Exhibitors Herald (Jul-Sep 1921)

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A Every Season is a Good Season — for Good Pictures! ND here are'the'pictures which will make the season 1921-22 the greatest season you ever had in you life. You don't have to worry about business when you show these. Look them over! September "The' Bride's Play," with MARION DAVIES. Cosmopolitan production. By Donn Byrne. Directed by George Terwilliger. Scenario by Mildred Considine. A romance of modern Irish life, lavishly staged. Wallace Reid m "THE HELL DIGGERS." another B yron Morgan story full of he-man thrills and rugged combat. Directed by Frank Urson. Cast includes Lois Wilson. Gloria Swans Oft in Elinor Glyn's "THE GREAT MOMENT," destined to be one of the greatest productions of this generation. Directed by Sam Wood. Scenario by Monte M. Kattcrjohn. Betty CompSOH in 'AT THE END OF THE WORLD," adapted by Adelaide Heilbron from the play by Ernst Klein. Scenario by Edfrid A. Bingham. Directed by Penrhyn Stanlaws. Her first Paramount. "Dangerous Lies," a Paul Powell Production with DAVID POWELL. By E. Phillips Oppenheim. Scenario by Mary O'Connor. A big society drama produced by a great American director. " The Golem, " the stupendous sensation which has broken all records at the Criterion Theatre, New York, in the hottest summer on record. Cecil B. De Milk's production "THE AFFAIRS OF ANATOL," by Jeanie Macpherson, suggested by Arthur^Schnitzler's play and the paraphrase thereof by Granville Barker. With Wallace Reid, Gloria Swanson, Elliott Dexter, Bebe Daniels, Monte Blue, Wanda Hawley, Theodore Roberts, Agnes Ayres, Theodore Kosloff, Polly Moran, Raymond Hatton and Julia Faye. October Elsie Ferguson in "FOOTLIGHTS," a John S. Rober tson production , by Rita Weiman. Without any question the greatest, most entrancing picture Miss Ferguson has ever had. Photoplay by Josephine Lovett. Th Omas Meighan in "CAPPY RICKS," from Peter B. Kyne's lovable Saturday Evening Post stories, rich in human interest and heart appeal. Photoplay by Albert Shelby LeVino, from the novel by Mr. Kyne and the play by Edward E. Rose. Directed by Tom Forman. George Mel ford's production "THE GREAT IMPERSONATION," with James Kirkwood. By E. Phillips Oppenheim. Photoplay by Monte M. Katterjohn. Roscoe {Fatty) Ar buckle in "GASOLINE GUS," from the Saturday Evening Post stories by George Pattulo. Directed by James Cruze. Scenario by Walter Woods. George Fltzmaurice's production "EXPERIENCE," with Richard Barthelmess. By George Y. Hobart. Photoplay by Waldemar Young. The play that broke records everywhere. "Enchantment," with MARION DAVIES. Cosmopolitan Production. By Frank R. Adams, directed by Robert G. Vignola. Scenario by Luther Reed, Cast includes Forrest Stanley. William De Mille's production "AFTER THE SHOW," by Rita Weiman. With Jack Holt, Lila Lee and Charles Ogle. Photoplay by Hazel McDonald and Vianna Knowlton. Ethel Clayton in William D. Taylor's production "BEYOND," by Henry Arthur Jones. Scenario by Julia Crawford Ivers. A new story by the prominent English dramatist. (paramount ^pictures Show free picture to keep the pictures free! Motion Picture Day August 25th 3 famous Pi_vtE us l\»m corporvtiov ■