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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 25

Location:
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
25
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

LPHIA INQUIRER. TUESDAY 7.1 I 1-r a 23 At the Locust LO 7-6007 11 1 KT mi rem AMERICAN SOCIETY OF ANCIENT INSTRUMENTS 39TH FESTIVAL April 25, 26, 27 UNIVERSITY MUSEUM For Festival Information Call or Writ 7445 Dovon Street, Phila. IS! 19 CH 7-7623 or CE 8-0930 Rolls Royce Is Crux of Success Farce OOOhS OHtK 10 JO A 11 VO AM. 12:45, 2:35. 6:25.

820. lOJS I The Cast figures in one of those "we have been here before comedies." By HENRY T. MURDOCH Of The Inquirer Staff After first registering a com "HAPPINESS IS JtTST A LITTLE THING CALLED A ROLLS ROYCE." A new comedy by Arthur AlsberK and plaint that in the earlier scenes bDT.4dn,A,,VJk- TICKETS. is just a part of his entrapped world. He is always a gray suit, button-down collar rebel and a little bit cowardly about it all.

Ruler of his domain is played by John McGiver who has the owl-eyed wisdom to play such roles. He heads the law firm which passes over our young CLIVh 00NNERSf.im oi GO THE tne Players Seemed tO be enjoy-faer, scenery Larry Keehlint. eos-r tumes by Ann Roth. Lichtinr by John ins a private joke and the Gien premiere Mon- pinviinr SSISL1EY TELLY OKIE COLOttrhiaM amy mgnt at tne Locust with the follow ing-aid was needed, Happiness east: Wsnnns Savalas Oauis UNITED ARTISTS is a Little Thing Called a Rolls THIS SUNDAY DIONNE WARWICK HERBIE MANN AIL PHILLIES GAMES N. Y.

THEATRES SPORTS 231 S. 13TH (NR. LOCUST) PE 5-9673 CLASSMAN'S TICKET OFFICE Royce" perked up, got louder myra naciey Louise Sorel Sanford Rutrhik Shimen Raskin Walter Baley Pat Harrington huck Kinsey Marvin Lichterman Karen Kinsey Phoebe Dorin Phil Gorshin Lee Berrere Andrew Mclntyre John McGiver Jerry Ramsey Ray Fulmer Andrea Clithero Alexandre Berlin hero until he buys a Rolls. Mc- Giver plays the stalwart A. A.

i advocate, the Nero of the firmj and the man who believes the! junior member is lacking in' and became an amusing, if conventional, comedy. The format, designed by playwrights Arthur Alsberg and "COULD BECOME A COMEDY CLASSIC" HELSEl, Doily Newt r.l tliffHI C0roAHON drive until he buys the Rolls! XTRA ADDED! COLOR byOeLu.e DOORS OPEN 12:15 P.M. 12:50, 2:40, 4:30, 6:20, 8:10, 10:00 P.M. "WET AND WILD" 'lams Robert Fisher, is derived from to go back to Harvard to teach the earlier horse-trading im-haw. pulses of "David Harum" andj in the meantime he lives in an the bluff of "Get Rich Quick apartment, well designed by Wallingford" and suggests that' Larry Reehlins.

in which he is Surfing Spicitl Ull CmtTWT IT. LI t-ttst Royce. What is intended is a satire on the business, the social andj the philosophical all of which may deserve the satirical treatment. Nothing! the way to succeed is in the, surrounded hv snnnran art nf soupcan ACADEMY AWARD WINNER "BEST FOREIGN FILM" "A COMPREHENSION OF THE grand splurge. ASSOCIATES AWED the Andy Warhol school and in his A.

A. moments has recollec ACADEMY AWARD WINNER MIKE NICHOLS BEST DIRECTOR jd i JT 9 -P tions of his day as a pole vaulter, of trip 1 In this case the hero PSYCHOLOGY OF SEX" NY. TIMES I Ft 11 a. much emerges in but the idea. The execution is; faulty.

To be mentioned favorably! besides McGiver and Harring-j ton are the performances of! DOORS OPEN 10:45 AM 11 05, 12:55. 2:40. 405. -iO. OO.

9-4S PM CMMTNUT AT I STM lO l-)0 play, a momentary deliquent crau wnicn ne penormea wen from Alcoholics Anonymous, ln ctHege. JOSEPH E. LtVINET TfJ, X-A PNVISI0N" MIKE NICHOLS- LAWRENCE TURMAN takes his insecure fortune toi CAUGHT IN TRAP imiTfo iRnsTsc, BEST DIRECTOR buy the Rolls, thereby awing his associates in his law firm. He has secured status. The partner- Pat Harrington plays this hero with a great deal of frantic and amusing activity.

If he pulls out technicolor; panavtsion AN EMBASSY HCTUW I STAKING ACADEMY AWARD WINNER Alexandre Berlin, as a young girl who comes to supper and remains to comfort and Louise Sorel as the understanding wife of the young legal eagle. They are all, unfortunately ANNE OUSTIN HOFFMAN 11 30-1 30-3 30-5 30-7 30-9 :30 KATHARINE ROSS 730 930 ONLT 1 Lm mu ivt 1 7 :50 KlKlflJll 1 CASTOR AVE ship long denied him is the phone, throws it out the He is a man to be reckoned! window and kills a policeman's with. All the time he just wants horse, no malice is intended. It BEST ACTRESS EST SCREEN PLAY Theater oi Living Arts i a 'i 1 1 i 1 1 a iitiNiiiM i Spencer i Sidney i Katharine TRACY POITIER HEPBURN guess who's coming to dinner TECHNICOLOR" Marlboro Series Concludes CHOICE SEATS AVAILABLE TONITE AT 8 P.M. PHONE WA 2-3404 The clarinetist was Elsa Lude- which the playing was more mm fmvpmmtmKm 1 uSFl NOW to SatMAY 4 ml BOX OFFICE OPENS 10:30 AM Fsalura: 11 AM, 12:55, 2:50, 4:45, 6:40, 1:30, 10:25 PM By DANIEL WEBSTER Of The Inquirer Staff The Music from Marlboro series at the Theater of the Living Arts closed Monday with a concert that summarized the special quality of the music and players the series has featured.

THE Will wig and she joined in Beethoven's Grand Trio, Opus 11, with piano and cello and in Hinde-mith's Quartet for violin, cello and piano. In between, Leslie Parnas played Chopin's Cello Sonata in COLOR ACADEMY A17ARD WIIIUER! 6 Tn 70mm. anil full UrrrnnhnniV cminrir SEATS NOW ON SALE AT BOX- OFFICE OR BY MAIL! than the music deserved. The four movements draw everything from the instrument, but seen long and windy. Parnas and Perahia were highly individual collaborators, yet finely tuned to each other's ideas.

Their playing had sweep and power and the feeling that this was the only way to play. It is, and the quality of the playing makes the end of the series regrettable. BEST ORIGINAL MUSIC SCORE By featuring a clarinet in with pianist Murray Perahia. UNIVCNSAL eFulie Andrews Hill CHOICE SEATS AVAILABLE TONITE AT :30 P.M. chamber music the players! The clarinet prompted highly were sent into untrampled rep-; individual writing bv these com- PHONE LO 7-702 1 3t ertory, turning up fresh early posers.

Beethoven built a shin- MarylylerMocr works by Beethoven and Hinde 'x? in ing, bouncing work in which the clarinet drew away for brilliant Crol Clnanning James Fox mith. And their playing was i vigorous, youthfully brash yet flights and witty interjections 15 meticulously proportioned. Asjwhile piano and cello worked LAST 8 DAYS w' i 5, ever, the talents were large and earnestly. The players caught DIANA ROSS AND THE SUPREMES LARRY WILDE Children TECHNICOLOR the spirit of the piece, particularly the humor of the variations that make up the last TOMORROW OPEN 9:30 AM FIRST SHOW 9:45 AM I fl 3 the individual's dedication to the music rather than the display gave the entire performance distinction. Bolshoi Ballet Off for U.

S. Tour MOSCOW, April 22 (Reuters). The Bolshoi Ballet Co. left Monday for an 11-week tour of Under 12 1 "4 5Sc.n -BcatriCGlillie I movement. Miss Ludewig's tone All 7imis A UNIVERSAL PICTURE "4JKLI9MPRROW varied from almost trumpet PLAZA CINEMA I SPRINGFIELD! PLAZA like clarity to a quiet, dark quality barely distinguishable CHELTENHAM Chtitfnfcam StMHiRf Ctntff ChclttnkjM I 0intl Avts.

IHtinvi Pikt Slum II. lint il Frumi in Cntir Nnnilm SMfi Mill the United States with a galaxy of top dancers including prima ballerina Maya Plisetskaya. smmut (tuny. pi. mn i piutin.

pi. ditrintwi. II I. mem-. AM SEE 2 FEATURES "BONNIE CLYDE" "NO WAY TO TREAT A LADY" LAST 2 DAYS "NO WAY TO TREAT A LADY" SEE INDIVIDUAL THEATRE ADS IN DIRECTORY FOR ADDED INFORMATION from the cello's.

AUTHORITATIVE READING List of Concerts Is Corrected The concerts of the American Society of Ancient Instruments at the University will be given The company, which last Parnas and Perama were 1 FIRST PHILA. SHOWING-Faa 7:30 PIVI authoritative co-workers in this LK3D1 toured the United States in 1966, will visit several major cities including New York, Philadelphia, Washington, Detroit and Los Angeles, before returning GIRLS, LOVE IS the ONLY at 8:30 P. M. Thursday. Fri-reading, me piamsi crisp styie day and Saturday.

They were ana strengtn reauirmea me in- WAY TO LIVE! Two Arms will do-ANY TWO ARMS! erroneously listed in Sunday's sirument importance ana mae-Inquirer as Wednesday, and the cello played home July 10. A major item in its tour pro day and Friday. tne role 01 caiaiysi Deiween Terence STAMP Carol WHITE gram will be a new 20-minute An omitted dateline listed ana ciannei ballet to fugues and preludes i Sun. MAY 5 to Sun. MAY 26 j'pv THE I if LIBERACE ft lllHI SHOW I fi WTH 1 III FLORIAN AZBACH I tC GALE SHERWOOD jffTwftfMii ii 'ill rmanmiS ffl May 27 to June 2ffi.

JACK 1 (VW JONES A "Jj PETE it j7 BARBUTTjJl JUNE 3 to JUNE 9 the following events as Friday THE YEAR'S MOST TALKED ABOUT (BLnJ by Johann Sebastian Bach, in instead of Saturday: TECHNICOLOR which Miss Plisetskaya will Philadelphia Eisteddfod, Gir- RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES i dance the main role. ard Avenue Welsh Presbyterian REDUCED PARKING RATES tot SUHLET, STAKTON BOTD Pitrwt It MM1B Hotil tyifl. General Church, 1:30 and 7 P. Concerto concert, Philadelphia TONIGHT at 8:30 PM Music Teachers' Association, U.N. Issues BOX OFFICC OPEN DAILY 10 AM la PM $UN.

I Ptt tot PM MOTION PICTURE! Greek Hall, Wanamaker store, 2:30 P. Parents Day con ft UoorthoAPAnrMVAuADnuiiJMiMncnijnl' ri iibai iiicnunuuiTi i niinixu iiimiiimu oumu; cert, Clothier Hall, Swarthmore 3 New Stamps "TALK TO THE ANIMALS" College, 8:15 P. and Philadelphia Workmen's Circle UNITED NATIONS, N. The Hmdemith Quartet is a sunny work in which the clarinet is again called on to be the singer apart and then to join closely with the cello. Hinde-mith's inventiveness and timbers and his sense of architecture provided the players with a work that challenged as quickly as it pleased.

Perahia's confident playing gave the whole performance a sense of mission, and the players, joined by violinist Hiroko Yajima, gave a polished and sensitively shaded performance. The slow movement, with its clarinet song above the strings, was a high point. Parnas and Perahia filled the middle of the program with a passionate reading of the Chopin Cello Sonata, a case in Chorus, Gratz College, 8:30 P. M. April 22 (AP).

The United Nations has issued three new post WAYNE in zX "JOiiib STEREOPHONIC SOUNO C010I IT DELUXE -T000 1 0 A TOniR STEREOPHONIC SOUNO C010I If DELUXE -T0D0 10 age stamps designed by Ole TICKETS ON SALE it BOX OFFICE OR BY MAIL Hamann of Denmark, head of the NEWTON I I I I-W HATS. 2p SAT, SUNDAY EVES. 8 30 world organization's Graphic Vtoner Arts Present Presentation Unit. 3 SHOWS EVERY SUNDAY at JACKIE The issues two commemora- KAHANE tives on the U.N. Industrial De ISOlllMIIE, if velopment Organization and a TONIGHT at 8:30 PM BOX OFFICE OPEN DAILY 10 AM to9 30 PM SUNDAY 1 PM to 9 PM regular air mail stamp brought Mon.

JUNE 10 to Sun. JUNE IS to 20 the number of U.N. stamps WINNER 3 ACADEMY AWARDS! that Hamann has designed. Mi ID I SANDY DENNIS jKEIR DULLER AXXE HEYWOOD rr'v (Rsi.a 11 a i THE RESERVED' SEATS AT BOX OFFICE OR BY MAIL (mam, timmmrm im IN P. H.

L.WRENTES RIM. LOVE IS A ID ASSOCIATION JERRY COLLINS TECHNICOLOR STEREOPHONIC SOUNO 70 mm warner arts 2 PM MATINEES SUN. HOLS. EVENINGS 8:30 SUN. EVE.

8 PM FOUR LETTER WORfl PLUS ACADEMY AWARD rrZM II TBI WORLD fBWVN MAWR DOORS OPEN 10 45 AM Flit. 11:10 AM 4.40 1 10 10:00 MKu4, I 1(10 MAfKiT wama of VYAKKtN btAI IYrAYh UUNAWAY WINNER MICHAEL J. POLLARD GENE HACKMAN ESTELLE PARSONS MM Super Mother Superior vs. Groovy Sister George! Divorces Begun Bernstein, Gerson vs. Beatrice.

Bivens. Virginia Edith vs. G. Charles. Ryan, Rita M.

vs. John Sr. Goldberg, Rochelle vs. Raymond, from bed and board. Ryva, Anton, vs.

Katherine. Waite. Margaret K. Skene vs. Francis J.

Cyr, Harry J. vs. Sandra J. Fish, E. Bessie vs.

J. Joshua. Noel, John A. vs. Edna M.

Slaughter, Eileen Marjorie Wayne vs. William Henry. Selmer, Viola by Mary Craggs, guardian, vs. Thomas J. Morrison, Rose M.

vs. Joseph. Moore, Clemigene vs. Ulysses T. Martin, Katie L.

vs. Julius. Allan, Oscar W. vs. Delzora.

Marshall, William M. vs. Elizabeth. Byrd, Eliza M. vs.

Martin L. Kuntzmann, Dolores L. Smith vs. Harry B. Whiehams, Robert L.

vs. Naomi Richardson. Lancaster W. it lry Mavr frtt Parkin! V2S62 Tonite 7:30 9:30 Cj LO 3-1216 IM 1 Cont. fr.

10 AM SHOWS NIGHTLY coLOR-mkUm RUSSELL STELLA STEVENS in MINIMUM FOR 11:30 SHOWS TECHNICOLORS ACTRESS JmL ijlfjflf i WED. THURS. WHERE ANGELS TROUBLE FOLLOWS Milton BERLE Arthur GODFREY Van JOHNSON Robert TAYLOR pin I Ull I LIOUM TO ACCOMMODATE OUR PATRONS FOR THIS Q.nfl TWIN-HIT PREVUE -DOORS OPEN TOMORROW FUU TOMORROW LIVE ON STAGE7) ADULTS ONLY! MINIMUM FOR ALL nrupR tunw 1 OULT TMIT IN fi I ($6 PER PERSON PHIL. WITH II Vt TRAVELING BURLESX np PREVUE TOMORROW COME AS EARLY AT 9:30 A.M. SEE 2 FEATURES "PLANET OF THE APES" PAUL NEWMAN AS "HARRY FRIGG" Divorces Granted Barnett.

Dorothy from Bruce. Natale, Diana from John M. Schacklett. Elsie May from Edward Minimum always includes food and liquor FROM PHILA. DIAL WA 3-4343 FROM N.

J. DIAL NO 5-3600 LAST 2 DAYS FRIGG' i inn mi ICI BtAI ITICI II PI IH NFW ALL STAB Svendsen, Nancy Gay from James Charles. Huymaier, Andrew from Yolanda. WiUiams, Rose M. Hall from Matthew Jr.

Nolan, Thomas E. from Florence D. Lieberman. Ronald from Leona E. Tobin.

NEW MOVIE MODELS WEEKLY Man. Ui 1 fg. T.I It Cm Ai lat Ai 9:30 PM i Set C.mpM. Slww I Merrlgan, Robert T. from Veronica sum nhbbbjnbbi I A.

forced to mate by 1 31 civilized Wl S1F-S0IED SLEEPER! mm 0 BREATHTAKING! IMAGINATIVE! The nicest surprise to happen in a long time. Unless you just enjoy turning your back entirely on life, you should not miss the -rvriON ff. I if' la THE St.TunP SHu inn p-- mm mm Tnt Jr -sT TTtVi il breathtaking shots!" 1 STARTS TOMORROW 19th and Chestnut Streets, LO 9-4175 ROlW McDOWALL MAURICE EVANS KIM HUNTER JAMES WHiTMORE JAMES DALY IAST DAY "SWEET NOVEMBER" a aaurc plm in colop UNUA HARRIoUN' apjac productions mort Abrahams frankjjnj.schaffner michaelwiison rooserunc uuKvXmSOLBMTH ase ey wu PttWE WUU PAWYISIOH COiOt DELUXE tJD.

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Pages Available:
3,846,195
Years Available:
1789-2024