We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.
Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.
* i' Rawhide “Rawhide" is a lusty drama ear-marked to be one of the entertainment highlights of 1930. Co-starring Tyrone Power and Susan Hayward, "Raw- hide" is based on a screenplay by Dudley Nichols who has been associated with some of the screen’s most popular works, including "Stagecoach". Like the latter, “Rawhide” is an outdoor thriller concerning a brave, young man’s en- counter with bandits. Not since "Jesse James" has Tyrone Power had such anadventurous American story as is disclosed in “Rawhide". But, this time he is in pursuit of outlaws instead of being one of them. The pioneering spirit of the men and women who penetrated the badlands and courageously met every chal- lenge is thrillingly personified in the roles he andMissHay- ward enact. "Rawhide” takes its name from a forlorn relay station on the route of the Overland Mail, the first stagecoach line to link America. Power is a young man from the East learn- ing about theOverland route for his father. His path crosses that of a pretty traveler and her daughter—and he assumes a protective attitude toward them when a desperado, who has broken out of jail, and his three confederates overtake them. Overpowered, the Easterner, girl and her daughter and others become prisoners of the desperadoes who force them to facilitate their plan to rob an eastbound stage transport- ing $100,000 in,gold bars. Meantime, love develops between the Easterner and the girl. They are constantly lashing out at each other, filling the night with the fire of their passions as the impact of their personalities finally brings happiness out of several days of horror. “Rawhide” is the second successive Tyrone Power co-starring vehicle directed by Henry Hathaway, for he made "The Black Rose” in Africa with that star. In "Rawhide”, Power has a definite change ofpace. Another who undergoes a change in pace is Hugh Marlowe who plays the fugitive desperado. The reader will recall him as the song-writer in "Come To the Stable” and as a flier in "12 O’clock High”. Among his quartet of cut- throats is Academy Award winner, Dean Jagger as a pot- bellied man with a good-natured countenance. Jagger won his Academy for his performance in "12 O’clock High”. Others in the cast are Edgar Buchanan as the stage driver; Norman Lloyd as a pimply-faced outlaw with a loose grin; George Tobias as a bull-necked German killer; Jeff Corey, James Millican, Louis Jean Heydt, William Haade, Milton R. Corey, Jr. Ken Tobey, Max Terhune, Robert Adler, Judy Ann Dunn, Howard Negley, Vincent Neptune, Edith Evanson, Walter Sande and Dick Curtiz. Much of "Rawhide” was filmed on location at Lone Pine, Cal.Lionel Newman and Bob Russell wrote "A Rollin’ Stone”, which is introduced in this romantic outdoor drama, photographed by Milton Krasner.