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The Journal News from White Plains, New York • Page 35

Publication:
The Journal Newsi
Location:
White Plains, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE ROCKLAND COUNTY JOURNAL-NEWb 35 Nationally Known Artists! NYACK, N. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1963 N. Y. Theaters Shubert Alley Celebrates 50th V'i College Sculpture Show To Be Rockland Talent Instead of having to travel to i museums in New York City and other major art centers, residents will soon have the opportunity to see tine works of sculpture in their own backyard. Six recognized American sculptors wno make their homes In Rockland County and works are seen in private and museum collections throughout the world, will show some of their sculpture at the Rockland Community College Oct.

13-20 from 3 to 6:30 p.m. daily. The exhibition, called Sculptors" is sponsored by the art and sculpture committee of the Rockland Foundation in West Nyack as part of a program to bring artistic works of high calibre to the county in a series of once-a-month exhibl- jpTSX plays Cathy In the Immortal classic, and Laurence Olivier, who protrays Heathclilf. Also co-starring is David Niven as Edgar. "Wutherlng Heights" Is scheduled for showing at Clmema 45 Theatre through Tuesday.

than doubled In the last 10 years, Increasing from $18.35 to $36.83 a day, the American Hospital Association said. FOR ADULTS ONLY1 "MONDO CANE" IN TECHNICOLOR "BIZARRB and SADISTIC" N.Y. TIMiS MAIN ST, SPRING VALLEY. N.Y. II 6-60(0 FREE PARKWO ftw 600 CARS iiiii.inn.POSSIWrHPWIH Doris Dpy James rnricn ARLLHE lUXCIS Frae CoHte In Our TV Leunat Every Eve.

ins! Performances Friday, Sunday of 'Angels In Love' "WUTHERING HEIGHTS," from famous novel by Emily Bronte, with the screenplay written by Ben Hecht, Upper Nyack, and the late Charles MacArthur, Nyack, Is the feature film now at Cinema 45 Theatre, Spring Valley. Seen above are Merle Oberon, who HIAWATHA' PANNED BOSTON (UPI) When "Hiawatha" was first published In 1S85, It took such a critical thrashing from the Boston Traveler that Longfellow's enraged publisher, James Fields, publicly severed all connections with the offending paper. HOSPITAL COST CHICAGO (UPI) The average cost for each day a patient spends In the hospital has more "I rcommnd the i plclur lo vryn.n I -New Yorker Magazine LESLIE MM Ft 1.3:10. 1-M. 7 JO, I 40 comes to the Broadway AN UNUSUAL CONCERT to be heard tonight when the Russian Puppet Theater act0rs and audience with easy i access to the street.

The strip of land traversed by untold the ater-goers was the architect's answer. Today the ownership of i the alley Is equally divided be- i tween the brothers Shubert and the Hotel Astor which claims the eastern half of the strip. Besides making the event a public holiday and a day for Hollywood Hons. The November show will be at the Foundation. At the Community College next week will be works by such established artists as Hugo Robus, of New City, Thomas Lo Medico of Tappan, Edwin Gamble of Germonds, Carroll French of New City, Blanche Phillips of Nyacl- md Louise Laskey of New City.

The sculpture wil' run nm the easily recognizable to the more demanding abstract, from the literally serious to the double barrelled whimsical, using such materials as brass, bronze, terra cotta, wood, stone and, In the case of Mrs. Laskey, old tools and farm Imnlements that have been welded Into weird and witty forms. French, departing from his familiar territory of wood, will show works chiselled from na- norant of the facts of life, all thanks to his mother, Dearest. With Harry Kahrs as Fauntle roy and Dorothy Brown as Dear est, others In the cast are Kath leen Murray, Linn Macdonald, Burton Crofut, Robert Lowndes, William Blando, Diane Weldon and Richard Nelson. In keeping with the Victorian style of "Angels in Love the exhibit for this production features newspapers, books, art objects, and household gadgets, all of the period.

The display was arranged by Gardner Watts, a member of the Tappan Zee Historical Society and Mrs. Joseph Lamond of the Trading Post. Tickets and memberships will be available at the box office, and a buffet supper will be served on Sunday from 6:30 to 7:45, TILE TIP NEW YORK (UPI) Cera mlc tile Is an Ideal surfacing material for kitchen countertops since Its dense scratchproof body Is baked at more than 2000 de grees during manufacture and cannot be damaged by hot pots and pans. If A i-zi able cooler on wheels on the Iiuibnnk, set of her new movie, "The Fastest Gun." ARTISTS' I 4 til i 'i' I. Mb- -i im ii as NOW AT POPULAR PRICES! This eveninf? at the Broadway Thoater at 53rd Street, voices will be dubbed over the actions of hundreds of Muscovite pup-pels.

The words will be in English and the staged fables by the diminutive but none the less expressive figures will be as graphic and entertaining as a master puppet designer can manage. The manager here is Obratsov. Earlier in the day some very animated voices were raised by celebrants gathered to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Shubert Alley, a few blocks down from where the puppets were being readied for show. Altogether it will be a day of International amity along Theater Street. The puppets are the work of a famed master of the art.

Obratsov, from all accounts, has designed his little friends to widen your eyes with their staged dramatics whether you be adult, child or part of both. Visitors from the former land of the Czars have returned with unstinting praise of these bloodless actors. The word has been out that they are as life like anil character-deep as the genuine article. They've been devised with a shrewd mind towards "comment" by their maker, Obratsov. 60th Anniversary of the "Alley" At 12:30 p.

m. this afternoon band of musicians from Local 802 supplied their services to the Shuberts for free. that's news. The occasion was the 50th anniversary of Shubert Alley. Among those on hand for the huzzahs and congratulations were Helen Hayes, Richard Rogers, and Senators Javits and Keating Sharing the platform with the notables were Mrs.

J. J. Shubert, Lee Shubert, Mrs. John Shubert, Lawrence S. Lawrence and Lawrence S.

Lawrence executive vice-president of the Shubert Theater Enterprises. Originated in 1913 In case you might wish to know how this odd piece of real-estate came Into being, here's the explanation: Back In 1913 When the Shubert and Booth Theaters were built back-to-back, the fire laws demanded a walk at least eight feet wide and 10 feet high to run alongside both theaters to provide IRMA AND HER FRIENDS ARE IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD! UtMMON MaeLME BILLY WILDER'S IRNM0VGE TECHNICOLOR PANAVISION HASTINGS URCHMONT larehfflont KIMBALL TOnHU DOME PlttllfiMUt URiSCH CCUr. JONBItttUU' T. ill Jti? BiRISCH COMPANY-0W0 1. MPfRSOfl George Maharis Scheduled For Judy Garland TV Show GUtNNtSS ANTHONY OUINN JACK HAWKINS ANTHONTOUAVU ClAUOC HAMS -ARTHUR KINNKIT 2 SHOWS DAILY Aire JCjC FtRKtR MATINEES AT 1:30 P.M.

EVENINGS AT P.M. SUN. EVE. AT 7:30 P.M. HiiilllifcMWHMiHi THEATRE NANUET, N.

Y. M.NAJ-MU NOW cATCH THE RUNNING MAN FROM THE BEGINNING! MIM rixma tlve sandstone in the past twi. years The Robus bronzes and the brasses of Blanche Phillip: will show how two sculptors can wor with metals and emerge with works radically different in texturai and emotional con cept. Gamble will show two In teresting pieces In terra cottr and wood, and Lo Medico whose works convey a stronj. masculinity no matter what the subject, will show several pieces In wood.

Whenever a drawing was made previous to the sculpture, It will accompany the piece on exhibition. The general public and members of the Rockland Foundation are expected to attend the opening of the show at 3 p.m. on Oct. 13 at the College and several of the sculptors will bo present. Foundation hosts will be Dr.

George Stein and James Nalsmith. Film Schedule TIME SCHEDULES for the double features being shown this afternoon and tonight at the various mcvle theatres throughout Rockland County, In nearby Westchester and Bergen Counties, are as follows: ROCKLAND Theatre, Nyack "The Running aMn," 2:27, 7:29, and 9:44 p.m. LAFAYETTE Theatre. Suf fern "The Running Man." 2:27, 7:29, and 9:41 p.m. ISKUAUWAY Theatre, Haver- straw "Beyond The Time Rirrier," 2 and 7:30 p.m.; "The Thrill Of It All," 3:10 and 8:50 p.m.

I CENTRAL Theatre, Pearl River "The "-hrM Of It All," 21 and 9:35 p.m. CINEMA 45 Theatre, Spring Valley "Wutherlng Heights," 7:30 and 9:45 p.m. ROUTE 803 DRIVE-IN Theatre, Orangeburg "Johnny Cool," 7:30 and 10:30 p.m.; "Cry Double Cross," 9:25 p.m. NYACK imiVEIN Theatre, Blauvelt cartoon, 7 p.m.; "The Thrill Of It All," 7:07 and 10:33 p.m.; "The Terror," 9:10 p.m. ROCKLAND DRIVE IN Thea tre, Monsey cartoon, 7 p.m.; "Beach Party," 7:06 and 10:25 p.m.; "Young Racers," 9:01 p.m.

SKOCRAS 59 Theatre, Nanuet "Lawrence of Arabia," 1:30 and 8 p.m. SPRING VALLEY Theatre, Spring Valley "The Thrill Of It All," 7:20 anr 9:33 p.m. ROl'TE 17 DRIVEI.N Thea tre, Parnmus "Ik-ach Par ty," 7 and 10:20 p.m.; "The Young Racers," 8:50 p.m. FIX Theatre, White Plains Above," 2, 4, 6, 8. and 10 p.m.

Seventeenth Doll An open casting for "Summe of the Seventeenth Doll" wU be held at the Antrim Playhouse, Suffern, Oct. 9, at 8:15. John Brlmer directs this dra ma by Ray IawIct. Set In Australia, the play has parts for three men, one young, two older and four women, ranging In ago from young to elderly. Production dates are Nov.

29, 30 and Dec. 6 and 7. OH VMtf All iMcma Um WW1XUI1 lit BJJ T. tPtiN VAllfT NT IIMHOMI-MI- MERLE OBERON LAURENCE OLIVIER DAVID NIVEN WUTHERING HEIGHTS NOW PLAYING TrieTlirill 1 OFicAii! DftY JAMES BOB CUMMINGS IN "BEACH PARTY" DOROTHY FRANKIE ALONE AVALON ANNETTE FUNICELLO plus "YOUNG RACERS" Box Offict 6:45 P.M. Show Tim.

Duik Doris Dpy James COLOR nmu plus "THE TERROR" liftf 4. I Final performances of "Angels in under the direction of Katharine Brlmer, will be presented at the Antrim Playhouse, Suffern, on Friday at 8:40 and Sunday at 8 p.m. The results of bringing up a "perfect" gentleman are discovered in Hugh Mills' comedy. Little Lord Fauntleroy is now twenty, but he remains blissfully lg- Concert Group Schedules Noted Violinist, Chorus Members of the Ramapo Val ley Community Concert Association will have their membership cards for the coming season mailed out. A group of artists will be presented this season at Suffern High School Auditorium In four separate concerts.

The first attraction will be Zvl Zeitlin, a noted violinist, who will play on Nov. 16. Next, the DePaur Chorus will offer a vocal program on Dec. 10. The Zurich Chamber Orchestra will appear on Jan.

15 and Olegna Fuschl, a pianist, will present a program on April 6. 43 4 DO IT YOURSF.LF COOLEU With the temperature at 114 degrees, actress Merry Anders comes up with her own port- UNITED STARTS TODAY I 5 Jtottf'Jf 4V THE COSH By VEKNON SCOTT L'PI Hollywood Correspondent. HOLLYWOOD (UP1)- George Maharis, the angry young man who bailed out of "Route 66" in mid-season last year, is back in tinsel town to establish a movie career. Still recovering from a near-fatal bout with a liver ailment, Maharis no longer is the smart Alec, finger snapping hipster of old. Eight months of inactivity in his native New York have extracted much of the actor's tough guy veneer and given him a less brui.sed view of the world.

"I don't even watch 'Route 66' anymore," he said, "because I don't have any reason to. All the legal problems I'm having with the show should be worked out within the next three weeks-in or out of court." The producers of the show, with whom Maharis has been fighting for almost a year, continue to claim that George is under contract to them and that he should return to his co-starring role. "Never," says George. "I'm looking for movies now. to see my li I THRILLING SUSPENSE! 1.1 tUnui! LAURENCE HARVEY Hemlrk iinil Alnn Biilm speech making and general all- around good wishes, a bronze que was mounted on the wall of the Shubert Theater to commemorate the event.

All in all It was a nice job of show business publicity hitched to the star of a sector known pretty nearly everywhere as Broadway, itself the principal alley of the nation's theater industry. "The doctors told me not to work, for a year, and I've been following their advice," he said. "This is my first big outing. I chose Judys show because its not one of those appearances where you just get on and sing and then get off. And besides, how are you gonna top Judy Gar land?" Unknown before his video se ries, Maharis cut several successful albums when the show was at its peak: "George Maharis sings," "Portrait in Music" and "Turn Me Loose." Records All Hits Now he's waxed another, "Where Can You Go For a Broken Heart?" The answer, presumably, is the bank inasmuch as his recordings have all been hits.

Now that he is back on his feel, Maharis is anxious to make an impact on movie-goers. Uut he's being selective. He said he had turned down film offers from MGM, Columbia and Universal. "I want my first movie to be more than entertaining," he explained. "I want it to say something, too.

"And I want a balance of popularity. That's important lo me be back into action. I lost more than 35 pounds during my sick- Maharis returns to New York soon to look over his offers. His return trip will be by air. He doesn't even like to think of traveling by car on "Route 66." ill k' tf EXCITING ViY0U RUN OUT OF BREATH!" Joumtl AmtmM ABULLSEYE1" Archtr Wmltn, Poll Tnb'jn ELM3FGR0 mvm YONKERS him "7 I tUV.

li. career turn. I believe I got out, because of the thousands of b. just in time. If an 'people who wrote asking me to actor stays in one part too long get well when I thought I'd never DORIS DAY-JAMES GARNER fwfxe vr to vjatch thsm share TheThrillQfifcAll! ARLENE FRANCIS color THE riot! Theal PREMIERE SHOWCASE PRESENTATION ItlA MURDERNl TERNATIONA 14 V4T E.

I -f nnnnnnnnvv KM it a the character becomes too set; solidified, like in cement." Before signing for his first role in pictures Maharis will appear with Judy Garland on her new CBS-TV scries. It will be Maharis' first singing stint on television since his "66" battle. RICHARD ATTEKDOROUGH I Mile UH MD rivc it aM lib Children THE 1 sl THEY KIDDIE HSTRA- WE In UCWnV CIIVA Tflnl llll I WIBw wwwi mum ior 'ch IKT CCUlWI luM W. 1 Lit TV7I STEVE KcOUEEN JAMES 6ARER 1 111 vr MSM OWESH DONALD PLEASENCt JAMESCOBUR1 B90IH0II OF CRiMtl ''kLJ yrnT- www trm- mttt mn mmh turn Ill I II 1 MM Under 12 Free Tj Ramser.N.j, Ml( ttMON WDM CilMMffS yZ CIDQT.Q1TC iinvriiniii nuikinvnti vrh (HENRY SUVA EIIZACETII niB mn mm mm rai WW mmmw mi mwr k-Mk tt mm N-r JOSEPH LAMXiN WiUiAW ASHE.R PPERLAWF0R0 MILTON EBBlNS MvwvtfjfvHfwM aMA UNlTtOATiSTS "I AT THESE GOLDEN SHOWCASE THEATRES BRONXVIllE l-xi 9 MT.KISCO COLONY VICTORIA rnnnnn ntalvp I PREMIERE SHOWCASE UiilLUJ III T1AIM ftCAROUMi Box Offic. Op.n 6:45 M.

1 PARKWAY, ML Vernor. l5 Show pw Tfmt Duik.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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