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Getting Into the Movies?
Read our booklet on "How Can I Get Into the Movies?" It discusses the methods used by new players and there's a raft of good suggestions in it.
Send 5c, postage money, for the booklet and get started before the fall rush. We will alsu enclose our new price list (greatly reduced) of our courses in Motion Picture acting.
NATIONAL MOTION PICTURE INSTITUTE
175 Duffield Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
THE NATIONAL MOTION PICTURE INSTITUTE i
175 Oufflgid StrMt. Brooklyn. N. Y. \
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Stage Plays That Are Worth While
(Continued from page 6)
"Afy Golden Girl." — A passable musical entertainment with a score by Victor Herbert. A chorus girl, Jeannette Dietrich, scores the hit of the show.
"The L.itlle Whopper." — Lively and amusing musical comedy with tuneful score by Rudolf Friml. Viviennc Segal pleasantly heads the cast, wdiich also numbers Harry C. Browne, who does excellent work, Mildred Richardson and W. J. Ferguson.
"Wedding Bells."— A bright and highly amusing comedy by Salisbury Field. Admirably written and charmingly played by Margaret Lawrence and Wallace Eddinger. One of the things you should see.
"Aphrodite." — Highly colored and lavish presentation of a drama based upon Pierre Louys' e.xotic novel of ancient Alexandria. Superbly staged adaptation of the play that caused a sensation in Paris. Dorothy Dalton, the screen star, returns to the stage in the principal role of the Galilean courtesan, Chrysis, and scores. McKay Morris is admirable in the principal male role.
"The Frivolities of 1920."— G. M. (Broncho Billy) Anderson's girl revue. Lively, speedy musical show with a large measure of vulgarity, but many pretty girls.
Loew's N. Y. and Loezv's Amcriean Roof. — Photoplays ; first runs. Daily program.
Loezv's Aletropolitan, Brooklyn. — Feature photoplays and vaudeville.
Capitol. — Photoplay features plus a de luxe program. Superb theater.
Kiz'oli. — De luxe photoplays with full symphony orchestra. W'eekly program.
Rialto. — Photoplays supreme. Program changes every week.
Strand. — Select first-run photoplays. Program changes every week.
THE NEWS MEN
By Walter E. Mair
We turn a cool, collected crank Where foemen flee the furious Yank; We scale the Himalayan peaks to snap a bunch of flowers. Or, perching on a biplane's tail, We photograph the Airline Mail ; Tlien nonchalantly spiral down to "pan" old Gotham's towers.
It may be up in Saskatoon We point our guns to shoot the moon. Or in some Panamanian cove we coax the gentle shark. We leap athwart some skipper's neck And focus on his vessel's wreck. Then right-about to catch a glimpse of spooners in the park.
We plumb the deep and dreary mines And risk extensive trespass fines To spot a locomotive spinning sparks from every wheel. Perhaps we hie to gloomy glade Where lurk mosquitos in the shade. To get artistic studies of the Great Brazilian Eel!
We frame a strip of Mandalay, Then take a little fly-away To where at sunrise ululates the Turkish muezzin. Fingers in ears, we say amen ! Then hasten forth to crank again .\ crew of Senegambians getting full o' niggergin.
Nay, friend, no gang for arigel choirs Are we: ti'C shine around big fires! And yet I have a notion, should you mount the golden stair. You'd find a nosy movie guy Evading Peter's watchful eye. In hopes that yet some Newport dame might find admittance there.
MOTION PICTURE
The Popular Popularity Contest
The Popularity Contest is still arousing universal interest. No part of the world is absent in representation. Votes are pouring in — hundreds of them — every day. Mary Pickford still leads the women with a large majority of votes. Wallace Reid heads the men with a notso-large majority. Others are coming forward so rapidly that it is hard to make any predictions concerning the next report. If you have not already sent in votes for your favorite player, there is still tiine in which to do so. All rules and regulations, together with a description of the useful and beautiful prizes are presented on another page, and here are the last-minute results of the contest at the time of going to press :
Mary Pickford, 49,600; Norma Talmadge, 29,851; Pearl White, 20,161; Mme. Nazimova, 11,748; Constance Talmadge, 6,907; Bebe Daniels, 4,748; Viola Dana, 3,555; Elsie Ferguson, 3,417; Lillian Gish, 2,801 ; Mary Miles Minter, 2,412; Theda Bara. 2,249; Dorothy Gish, 2,154 ; Ruth Roland, 2,017 ; OliveThomas, 1,759 ; Shirley Mason, 1,519 ; Anita Stewart, 1,506; Marguerite Clark, 1,451 ; May Allison, 1,412 ; Ethel Clajton, 1,359 ; Baby Marie Osborne, 1,206; Dorothy Dalton, 1,114; Gloria Swanson, 1,106; Irene Castle, 1,017; Marion Davies, 916; Pauline Frederick, 861 ; Geraldine Farrar, 854; Alice Joyce, 816; Ann Little, 747; Alice Lake, 712 ; Mae Murray, 701 ; Olga Fetrova, 656; Margarita Fisher, 617; Katherine MacDonald, 604; Marie Prevost, 597; Alice Brady, 558; Priscilla Dean, 552; Wanda Hawley, 519; Edith Johnson, 512; Blanche Sweet, 506; June Caprice, 461; Madge Kennedy, 458; Vivian Martin, 452; Kathlyn Williams, 446; Dolores Cassinelli, 421 ; Doris May, 416; Marie Walcamp, 408; Winifred Westover, 404 ; Tuanita Hansen, 361 ; Betty Compson, 3"57; Billie Burke, 334; Violet Heming, 317; Doris Kenyon, 306; Gladys Leslie, 271 ; Jane Novak, 265 ; Dorothy Phillips, 254; Clara K. Young, 250; Mildred Davis, 231; Jean Paige, 211; Enid Bennett, 175; Louise Glaum, 167; Lila Lee, 167; Mae Marsh, 159; Eva Novak, 156; Fannie Ward, 154; Constance Binney, 144; Virginia Lee Corbin, 138; Betty Blythe, 131 ; Marjorie Daw, 127; Mary Garden, 124; Corinne Griffith, 123; Mildred Harris, 116; Peggy Hyland, 114; Louise Lovely, 109; Mildred Reardon, 104; Mary Thurman, 104.
While the men players are vastly in the minority in the number of votes cast, yet the leaders are steadily holding their own:
Wallace Reid, 19,954; William S. Hart, 16,321 ; Richard Bartheliness, 14,556; Douglas Fairbanks, 9,664; Eugene O'Brien, 4,823; William Farnum, 3,914 ; Charles Ray, 3,461 ; J. Warren Kerrigan, 2,807; Tom Mix, 2,702; Charles Chaplin, 1,958; Douglas MacLean, 1,654; Thomas Meighan, 1,362; Rodnev La Rocque, 1,358; Tom Moore, 1,346 ;'William Duncan, 1,256; Kenneth Harlan, 1,116; Jack Pickford, 1,057; John Barrymore, 1,014; Ralph Graves, 1,009;
(Eight)