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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 73

Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
73
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Swedes Cheer egngfkCtat nL.oa.t.i6& urti 13U I Show Biz Spotlights Tight Money Policy Zorba' Continues one cf Bergman's favorite Swe dish actresses, Bibi And ersson, while the patient is played by the 2S-year-old Norwegian star, Liv Ullman. Anthony Quinn stars as Zorba in 'Zorba th Greek in the Beverly Canon Theater. SULLIVAN Writer 'A TICKETS NOW AT BOXOFFICE OR BY KAIL! Musical 'Heidi' Production Set A musical version of "Heidi" will be presented by Ted Thorpe, producer of "Zulu and the Zayda," at the Warner Playhouse opening Thanksgiving Day. The new attraction, written by Samuel Li Rosen with musical arrangements by Ray Henderson, will be offered daily at 1:30 p.m. through Nov.

27. It will then be continued at the same time during weekends through the Christmas holidays. Ml WIS (uitnt is JUTJE ANDREWS'MAX VON SYDOW RICHARD HARRIS hTHSCTOaSt )T Mi HI.TH KtSTJ MOWCTW HAWAIT tUUtlBOe MJM Mm BY ROBERT UPI Staff NEW YORK The prosperous looking man in a cartoon in a national magazine says to a bum looking for a handout: "A glance at the papers will tell you money's money which everybody i3 screaming about may or may not affect the bum business, but it certainly has affected show business, according to Carol Lawrence, who should know. Carol can speak for all forms, including Broadway shows, off-Broadway shows, summer stock, television, night clubs and concert tours. She does them all.

And in each one she is just as likely as not to sing, dance, act, "joke, or even read poetry. She does it all. Carol and her. husband, Robert Goulet, came to 'aiKirtaiarETS- ix BOOM TO tPM. fTRVPTI AM aVffic 37 u.

Hiii. Z. (A 7.1 1 4 ,11 IM TKMire Part Tlr rT unA A-r mnvnmmrm (712 HOLLYWOOD BLVD. -HO. -H67 Cr METO-GOUWiN MWER David AT EASE Gen.

Charles Gordon (Charlton Heston) sips his brandy and contemplates strategy in scene from "Battle for Khartoum," now at Cinerama Dome. SHIRLEY JACKSON eoi klM IntanmttM CaM 4 UAKisi STTfWIDH MrnririiUiMitoHilnaaMaal Rcflsrave jjwjiBi New York after finishing a concert tour in Pittsburgh, where they grossed for six performances. "That's pretty good," she said in their midtown Manhattan apartment, "considering the low market" The market is really important, Carol said. "Take somebody who wants to do a show in New York," she said. "He's got to park his car (at as much as $4) buy tickets (from $5 to $25 a pair) and eat (forget it).

"Money is tight people just don't have it to spend." Carol also mentioned that backing, production, and promotion costs, and the cost to borrow the money to meet the costs, now cost more. Therefore there is less backing of new good shows, she said. couple of acts, while Wheeler lays his groundwork, but the third act explodes into a chilling, if predictable, climax. Miss Knight, daffodil yellow with tumbling hair, does a splendid job with Constance, and Webb has a field day with the crusty old uncle. Young Miss Menzies, who has been featured in a couple of movies of Music," is a properly diabolical youngster, and the rest of the cast, under Garson Kanin's direction, is quite satisfactory.

But the trouble with the people and what happens to them is that you never really care. i 'Wrong Box' Still at the Same Theater "The Wrong Box," starring Peter Sellers and Michael Caine, is continuing into the ninth week of its engagement at the Beverly Hills Music Hall BfflWOMftT BMIMW iVH From rehearsal hall t0 Perfection to performance. iWki fnum I ipfy 1 -r i i mmnSr frf RESERVED SEATS NOW ON SALE I at In Mai Order me So. CaMernia Mmic Cav, i7 Su. NM Stmt SM Mutual Acenciea PtMM MA.

7-124 tar yew aaarait tocatioH Vtltt 'rty Crwf Sales lwmi cai iM4iaBaa hh CHARLES CHAMPLIN 'Hogan's Goat' Triumph of Craft Continued from First Page both dream and nightmare So, for that matter, is the part of his wife, whose fatal ladylike elegance, mixing warmth and a forlorn dignity, must play off against her husband's out-of-the-bogs, up-from-steerage toughness. The parts are here entrusted to Robert Hogan and Mala Powers, and they handle their hugely difficult roles with conviction and authority. Miss Powers is an actress of great gifts. Verse comes foreign to the modern tongue but I suspect that they will all make it seem even more as natral as breathing as the run progresses. In the supporting roles, James MrCallion is wise and convincing as a parish priest.

Co-producer John Harding 'HOGAN'S GOAT A stfeY by William Alfred. Presented by Stephen Brown and John Harding at ttii Society Theater. Directed by Tom Palmer. Seta and lightlnt by Frank Maei. Music coordination by Leigh Harllnt.

'It only hurts when Continued from First Page wheelchair and is firmly convinced that Constance did the killings. This uncle, who didn't take much managed to live through the carnage but he can't remember just what happened, and he refuses to believe Heather exists. Ghostly Presence There's also a little Negro boy who came along after the murders and who hides in a dumbwaiter and 1 emits ghostly moans. These all live in the castle, which is a big, cheery New England farmhouse, handsomely realized in the ornate setting of David Hays, along with a safe stuffed with money and a lot of eerie voices that rumble in the woodwork. Sticky Going Into this menage comes cousin Charles, a handsome lad bent on acquiring Constance and all that loot.

But he reckons without Heather, All this makes for some rather sticky going for a MMat IK eatMMOf uo DMC401 nlil 1 4Vanej vanpa I Last 5 Days ExcfotWtly at STATtWIOt CREST anmoe navidVfamer Warner hjmmc BR 2-587S Matthew Stanton Robert Hooan Kathleen Stanton Powers John, (Black Jack) Haggerty Mark Gardner Petty Boyle Cain Connors Basal Leg Barbara Perry wir ainttlTIIV i-- MMIHIM-miTODRCHEm-TECHNICOLOR't NOW PLAYING Exclusive Limited Engagement KIW' nCRCWT WWWXT0H 47TI7M BONIFACES nr.Ur.ni westwoob ullage 371-OWt HOLIDAY" Daily; rpniHDC 7itcoioiuM w.MMt fRtZEVTNNEX EOUUllU. PASADENA MB. tin. INTERNATIONAL CARTOON FESTIVAL Bergman Film Eutaahr la Tka Times tram Reaaara STOCKHOLM Swedish film producer Ingmar Bergman's first movie in more than two years was given an ovation here. The film, "Persona," is the first Bergman film since "All Those Women," and depicts the relationship between a nurse and her actress patient who refuses to speak after seeing a television program in which a Buddhist monk in Vietnam burns to death.

The nurse is played by Km armfitl id 4 (a temporary casting) does a fine, satiric cameo as a second priest. Mark Gardner as a wardheeler, Barbara Perry as the resident floozy, Paul P. Farrell as another working poi and Jeanne Arnold all do notabley well. Stuart Lancaster as our semi-hero's political adversary inherits another of the author's fine-to-read but hard-to-play roles, and overplays it Sandra Outsen has a small but vital role as a telltale and, again, should un-' derplay rather than reverse. Alfred's play poses problems (or any designer, but 'particularly for Frank Masi and the Stage Society's low-ceijing shallow stage.

But somehow Masi manages to convey two rooms (on two levels)-, two saloons and an excursion boat The direction is by Tom Palmer, who has surmounted the physical problems, sustained all the momentum of Alfred's plot and brought forth a well balanced production lit by two remarkable central It is not less than glorious to hear Alfred's exultation of language. Line after line will stick with you: I keep remembering the' description of a falling lady. and acres of somersaulting drawers," there were. Alfred writes with warm affection about these new Americans scratching for roots in a new land, making perhaps their first And if the events are tragic, there remains a positive note, for the tragedy flows not from the Wind and angry Fates but from human failings and even those are born of aspiration not malice. It makes for quite an evening.

Universal City Club Takes the Jazz Plunge BY LEONARD FEATHER i Time Jail Critic (L r- 1)1 Msnnia r.M hot number in her yj Award-winning performance! jyfe MEmOGOLimN MAYER rWtorm Mm 25 Fri.E 30-13000 30 Sat and San 2-4-t-Sn1BPM RDXY DEAR JOHN nianfl.la CI 3.6393. 12:13 MOMENT OF TRUTH CROWN Paiadenl COLORADO Alvarez Kelly CAT BALL0U Elizabeth Taylor TST rtu unr tiu daaf raaauena 6-9704. :3 BUTTERFIELD 8 DEAR JOHN AX 3-7164. 6:43 Garner, Mr. Buddwlng Battle of Bulge PL 4-2895.

6 X3 CHAMBER HORRORS GREAT RACE' SINGINGNUN LEIMERT GREATEST STORY- Crem. 43 PI. EVER TOLD AX -5iS' GLASS BOTTOM BOAT GREATTACE' PL AMBUSHBAY MANCHESTER Man Called Adam WILD ANGELS Sf IL DEAR JOHN 62-3379. 6d MOMENT OF TRUTH COVINA 104 N. Citrm A MILLION ED 2-2003.

6 X3 WHAT A WAY TO GO CREST Mnnmvia WILD ANGELS EL 6-31 19, 6:43 AMBUSH BAY GLENDORA crTttstoy 108 W. Fwthill EVER' TOLD ED 5-7070, 6:43 YELLOWSTONE CUBS STA? GREAT RACE EO 6-2463, Ml GIRLS ON BEACH ArvarczKeHy 886-3600. t-M Brando THE CHASE Dl 1-2222. 6X3 LOST COMMAND GRANADA mloT tfiSLt" AR0UENDW0RL? 360-2171. 6:43 AND UNDER THE SEA cinema Alvarez Kelly C.rri.?.

ginire "7 .7.. 485-6726, 1:45 GLASS BOTTOM BOAT CREST Elizabeth Taylor 8 in Berdee CAT ON HOT TIN ROOF TU 5.4853. BUTTERFIELD 8 STUDIO San fttrnanlfn TU 3-6405. :4 DEAR MOMENT Of TRUTH CORONA 211 E. 6th RE 7-3446, 6X3 Hitchcock's TORN CURTAIN' Mr.

Buddwlng PARAMOUNT FIREBALL 500 BEAU GESTE Paramount-Cam B. 3-4646 ROADIUM fttdonoo Bok. Crtn. MARCO THE DA 4-2664 MAGNIFICENT RUBiDOyX Hy.99W. Bivona-.

JIN ROOF OV 3-4453 BUTTERFIELO I SUNDOWN tt2 W. Washlnetea IL Wliittlor OX 3-3243 SUNLAND 6016 Foothill IM. Bunlind FL 2-1401 TWiNVUE 324-3127 CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF BUTTERFIELO I GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD; GLASS BOTTOM BOAT VII I ev William Heldea uS.Mc.-tr.l lyutL YU 4-363J THE CMASI VAN BUREN MzWlL? Van Bona Aw. iSVu? Arllnataa 0V 1-23(1 THE CHASE At II Maria Haggerty Arnold Father Coyne James McCallion James (Palsy) Murphy Paul P. Farrell Bill Peter Flgland Ann Culcahy Iris Korn Jotie Finn Sandra Outsen Last Sunday at Donte's Sheldon offered a preview of the quartet he has assembled for his weekly insurance against weakening chops.

He has Jack Marshall- on Bob Bain on bass guitar and Stan Levey on drums. There was a little too much clowning for this listener, some of in debatable taste, but Sheldon at his best is a natural comic with a C-sharp sense of timing. As for his horn-blowing, it was hard to be-lieve he had scarcely touched the trumpet in four Drop-In Sit-ins Incidentally, his well-polished accompanying unit is apt to be augmented at any moment by some name musician dropping by to sit in. I had almost forgotten such things happened in jazz rooms. To round out the club's seven-day musical week, Mondays through the Mike Melv'oin trio remains on hand, though the piano bar is out, replaced by riser stage.

Melvoin is accompanied by Bill Goodwin on drums and Monty Budwig on bass. 7 If you can hold your appetite until 9:30, the music will serve as an obbligato for your steak or Jobster, PARAMOUNT WJS Hlywd. Bl. HO 3-3263 Reserve Seat Engag. DR.

ZHIVAGO Tonight 8:30 p.m. GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD LILIES OF THE FIELD CENTURY II 15 Hlywd. Bl. NO 4-4616. 6:45 BEVERLY Rerve sea Engage.

tM N. Bn. Dr. THE BIBLE CM 8-4484 Tonight 6:30 p.m. CREST Exclusive Engage.

unt'" Vanessa Redgrava SfSS. MORGAN Alvarez Kelly 3946703. 12:38 BrandoTHE CHASE ex 5-2469. 12:43 ambush bay Diy Elizabeth Taylor p.e Pillua-M CAT ON HOT TIN ROOF BUTTERFIELD 8 mm KfWU wi OR I-3I3I, 6:43 Brando THE CHASj RITZ Market Inf. la T7n GREATEST STORY FVFR TOLD SINGING NUN MERALTA 10 Commandments r.iiUnr tv 118-3432.

1:43 GLASS BOTTOM BUAI holiday Alvarez Kelly ToV-m" iTT Brando-THE CHASE SOUTH BAY MR. BLIDDrVING 3 golden gate Alvarez Kelly 5l76WhlHir AN 9-8188. 6:45 D. Martjn, SILENCERS f5WSlJORN-CURTAIM an -4988, a -Ah Gamer. Mr.

Buddwlng CENTER 4762 Whittle AN 1-8332. 6:43 WILD ANGELS AMBUSH BAY BOULEVARD 4549 Whittier AN 1-2668, Ml GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD SECRET SEVEN TIWN Fullartea DEAR JOHN MOMENT OF TRUTH 772-M02. FLIGHT OF PHOENIX BUENA PARK WILD ANGELS i-all Gamer. MR. BUDDWING STANTON 6rVeErSTtoSlTd0RY ISSZtf DISNEY FEATURETTE THE MILS Arrow EO 1-5223 ANGELS leather boys rolls" royce JjAMOND HtB 3 OH A COUCH' JOHNNY TIGER fl.10 PER CAR II irratai Rt ED I-522S HARBOR.

Varmont 4 Setal. TE 4-8501 THE WIL0 ANGELS DUEL AT DIABLO o.mil F'hIH t)V 3-3588 DTmirada. "SJKS" 3-31 1 1 at fan f.i BUEl AT DIABL8 SHENANDOAH In eelar ARABESQUE CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF BUTTERFIEU I MAGNOLIA Artinflten 89-9344 MISSION Muiien.Pomt Poment NA 6-5011 GO OUT TO A MOVIE TONIGHT lOJ sr. ELIZABETH TAYLOR LAUREIICE HARVEY i III ELIZABETH TAYIOR II DINA MERRILL snxMILDRED DUNNOCK BETTY FIELD (o) PAULIlEni BURL IVES scMMwra RICHARD B300KSM JAMES POE tuowiMnrxwrmiMrar TENNESSEE WILLIAMS emninn nrtAAin I wifonurr luntir ibttii Things are jumping again around Universal City. Having tiipped gently into jaz? waters via the' piano, trio route, the management of Conte's on Lankershim Blvd.

has survived and' thrived. As a consequence, effective tonight the policy will be expanded. Hovrard Roberts, the Hollywood studio guitarist who has been, enjoying some success lately as a leader of rhythm-and-blues on records, will be appearing Fridays and Saturdays leading a quintet. His companions will be Dave Grusin, organ and piano; Emil Richards, vibes and miscellaneous percussion; John Guerin, drums, and Chuck Bergho-fer, bass. Diverse Career On Sundays, Jack Sheldon will celebrate his return to music.

Few jazzmen can claim a diversity of careers a3 wild as Sheldon's. In the past couple of years he has put in service as professional swimming instructor, highly successful trumpeter, vocalist, stand-up comedian and, as anyone must know who has been watching the small screen this season, television -actor playing the lead in the Run Buddy Run series. JEFFREY DTiN KAY UEOFORD SlKAN OL'ER eMrt-CHAFlES SCHNEEnd JOHR MXHAELHAYES nniuvuw unuuM Mooucasrinnnuioc nununniui wORHStSff hi aca n.3 Vzs ai i rr I q- ia jiH i lii ittM'" -rr'- 11 si mutwmsv wsTCHorn atmonia rno o.hli. atuaoo.a wirreks -m rmoisE tutu eoiDRioa EiMuml iiueE um jur kJw iion Ji S.7MM1 STmf gS ZVm 571" lowuNct none -n nirr iNuwoao burwaroNK "us 1 KOm FIFTH y. PARK MX0Gp4Rr KSBRI FOOTHILL SAN PEDRO chmi aim "oyl" U.r-44l ari'mi I to ton I tt.irm siwuno w.eonM camumw aANaAmn.

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