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The Most Beautiful Star In The World With The Most Beautiful Voice On The Screen!
Billie Dove Has STRAND
Perfect Silhouette, Expert Declares
Beautiful Billie
OFFICIAL BILLING
First National Pictures
Presents ‘ ; ° If you’ve ever loved — and Mirpurgo, Italian Artist, B iT LLI K D VE Be . ; , ost—-and won again—you’ll Joins Chorus of Praise O thrill to this drama ‘of a Of Screen’s Fairest in beautiful girl who married
the wrong
“THE OTHER TOMORROW”
with
GRANT WITHERS Kenneth Thomson, Frank Sheridan, Otto Hoffman, Wm. Grainger, Scott Seaton
(CURRENT READER) Already known as “the screen’s most beautiful woman”—although she doesn’t like to be called that, believe it or not—-Billie Dove has just added another beauty prize to her collection. Mirpurgo, Italy’s most noted silhouette-cutter, and an artist and sculptor of note, declares that Miss
Adapted from the story by Octavus Roy Cohen
Dove has the most perfect silhouettes. (The plural is right; they come in pairs, one a profile, the other front view.”
The artist visited Miss Dove while she was filming “The Other Tomorrow,” her latest starring vehicle for First National, now showing at the Theatre. He was making a world tour during which he has drawn and cut silhouettes of the most famous beauties of the world.
Not so long ago, it will be remembered, a visiting delegation of European artists and sculptors, stopping at the Carmel and Laguna art colonies of Southern California, voted Billie (once again!) “the most perfect brunette type of American womanhood.
“The Other Tomorrow” is a stirring romantic drama of modern marriage in the Old South, with Grant Withers and Kenneth Thomson in the principal supporting roles. Lloyd Bacon directed the picture.
ACROSS THE GAP
Billie Dove is one of the film stars who have successfully bridged the gap between silent pictures and talk
ies. Her voice is heard in her fifth “talkie”, “The Other Tomorow,” wnih “epolg: = oe ee at the sete mea eR eT diN Theatre.
TWO ENTRANCES
oo os See Billie Dove in “The Other Tomorrow”
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Fashionable Billie
Billie Dove’s appearance on the screen is said to invariably start sev‘al new fashions in clothes for women. The beautiful First National star is always gowned in the latest Hollywood and Paris styles, and in “The Other Tomorrow,” coming Theatre, she follows her usual precedent.
MARRIAGE FEUD
By marrying the wrong man Billie Dove unwittingly promotes a bitter feud between two fiery Southern gentlemen in “The Other Tomorrow,” the First National picture at the Theatre. Grant Withers Thomson—are—the men
and Kenneth in the case.
LOEWS STATE ™::.
O/RECTIONWEST COAST THEATRES INC,
Better Than Her Best
an this
house.
See it,
for its
Adapted from the story of Octavus Roy Cohen
Fifty, sixty, seventy miles hour. beautiful wife into her former sweetheart’s
terrible scandal. . .Mud!
entertainment.
You'll love it, and Billie
with GRANT WITHERS And Great Cast
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Fate forces
Headlong into a
for its gripping Hear it thrilling climax.
= — ee
Directed by LLOYD BACON
A FIRST NATIONAL & VITAPHONE PICTURE
“Vitaphone” is the registered trade mark of the Vitaphone Corp. designating its products.
Directed by Lloyd Bacon A First National and Vitaphone Production
THE “CAST
Podith Larrison gin Carter: os ee Nort Larrison:. <3 Dave: Weaver TEE CE Dram LOge ee Ed: Conover. 62252 sii 3 ae
RE Sacre William Grainger
gies ee eae a eae Scott Seaton
SYNOPSIS (Not for Publication)
A church fair is in progress in @ rural Georgia community when Edith and Nort Larrison return to the village from their European honeymoon. They were married after Edith had quarreled with Jim Carter, her sweetheart since childhood.
Jim still loves Edith although when they meet at the fair he gives no sign of his real feelings. The townspeople however, know how deeply Jim is hurt by Edith’s marriage and Nort overhears Dave Weaver, sheriff, and Drum Edge, county clerk, discussing whether or not Edith still doves Jim.
Nort is vain, self-contained, high tempered and impulsive. He is insanely jealous of Edith, and when he overhears the discussion between Dave and Drum his vanity is hurt and he tells Edith that she must no longer treat Jim cordially. Edith begs him not to let idle talk interfere with her life-long friendship for Jim.
She invites him to her annual birthday dinner against Nort’s wishes. Before the dinner hour Nort goes to Jim’s home and tells him that he must not go to the dinner and must hereafter avoid Edith entirely. Jim, who wants to save Edith as many unpleasant experiences as possible, complies with Nort’s orders.
Edith, who is deeply hurt by Jim’s absence from her birthday dinner, learns of what has previously occurred.. Nort glowers with jealousy and rage as he and Edith quarrel.
Edith is chagrined at Nort’s colossal cexceit, and her love for him dies when ne confronts her with disgraceful accusations. Picking up her coat, she gets into her roadster and rushes towards the home of her father.
A storm which sets in drenches Edith. Muddy roads cause her car to slip dangerously about. She loses her way in the darkness. In an attempt
to avoid a fallen tree her car swerves into a ditch from which it is unable to move.
After wandering about in_ the woods she accidentally comes upon Jim’s home. He has her clothes dried and she stays at his house the remainder of the night since it is impossible for her to reach her father’s plantation in the storm, which is hourly becoming more severe. Jim gives Edith his bedroom and sleeps in the barn.
Early the next morning Ted Journet, town. gossip, comes Edith’s car stalled in a ditch near Jim’s house. He stops at the house in the hope of discovering a scandal. Through Journet, Nort learns that Edith spent the night at Jim’s home and his hatred of him becomes more intense.
Nort wants to kill Jim. His plan is to first make him angry and then murder him, when Jim attempts to fight. It is for this purpose that Nort has his lawyer draw up divorce papers in which Edith’s name is shamelessly dragged through the mud, and im which her night at Jim’s house is named as the cause of action. Drum, the county clerk, does not file the papers but instead shows them to Jim. They have the desired effect, and Jim sets out to find Nort.
Edith knows that when Jim goes to Nort’s house he will be murdered and Nort will plead self-defense. She hurries there in an effort to save Jim, who has not yet arrived. Nort locks Edith in a closet and she later hears two shots and thinks that Nort has killed Jim.
Jim releases Edith from the closet and she learns that Nort has been killed by Sheriff Dave Weaver, who appeared on the scene just in time to save Jim from being murdered.
Latest in ““Mikes”’
Microphones with a short sound radius were used in outdoor scenes for “The Other Tomorrow,” the First National picture coming .......... {0 is 1 Ce ee eae ecnnees re cana Theatre. Distant sounds from airplanes, trains, and birds did not record, and the “mike” captured only the voices of the players nearby. This is the latest improvement in sound recording.
THE CLIMAX
A startling climax occurs in the First National picture “The Other Tomorrow,” now showing at the.... Ae ee ae Theatre. Billie Dove stars in this drama of the screen which is adapted from a story by Octavus Roy Cohen.
TOWN GOSSIP
Drum Edge, a gossipy county clerk, is played by William Grainger in “The Other Tomorrow,” Billie Dove’s new First National picture, which is showing at the Ee a RE Theatre.
Ultra-Realism
At Director Lloyd Bacon’s directions that she stall her car in the mud for a scene in “The Other Tomorrow,” Billie Dove carried the orders out so well it took a team of six horses to get the automobile back on the road. This First National picture is now showing at the .... OE eer Poe aeees eect Ona re Theatre.
vaN g
upon |
GRANT WITHERS
Adapted from the story of Octavus Roy Cohen
Directed by LLOYD BACON
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A FIRST NATIONAL & VITAPHONE PICTURE
“Vitaphone is the registered trade mark of the Vitaphone Corp. designating its products.
Billie Dove Plays a Daughter of Dixie
(ADVANCE READER— VITAPHONE)
In the role of a Southern girl in a small community, Billie Dove will make her next screen appearance in “The Other Tomorrow,” a First Na
tional starring production, which GPE Mca BU UIC tk nasa eaeeat atest cane SLLDyS YEG ac Paneer Naa Sracmationgese nase asT 4 Tt. 38
the beautiful star’s fifth talking picture.
The entire action of “The Other Tomorrow” is laid below the MasonDixon line, in Georgia. It shows Miss Dove on her honeymoon with a man she married after a quarrel with her girlhood sweetheart. The story, by Octavus Roy Cohen, is highly dramatic and an excellent vehicle for the actress to display her remarkable beauty and emotional ability.
Grant Withers, former newspaper reporter who was featured in “In ‘he Headlines” appears opposite Miss Dove. Kenneth Thomson plays Miss Dove’s husband. Others in the cast are Frank Sheridan, Otto Hoffman, William Grainger and Scott Seaton. Lloyd Bacon directed.
DOWN IN GEORGIA
“The Other Tomorrow,” Billie Dove’s newest First National pic{UTE * COMING es Cape Sa to the
Se Theatre, occurs entirely ‘n a small community in the State of Georgia. It is the first Southern role the star has attempted.
DERIOMTeWy
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