Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Philadelphia Daily News from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 31

Location:
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
31
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PHILADELPHIA DAILY MEWS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, I9ST 31 Earl Wilson 1 lO 7 6007 DOOffS OPIN 10 30 A 11 IS AM I 01, 3 00 4 50 6 45, I 35. 10 25 PM. ngrid Will Tire of Beauty Kudos George Scheck was pretty star- LEE MARVIN gives it to you 1 "POINT DICKINSON In Pantiiifen'ind Mttrectlar 'RAVE REVIEWS' NEW YORK. Iiigrid Berg-man'i slenderful beauty captured Broadway last night ia Eugene O'Neill's "More Stately Mansions," and she will be quite tired hearing about it. We sneaked a small peek at the last few minutes of the show, and at Miss Bergman, our friend for more than 20 years, and could only utter such cliches as "You were exquisite!" MIsi Bergman again plods daily to the theater, from a Central Park S.

hotel, past the Stage Barbershop and Stage Delicatessen, as she did during "Joan of Arc," 21 years ago. Miss Bergman's a philosopher who once told me that she's glad ahe's been unhappy because one who's never been unhappy doesn't know what happiness is. When she and Roberto Rossellini were involved in their tied to hear on NBC Monitor that Connie Francis had had a baby. They meant Connie Stevens. It almost scared George out of his commission.

JOEY ADAMS GOT calls from Mrs. Sukarno in Paris that both Paramount and 20th have movie contracts for her, and that he's to decide. Joey meanwhile's off to Japan and to Korea, hoping eventually to reassure Sukarno of his wife's love for him Duo: Greg Bautzer Diahan Carroll Remember when girls went on "personal appearance tours" with 25 bags? Kim Simons of Cheetah Magazine, touring college campuses, didn't need many bags with those outfits. A book, "Married Men Make the Best Lovers," by Ruth Dickson, claims that wives get the bad deal with the cooking. SIDNEY POITIER 1 -N laai MORE "to siR.ifttimtf3UE" BOX OFFICE OPENS TECHNICOLOR FEATURE TIMIt 11 00 17 50 7 40.

4 30 6 70 III, 10 10 DIAHAN CARROLL seen with Bautzer coat, 20Gs worth (ordered from 10:39 A.M. HMtiKMBPSM great romance, she told her housework, kids, diapers, laundry, and it's the mistresses who have the advantage It also warns single girls to make sure the guys they get attached to are married, because they ANITA COLBY danced wildly held the guy off, saying, "You don't want to do that, I can't afford the bridgework." Peter Dachin played piano for free at the "Happiest Millionaire'' supper at Philharmonic Hall while Harry Evans danced wildly with Anita Colby to the delight of the Drexels, Biddies, Dukes and Gloria Gurney in a $3000 gown Connie Francis' manager IS IMOINO CRITICS AGKfl- press agent, Joe Steele, "You aue anybody if they print I'm pregnant!" One day she suddenly sent him off a cable from Rome: "From now on, don't sue anybody." THERE WAS A big scream the screening of Frank Sinatra's "Tony Rome" picture, when Frank, about to get belted. 'POSSIBLY THE BEST FILM OF THE furrier Mike Forrest) Bar-bra Streisand and her husband mgr. Martin Bregman split; her actor husband Elliot Gould'U handle her affairs Tony Bennett says he'll have a role in the "After the Fall" film Rocky Graziano wore a paper tuxedo to Gallagher's Mary Ann Mobley weds Gary Collins Nov. 24 in Brandon, Miss.

might be single and would just! be sneaky enough to want to marry a girl and reduce her to a wife's slavery of kids, kitchen and trading stamps. Eddie's maternity gift to Connie: A chinchilla and a jaguar 'A Matter of Resistance' Now at 1812 Nazis from her land, dvnamic manliness. leave the children home. ELIZABETH TAYLOR MARLON BRANDO "A Matter of Resistance" is a frolicsome Gallic farce which Is a matter of a welcome change Also disrupting the of the household are noisy visits by Miss Deneuve's bombastic farmer-father, the local resistance leader. from the recent rampage of The climactic sequence has a two-man resistance team outwitting the Nazis and taking over an impregnable pillbox.

rf EFLECTIOPiS A GOLDEN EYE THFV THE "WAR" i 1 1 i I It a slapstick gem. (WctamJOiNHlSTO TECHNICOLOR PAN AVISION Suonrsrro rom MAruftf auotrwers' and the psychopath of "Repulsion." MISS DEXEUVE plays the restless, bored young wife of a cloddish country squire (Philippe Noiret), described at one point as a "wet rag but bullheaded." They live In spirited disharmony in a crumbling chateau near the coast, aloug with Noi-ret's harridan mother (Mary Marquet). Miss Deneuve yearns for the excitement of Paris. Noiret is content to tend to his apple orchards. Miss Marquet occupies herself with setting the plaster falling from the ceiling with her piano pounding and chasing Jean Paul Rappeneau won: the French film critics' award as the most promising new director.

Hopefully there will be more wacky film fun coming from him soon. 1 SANDRA SAUNDERS TONIGHT AT 8 PM raunchy movies. With a delicious sense of the ridiculous, the import at the Theater 1812 focuses on a group of kookie provincial types who become embroiled in the resistance movement (and nearly wreck it) just before the Normandy invasion. While the setting is wartime, the film's fireworks are limited to the romantic variety, sparked by blonde charmer Catherine Deneuve, who'll be remembered p.m. fcUWiliVASfafe: MATS.

SAT. SUN. 2 enters meir sneueieu existeute with the arrival of Henry Gar-cin, a handsome French Army officer working undercover on Day preparations, and Carlos Thompson, a Nazi commandant who takes over the chateau for a billet. The comic complications compound as these two intrepid military leaders wage their private war with Miss Deneuve as the prime objective and Noiret's jealousy arouses him to 111 70 mm. nndslrrconlionir sound! TOOAr AT 4.00.

M. 1000 I 'V' S.T as the sweet young thing of "The Umbrellas of Cherbourg" RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE ADULTS! Vj jeW i iixni'iiMU'vnn Atmv.l.nwiiT vvri 'Don't Look Back' at World the pioneers of cinema verite c3 CdBURTJ TONITE i In America. While this style is occasionally hard on the eyes (jerky camera movements and fast cuts), it gives a you-are-there authenticity to the action that eliminates any hint of stag at 8:30 PM. ATURDAY WMvf Bob Dylan, folk idol of the young, tells it like it is. He's now the subject of a fascinating documentary, "Don't Look Back," which shows it like it is.

Unveiled yesterday at the World, the film follows Dylan and his entourage, including Joan Baez and manager Albert MATINEES SATU TfMWCdlH SUNDAY a 4.M I II I 1 riiiTOnun. and fi.ll 1 o'pS cavernous Royal Albert Hall. HE'S HEARD SINGING some of his best "The Times They Are A-Changin'," "Gates of Eden," "It's All Right, Ma." "Hatti Carroll' and "Dont Think Twice." Miss Baez also strums guitar and sings "Turn, Turn Again" in casual, impromptu song session in a hotel room while Dylan composes at a typewriter. Dylan's British rival, Donovan, also gets a turn in a similar informal scene. The movie has limitless appeal for Dylan fans.

It's also an eye-opening bit of filmmaking for the uninitiated. SANDRA SAUNDERS slcn'oplwnif sound! at 10 a.m. utnuvuuj Grossman, on a concert tour of Great Britain in the spring of JI LIE CHRISTIE TERENCE STAMP hi nrrrn rnvit ing. Dylan has been called a fulk-singer, protest singer, poet, philosopher and eveu an "anarchist." But he resists all labels and testily puts them down in several abrasive sequences covering his "interviews" with the press. His very contemporary philosophy is brought out in these standout scenes and in his clip 1963.

Hand-held cameras take the viewer into Dylan's unique C55P Iht ALAN BATES world the concert stage, the moving cars and trains, the to press of adoring fans, the press interviews, the hotel room horse play. ped conversations with his own in-set and the ever-present I WORLD i 12:50. 4 JO. 20. 111,110 hangers-on.

The over-30 crowd THE FILM IS THE WORK of Donn Alan Pennebaker, one of British Actor Returns To Films after 12 Years Jimmy Hanley, British screen star of the 1940 will return to Van Huesen-Cahn Set For Title Tune will come away with better insight into the thinking attitudes1 of present-day youth. There are many scenes that linger in the mind. One behind-the-scenes glimpse of show AWH.nOW.Ti ffieWsa CAUGHT IN AN ORGY OF SEX, VIOLENCE and VICE! SEX SYNDICATE SWIHGERS HIT 2 THf UNCONTROwLASLf of motion pictures after a 12 year OKI THUm i nam. wmi im hiatus to be thoroughly digested by a mammoth sea monster during a key sequence in the a ntnuK imuu I Producer Saul Chaplin has signed Jimmy Van Heusen and Sammy Cahn to write the title tune for 20th Ocntury-Fos's "Star!" the Robert Wise roadshow film starring Julie And- Seven Arts-Hammer production business wheeling and dealing has Grossman and Dylan's suave British agent negotiating by phone with two rival television companies for the best ATRIP TO IRMEISPAU rw tirtvv hfnr ihi ramprjn of "The Lost Continent." Hanley plays one of a ship's crew beset by fantastic hazards in, the. 20th.

Century-Fox attrac The song will be used in lb tor a D'lan PParance 4 A LI UVf CAST of course, Dylan per scirnM ew cirls miT ium-wumn-a-mm sequenc phi Tiij'niiiiL wnich Miss Andrews, tion, based on the Deunis Whealley high-adventure navel. caught in the single a docu-lllgnt of jam-packed concert balls ruae Lawrence, view i.iih:ihtm' i "Uncharted Seas." from the provinces to London mentary based on her career,.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Philadelphia Daily News
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Philadelphia Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
1,705,714
Years Available:
1960-2024