Exhibitors Herald (1927)

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22 EXHIBITORS HERALD August 13, 1927 Th ese feminine Robin Hoods are seldom so serious, for they are Doris Dawson (left) and Gail Lloyd of Christie-Paramount comedies. Gladys McConnell, a high school girl, has beauty on her side so when Harry Langdon saw her in a Western he chose her for his leading woman in “Three’s a Crowd,” his latest First National comedy just completed. It won’t be long now! Woman’s place will be on flag poles too, as Vera Steadman, Christie-Paramount comedienne, prophesies above. In the grand dining room of a Hungarian countess," while brilliant blades of the army gather, intrigue arrives as an honored guest. The scene is from Billie Dove’s current First National picture, featuring Lloyd Hughes and directed by Alexander Korda. Another festive occasion with uniforms— -this scene being from Fox’s “Paid to Love,” a Howard Hawks’ production starring George O’Brien and featuring Virginia Valli, Wallace MacDonald and William Powell, who is shown above with glass aloft, in a toast, of course, to some new villiany.