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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 36

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THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK. MONDAY. MAY 27, 1029. A 12 AMUSEMENTS MAXnATTAN, AMUSEMENTS MANHATTAN. AMUSEMENTS MANHATTAN.

nt of our Gotham Li'c, nnd wiiii trill you ju.t whr.t's what i ill perfect German and lm- i Theater News The Cinema Circuit rriw Ja1 I aWWk By MARTIN DICKSTEIN- MDViETOHEu OF 1919" ALL-TALKING ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING "The Movietone Follies," Something New in Movie Musical Comedy, at the Roxy "The Man I Love" and "The Divine Lady." In "The Movietone Follies," the current attraction at the RoxyThca-ter, the sppctAtor may encounter a number of innovations in both the mechanical and pictorial departments of the spoken movie medium, A revue in the sense that a Scantbls or a Vanities Is a revue, this latest product nf the Fox studio is li.c'inpd however to achieve at least its visual effects through imaginative cinematography, rather than by the reproduction of the orothodox stage routine which has characterized the filmed musical show In the past. At the Roxy, therefore, you may see and hear something that amounts in Its essentials to a Broadway revue, yet departing sufficiently from i rprpHnnn i 1 1 1. -1 1 11 Colorful Achievement WILLIAM FOX Presents The World's First Great Musical Comedy Extravaganza of the Talking Screen vith A Host of Broadway's Most Talented Personalities and Hollywood's Most Vivacious Stars Dazzling! Sumptuous! Irresistible! ALMOST AN ENTIRE YEAR IN THE MAKING perfect, albeit delightfully quaint, English! And reflecting thus, a columnist who has had ono swell tinio among swell people In the grand old-younr; city of Berlin regretfully packs his takes a final look about town, and climbs Into the I.nft Kan-a Bus that takrs him to Field, the finest flying in all the world, and climbs aboard the plane bound for Vienna. Memory Test SolutionsJ 1. Alexander t.

Milch of Newark, N. representing Amherst College, won this year's Events 2. The British Government Is pecklni? a concession of the Dead Sea because of the potash found there, 3. Leon Trotzky has been refused admittance and medical treatmpnt in Germany. 4.

Bv July 1, according to Capt. F. C. Hlasnuru of the Department of Commerce, there will be nearly 10,000 miles of lighted airways in the United States. 5.

Ant-hills 25 feet high may be found In Africa. Fill-Me-In Puzzle Today's solution: RlND. MIND, MINE, MIRE, MORE, COKE, AMUSEMENTS-BROOKLYN. BR00KLYN-BENSONHURST Kings Highway and Bay Park way (22d Ave.) Sea Beach and West End Lines (Oil lTiZeTr IIOO PEOPLE -200 INDi I Movies Began To Talk! balcony nf flip Mokn Kflo nml n-oilri fin by. or ltiil in any one of 30 delightful cafrs along the Klorious Unter den Linden, and ex-ruse the adjectives, but they belong.

Honest they do. You ran get Chinese food at the new Tientsin, on Kantstrasse, and If you're that way about pood food, spend a dinner hour in the traditional old Aiisternmeyer's, on Mel-nekestrassr and let 'em do things to oysters for you. If you like genuine Hungarian food f.i'.d fvpsy music, visit Prcsscl's, on Joachimstaler-strasse, end you'll find that Fritz Kollcnhagrn, onPottsdammcrstrassc, has a delicatessen that you'll remember. At the restaurant of HiUcr. and of Kannpnberg, both on the Unter den Linden, you'll find diners from all over the world, in the most cosmopolitan atmosphere in the world.

And on Friedrlch-strasse you'll even find an honest-to-gosh automat! The Kamera, on the Unter den Linden, is as tricky a movie house as you'll find, and If you're traveling by train from anywhere to anywhere, you can book your sleeper a month in advance at the Mitrona. You can change your money, get your mail, meet a flock of people from New York and Kansas and Salt Lake City and Dubuque, at the American Express Company, corner of Jagerstrasse and and if you like concerts in a big way there's almost always one to be found at the Becthoven-Saal, on Kothenerstrasse; the Bech-stein-Saal, on Llnkstrasse; or the Each-Saal, on Lutzowstrasse. And you can book trips to any place in the world in any of the hundred travel agencies on Unter den Linden. For camera trouble, films or whatnot, there's a kodak store on Lelpzlgerstrassc and you can't go 11 feet without stumbling an art gallery. "Otto," whose last name Is Boe-nicke, runs a smoke shop on Fran-zoslschcstrasse, has been to the States and speaks English, as does every hotel i porter, cashier and clerk.

You can get anything in the world at half a dozen marv department stores, and if you happen to be male, with a yen for custom-built clothes, on Moehren-strasse, is a wow shirt builder, and the Jockey Club, at 75 Unter den Linden, doesn't take longer than nine weeks to build a suit on what they naively call American lines for you. The BerlUj subway, or underground, is so clean that it sparkles, and every station is so full of maps that you can't get lost. A taxi will take you anywhere you don't want to underground to, Just providing you write the names of the streets you can't pronounce. (You'll find nearly all of them are unpronounceable, nine-tenths of them even un-spellable.) And you can have the time of your life flitting along Unter den Linden, or Friedrich- strasse, on the top of a bus. Albert Rosenhain.

on Leipzlger- Sona Hits of the Year "WALKIV THAT'S YOU BABY" and Many Others The Most Since The nEARj The Here Is That's A SEE The It' The A Tantalizing "BREAKAWAY" Nation's Newest Dance Craze Musical Coined Smash Year Ahead of Broadway WW aifirf un'e By. Story tnd CONRAD, MITCHELL GOTTLER DAVID Rivut Dirtcftt By MARCEL SILVER Entire ROXY EXSEMBLE of 330 ARTISTS And Augmented Cast of Principals Offer The Season's Brightest and Gayest Stage Program "WHERE THE EDELWEISS GROWS" All The Color, The Fantasy and the Folklore of the Tyrol "DEEP NIGHT" By Rudy Vallee A Symphonic Production Based on tie Syncopated Melody of the Hour "IN MEMORIAM" A Musical Ode Mmmmmm spectacle In Honor of the Nation's Martyred Heroes nnvv cvtiniinvv Anrnvcrm Direction By BUTLER mj SOmST.and TthAVI, 1 IN nvm a t-7 a i.f aa anvt JS, aiavm Overturn "William Tell" Joseph Littau, Conductor rnY.TVfnviFTnvs?i' n-r tw t.T, WHAfttjf 1 1 jw SSSPrl the customary scheme to stamp it a3 more than a mere celluloid copy. Such cinematic tricks as the double exposure, lap dissolves r.i the moving camera have been generously and ingeniously employed in the recording of its scenes, and it is this imaginative use of the lens which helps to make "The Movietone Follies" a unique piece of work. In simpler language, then, here is a musical show which has been fashioned purposely to meet the requirements of the motion picture screen. It is distinguishable, for example, from "The Desert Song" and "The Cocoanuts" both, essentially, photographed and synchronized carbons of their originals.

If "The Movietone Follies" frequently betrays certain crudities in, say, the interpolation of its song numbers, or if the continual changes of settings appear to be somewhat bewildering, these items are pardonable in view of the experimental nature of the production. Since the coming of the talkies, It has been but a question of time before the audible films would give their attention to the recording of entertainment along musical comedy lines. Well, "The Movietone Follies" is only a beginning, but it offers a promise of better things to come. It Indicates, at least, that musical comedy on the screen can be entertaining. The production at the Roxy is peopled by such personable young entertainers as Lola Lane, Sue Carrol, David Rollins, kharon' Lynn, John Breeden and that provocative ebony comedian Stepin Fetchlt.

Con Conrad. Archie Gottler and Stanley Mitchell were responsible for the music and lyrics, and if the song numbers are not always as distinguished as they might be, they c-e at least adequate as musical comedy compositions go. The dance routines, the work of Fanchon and Marco, are effective and assume a certain pictorial importance by dint cf imaginative treatment from the camera. In spite of all these virtues, though, it is barely possible that you will find "The Movietone Follies" something less than a first-rate entertainment. The piece has not been so expertly constructed that it will compel your undivided attention.

Its pace is not always unflagging, indicating, perhaps, that the movie people still have something to learn about musical comedy production from such more experienced Impresarios as Mr. Zieg-feld and Mr. Carroll and Mr. White. But "The Movietone Follies" is undoubtedly a start along the right track.

It is mainly as an experiment in a new field that It should interest you. "The Man I Love." BROOKLYN PARAMOUNT "The Man I a Paramount talking picture based on a atorr bv Herman Manklewlcz, directed by William A. Wellman. THE CAST. Pum-D'im Brooks Cells Fields Snla Barondoff Curly Bloom Lew Lavton D.

J. Carlo Vesper Champ Mahoney K. O. O'Hearn Arlrn Mnry Brian Baclnnova Harrv Orecn Jack Ookle Pat O'Malley Fenton Sullivan Vincent The playbill at the Brooklyn Paramount this week describes "The Man I Love" as a throbbing story of a young love, and if that means that it tells about a rising young pugilu who won the big fight because he knew that his girl was listening in over the radio. I guess the description fits the picture perfectly.

The plot of "The Man I Love" Is pot exactly a model of originality. The movies at least before sound vas thrust upon them have recounted the story of "Dum-Dum" Brooks (Richard Arlen) a hundred times, if they have told it once. You know the formula: the contender for the championship who has had a spat with his sweetheart the big fight the challenger getting the worst of it he catches a glimpse of Celia smiling up at him from a ringside seat wham he finishes the champ with a terrific right to the Jaw. Well, "The Man I Love" differs from the customary plan only in that here the characters speak their lines and that the heroine doesn't Reverting -By RIAN Tickets on Sale at Grounds and PEASE PIANO S8 Flatbush Asa. Gen.

Admission, llie.t Children under 13, SOc; Grandstand, 75e. extra. TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT! You will SEE and HEAR thing you never saw before. Fun and frolic mirth and THE TUXEDO Coney Island's Newest Theater I madness gayety and despair inugnier ana tears love, nate ana trreea ana every human emotion ol tne throbbing nte or the ONE and ONLY fnl I 111 II! Prwnted by Varl rat 1 tu" ail TalirlMa ninrinsr Tla-ai 1 E1IA Ilk aisa. sw fill A 51 feil IfvlU a8 til ft1 Morley Invites Tarsons.

Tonlpht is "Parsons NlRht" at the vrlc, Hoboken, where ths revival cf tho onre-scanrialous "Black Crook" bceins Its 12th week. Mini-tors of all denominations are to be Christopher Morley's i tests. Critics Will Decide. Hyman Adler, producer of at the Bayes. Theater, will Rive one performance of "Judith Did It," by Sally Kemper, at the Bayes on Tuesday or Thursday afternoon' during the week of June 10, as a tryout.

If the critics like the play, Mr. Adler will probably start It immediately for a summer run. Seeking Inspiration. Arthur Schwartz, composer of most of the music In "The Little and "The Grand Street Follies," will shortly leave for a vacation in the Bermudas with Tom Weatherlv. While there, they will discuss plans for a new musical comedy Weatherly intends producing next season and for which Sihwai tz has been signed to do the music.

New Russian Dancer. Luba DublaKo, Russian dancer and member of one of the best known royal families in Petrograd prior to the revolution, will make her American stage debut in "Music in May," at the Casino. Her father, now a pianist In this country, Is Gen. Dublago, who headed the White Army in Siberia during the AMUSEMENTS BROOKLYN. TODAY ALLWEEK By Mm at hans- (oo animals! At the Ocean Parkway Station of the Brighton Beach Line 1424 ALL lilS WfcbK JOHN GILBERT in "Desert Nights" Sound Jim TONEY NORMAN-Ann Kitht.

"OI GANG" In' "HOLY TERROR" "'M HEW YOIIK and Born Iflanrr Hrnutu rnnlrt, in S'rtMj, P. it. TODAY WH I ADlJI0'n- Tlkino; TT ILLMKl "IIOI.K IV THE ft "MEET THE M1SSTS" HILLSIDE All Talking THE HOLE in tho WALL' ODKNTAL BUST I BT II AV. "'a Ed. Robinson RM.ACE An Talkinf Comedy "Meet the Missus" P0U01A3 ST CNYMl Big Time VAUDEVILLE HILLSIDE 'i Morris Campbell GMS Ray Sedley Mob mm 4HTH STREET Sunshine Sam in 7 in Pen on with on 1 Brn Lyon In "THE OI IT- Jf.K"; MOV IK TON MVS 111 If i't-.

ar a ttti tf ereni EjrW; Eddie Lam. i Vim, on tatihAti WM HAINES The Duks Sleps Out" In "WrRV hiver" (ONCY ISfl'The Duke' Step, but awrsnuMUM Mot II Tnvtii i KH'HAKK Movietones. tunnA "THE QUITTER" MOVIETOHV I 'tlk vnrwii. IT ERATION' with Jean Her- MOVIETONE WS MAJESTIC OT.S. THIS THING CALLED LOVE With VIOLET HEMINO MINOR WATSON JII.IETTE PAY EXT WEEK SEATS NOW Prior lo Broadway "NICE WOMEN" I ROBT.

WARWICK SYLVIA SIDSET Special Summer Pricet VJll II MOVIETONE A first class moving picture theater showing the best movietone and vitaphone talking pictures. Policy, continuous from 1 to 11 P.M. Most interesting programs change three times weekly. A most splendid opportunity to spend an enjoyable afternoon or evening and make it profitable for your club, lodge, organization, would be to vote for them at the contest that we are running for the entire month of June. The five leaders will receive cash prizes as follows: First prize: Two Hundred Dollars ($200.00) Second prize: One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) Third prize: Seventy-five Dollars ($75.00) Fourth prize: Seventv-five Dollars ($75.00) Fifth prize: Fifty Dollars ($50.00) The prizes will be distributed at the midnight performance of July 4, 1029.

The ten leaders will be announced at the first midnight performance given on July 1, 1929. xw aausss .110 ifiipjinai all'D linr .1. st tivuus. oiwii. dj nuip vt tui visa-ii ii irun, r.reiyn orrni, T.

E. Jackson, Otis Harlan, Rubrt Kllia. Paul Forcasi, Untie Fen ton, Cforc Ovy and hundreds of othfrs. A Paul Fejos Production, Carl I.acmmle, Associate Producer. Color Scenes by Technicolor, rjl ORF Ml TOinifT PRICKS xaaivjju 4ittn 2.n-a.oo-i,5o-i.oo TWICE DAILY "The Movietone A MOVIETONE REVUE written and directed by David Butler, with words and music by Con Conrad, Archie Onitler and Stanley Mitchell: presented by William Fox at the Roxy Theater.

CAST Or STORV. Oeorue Shelby John Breeden Llda Beaumont Lola Lane Jay Daddell De Witt Jennings Ann Poster Sharon Lynn At Leaton Arthur Stone Swlfty Slepln Fetr.hlt Martin Warren Hvmer Stage Manager Archie Gottler Orchestra leader Arthur Kay Malre Mario Domlnlci THE PRINCIPALS. Sue Carol Carolvnne Snowden Lola Lane Pavid Rollins on tlnnhu Frank mcnarnson Melva Cornell Henry M. Moiiandin Paula Lanclen Prank La Mont David Percy stepin retain Jcanette Danrey actually get to the fight but someone informs the challenger that she's got her ear close to the loud speaker. In the final analysis it all amounts to the same old thing, however, and very likely you will be bored with the whole procedure long before the big fight scene in a studio reproduction of Madison Square Garden.

You will want to know, though, that Baclanova is once more enlisted here to portray the alluring Russian countess who comes between the rising young middleweight and his best girl. And that Mary Brian is the girl. Harry Green contributes a few humorous moments in the role of a fight manager, and Pat O'Malley does his best to look like a big promoter. Frankly. I don't think you will care for "The Man I Love." The stage presentation at the Brooklyn Paramount is called "A Day in Hollywood," and as a mild attempt to satirize the customs of that celebrated community it is immensely successful.

"Divine Lady," Strand. "The Divine Lady" is the current screening at the Brooklyn Strand Theater. A First Natlonal-Vita-phone production, it is based upon the novel by E. Barring-ton and traces the romance of the celebrated English beauty, Lady Hamilton, and Britain's distinguished sea fighter, Lord Nelson. The high point of the picture is, of course, the thrilling naval encounter between the British and the French at Trafalgar.

These scenes, and those depicting the battle of tne Nile, have been vividly mounted, and since the Vitaphone sound device has been ingeniously employed to add sound effects to the whole exciting panorama, the result affords as stimulating a series of episodes as the audible screen has offered. It is the purpose of "The Divine Lady" to follow the rise of Lady Hamilton from her humble beginnings as a cook's daughter through her glamorous days as the wife of the British Ambassador to Italy and culminating in her affair with the heroic Nelson. The role of Lady Hamilton is portrayed by Corlnne Griffith. Miss Griffith is called upon to sing an occasional balad for the pleasure of the great admiral, and while one cannot always be certain that the voice that wafts through the Vita-phone projector is that of the star, the singing, nevertheless, adds a pleasant note to the romantic scheme of the story. Victor Var-conl offers a convincing impersonation of Lord Nelson, his work being particularly realistic during the scene of the famous sea fighter's death aboard his flagship, the Victory.

The part of Sir William Hamilton is also believably played by H. B. Warner, while the supporting cast reveals Ian Keith, Marie Dressier, Michael Vavltch, Dorothy Cumming and Montagu Love. Superb photography helps to make "The Divine Lady" an effective pictorial narrative and, while one hesitates to say that the procession of its events is always historically accurate, this picture at the Strand is satisfactory entertainment. Frank Crumlt and the A.

P. Gypsies appear in Vitaphone incidents on the surrounding program, which also includes the Pathe and Movietone newsreels. to Type JAMES- night life at its very swankiest, visit the Ambassadeurs, on Harden-bergstrasse; the Casanova, on Lu-therstrasse; the Oase, on Pottsdam-merstrasse; and if you want your night life and don't want to have to dress to enjoy it, there's a hundred other kabarets to visit. There's the Libclle, on Jagerstrasse; the Eunel, on the same (you don't have to buy wine at either of 'em); the Alt Bayern, the Stcinmeyer, on Frled-richstrasse; the Atlantic, Der Blaue Vogel (the Blue Bird), and the Larifarl, on Kurfurstendamm. If you want a good hotel you can get rooms, with breakfast, from $2.50 per day and up, at the Bristol, on Unter den Linden; the Kaiserhof, on Wllhelmplatz; the Esplanade, on Bellevucstras.se; and from $4 up at Berlin's swankiest Adlon.

You can get marv wines at Rudolph Dressers, on Lelpzlgerstrassc, and at Schweimler's, one of the finest caves in all of Berlin. You can gpt an American sandwich and an American soda if you must) at Robert's soda fountain at 26 Kurfurstendamm, and grand beer at Zum Klaussner, on Krausenstrasse; Baycrnhof, on Potsdammcrstrasse, and any one of a thousand other "Kondltorle's." You can sit on the Arrangements can be made CONEY for theater parties by calling ISLAND strasse, runs an interesting gift shop, where everything is priced as though Albert was going to try pay. ing Germany's war debt all by himself, and at any of the multitude of tobacconists you can get a good, teasonably priced meerschaum pipe, which like as not you drop tne second day on the boat on your way home. And remember can only drop even a good meerschaum pipe once. www You can buy RadelyfTe Hall's "Well of Loneliness" in Germany in your hotel lobby.

And you 11 go ga-ga over the window display figures, which have the faces of real live men and women. And if you want news of other American travelers abroad, your hotel news stand or porter will get you day-old copies of the Paris Herald, and the Paris Chicago Tribune, both of which publications cover all Europe like a tent. And finally, if you want to know what's going on for the week, and where, you'll find it all in "Das Berliner Programm," which is the RESTAURANTS BROOKLYN. CONEY ISLAND the "fisneree" and dininn grill in boardwalk cafe al FELTMANS' open all year "moderate charges" fiiK and seafood specialties and not forgetting the famous fcltman frankfurters. all departments now open alpine garden german cooking Swiss yodlers, peasant orchestra 3:30 lo midnight main dining room and dining gardens table d'hote luncheon, 1.50 table d'hote dinner, 2.00 six to nine special dinner Saturdays, 2.50 six to ninerf-special dinners sundiyi and holidays, 2.50 noon lo nine shore dinner daily, 3.00 noon to midnight also a la carle maple garden six lo close french cuisine dancing accompanied Ly mel craig's mapletonians.

company of cooks regiment of waiters an army of patrons FELTMANS' "caterers lo the millions" AMUSEMENTS BROOKLYN. held over week OVER IH.IMMt WOMEN SAW IT HERE LAST WEEK EXCLUSIVE SHOWS FOB WOMEN ONLY Films Charts Models from Life Also Plain Talk on Social Hygiene, by Experts "SEX VIEW OF LIFE" Also Feature Film, "Miracle ol Life." featuring Percr Martnnnl, Mae Bunch, Nlta Nalili SHOWS START ALL FfY, I .1, .1 711 SEATS WERBA'S tSatm FLATBL'SH AVE. and FIXTON 8T. Today ft Tomorrow "CANARY Ml'RDER CASE" Win. Powell and "HARDBOILED" Mldnfte Show Sat.

GILDA GRAY IX PERSON Al Shean ft Lynn Canter ALICE WHITE Talks "Hot Stuff" NCOPATION Contest Finals LUNA PARK I he Heart of Coner Island "Court of All Nations" FREE t'lfeus Concerts Danrinir, Rides, no World's Lartjeal M'ntcd Rand Luna's Great Swlmmini fool Flatbush The Tired Business Man Next Week I GI A LGH RS rX'klyn MARK BO 27 A 11 AM tolPM430 First time at Strand First Nt. presents CORINNE I Prices C.RIFFITH In "THR DIVINE I APY" Vitaphone Acts A Gypsies Others I UiUtl Ms. TONITF "SV tttiel osrrjrmore Chio. 9944. Evgs.

8 50 I ETHEL BARRY MORE In "THE i.ove nvr.i." MATINFES WEI), and SHUBERT Th'? v44th.W.ofBy.Ev,.8:30 Vh. Wed. Sat. 2:30 The New Musical Comedy Revue Hit A NIGHT IN VENICE MOR0SC0 W.of y. Evs.

8:50 Mta. Wed. Dec. Day tt Sat. 3:30 JOHN c'' DRINKWATER'S Dmliin ilAlll CASINO 3910 81 ve, Mats.

De. Day Bat. 2:30 i nr, PERFECT MU8ICAL PLAV MUSIC in MAY Chanln'a Maieitie ,4, w-01 B- Ev Mts.Dcc.Day& Sat 2:30 JACK I PHIL I SHAW AILEEN PEARL I BAKER I I.EE I 8TANLET 'VJIKT Pleaore Bound FOR FST 4Bth, W. of y. Evs.

8:40 rurvrxLJl Mats. Wed. Sat. 2:30 A RIP-ROARING THRILLER! CHINESE O'NEILL With DOUGLASS R. DUMBRILLE RITZ, W.

48 St. Evs. 8:80. Mats. Wed.

Sat ww lantor Presents JANET BEECIIER Msvsrva a v. Il.t Weeks 4Ath. W. of B'way Eves. 8:50.

Mats. Thurs. ft Sat. 2:30 A LAI GH HIT! Good Balo. Seats St la S3 at Box Office FEATURE FILMS BAYES IV.

41th St. Eve. 8:60 Mats. Thurs. Sat.

YEAR HARTUUR UOPKISS presents -olidaY PLYMOUTH The' w-45th st Ev- Mats. Thurs. 3t 2:39 PLAYHOUSE Wmt ICurtaln Emits. 8:50 48StMU.Wod.,Timr.,Nal Sim SCEUG ROY ALE w- 45th 8t- Et- at raw. G.

Robinson in IBITZ ER AI.VIN, SJ W. of B'y. Mats. Sat, cnniMr urnr mosi RrftailVnr.t W. 44 81.

ETfa. Mats. Thurs. and Bat. 2:30 Mimical Comedy Knockout Hold Everything! Tomorrow VyiJCllS 8,45 r.

M( ON WITH THE SHOW WARNER BROS. 100 Natural Color Talkini and Sinf-Inf Pfotiire In Technicolor. Winter Garden Twice Dally B'av Shows Thur. TTTTTT" THEA W. 44th St.

lilii.ua tu.il Thurs. Bvt. 8:30 Thurs. Ss Sat. 2:40 John Golden Presents FRANC1NS LARRIMORE In "Let Us Be Gaj," by Bathe Crathers CAPITOL B'wajr A Slst Street Midnight Pictures Nightly at 11:20 ION CHANEY in "WHERE EAST IS EAST" Mrtro-Goldwyn-Mayer Bomane with Sound DAVE SCIIOOLKR mnd Capltollani In 8tae hhow, "OR1ENTAI.E" New York's Sensation Hit! 4 Mant Bros.

Talkinf Slniinl snusic-comedy "Cocoanuts1 I A Hear VILMA BANKY Speak In "Thia Is Heaven1' IVfil UNITED BW ARTISTS at 40th MADAME Metro-Ooldwyn-Marrr'a Marvelous ALL TAI.KINO HIT HARRIS t-u Twice Dally Mats. SOc to SI Evs. SOc. to 82. ROXY 7th Are.

a Aflth St. Direction of B. L. Rothalel iROXYl WIU.IAM FO.t rresents FOX MOVIETONE FOLLIES OF 1929 A MAMMOTH S.0 REVUK Al Isual Popnlar Prices With Glltterlnr of Stan fa CENT KAIL THEATRE a. a ihim aa A First National Vitaphone Picture "THE BROADWAY MTTmV" An M-O-M All-Talking, Slng-milAim nncln Sensation AQTriT? B'way St 4Mri Dally 2:50 tt A01UHg 5.

sun. ft 3. 8 50 MIDNIGHT, 8HOW EVERY SATURDAY rT' MARY DUGAN ALL TALKING PICTURE EMBASSY B'wy 48 8t- 8 45., Sun and Hnl 3-H-8 45 8 I' A A DAY The DESERT SONG WARNER BROS. THEATRK B'WAY ST. TWICE DAILY RHOUR THI RS.

A HK. Larmmte aiu. ''V isit, ,4. TTaaiatSBBH, tUC arilMIS" tfunninr ana Pricei Cut in Half for the Masses BEST tl Ifl Tirkels Now criTS Tlekete Now S1.00 V. 00,11 Best Seata Dee.

Day A Ssi. Mat. Sl.OS) P.tlORRlS C.KST Prents the FREIBURQ ASSION PLAY Artolph Passnarht as "Chrlstnaf Oeorf Fassnaeht as "Judas" Dhtct from Fielbur, with orl. lnal cast of 1,0011 living persona. Personal direction of DAVID BELASCO.

N. Y. HIPPODROME SeaU for next 4 weeks AOa to 11.50 at' Box Office Erenlnirs. 8:80. Mntlnrv ed.

snd Sat J-89 Special Extra Peroration Day Mat. Tin re. Journey's End ERLANGER Th -w-44 at. evssss Mats. Thurs.

A Sat, ELLO DADDYI LEwrnxDs CHARLES DILLINGHAM'S taoihlnf Rll "STEPPING OUT FULTON W. 46th St. Evs. 8:3 Mats. Wed.

anil R.t sJtZ Tneatre. W. 43 St? House n-nttM." Mts. Wed. 4 Sak EDDIE CANTOR 'Se'sSn SHOWING TODAY TOMORROW i Pealurs Double Featura rassions SECTION Leatherneck: alao Vaud SECTION Sams Fsalur I 1 bleFtaturs All Talkie Betti Bronson Santa Snma also Phantom Leatherneck: alio Vaud Featur Kerry House af Horrors.

In Dlvle, All SECTION On tha evening of fouit'n day In Berlin, a weary columnist sits down, takes inventory, and finds that the city has Just about everything that any city in the great wide world has, only in greater quantities, and closer by. True, you will find fewer places that date back to hte Eleventh Century, but then you'll find recompense in the fact that more of the modern ones persist, and are more interesting. Looking back on our ramblings of the past four days, we find that we have actually been places and seen things, that it was expensive but worth while, and that we'd rather live here than in any other city in the whole of Europe. For here, as we said in starting out, lies everything. If you like history and museums and monuments and such, you'll if you want a glimpse of Berlin LATIUSV AVI, and HV1HS ST.

Begins Today "'The Valiant Is Blessed With Considerably More Originality Than Most Screen Offerings" Mordaunt Hall "The Times" Direct From Its' Two Weeks Engagement At The Koxy THE ALL-TALKING with PAUL MUNI (MUM VF.ISENFBEND) William Fox Movietone Triumph ttfi-. ON THE STAGE OEORGE SADIE Whiting Kurt Xing and Queen of Melody VILLIE, WEST McGINTY A Billion Building Blunders JIMMYSAVO With Joan Fraruta In "Slow Motion" RODION DANCERS EWING EATON May time MCIOUIOS Alluring Youth. Snt. dng Beauty, Uproar ious Comedy with a castor SO GLOniOtS ART1STS-30 BROOKLYN Paul ASM ia "A Day la Hollywood" Heat Mary Brian Arlea talk In 'Mao I Love" SWiatsM 11:10.1:20. 10:20.

wumwmt DINE "DANCE 4, -i CONE.Y ISLAND STEEPLECHASE (W THE FUNNY PLACE ui ar aw I BEDFORD SECTION Apollo. Fulton 8 Jot. The Rell.m. tvi.i Classitae. Marcy ft The al Am.Zr V.hnJ Re(enL Fulton A SS Chln.t.wJ 'SfSu.

BENSONHURST AND MAPt.FTns sitti Marboro, Bay pky-70th Garbo, Wild Orchids BORO BALL AND DOWNTOWN SECTION Orph.ua.. 578 Fulton St. B'd. U.rnJrwck $1 Oxford. Stat.

Who IWIlsi iittie Savii; A H.I. BUSHWICK SECTION CONEY ISLAND Tllyon, Opp. Boyd, I KLATfllHH Albemarle. Flat. As Ainmte.

ni. find the "Altes und Neues" Museum, on Dorotheenstrasse; the Zeughaus. on Unter den Linden; the Kaiser Frledrlch Museum, immediately off Oranienburgerstrasse, and the Kronprinzenpalais worth the trip. 1 you like monuments, every public prz abounds with 'em, and if you you have to faw down and roll ver in order to get to Heaven, see ootsdam first I Tf you want an American druggist there's one on Mohrenstrasse, opposite the Kaiserhof Hotel, and you can Ret a first-rate American meal at the Anglo-American tea room at 130 Xurfestendamm. If you want to cit In on the finest opera in the world, there's the Staats-Oper.

on Unter den Linden, or the Stadische Open, on Blsmarckstrasse. In the ITetropol Theater, on Behrenstrasse, you can sit threugh Frank Lehar's deilghtful operetta "Merry Widow" once aaaln. and If you miss "The Five Frankfurters "(which isn't what you think a-tall, a-tall) at the Berliner Theater, you're missing one of the traditions of Berlin. If you like mystery plavs. there is Edirar Wallace's detective play at the Komedle.

and for vaudeville, there'j th famous Winter Garden, on Dorotheenstrasse, Avalon, Klners H(thy-S. 18 St. Alice Terry, Three Cresrenl, 2H19 Church Lytetf, Lone Wolf's Danrhter r.rr.mi, riv. nosrrs. Klrhard narthelmess, Wearv River Kenaaore, Church ft Flat.

Boyd. Leatherneck; alao Vaod tir-I Klnc.asr. Klnm I. AT Rirh.rd Barthelmess. Weary 'liver: Vaud Sim! Leader, Newklrk-C.

I. Anna Q. Nll.n. Blockade Donble inden, 8tS Flatbush Av Ren Lyon. The Quitter; also One (ianr ComedT 8ama Marine.

Flat. Hy. Fyneopatlon Wllh Warlns's Pennsylvanlans.R Barthelmesa Mavfalr, O. Greta Garbo, Wild Orchids Herbert Hnlmei Mldwood, At. J-B.

1.1th Hill' rarkside, PKsiae-riaiousn. Mils, The lUrkcr Patio, 674 Flatbush Av Alice Terrv, Three Passions Malta 1085 Flatbush Greta Garbo, Wild Orchids PARK SLOPE SECTION Atlantis, Flatbush ft Q. Nllsson. The Carlton. Flstbush-7th Av Rlrhsrd Ills, Hrd.kln National, Wash, ft ftellsmr Trial; 9lh St.

-5th Av William Rovd. Banders, Pros. Pk W. ft 14 Bt.Lonliie Farenda. Terminal, 4lh Hearta RIDGEWOOD Madleen, Uvrtle ft William Rovd, Leatherneck: also Vsni rartbaiua, 339 Orel Garbo, Wild Orchids Psma.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963