Exhibitors Daily Review (1927)

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5 Exhibitors DAILY REVIEW, MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1927 Let *Er Ride — Making It a Clean Shave — Four Jolly Good Fellows Three national figures who graced the Association Motion Picture Advertisers dinner. Left to right: Major Edward Bowes, managing director Capitol Theatre, New York; Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover and Will H. Hays, of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America. 85 (Below) Already famed as a dancer in Mexico City, Lupe Velez, seventeenyear-old Mexican girl, is Hal Roach’s latest find. She makes her screen debut as leading lady for Charlie Chase in Pathe’s “What Women Did for Me.” This German police dog is almost as tall as Jacqueline Gadsden. Both appear in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s “The Thirteenth Hour,” Miss Gadsden being co-featured with Lionel Barrymore. The man under the knife is the victim of a perfect German shave, which is being superintended by Ernst Lubitsch, director of “Old Heidelberg” for M-G-M. Ramon Novarro and Norma Shearer will be co-starred. Don’t pity the poor prop man who is often called upon to produce anything under the sun. Raymond Moy&r shows Colleen Moore, First National star, that it’s a case of “join the prop men and see the world.” A mixed baseball team practices between scenes of Warners’ “Tracked by the Police.” The catcher is Jason Robards and the man (in the vernacular) at bat is Virginia Browne Faire. In perfect synchronization with her part in “The Chinese Parrot,” which she is making for Universal, Marion Nixon dresses in a suit of Chinese pajamas to drink a cup of Chinese tea. The old gang gets together in Universal City. From left to right: Fred J. McConnell, editor of Exhibitors DAILY REVIEW ; Lloyd Nosier, one of Universal’s film editors, and Walter Anthony and Tom Reed, UniversaFs star title writers.