Motography (1912)

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412 MOTOGRAPHY Vol. VIII, No. 11. Calder Johnstone, Irving V. Willat, Harry J. Morey, Howard Crampton, George O. Newhall, Louis Gelang, Bert Adler, John Charles, Howard Howard, Edward Wynard, John Adolph. Arthur D. Jacobs, Arthur Housman, Harry Beaumont, C. Jay Williams, Josh Hopkins, Herbert Brenon, T. G. Holliday, W. W. Robinson, F. E. Balladney, George W. Terwilliger, Frederick A. Thorne, Charles D. Chapman, Arthur V. Smith, Crane Wilbur, C. Francis Jenkins, Harry Spear, Hugh Hoffman, Henry Belmar, Edward J. Warren, H. Z. Levine, James Kirkwood, George Ober, Frederick Best Spear, the Rev. E. B. Stockton, H. S. Mack, Charles F. Fisher, R. Gaumont, Herbert Miles, Isadore Bernstein, John Arnold, Irving Cummings, Darwin Karr, William Pincus, Edward Thomas, Joseph Carroll, J. T. Bernstein, A. Kessel, Jr., W. H. Clendenning, Harry R. Raver, Hopp Hadley, G. W. Saint Loupe, C. Cobb, Jr., John Bunny, Alec Budd Francis, Harold Wilson, George Heming, Henry Benham, Wm. Garwood, Albert W. Hale, James Young, Paul Scardon, William Steiner, Maurice Costello, Lee Beggs, Frank Powell, John W. Noble, Harold M. Shaw, Yale D. Benner, Tefft Johnson, M. A. Kraus, William A. Bechtel, A. Warner, W. F. Haddock, Lamar Johnstone, William Quirk. Among the guests were H. S. Scallon, Arthur Pickens, James Cruze, D. Murrie, James Smith, John B. Clymer, F. M. O'Connor, Charles E. Graham, John Davy, H. E. Millarde, Henry Marks, C. W. Doty and J. Stanchfield. Frohman to Use Films in New PlayMotion pictures to representnot a mere section of a scene, but vast divisions of a country into which the dramatic action of the play leads, are to be used by Charles Frohman extensively in a four-act drama which he has engaged Paul Potter to write. The second and third acts are laid in India, and there will be fourteen scenes. All of them will be represented without lowering the curtain, with the aid of the motion pictures. They will be interwoven with the dialogue and action of the play and will be in colors. Mr. Potter got his inspiration for the play from Mr. Kipling's Mulvaney stories, and his scenario is called "On the Road to Mandalay." Motion Pictures in Parish House Flatbush (Long Island) Congregational church has installed a moving-picture outfit in its parish house, considering it a valuable part of the machinery for its work, particularly with the children. The opening exhibition was conducted by S. M. Spedon of the American Vitagraph Company, who exhibited some fine films and lectured as well on "The Ethical and Educational Value of Moving Pictures." After the opening services in the large church Sunday mornings, children under 12 years of age are invited to pass into the parish house, where "Children's Church" is conducted and an illustrated sermon delivered. 'The Prospector," a Western Drama by Essanay.