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

The Morning Call from Paterson, New Jersey • 26

Publication:
The Morning Calli
Location:
Paterson, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
26
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 ft 26 The- Mornim Call, Thursday, March 31, 066 Petula Clark Reminisces Instant Success After 25 Years AmiiMments (I 5 rF IsrrI rr? yjjjpi By ROBERT Ml SKI. I oikIuii it I'D Someone told Petula Clark her new record "My Love" was jockeying for the top of the American charts against a new Beatles song and she uttered a languid: Not disinterest. She had been recording a new album almost non-stop for 10 hours and ahead of her stretched the dreariness and sheer physical fatigue of an all-night singing session. You have to be tough to survive in modern show business. As all her friends know, Little 5-feet 1 Miss Clark's backbone must be tensile steel.

She was a child prodigy and grew out of it even though they bound her budding bosom so it would be flatter longer. There were happy times when McKuen Strives For Valid Songs anyone tells you, to make it in the United States is still the dream of every trans-Atlantic performer. You work for It, long for it. And I can't tell you how ecstatic I was when 'I Know A Place' was nearly as big a hit as "Downtown" and the Copacabana Club in New York signed me. "I threw my act together ln only 4 days.

Tony was in Britain so I had to use my own ideas. That opening night was the most exciting and important in my life and you can realize how I felt when I read the wonderful reviews." The reviews meant a new international singing star had joined the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and Herman's Hermits to reinforce Britain's challenge in pop music. British? Miss Clark is married to Wolff, a Frenchman, speaks French fluently, said she didn't know how much she weighed in pounds but it was 45 kilograms (99 pounds), but she still thinks of herself as British and came here for her church marriage and the birth of her two children. "I've heard stories that I learned French under hypnosis," Miss Clark said. "It isn't her arrangement was for a slow ballad instead of the Beatles' i own driving beat.

Her husband arrived, a good looking 35, but evidently losing the battle of the bulge (waistline). Miss Clark said she fell ln love with him when she saw him putting a light bulb into the socket at her agent's office ln Paris. He spoke no English, she spoke no French, so they courted with the aid of a phrase book. Her father, she said, warned her that the French were garlic-smelling skirt-chasers who spent their evenings at the Folies Bergere. But Miss Clark Is very happy she disregarded his advice.

She learned a lot from Wolff. "The first time I saw him walking around the flat stark naked I was horrified," she said. "A Briton wouldn't do that." Miss Clark has a night club engagement in Los Angeles in April and hopes to spend much more time in the United States and Canada in the future. sif mw By DAVID M. ALPERN New York (UP1) Amid the piercing cries of the restless, rocking teen-age idols, Rod McKuen writes and sings and strums with a sense of innocence lost.

Now in his mid-30s, McKuen has been an actor, composer and night club singer, with occasional forays into poetry and the novel, but he's finally decided his goal in life is to wiite good songs. "I want to say something valid about new subjects, or about old subjects in a new way. That's the challenge." premiere with "To Trap A also starring Vaughn and David MacCallum, at the Stanley Warner Route 4 theater last night. SPY STUFF Robert Vaughn seems to have himself In an awkward position in this scene from "Tae Spy With My which has a NOW SHOWING she was a radio star, a film star, a television star. There were grimmer times when she wasn't.

Thinking back over the artistic ups and downs of the rugged 25 years since she first toddled on a stage, not to mention a few personal crises. Miss Clark is apt to wonder exactly what American critics mean when they hail an artist as in overnight success. Down in the studio, below the control booth where we sat, the musicians were strolling out for dinner. Not Miss Clark. In flowered corduroy slacks and a turtleneck sweater she said she would have time only for a sandwich and coffee if that.

There was the interview and then a fitting for her upcoming engagements in Switzerland and Turkey and, later this month, the Ed Sullivan and Red Skel-ton T. V. shows in the U. S. A recording star these days moves in convoy.

Miss Clark's entourage is no bigger than the others, perhaps, but it is more varied, considering she is a star in all the Common Market countries as well as overseas. Her manager-husband Claude Wolff is French. Recording manager Tony Hatch, composer of "Downtown," "I Know A and "My Love" is British. Ezio Leoni of Milan was on hand as her artistic director for Italy, and is writer of one of the album songs, "Un Giorno Mi Hai Sorriso." "You Smiled At Me One French and German lyric writers were also on the premises but, thankfully, Miss Clark said she had left her own band in France. On the continent touring pop singers, particularly those whose songs have a beat, take no chances on provincial musicians raised on Offenbach's cancan.

They carry their own bands with them and although Miss Clark agreed it was expensive she said the fees for European concerts were high enough to make it worth while. Nothing in her 32 years except her marriage and two young children has so enraptured Miss Clark as finally achieving success in America. She was beginning to wonder whether her voice would ever span the Atlantic when Hatch (whose first music publisher boss told him: "I need an office boy not a came up with "Downtown," a 300,000.000 record seller. Her discovery by the Americans soon followed. "Better late than never," said Miss Clark.

"No matter what The Lyons Den strictly true. I had to do one song in French slang and this meant the accent had to be per feet. I nearly split my poor head trying to learn it and then I someone suggested I allow my- self to be hypnotized. This I did But only for that song. It I worked all right but the only I real way to learn a language Virginia Hill Gave Desi A $10,000 Hello MESERVEO SEATS NOW AT BOXO'UCE AND AT ALL 8KOUWAS THEATRES cvrs i so km sun 8 00 PM MATS WE0.

2:00 PM SAT HOIS 2 30 PM SUN. 2 Born in Oakland, McKuen was brought up in a place called Alamo Junction, Nev. He wrote a newspaper entertainment column even before he dropped out of high school, and also dabbled with a nighttime disc jockey show. McKuen made it through seven months of college at San Francisco State before officials found he had no high school diploma. After that it was odd jobs, factories and a little lum-berjacking, until the Korean War.

MOSCOW; LABEL Assigned' to a psychological warfare and propaganda unit in Korea and Tokyo, vn 1953, he has the distinction of being the only current popular singer to have been named a bona fide war criminal by Radio Moscow for his verbal salvos. In the interim he wrote a comic novel about the absurdities of the U. S. aid program in Korea. "It was called 'Elephants in the Rice I maintained we hadn't taken time to select what was really needed," McKuen said.

"We sent things like butter and they thought it was inferior cheese and used it in their lamps. They used the powdered milk for whitewash on the houses." Back in this country, he worked for 2 years as an actor for Universal-International in "Rock Me "Summer and what he calls an epic western, "Wild He also started writing songs and soundtrack scores. But it got to be too much. "I was tired of making films, and especially bad films, and I came East," McKuen recalled. He did two seasons of musical scores for the weekly CBS-TV Workshop, working with a small orchestra and often having to fill in for thin drama with rich mm mats atp 1 1 i 7.

SPECIAL MOUOAf MATS APtIL 11. H. IS. MAY 30 AT HOLIDAY MAT gjCtl Skourat' is to slog at it while conscious." Miss Clark said she was doing a Beatle number for the album, "We can work it out" but Rout 46 S64J niMsTIUIA A A Totow lAUPIf PARKINr, 4ssssSSySswaa NATALIE WOOD CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER "INSIDE DAISY GLOVER" Plut George Peppard Elizabeth Ashley "THE THIRD DAY" CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE DAILY will be filmed abroad in September. Helen Menken, at her death last week, was working on two benefit performances of "The Killing of Sister One potential ticket buyer told Miss Menken: "But I hear this play is about lesbianism, homosexuals" "39 years ago," replied Miss Menken, "I went to jail for a lesbian play, 'The Captive'.

Today you go to jail if the play is not about homosexuals." Channel 13 succeeded in taping a prized TV. show with Andrei Voznesensky, the Soviet poet, and two Pulitzer Prize poets, Robert Lowell and Stanley Kunitz Mrs. Kun-itz, whose paintings are signed "Elise will have her exhibit April 19 at The Contemporaries Andy Warhol will design the movie theater on the second floor of the new nightclub, The avant garde movies By LEONARD LYONS Desi Arnaz once met Virginia Hill, the mobsters' girl friend who died in Salzburg last week. When Arnaz worked as the bandleader at LaConga, a cellar club, Miss Hill was anxious to meet him. She bought out the club for the evening, paying a $10,000 tab for the party, and greeted Desi: "This is the most expensive 'Hello' I've ever had." It happened in the White House last week, at the L.B.J.s' reception for Chief Justice Earl Warren.

Some of the lawyers among the guests gathered around Justice William Brennan who wrote the majority opinion in the obscenity cases Justice Brennan told them: "We must face the fact that there is such a thing as hard-core pornography." At the White House dinner for Prime Minister Gandhi, the wife of the Indian Ambassador Mrs. B. K. Nehru wore a coat made by Adele Simpson from a cashmere coat once owned by Ambassa-' dor Nehru's grandfather is bidding for Dirk Bogarde to costar with Natalie Wood in "Penelope" The Pulitzer Prize staff requested a photo of William Alfred, author of "Hogan's If it's chosen it will be the first off-Broadway play to win the Pulitzer. Helen Hayes was just elected to the editorial board of Junior Literary Guild.

She'll assume her duties there April 1. Gloria Vanderbilt's paintings go on exhibition at the Hammer Galeries next week. In her "Family Portrait" the husband's head is cut off John Huston is writing a new screenplay for the Elizabeth Taylor-Montgomery Clift-Car-son McCullers movie. "Reflections in a Golden It GARDEN STATE PLAZA ROUTE 17 PARAMUS AMPLE FREE ALWAYS! ADOITIOrtAt INFORMATION, GALL: 84 J-M30 AMONG THE GREAT MOVIES OF ALL TIME. TBSfc I MOI1B MKT I KIT NOW! Lot a IMlllHMlMBl music.

"That was a real chal-1 lenge." He also wrote what became a brief jukebox craze, a quaint little ditty called "Oliver hardly a waltz. EXCLUSIVE N. J. ENGAGEMENT Modern Monster Refuses Off -Duty, Public Scares CLGSTER Jm THEATRE CloiUr Shtwinf Pltll Theater Partiet 31 and 1 r.HJ. Travel Service 768-8497 But again it was not quite right.

"I had to go back to the coast," he said. "I decided if I wasn't going to be able to write and sing what I wanted, I wouldn't do anything at all." But his sensitive ballads and simple songs caught on. They have been recorded by the Kingston Trio and Glen Yarbrough, Eartha Kitt, Jacques Brel, Kitty Kallen, and the Lime-lighters. "I just started writing For Complete Details phone AR 8-2282 DISPIKD AimrtTr "AN EXTRAORDINARY FILM! A REMARKABLE FEELING OF BEING IN THE PRESENCE OF TRUTH -CreeUHv, N.r.7MS By HAROLD HEFFERNAN Hollywood (NANA) The private life of a professional monster is no longer the lonely, desolate existence it was during the reign of a Karloff or a Lugosi. The horror they generated on the motion picture screen was reflected in the treatment ac- after one of the long 5-day weeks he spends on the filmed show.

FROM BARD TO BOGEY If you'd told Gwynne or his colleagues doing Shakespeare at the historic Brattle Theatre in Cambridge 10 years ago that he'd be scoring his greatest success as a lumbering clown in makeup that required 2 I thoroughly enjoy my experiences." Fred had no idea he was so funny until he was awarded a role in the state production of "Irma La Douce" and found after the first night he was being hailed as a new comic sensation. Actually, he was at the time between Shakespeares and had taken a job in the office of an advertising agency shown there will have free admission. David Dubinsky, who just retired as head of the I.L.G.-W.U., left the union in powerful financial condition. Dubinsky once invited the late British Labor Party Leader, Hugh Gaitsekll, and his wife to address a rally in New York. The Gaitskells flew economy class, explaining, "Not until we were in the plane did we read your union's financial statement showing assets of $236,000,000 Senator Bill Benton dedicated the 1966 Encyclopedia Britannica Book of The Year to Adlai Stevenson, described by Benton as "The World's First Oliver Smith will do the sets for the Harold Arlen-Martin Charnin musical, "Softly" The composer, incidentally, has a treasure in his new album.

"Harold Sings Arlen (with The friend who joins him in song duets is Barbra Streisand The MAD show will make a tour of 50 colleges. Edward F. Cook, the Broadway lighting expert, and his wife were visited by their young grandson, Kenneth, last week. The youngster said to his grandmother, "Your buttons fell off the front of your dress" Mrs. Cook looked, and the boy said, "April Fool" "She told him "But April is not till next week" "Know," said the boy, "but I won't be here next week." Bob Dylan's next Columbia release will be titled "Rainy Day Women, No.

12 and 35" George Jessel is flying here to confer with producer Samuel Bronston about filming a Christopher Columbus in Spain R. C.A.Victor will record William Mooney's 1-man show, "Half Horse, Half Alligator" Joe Namath, the Jets quarterback, is proceeding with his plans to operate a bar room despite the frowns of Sonny Werblin, owner of the Jets. Harvey Brelt, the playwright-author, may accept the offer to teach English at Berkeley. It would conflict with his deals to write, in London, the screenplay of his own novel, "The Narrow and Malcolm Lowry's "Under the Volcano" Breit, incidentally, asked Ted Sorensen. former White House counsel, about running for office in New York.

Sorensen shook his head, and said that Senator Javits is unbeatable in this state. Julie Andrews's and Carol Channing's dances in the film, "Meet Modern will be choreographed by Joe Lay-ton Keith Funston has been advised that even if the New York Stock Exchange moved to Newark, it still could call itself the New York Stock Exchange Iggie V'iolfington gained 20 pounds working in Jerry Lewis's film. On the plane to New York he was the only one to finish his food and drinks. It's part of his campaign to win the "Fatty Arbuckle" musical role. m.t Mar am Tia Gospel According to Si.

Molfhew certainly the pes! hit of Jesui ever placed an lilm and it it probably Iht Until nliglous lilm ever mea'e as well Indeed, it may come to rank, as Iht yean add to our perspacfve, among In great movies of all lime, regardless or sueecf ALL SEATS RESERVED TIMl SCHIDULI WEDNESDAY P. M. MON THURS. FRI. 3(1 SAT.

A SUN. 2:111. 3:30. lo P. M.

FOR SPECIAL GROUP RATES CONTACT: CORP. 567 191 OR CLOSTIR HOLIDAY MATINEE SHOWINGS APRIL 11, 12, 14 and 15 the kind of songs I couldn't find to sing myself," said the guitar-playing balladeer. He has 20 albums of songs and is still going strong. corded them in public places, hours to apply every morning Karloff complained he could you'd have been laughed into jn order t0 exist- But now' hav' 1te(j0speL en CO MUtuniP lence. He was destined at that in8 won instant stature as a never dine out peacefully NEW YORK THEATER DIRECTORY "AN INVITATION TO I.AII.HTKH AThr Nrw Cumi'dy vma.h Hit! NY Wt.liVKSOAV Prices: Tues.

thru Thurs Evs J6 50, 5. SO 4.5C 4.00, 3.50. 2.90. Fri. i Sat liw il OO, 6 50, 5.50, 4.50 4 00, 3 50.

Wtd Mls S4.50, 4.00, 3.50, 2 90 2 30. Sit. Sun. $5.00, 4.50 4.00, 3 50, 2 90 GEORGE ABBOTT. W.

S4 St. Jl C-37S7 "Irrtiiitlbly Funny" Kerr. Trlb BThe New C'emedy Hmih AREFOOT IN THE PARK Prices: Mon. thru Thurs. $6.75, 5.50.

4.75 3.50. Fri. Sat. $7.25, 6.75 5.50, 4.75, 3.50. Sat.

$5.25, 4 75. 4.25, 3.50, 3.25. Wed. $4 75, 4.00 3.25, 2.75. BI1.TMORE.

281 W. 47 5H2 comedian, he tried for and got that costarring role in T. IU UlttA llll.VT time to become one of the foremost serious actors of our time. "People kept telling me I was squandering my so-called talents taking over a role such as this," explained Fred, who, by the way, is an old Harvard man himself, "but I cannot see their point of view. This is a first-class job.

I get good gullible tourists would immediately get up from the table and (talk out, frightened kiddies whimpering at their side. Actually, Karloff was a gentle, soft-spoken soul who gave much to pet charities. He raised orchids in his back yard as a hobby. One rare species was named for him. "Car 54, Where Are You?" that of the perpetually baffled officer Muldoon.

From there it was an easy jump to "The which began in 1964 and has retained its popularity as one of the brightest new PMCIS Evenings and Sundays J' Orrhentra S2.5H Lose mi Wednesday Marine Orchestra SI 50 Lota S2 no Saturday Matinee Children SI 25 morinsm Orchestra S2 1 Urn S2.su Best Muslul 15 H. D-ami Critics HERNCHEL BERNARD! In DDI.ER ON THE ROOF F' comedies on T. V. MAKEUP HEADACHES Gwynne had some serious Amerltt'i Moil Arrlnlmfd Munlr! Closter Artist To Show Works In Ridgewood Ridgewood Mia Munzer Le Comte of Closter, who has exhibited her paintings in museums both in Europe and the United States, will have a 1-man show during the month of April at the Cottage Place Gallery. The exhibit will open with a reception for the artist from 3 to 6 P.

M. Saturday and run through May 1. Mrs. Le Comte, a 56-year-old Czechoslovakian painter whose work hangs in Prague's Museum of Modern Art, was recently involved in a controversy with officials at the Jersey City Muse- APRIL 2nd FOR THE SFASON But T. V.

has created a new Ty muC Tn monster image a fellow who "uld ever retains all the old renelling 1 me- And what mor. physical characteristics, but i now comes equipped with a St AtlQctaciQ great sense of humor that makes him a hail-fellow, ac Plgvprc PuH cepted socially on every JCI OPENING at '2 Noon and adjustments to make. The long makeup job, requiring his presence at the studio by 6 A. is an ordeal such as he never experienced before. The plastic forehead gave him headaches in 1 1 or Directed! hv JEROME BOBBINS Prices: Mm.

thru Sat. $9.10, 8.50. 8 00, 7 00 6.40 5 40, 4.60 Wed $5.00. 5.10, 4.60, 4 00, 3.60, 2 80. Sat.

$6.10, 5.50, 5.10, 4.60. 3.60. IMPERIAL, 241 W. 4S NT 2S 2412 "A BONANZA BEhUII.INC AND DELIGHTFUL" Chnoman Newa HTONT TANNER im the Miui.nl AI.F A SIXPENCE ti Men. thro $9 50, 8.25, 72S.

i 6.50, 5.50, 4 50, Wed. $5 75. 4.75, 4.25, 3.75, 3.00 Sat Mats $6 00, 5.75. 5.23. 4.75, 4.25, 3.75, 3 00 BRMADHURST, W.

44 S4-IStS Daily There ofter for several months but gratf- 1 "I couldn't have been the ually the discomfort lessened St. Anastasia in Teaneck leads in the Bergen County Catholic Youth Organization 1- permitting him to stick with a job he thought for a time he'd Karloff type for anything in the world," grinned Fred Gwynne, the towering 6-foot, 5-inch beanpole now starring in his second season as the bum su have to give up rails1 riAcnh QA a i One thing he likes about that nlnn if ''Cnrnnlinrt tL, bling Herman of the C. B. News'-'b Ladv Grego keup aDDPar ln if uir. v.

ocitca, nc iHuuaicia Cuvnnp loves life and nwinle Mount Carmel of Ridgewood tuallv linrer-nenizpri pyr-pnt hv mi too well: "I like to get around is, second with 84 points. Its the old officer Muldoon fans, with the family, go out to Pla-V- "G(d Said No was This does not hold true, how- Mj i urn over three paintings of nudes she had planned to ex Ihibit there. Museum trustees said one of 1 the works was indecent, and I Mrs. Le Comte withdrew all three, terming the officials of the Museum philistines. Among the canvases on display atvthe Cottage Place Gallery willlbe 'the three that sparked the Jer SAT.

I SDK, APRIL 2nd 3ra hockey, basketball, and base-, 'c" u-v U1 "lc" ever, in the studio restaurant SUZanne Jn Uiraiwher. hp finrU himc.lf ca 2 P.M. on the FREE ACT STAGE and fourth place are Annuncia- rassei by curious visitors that ball it would kill me if people got up and ran away when I showed up," he explained while lahnrimiclv ninchinc nff SATURDAY WAiC Hon ana visitation ooin oij ne nas to totter off lo ex. UNAN1M0USLV ACCLAIMED COMEDY HIT "A BRILLIANT COMEDY!" Watts. Post CI.

AIRE NlfHTERN prnU BARBARA I.ARRV GABRIEL Bel REDOES BLVDEN DELL In the New Comedy Smash lUV MURRAY SCHINGAI. directed bv MIKE NM Hill BOOTH. 222 45 ST 24S-SMH Mats Wed. 2, Sat at 2:40 "ENTHRALLING MUSICAL" Chapman News MA New Musical Play AN OF I.aMANCHA Ews. at 8:30 P.

Tues. thru Sat $7.50, 6.35, 5.35. 4.45, 3 75. Mats. Wed.

at 2 $4.75. 3 75. 2.85 Mats. Sat. Sun at 2 30 P.

$5 50, 4 00 3.00 ANTA WASHINGTON SQ 40 4 St (4th St. bet. Wash. So. B'way.) OR 4-5600 "SEASON'S FIRST WorhMele' I INNER A LANE'S MUSICAL HIT ON A CI.FAR OAT TOU CAN REE FOREVER STARRING Rarhara HARRIS John CUM.

I'M Mail Orders Filled PRICES: Evgs Orch $10 95 Men $9 25. Bale. $8 25, 7 25, 6.25, 5 25 Mat. Wed Sal. Orch Mm.

$6 25; Bale. $5.75, 4.75, 4.25. List alt daev MARK HELLJNGER. 237J 51 St PL 7-7064 "A Brs.h Movlns Mu.lr.l 1m. SUNDAY WMCA "Good Gey" JOE Paramus, with 71 and 69 points, ecutive dining room for the Dilt Jexkoy Herman's heavy facial makeuD i respectively I privacy necessary on a 1-hour faced Mount luncheon break.

BRUCE 'MORROW St. Anastasia O'BRIEN Gwynne met and married AS M.C.S. FOR ii in I Carmel last night at St. Francis rSallet hXDHnninff Auditorium. RidBefield Park fnrmpr maffa7ine writer loan sey City uproar.

Mrs. Le Comte will display 20 paintings at the show. Her work has been described as having a figurative style stemming from German expressionism. The Cottage Place Gallery is in the Unitarian Society Building at 113 Cottage Place. Queen of Peace, North Arling-1 Rcnnard in 1951 while he still ton- i was a copywriter for and agency Series For Youth Annunciation will compete in New York.

Because of her Newark The Garden State tomorrow at St. Leo, East Pat-: last name, she was nicknamed Ballet's Introduction-to-Ballet erson, at 8 P. M. against Our Foxy, and Fred never calls her program at Symphony Hall. Lady of Mercy, Park Ridge; by anything else.

To perpetuate May 12, is sold out for school St. John, Hillsdale; and St. Leo. I it. he and his named their field trips, and the theater's ed-1 i third child, a daughter born 'HE RASCALS ana Timely.

TauDman. Times "A Captivating MaalrsH Fanny ana Packed wllh Entertainment Chapman. Mews Sal ucation department has added Di 11 Qfovona nerformance on Mav 10 and 11 CHCVCIIS "Good Lovin' "AtUntic Record THE EXCITERS BILLY GIBSON THE SHALIMARS JACQUELINE ft. CAROL LOUIS last Sept. 14, Mayn.

which also means fox in Welsh. This also followed their addiction to unusual names the other chil- to meet the extra demand. Quite Exclusive These 10 A. M. programs will spotlight the Garden State Bal THE ELEMENTS Productd by HAL JACKSON ii and RECORD BEAT JULIE HARRIS 1st ITICItfll The New Musical Caaaedy Lunt-Fontaone Thea 205 46 St.

586-5555 Eeos at 8:30. Mats Wtd. at 2. Sat. At 2:10 ALL N.

Y. DRAMA CRITICS ACCLAIM "BROADWAY'S NEWEST COMEDY SMASH!" SAINT RUBBER orwwnta Eddie BRACKEN Pal HINGI.E In NEIL SIMON'S Haw Comedv Hit THE ODD COUPLE DIRECTED BY MIKE NICHOLS PLYMOUTH. IM W. 45 24 t5 Esti 8 40 Mats Wed 2 Sat 2 40 ITS THE TOP!" Watt. Newa VAAIT A MINIM! tTllYSAT.

St and Hear P.M. WNIR Disc Jockey Sainer Drama Set For Off-Broadway New York "God Wants What Men a new full-length play by Arthur Sainer, will be presented by The Bridge Theater, 4 St. Marks Place, opening April 25 at 7 P. M. It is directed by Sainer and featured in the cast are Lynda Barnhurst, Joanna Bellows, Norman Dallas, Jennifer Feeley, William Finley, Nina Levin, Gregory Reese and Walter Robinson.

Sainer previous plays include "Blind Angel" and "The Bitch of Waverly Performances will be on Friday, Saturday, and Monday nights at 9 P. M. and Sundays at 2:30 and 7:30 P. M. HAL JACKSON IN PERSON HJVE from he Park New York Stella Stevens dren are a son, Kelton, 12, and has been signed to an exclusive a daughter, Gaynor 11.

contract by Columbia Pictures, if the public has taken it was announced by Mike Gwynne's amiable monster to Frankovich. The new deal is jits heart, his children are not the result of the studio's ef unduly impressed by Herman thusiasm over Miss Stevens's Munster nor are their performance and critical recep-1 schoolmates. They attend a tion in the Irving Allen, produc- school in Beverly Hills where tion, "The in which the pupils roster looks like 1 a she costars with Dean Martin, star-studded marquee. Previously, Miss Stevens had "The rating competition over a multiple picture deal with Co-; there is pretty rough and I'd lumbia. i be lucky to make Nielsen's The beautiful, blonde star re- first 100," chuckled Gwynne.

cently costared in The Rage" "To give you an opener, the with Glenn Ford in Mexico for father of one of the girls is Columbia release. 1 Gregory Peck!" let's historical survey of classic dance from the Victorian court style through modem ballet abstractions, including jazz dancing. The New Jersey Symphony will accompany under Kenneth Schermerhorn's direction, playing scores of Tchaikowsky. Pug-ni, Haieff, Bizet, and the contemporary Ned Rorem. Symphony Hall youth programming in April and May also includes the "Preludes to Greatness" series and screening of the film classics "Julius Caesar" and "The Would-Be The Mustral Smash for Everyone PRICES Em ihru Sat Orch $7.95 i Front Men $7 25 Rear Men.

$6.00. 5 25 4 2V Mat Wed 4 Sat Orch $5 75; Front Men. $5 00 Men 4 25, 75, 3 00 I GOLDEN THEA S2 4. 246740 I WPP'' d.Wf F. ear- i lfcakRil "A DANDT TMailLI.ER.

Witt News WLEE RIMICR In AIT UNTIL BARK Eras Man thrawfh Orch $690 Front Men. $6 40; Rear Men. $5.50, 4 50, 3 50. Man Wed Sal Orch $5 25, Front Men, Rear Men. $4 00.

3 50. 3 00 BARRYM0RE THEA 24) W. 47 ST. 246-0390 HELEN HAYES Joins Editorial Board fV.

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 The Morning Call
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Morning Call Archive

Pages Available:
502,777
Years Available:
1885-1969