon." 12:03. 3:37. 711 10:36.

"It Started With Eve, 5:32, 9:06. SHERIDAN "Sergeant York." 3:20, 4:50. 7:25. 10:05. STATE "Sweetheart of 12:34.

2:21. 4:08. 5:55. ,7:42. 9:29.

11:26. STRAND "Moontide," 2:00. 3:59, 5:58. 7:57. 9:56.

TIVOLI "Juke Girt." 2:00. 3:55. 7:55, 9:55. ll'litfiMl'lilVi'ilJ 25 DISCOUNT Tai eaaaaa alitlaa Diteeaat ally rotate akatra SIGHTSEEING BOAT NIKKO 24th ST. AND COLLINS AVE.

MIAMI BEACH 3 TRIPS $1 DAILY 1 For Reservatlona Phone 5-7033 SCHEDULE "I.OtT HORIZON" 1 1 3 :37 7 8 10 "IT STARTED WITH EVE" 1:5 9:30 Service Men, 10c motion pictures dedicated to cruel, cruel to the sex. Among his productions are two Greta Garbo pictures, "Anne Kar-enina" and "Grand Hotel," and four Bette Davis films, "Dark Victory," "That Certain Woman, "The Old and "The Great Lie, in which Miss Davis suffered through a series of emotional crises. He is now engaged with John van Druten en the scenario of Miss Davis's next picture, "Old Acquaintances," while his completed production, "The Constant Nymph." with Charles Boyer and Joan Fontaine, is to have a premiere soon. Unlike another fellow director, George Cukor, Goulding doesn't mind being designated as a creator of women's pictures. He believes the screen tear jerker is good for men as well as women.

"Every man," he holds, "should cry once a week to be healthy, but the average male cries only once in two years because he thinks it's unmanly. There is nothing like a good cry to bring out the latent sympathy in each of us for our fellow men. It's a Technique "Why, the tear jerker is an art in itself. There is a certain psychiatric technique to it. If you want people to cry at a certain point in the picture, you usually go back 500 feet or so before that scene and start the customers thickening up in their throats.

Then, just at the point where you want the audience to begin crying, you reverse the emo tional mechanism by having the character laugh. "You see, no one will cry about any one who cries about himself. In 'Dark for instance, I wrote into the picture a character in the person of Geraldine Fitzgerald who did all the crying for Miss Davis. If Miss Davu had wept no one would have wept with her, but Miss Fitzgerald was in the position of the audience, weeping behind Miss Davis's back, and that gave Miss Davis a clear course of martyrdom. In 'The Dawn which was a man's tear jerker, without a woman in the cast, Errol Flynn and David Nixen laughed at the moment of blackest despair and the audience shed tears at their bravery under stress." Goulding ascribes his affinity for directing feminine stars to "chemis try, or a natural fusion of tempera ment." "I adore women," he said, and they have faith in me.

A woman is like a thoroughbred, and it is her trust in you that counts. An actress's career is at stake with every picture she makes, more so than with a man, and it is important for her to rely on some one's sympathy and judgment." The tear jerker is only one facet of Goulding's career. He has at one time or another been an actor. dramatist, novelist and songwriter. He is a native of England, where he made his stage debut at the age of MrtVl op nous 1 s.nt QJV CONDITIONED 2 ORCHESTRAS 3 SHOWS NIGHTLY 9, 12 and 2:30 EISCATNE STH ST.

feOO N.E. Basinets Men's Lanchaons 35c Fall-Ceart daLax Dinners, 50c to SI .25. Served from 5-Y P. M. MHAME tir PAGO PAGO ROOM SSStl 3o Sbawa Mhtly.

Colalna Coder Supervision George Porm-ranta ''a Blastr, 1:30, rOPCXAK DRINKS. 40e NEVER A COVER jirM i P.M. soot Are. YANDERBILT HOTEL PhOBe ss-iess. bs-imt ''WE DOOD IT-9 AGAIN! WE HAD TO TCB.X EM AWAY 8CNDAY FULL HOISE EVERY SHOW YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO MISS 'LOST HORIZON" JIST BECAISE THE JAPS DID "SHANGRI-LA" ALSO IT $TARTED WITH EVE" NOW OPEN! Miami's Newest Ballroom THE Frolic Danceland OS THE OCEAN AT 40TH ST.

PHONE 1-111 COCKTAIL LOUNGE luir Mi Z3a4 aa4 FAhK AVE, DINNER tnrlarilnc SHOW $1.25 ARTISTS 2k 13TH ST. AT MacARTHUR CAUSEWAY 100 Air Conditioned LARGEST DANCE FLOOR IN MIAMI Frank Stanley and Hi Orchestra $1 DINNER SPECIAL aoa aosTwjca POPULAR DRINKS 400 mm lilimi JACK CARSON CEORSf TOBIAS OH 1UI. ttt.All.

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Pages Available:
1,386,195
Years Available:
1904-1988