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Below is the official billing for “That Man’s Here Again.” It is important that this be followed without change or variation.
Warner Bros. 40%
u | pictures Inc. presents = = oe,
That Man's Here Again 100%
HUGH HERBERT >
Maw ‘Maguire ~Tom Brown
13%
Joseph King — Teddy Hart 40%
Directed by LOUIS KING 20%
A FIRST NATIONAL PICTURE | ied O%
Thomas J. ein ee aes GUN Be en at nies SRS Me Hugh Herbert
Nancy bee 366s peer eee So ee Mary Maguire
Jimmy Whalen............ he Piet ote ACN re he fae tera Mey ce ne Tom Brown
Bly, POMPGOCR. ne Sota SOS eas Se es Joseph King
BO es: Ceeeee Se ee ee Siena s ato ales Teddy Hart Mr. Johnson CE a en reat Gon aa : Sera Fase Arthur Aylesworth |
Mrs. Mathews... ek. pes tee ai Dorothy Vaughan
Mr. Wong................ cow Cet Re Wee eg Komai
®
DOSOis 8 ee po ie aa ee Louis King
Screen Misy by ee eee ee sree ae Lillie Hayward
Sléry by .60 os. a eee ae Ep aR Freee Ida A. R. Wylie
Photography by......... ones ee ers at es ....Warren Lynch, A. S. C.
Film Editor......... Pep ie. naa rae een eae et Harold McLernon
Dialogue Director... Mearns an Ss as ea a Joseph Graham
PR CRUOCROE ss es es ee Esdras Hartley
Page Two :
Country of origin U. S$. A. Copyright 1937 Vitagraph, Inc.
g
Nancy Lee (Mary Magwire), a
young girl who has lost her job in a department store, sneaks into the
basement of an exclusive apartment
to get dry and warm in the furnace room. There she is found by Jimmy Whalen (Tom Brown), a $12-a-week
elevator boy who sympathizes with
her and helps her.
Surprised by the angry apartment house manager (Arthur Aylesworth), the youngsters finally make their peace with him when Jimmy pleads that Naney be hired as a maid to help the manager’s over-worked wife.
Thomas J. Jesse (Hugh Herbert), a playboy and art collector who has money off and on, takes an interest in Jimmy and tells him about his prize art object—a Mine vase valued at $10,000. He tells Nancy about it also, warning her not to break it
_when she cleans his apartment. He is
habitually genial and always amusingly tight.
Mr. Murdock (Joseph King), another tenant, is the opposite of Mr. Jesse. He is a hypocritical pillar of society who has no consideration for the hired help.
As the friendship fore Jimmy and Naney ripens into love, Jimmy notices that she is hiding something. She goes away on her day off and he is mystified until he discovers that she goes to visit her baby in a home for children. On the day he diseovers this, Mary has broken Mr. Jesse’s Ming vase in the course of her clean
ine. Terrified at having broken the
priceless pottery, she runs away. Eventually she is found in a hospital, having been picked up follow
ing her collapse from undernourish
ment. Jimmy tells her he knows about the baby and likes the child and that Mr. Jesse has lent him the money to pay the back bills on the child’s upkeep.
Meanwhile Mr. Murdock goes away for two weeks. Jimmy decides to put Nancy up in his apartment and to bring her baby there. He sets the stage and brings Naney home from the hospital. While they are in Murdock’s apartment, its owner returns and immediately ealls a policeman.
Jesse, going to bat for the youngsters, then exposes Murdock as cheating on his society wife and threatens to expose him. Anxious to get out Murdock in his confusion picks up Jesse’s suitcase, springs it open and drops a vase out of it. Exclaiming that his Ming vase was broken and worth $10,000, Jesse immediately proceeds to collect two checks for $5,000 each from Murdock, holding over his head the exposure “of his hideaway
apartment. Murdock pays under protest, fearing the publicity ‘attendant
on exposure. Jesse explains to Naney that the
vase Murdock had broken was a cheap duplicate of the Ming vase. Then he gives them one of the $5,000 —
checks and his blessing.
HUGH HERBERT — the_comedian
of the fluttery hands and titter laugh —is also a playwright and a screen director. Born in Binghamton, New York and taken when a child to New York’s West Side—Is of Scotch-Irish descent His first stage job, se
cured at the age of sixteen, was a_ Hebrew character Traveled
widely as member of a repertory company—and was for years in stock
Came to Hollywood in 1927 as a
writer He was both author and director of the first all-talking picture, ‘“‘Lights of New York’’ Like most comedians, is very serious off the screen and one of Hollywood’s most substantial citizens Reads a great deal, and spends most of his spare time at home with his wife and children Is expert bridge player At present to be seen in ‘‘That Man’s Here Again’”’ at the ............... Theatre.
Exploitation
Advertising Section
Publicity Section Lead-off, Reviews, Readers Features and Readers Shorts
_ Accessories
Herald & Lobby . Posters & Window Cards.
MARY MAGUIRE — born in Bris-—
bane, Australia, seventeen years ago,
is the daughter of Michael Maguire,
one time welterweight boxing champion Mary calls him ‘Mick’ and dances with him almost every night Also lets him select her clothes for her They were en route to London last year for a film engagement when they stopped for a look at Hollywood. A First National executive saw Mary and signed her up at
once Mary has dark eyes and
hair, is five feet tall, weighs only a fraction over one hundred pounds, and wears a No. 1 shoe Thinks Hollywood is the most exciting place in the world and hopes to make her home there permanently Says weather there is ideal for her favorite
sport which is golf Has appeared |
in several Australian films Her present — and first — American pic
ture is ‘‘That Man’s Here Again’’ a ‘First National picture — with Hugh Herbert in the top comedy spot =e
‘“‘That Man’s Here Again’’ is showtne AG BNO Sok ey Theatre.
All rights reserved. Copyright is waived to magazines and newspapers,
During that time
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