Canadian Film Weekly (Mar 16, 1955)

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Page 6 TWO NEW HOUSES (Continued from Page 1) which is being booked by Marc Fortin. A completion date early in April has been set for the debut of P. Adduono’s 618-seat, six-day North in North Bay, Ontario, It will be booked by the National Booking Company. Under way is the Queen’s Drive-in in Fort Frances, Ontario, being built by Fort Frances Theatre Limited, of which O. C. Polenske is president. Principal Investments Limited will build a theatre as part of a $3,000,000 shopping centre at the junction of the Queen Elizabeth Way and Dixie Road on the Western outskirts of Toronto. Major alterations valued at $40,000 are under way at Alcana Theatres’ 556-seat Capitol in Paris, Ontario. Installation of new seats and heating equipment has been made in Bancroft Theatres’ 342-seat Bancroft in the Ontario town of that name and further changes will be made later. Odeon Theatres’ Savoy in Hamilton, Ontario, will undergo a complete renovation and alteration job and will have its name changed to the Highland. Only one new theatre contract, valued at $200,000, was let in Canada during January and that one was in Ontario. Columbia's 'The Queen Bee’ Betsy Palmer will star with Joan Crawford in Columbia’s The Queen Bee. "Great Day In The Morning’ Robert Hardy Andrews’ best seller, Great Day in the Morning, has been acquired by Edmund Grainger, who releases through RKO. "A Kiss Before Dying’ Crown Productions, through Robert Jacks, will produce its second film, A Kiss' Before Dying, in color and CinemaScope. It’s from a prize-winning novel and United Artists will handle it. Jacks, Robert Goldstein, Spyros S. Skouras and Plato Skouras head Crown, which is completing A Killer Is Loose. "Boy And The Bull’ Shooting In Mexico King Bros.’ The Boy and the Bull, a CinemaScope-color production for RKO release, has started shooting in Mexico under the direction of Irving Rapper. Michel Ray, 11-year-old British actor, is portraying the title role of a youngster who meets a variety of problems in his efforts to rear a baby bull. The Mexican government has given its approval for the King Brothers to use the Bande de Nationale, a government subsidized band of 50 which wears native costumes. heralded CANADIAN FILM WEEKLY “ n Th SQUARE Hye Bossin’s On The Square, which usually occupies this space, is missing from this issue due to a bout with pneumonia. However, his many readers will be glad to know that he is on the mend now and hopes to be back at the old stand next week. NO COMPETITIVE TV YET — OTTAWA “We should be careful about moving too quickly in some special areas to permit competitive licences which would undoubtedly detract from the national system,” Revenue Minister McCann warned the House of Commons in a cautiously-worded statement during its recent TV and radio debate. Dr. McCann reports to Parliament for the CBC, although the crown corporation is only answerable to that body and not to him, Dr. McCann’s statement was taken as meaning that the setting up of rival TV stations in such centres as Toronto and Montreal, from which much the greater part of the CBC’s revenue is derived, would be long delayed and might not be permitted at all. He also revealed that Bell Telephone had won out over the CNR and CPR in the race for the microwave relay contract for national TV hookups, although the two railroads will handle the French-language network in Quebec. Annual rental charges for the relays will cost the CBC about $2,000,000 and the complete Trans-Canada relay would be in operation in three years, he said. TV ACADEMY AWARDS EMMYS Loretta Young and Danny Thomas were awarded Emmys as the best actress and actor on a regular series by the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences in Hollywood last week at the seventh annual awards dinner. Others honored included George Gobel as the most outstanding newcomer; Audrey Meadows and Art Carney as the best supporting actress and actor in a regular series (both appear on the Jackie Gleason show); Robert Cummings as the best actor in a single performance (Twelve Angry Men, Studio One); Judith Anderson as the best actress in a single performance (Macbeth, Hallmark. Playhouse) ; and Dinah Shore and Perry Como as the best female and male singers, TRUEMAN RE NFB AND GOV'T The fact that between 60 and 70 per cent of the National Film Board’s non-theatrical film is in the hands of councils and libraries for distribution, instead of in government hands, “acts as a sort of balance wheel against Government direction,” claimed Dr. A. W. Trueman, head of the federal film agency, in a recent luncheon address to the Canadian Club, London, Ontario. His opinion followed the suggestion that Canadians keep their eyes on the board because “it is perfectly possible to use such an agency for propaganda purposes.” He added that he had never seen any indication that this would happen. Dr. Trueman, who had been introduced by Dr. G. E. Hall, president of the University of Western Ontario and was thanked by A. B. Lucas, inspector of public schools, said that the NFB, rather than interpret Canada for Canadians, provided infermation so that Canadians can interpret Canada for themselves. Lewis Named Mor. Of Fox TV Studio Hecht-Lancaster Buy "Tell It On Drums’ Tell It on the Drums, muchadventure novel by Harold Lewis has been appointed studio manager of 20th Avenue Robert W. Krepps to be published next summer by MacMillan, will be brought to the screen by the Harold Hecht-Burt Lancaster production company for United Artists release. A South African story of the development of the world’s richest diamond mines in the early 1880's, Tell It on the Drums is scheduled to be filmed on location next year in the Kimberly diamond area of Africa. Century-Fox’ Western studios which are being converted and re-tooled for television production. Lewis, formerly manager of Pathe studios and head of RKO location department, has assumed his new duties. 20th Century-Fox recently allocated several million dollars to complete renovation of the Western Avenue lot, which embraces ten stages and theatres. March 16, 1955 DONALD CARTER Named director of production for Crawley Films Limited. Stewart, Doris Day In New Hitchcock Film James Stewart and Doris Day will be co-starred in Alfred Hitchcock’s VistaVision production, The Man Who Knew Too Much, which will start at Paramount in May. A super-suspense spy mystery, the film casts Stewart as a doctor and Miss Day as his wife, a former singer. It is based on the picture of the same title which Hitchcock directed in England in the mid-thirties. Placed in London and French Morocco, _ producer-director Hitchcock will film part of the picture in these locales with the remainder to be done at the Paramount studio. Film Of Tolstoy Book For Para Release A top-flight motion picture based upon War and Peace, Tolstoy’s greatest novel which has been hailed as one of the landmarks of world literature, will soon go into production as one of the most important motion pictures of modern times, it was announced recently by Paramount Pictures, which has completed negotiations to distribute the film throughout the entire world except Finland, Yugoslavia and Russia. The film will be produced as a top-budget special by Carlo Ponti and Dino DeLaurentiis, leading Italian producers, largely on location in Finland and Yugoslavia, with interiors scheduled to be filmed at the PontiDeLaurentiis Studios in Rome. King Vidor, famed director of many memorable hits, will direct from the script by R. C. Sherriff. The cast will be headed by topname stars with whom negotiations are now in progress. The latest VistaVision process and Technicolor will be used.