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Daily News from New York, New York • 5

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, iS20. AMUSEMENTS. sociation is arranging an economy QUESTION SOCIETY WOMEN AID TWO MOVEMENTS TO A GIRL'S DUAL SELF SPLENDIDLY FILMED IN 'BODY AND SOUL' AMFRIHAN17F AI IF1MS hliu.o BY ANGELA. Women of the smart set are giv- tee of matrons and young women ing much of their attention to two who will serve tea. Mrs.

A. Bar-separate movements to 'make Hepburn and Mrs. Eaward D. 1 Mosely are on the committee of ar-; American citizens of aliens in this rangements for the sale. country.

One group led by Mrs. Happenings During Loss of Memory a Puzzle "a oai' iiAi't'iiiliJJ DUtUAG those weeks in Paris when you lost your memory?" is the rather frightening question that assails the heroine of "Body and Soul," an unusually well done photoplay at Loew's New York Theatre. Miss Alice Lake, whose piquant profile adorns our page today, plays the girl whose dual selves give her so much trouble. THIS AND THAT IN THE THEATRE By Mc Elliott "ihe Half Moon," with Joseph Cawthorn, invades the Liberty Theatre tonight. Charles Chaplin plans to be present.

A matinee of "Jim Jam Jems" will be given at the Cort Theatre tomorrow afternoon, instead of the usual Wednesday matinee. W. L. George contemplates the making of a play from cia novel, "A Bed of Roses," for production by Brock remberton. Charles Cochran wishes to present the three-starred "Hitchy Koo," with its present cast intact, in London next summer.

If this comes to pass, it will mark the first production over there of an all-American revue. The Selwyns have reduced the price of tickets for "The Mirage" for all nights except Saturday. Two dollars and fifty cents is to be the top price hereafter, save on Saturday nights, when an orchestra chair will "set you back" $4. Eddis Buzzell, of "Broadway Brevities," has written a vaudeville sketch titled "Tailor Maid." York City over 1 7 years ago. You will find it conveniently sale to be held at 507 Madison ave- nue, for five days, beginning vember 9.

The proceeds are to be work to be carried on at Roosevelt the birth of the late Theodore Roosevelt. Mrs. Oliver B. Bridgman is head of a commit- AMUSEMENTS. D.

F. KEITH Pi IO-BiG FEATURES "KEEP TO THE RIGHT" Fedh-i4 tCMTH TALIAFfcSSO SELECTION DAV SPECIAL miuinicuh show MOW ATKTSOPM NEW AMSTERDAM HITCHCOCK 8AN0CRS0N MUNTLEY "HITCHY-KOO 1920" WITHERS MOSCONIS 10 OTHERS THE TAVERU WHAT'S THE HA.VUCCFB) TOHt LIBERTY y.To-nisht, 80 JOSEPH in a New Mu lr.l rw. WTH0RN "THE Half Moon" 1A MAT.JimOB W. jMgulat auu. aat.

II TAUE The horse will neTrr ferirtre you. Cohan a. it MU Tora'it. Sat WELCOME STRANGER wltb tiKOIUiB SIDNEY GEO. COHAN Ttiea-, and 4Sd St.

THE TAVERN RNOI.I) DAT.T aa THB KNICKERBOCKER St. Ks. 15 Sat. comfcoiAN'j tlM TmUi (Isrtt it rcaj-d old f) PUNCH a W. ta St.

En THE TAVERN All's well with the fainting- female. TV, way. 6to. Mta. Sat THE TAVERN WHO'S THE WOMAN A-SCREAMlNGf prp West 8th St.

Eves, at 8.1 WlV I Mats. TonVw Bat. at .15 JIM- JAM JEMS THB SMASHING MPSICAt. HIT. THE TAVERN A slip of girl in gingham town.

GLOBE Bway 4Sta St. at "uta CTATI7 "Cheered- In rnijaoiuiiu TIP.TOP" THE TAVERN Ah, Ha! There's drama, la the alrt Iff 'h St E. at 1 31 nUUOUil Tom'w. Wel. Sat.

iwuiiro I MEANEST MAN COHAN'S on IN THE WORLD production MK. CO HAN IN THE TITLE BOLI THE TAVERN Hiding Cronchlng: Down and Hiding. SELWYN 42d St. Eras. 2f Mat.

Twa. tt 2.2UX LOEWS New York Theatre Roof A to 11 P. M. Roof to 1 A BASIL KING'S "EARTHBOUND" Loew'i Amer. Roof Cuiter'a Wllll'ir Jordan.

Ssati Alice Lake, "ttodj ana SouV it- I Resarrad OILDA Enter ftladame FI II TOM wasrr 4tu ut. at HM f8U. Torn w. Wed. 4 S.ii TIMP f.

THCATDf west st 1 tlUIA UV lIlUllHIj Tel. Bryant Si Fs. g.S0. Mats. TOMORROW, Thura.

Sat Ree THE IRAKI-- BEDS' Kxctuslve Show-'' trig "Man n' War Sir Barton Race." STRAND OliCH. TRAN HI "PARAMOUNT PICTURES "ffH. Rlalta eClsc. Elect. Ketarea.

CRITERION AT 44THWs Cecil B. De Mille's "SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT" w.th Clona Swaowa, Theodore Kobcr.s, Elliott Dritor Mi. ni. h'OLl I CHAS. RAY 4 if WAY AT I An Old-Puhlowd Bor-Lf Wl ST.

Rival! Coecsrt OrchM. MARY MILES MINTER Faatast Rialta Orc. OVER THE HILL' By WU1 Carletaa. Sirertwl br Barr Mlllarda, "Doot (alas lt-irt frsat!" H'4e Thliliaf I SS 4 Sr itA Konostor-r7pTO 45tfaStVV-BDMV I A 171 n.P.Koltha 1 rxy r. AM1LT0N oo.

Prica I. Hr148 BHOWS. 7.38 10.35 IMLA If HA vi 4- fQJ. "HELEN HAVPC n-ht Year LITTLE TucaTRE WEST ST. Rata.

Ww. Wed. Sat. RAZEE Woat tam. Bra.

i Mata. Wad Mat. I BnaiU aiaia. wena Margaret AnglinEc tm WOMAN r. BAT COHsrrOCK aad of5t W08T SENSATIONAL Mffn tO a MECCA LfcWlUKr PROMENADE fi CENTURY MIDNIGIIT REVUE ROUNDERS DINING aad UANCINO P.

M. 8. A. IT Kth Hit MAT. TOMORTV WINTER GARDEN MATINER GKO.

I MA RKS nr. BROADWAY OIlCVl 1 1 with EDDIE CAMTPA and BFST wimaua Manhattan stn- fh aV. KI.ECTION KKTl RMj READ FROM rJTAdiE TOMOJlliOW MCHT THKIL.1.NC Istorm mr COMMON SENSE rRIOFS. BOe. TO I.BO.

Liuatt UARRVMORE aays: "I fcava earn ea aa moved la a Ttiiatre a by tin acrlns la ttilo slay." The w. uBirrrra uutK, "WAY DOWN EAST" 44TH ST. THEATRE All 8ecs Buy In Ad anrv. I VOIP Theatre. 42a I FVs VO WRF UAT rVa tcJc of R'wf Edwsnf Musical Ceaxly Surevit.

i- rrti vi KISSING TIME With WILLIAM MORRIS 4 EDITH TALIAFERRO MATINEE TOMOR'W, ELEC DAY LAST WEEK BEST WUSICAL 8H0W IN TOWN I Tom A Sat. Bry. TOM MOOitr, "OmcEn 686" Hy Mayer's Datest Travelaugh. IXnt. 13-38 to 11 P.

M. Mata. SO 5n. Mahta totra Performance BjKCTION NTOHT. II.

So. BROOKLYN CASINO BlJRtRHQlfB FOB Til ENTIRE FAMIt IIKOORIjVN AU. THIS WEEK A. ha.V.-. JQY BELLS BIO SUNDAY CONCBBT I AV 's -JJ vyV hit 1 "BODY AND SOUL." Produced by Metro, Presented at New Tork Theatre.

THE CAST. Clair Martin Alice Ijke Howard Kent LawreJioe fit-ott Jloushtcn. HruiiK-s Houghton's r.eiiliew. Uiraril By McELLIOTT. I like "Body and Soul" -better than any picture I've seen for ages and ages.

True, has its little its occasional jarring notes (as wlien an allegedly devoted lover gives tip the search for his fianceewithin a few weeks and trots serenely home to America, leaving a fervent note tacked to the wall of her studio); but for all that, it is an extraordinarily well-rounded story. Alice Lake, who has moments of looking uncannily like Norma Tal-madge and mannerisms that are reminiscent of Alice Brady's, plays the heroine of dual selves one moment a normal, healthy-minded American girl, absorbed in the study of art, and planning to return to America as the wife of Mr. William Lawrence's nice upstanding hero. (I say upstanding, in the face of the glaring evidence that the poor fish permitted her to go trailing about the streets of Paris alone by night while be smoked his pipe or was it a cigarette? by the fire.) However, as the lady who saw the picture with us remarked, the story would have stopped right there if he hadn't behaved that way. If Claire Martin hadn't ventured forth in search of festive food that night she would never have received the blow on the head which permitted her other self the wanton, giddy, cafe-loving self to 'gain possession.

She would never have met the heavy villain as played, with a mustache and a roving eye, by Stuart Holmes; she would never have fallen, flywise, into the very spidery web he spun for her and we should not be telling you all about it at this moment! Yet this is the kind of story which is utterly spoiled by too much expositional chatter. Know ye, by these presents, that you'll be interested "to a degree," as a cautious literary lady ia fond of saying; that youH find the action tensely dramatic, Alice Lake an actress of decided ability and the whole thing worth investigating. 1 CUT KACKSAND CLOSE JJPSJ Elaine Hammerstein ha3 been presented with a Pekingese, said to be the smallest in the world. Oh, and she's to appear shortly in "The Daughter Pays," from the story by Mrs. Baillie Reynolds, an English novelist; and "Poor Dear Margaret Kirby," which Kathleen Norris wrote several years ago.

Schnitzler's "Affairs of Anatol" i3 to be the first picture to be made by Famous Flayers-Lasky, under their new plan which embodies, the "virtual abolition of the star system." Wallace Reid, Elliot Dexter, Gloria Swanson, Bebe Daniels and Wanda Hawley will all appear ia the Schnitzler opus; and collaborating on the making of the script will be such expert scribblers as Avery Hopwood. Beu- lah Marie Dix and Jeanie Mae- Pherson and Elmer Hams. Elsie Ferguson ia expected to ai-rive in New York some time next month, after a trip around the world. She will begin work Immediately upon the screen version of "Sacred and Profane Love," in which she played here last season. Priscilla Dean, I hear, is busy with modistes and milliners, collecting a 'wardrobe for her next story, "False Colors." Lorraine Clara Kimball Young's address ia: In Care of Garson Studio, Hollywood, Cal.

RAG and JAZZ lltnsa T-ausht anyena In it lessons From notes to popular sheet music. t'' fn Tl Hi -ri 1 FRANK1.1N S-tHOOL OJ" MUSIC. 21S K. llih Stujrveaaat ISiS John King Van Rensselaer, of 157 West Thirty-seventh street, held its -first meeting yesterday to discuss plans for extending their idea of Americanizing all Italians who migrate to the United States. It was under the auspices of the Rufus King Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, of which Mrs.

James Dugan is president. Mine. Tetrazzini, the opera singer, is one of the workers in the movement and at the meeting told of her establishing a school at her home in Rome, where the young and old Italians may learn the English language and American customs before coming here. Mrs. Van Rensselaer then told of the chapter's movement to have the Archibald Gracie mansion near Hell Gate, this city, opened as a museum of American history.

Part of the building could be used as a classroom for patriotic instruction. It is to be under the patronage of twenty women representing the oldest families in New York, who desire to have the principle of Americanization instilled in coming generations of domestic and foreign born citizens. To increase interest in their work of Americanization the Women's Roosevelt Memorial As- AMUSEMENTS. BOOTH TONIGHT at SO. a- WII I.IAM 1 In Mara Twain AVERS HAM Jg EfigkT Matimra Tomorrow.

and turdjty. REPUBLIC W-it A. Em. I Mara. Election Day 1 "The Lady of the Lamp" PI TINGF "i B'war.

Kn 11.45. Mta "LADIES NIGHT' ASTOR 45th St. Et St. Mats Election Dav A Kn 5 th LOUIS MANN "THE UNWRITTEN CHAPTER" LONGACRE West 48th St MATINEES TOMORBOW WED. SAT.

'ATTEJ You Leant bj Playing Latest Songs RAG JAZZ Piano Playing Tangtt Anyone Ability Hun start. Advanwa mntt-ltr loltti. IndKMual, print mwi by fraat tnehtr. AIM taoint ky nail. Olaloaat fraatatf.

open until 1 P. at. Booklet mailed. Coil HOW for demonstration. Winn Schools of Popular Mask 44.

WMt 54th St. Pennsvlvanin lii 155 Wnt lasth HU Morninsside 6678 553 Hut Ilnt St. Wadawortb mtt WINN BOOKS AT AU ll flC STOKES NEW STORE West Side of Broadway near 52d St. Opens" Election Dayy You Are Invited This HATCH Store, while the fourth, is in reality the first Hatch Store started in New It is in a new home, ghat's all. located, attractive and comfortable, Sundays midnight.

served featuring the 4 HATCH SPECIALTIES, as do the other 3 HATCH stores at Herald Square, 6th Ave. 35th and on the West Side of Broadway, near 45 th and 99th Sts. ALTO-NUTS (Mixed) $2.25 the lb.) Italian $1.50 the Supreme Chocolates, $2.00 the Matinee Idol (Nutted Choc oktes) $2.50 the lb. Sent to all Txzrfs of the world (send for booklet or telephone Fitzroy Sil) without additi'oval cost. "HATCH, HE PAYS THE PARCEL POST." All stores are open daily (Including and holidays) from 8 A.

M. until Soda Fountain Specialties, hot or at the four HATCH Stores. cold,.

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Pages Available:
18,846,294
Years Available:
1919-2024