Variety (Nov 1928)

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VARIETY'S LONDON OFFICE 8 St, Martin's Place, Trafalgar Square Fr\ D 17 f P M CABLE ADDRESS: VARIETY, LONDON XJ l\ lU I vl : 5276-6277 Regent - Wednesday, Noyember 7, 1928 English Music Men Theme Tl^i ro hai* ^i;<-ii ■ a- ■.V;i''1<.lc iV '(t''- ■jKi Ki vir!'.,.' f ()r Nt'\v . V.urk' of' all .tl"! . -.ViintiiJ^ CtLhiii)-ji'i.i;;^^xih:.CiuiiljilH-llV Connoily. pailc-il Oct.. .27.':' .-Nov, 2, l^iwi-ciict- Syi-liiru iuHl .Yohii. AbboMV • Ja'i tViiv.; of ; Vrn::ni>if<,. l)ay'V<SS:; .lIi^'U*?'^ -li'fI qli i 11 c' ■ 'Ly VIn tlii;m..'.' , oiiTcrs an- .-a'^fai^on for'; the, ■nviH^rttiion Is; not. 'niMHinpnt'-\in.iffi^i it, is the'curiOHitV' ■ (•unc-prnin;< ■ U>0 :'f^iili-S : ViiUic • in ^ ■ th\v)'iu> sojlg fiir .a- .'^vhH.ir.onlzod i)ic ; tin"p.-:'.\viili; its . jjossiljilitiosi for;, this side. Al.so-.fui: TOn'i'U^h. cpriiiort i.<ih$. , ■■ . At >iM:(j>;<'M^ "t'Ki"'" fi -^'I'M't^ aonc Jufs. oVcir lipvp.-.. CHILDREN AND Fills i^CoMiimjoil ironi. p;ij.ci' rivu.ii-' from ^hf sixth' ■}). ;■ ■ AftPi- ;t\VQ yi'i.irsUn Fi'ahoe and; ; Vlortiv'-ny; J lank '.(fho. .Mule) returiis .here, la; open ..at. tii.c. .Ht)l:burn . Em- llajiK .\vilV . double, .into ■..ryihce'ts. ■^ca:barel.V - ^r'' .'••'^-.^ ' ^Joe!.TernVini .comes back liere to .play; 2;i weeks •for: S ; eral iVheatres,': stortinff.. Nov. . 26. Tferm'i'ni' i.s due at .the. Scala, Berlin, month of Fpbr.ustry. ■ . /liotli and. Shay have been booked '.-tor the \Vlntcr '.Gardphj^ Berlin," in ■vI>(icpiTibi!i\ •; ' " .] ':'''^J': ■ ■ ■ ' ' . - Margie .Fihley, Che.ster Fre(lerl.ck<5 . and the Bcrkoffs have: been booked ; hy^;William;:jipn7s offlee; for;. C. • Coc.hrane's. new . rovuc in IJondOn ■■;nrn«r:ig€asbn;",;^^ ; .. Nee" Wong, starting in January, Ay 111 play. Jjohdon vaude ivails.- . ■0: ' ■'■ ? \' ' ■ ■ Paris, Ndy. 6. ■. ; Sihiphe Montalet and- Carlos Avril, ■ vaudevillians and singers, are rnak? ■Ing'a sound shbr.t fpr Gaunioht uhr - dcr the;Peterseri-PoUlsen prociess. ilaurlce ChaniprpuX Is the pro- ducer with the film being made at the local Gaumont .'vtudio. SKATERS GE*r OVER ■.^Lipiidon, ■ >Jov. 6... TPhre;e \yhiri\yinds, roller, skaters^ scoried enriphatically upon opening at,.;the PalladUim ( vaudeville) , yes- terdiiy CMonday); . . : • . . Trio: duplicated the success in doubling at the Trocadero (cabaret). $5,000 DAY I^pndbn, ^Ip.v. 6. . ■ . .Ilifi'.^Iaio.sty's lilt a fast pace la.st Siitv^fday VNoy. :'3)v: • ■ .■■ ' Over $5,000, came .in for two. pdr formahces of :."Song of the Sea" on the day. . pradc pupils iil.<vvanT tn tho advani't'ci ola.Kses in! .hi^h ■ si'-.IiimH, .an .ajje ran^'e from. 10 to.'it'y<';a-«. ■. . ■. -iJi/iiUiifT:. tlu' - WurVtvy .■^toachers xli.--i.'ijs-.--f.'(l th(/ same groups'.'pf lilms in . oi.jc'.r to ■g.ot the varyiiig .types <)f rc.it'.Vion ac'Cprdi.ng- to .age, ;^:'.']: ■ With'the excopti.pn ()r;.the . older lui?:h .iii'hool.. girls .'no.ne of the -stu.-. lient.s wore very hot-about Ipve.tp whiei.i they ■ cc)n'sistently ref.e.rred tP ■as :'iniish/' '; -.• '■ . in the sixth grade groups .the at- titude ■ t owards ;loyft a.^ a theme' was di.'iiinctly hp«tiie..: Asked tp .e.xplain thoir' in-ej.udi.'oe ...the- sixth graders j?onor.any .-^aid- that '."Idve is always t he s;V.mc t liirig.''. . One'boy ex'pi.ai.hed Uiat>;h6 didn't niind. kis'sing.; at the .fiid .(if the picture'.. ' He • eVidcintly viewed that as a nqcessary.ev.il. ; , . Ubve and Spooky '. . ' The younger stiulents had pro- nounced, refictlpnstp sad things. Al- though, they laiighed at Buster Kea^ ton .many, '.socmccl .to . feel sorry fpr him because . .of ".the. trbuble H is always in.. .■'..:"'•■ •;' . Some' of ..the, chiiaren didn't .un- derstand the, plpts pf Lph. .Chaney l)icturcs but were '''ticdrei(V' just " the same. Asked if they .wdul.d wining-:' ly attend a pietiireVlf they ktiew in advance it \va.s,.Sppelty; about half of tiie' piipil.s said th^ and halt that they .wpuidh't; pr their parent!? w:bi(rdh't allow; them tp... ' ; IjV the earlier ". ag*e^; "pipts with actipn" .were.' in deriiand. ;in the high sChepl ages "gppd plpts true to life" are wanted. : All pf the oliildren .ap- peared sensitiyc^^ that dis;; tor tod pr p^aggerated charac ters.' or Seeds. Early, in the high scHpbl ages the bPyis stai't to drpp. their 'previous preference' for cowboy .pictures. As they reach the more di..scernirig period boys prefer comedies aind girlij love themes/: An unusual re- qtibii; "vvas that the older . students; uniformly disliked Charlie .Chaplin's Gold Rush,'! favorite with the ounger pupils. This same reaction variance occurred in the case of the slapstick Beery-Hatton pictures which the older scholars,.regardless of sex, rated low in their estimation although- the kids favoi-ed thehi very much. . .■ High, school bo!ys seemed particu- arly annoyed' by heroine of a .pa- thetic "cute" type. The older they were, the more fastidious, the stu- dents *\\'.ere abeiit:'"natural, acting" and artistic matters", - Boys. appea,red. to knew .a\ gppd deal about the technical side pf m«- tipn pictures, how they were made and why certain things were bad and; ethers gppd. At no ■ age did the students like such sem'l-'eduratlpnail pro^ductlons as -'Nanooli," "Grass." "Moana" and "Chang:''- yc ''Luciiy Girl^^At Shaftetibury ,. Lendpn, Npv. 6. "MpIIusc": OlPSQS a;t the Cpmcdy Nov, .10. It will be; repla;ced next Morid.iy.by "TheiSqUeaker/! moving, from thie Shaft^ibury, Bertie ;Meyer.s'. production . of '.'Lucky Girl" como.s. into the-latter hou.«?e-iv.f*ict w'oek.; ; Glenn Ell.yn Starred In Paris ' London, Nov. 6, - Glenn .ipiiy 11 will .b(i sta rred In the iiew l'-olies Bergorei.revue, Paris.. It . jgoeg ihto rehearsal Jan.. 3. , ^tiss Ellyn was seen, dancing in the ;Bc;rliri : yersipn Of -: "Burle.squo' by Dbrval and ilie latter immedi- "atoly sighed her.. ; .\ .' .. ;Van t-oon's Bpbks and' Play : :.'.• ■.■'.. :l'aris,'-Nov. ^e!^' , l.Ton"dril%. Van'. Lc.kmv hasj. start.'e.d ■Wirik on' a. new. jilay an.d?twp bpplt.s. : vVuthpr: live.s' in .'l'!))d iraguc. Avhrre . \n: will ciiuipli'to this wcirlt.^; Debear;With; Leadlay . •'.. ;' ^ vLiVjii.U.m, :N<iv.- 6." Arohit^ 'liNx'ar .has .joinod Majur ■ T.cadlay; ii1 .the condiu't of tlio latr tfr's 'inilrlifity l>uro.;u OEOFtGIE VS^P^ of whom (Chester" B. Bahn wrote;in the Syracuse ''Evening Telegrii;m":: ^'I can only recall two . Others pbs- sessing ai .similar art-—one,. Sir Harry ;Lapder; the other, Charles Spencer Chaplin."' ^ "fhis was writ- ten ..on the EecOnd "week Of my .first Aihci-ican to.ur.''..; in By Frank Scully . :/■■:';■ ■■■•■•;'"■ ^ Nice, Oct. 25. . 'iSiliy season is still aL.month.away but■ things .are '.becoming quite,ex-, citing. .0|i, quite. Rex . Ingram weht .tb London flrst time In; flve ; yearS, jack. Cbbgan Intrp- 4uc.ipd his old man in a chatter iand patter : act, Constance ^ Talma<Jge quit work ;dn ; her ; picture and split three; gloves :iap"plauding " the Boy Wonder,, Frank: Hairrls ahhouhced he leaves, for America in two w^eks with. iwrars on • three fronts, and Jeanne Aub.er.t, star, of "La Pp.s.ses- siph,'.' married a Chicago pprk pax»ker.. ""W^ Captain Grant Resigns " • : / '. Lpndon,. .Xn.v; ■ Captain. Archie Gr.'inf,. wlioKe en. gagement to Tcddio GerarU' lias' been' ainridijnCed, has sent in his rr.sigjia. tlon . as a; meinber Pf ' t lnv .gcpia Guards. :■■'■; ■ ^ . .• '^ ■;■■'■ ■• This is in; aCccrdano'e wiih th« tradltlpn ampng-the ptljcor.s of thia body, that when ah' ofllcbr. weds an actress he must:; either v^'s^isn; hi? commls^lO'h; br. she must •retire from the stage. ■ ; '. .; I3:uidap6^t, Oct. 15;/• ; . 'This hks been a weiek of classical jubilees; the B.urgthCater,.; state-- subventipned, abede of classic vtra-. dition,' celebrated; ;the 40th anhivcrr sary: of the building with a, new production of "Faust"; the Staats- oper- performed Wagn'er's "Aieisfer- singerV for ther 350th. time, and ''':Abre*s"^rJJih-^^-Ros^b:'' ■ •had-jts:^2^^^^^ birthday; .-■■■■'\' According to the papers; "FauSf was top highbrpw for Theatre. Guild subscribers. Apparently Directbr Herterich feared the sUihe thihij here, fOr although <''Faust," the classic play, of German literature, Is^ permanently on German f;epertorles, few people, pretend to. understand the second part and hb. one has ever dttempted to explain it; 'J'herefore, explorer.s; of the : profundities of Faust" have now ;discpvered' that was never meant by the authbr to be anything but .a. sort, pf dra- matic revue, -with . the philpspphy: thrown in^ for. greater attraction. Hence ".it was etaged ;mor.e or .les^ ai3 a revue, with aU' sbrts of inno- vations, unheard of in;this theatre, which lives on itis traditions. "Whether this , was really, what Goethe meant is dOubtful; but pos- sible since he wis a . stage director himself. Whether. pr«seht-ddy au- diences' like it remains to; be seen; Atmosiphere at the, first night Was too festive to ■ allow any criticism tb.cropAip.; $100,000 REHEARSAL'S (Continued from page 1) places the amount at a larger flg- During the past 'three ;years Miss ilampten has been studying singing under . the direction of Estelle Llebling. Last season she Was in the ' operetta ''My i>rincess," pre-, sentdd- by Alfred E. Aarons, with iiirulatar iibldin g ttiG fihancli^l .bag wide open; Tlie piece <;10!?cd after 20 perforirnahcc9. In New York and VVas; tabbed at that tirive as a $300,- 000 bloomer, but it established Sliss Hampton, Brulatour, reput<ed a . muUi-rnil.- liOnaire, is a big' stookliplder in the Kastmftn Kpt^it Company . find holds a cdnlra;ct that.brings him a .royalty iof half a.cent. bn;every .ifoot of i-aw; motion pictni-.e lilin sold by the oriiiforii^. ;■■■ .; ;, Maugham's 'in Hartford: . ■ Hartford. . Nov, ;C, RointM'.'sot.. Maufihaih's' new xlv inii< "The 'Sacrod "Flanie'' prpmiorps at r;u'.soh'.s Fridjjy. ;It iS: here for two-(lay: ,«tay. . WANTED: $1,000,000 I'lir ■ ' .' . U.N t V E R S A L M O V E M E N T . ' ■ . Ill' luiiiiic,. RSAL CUKPOHAI ION iiU'Uiil liif; Yrit UKIIVERSAL THEATRE I'iiivo'i-K'ar <tr'uiiiii iirjil.. uh.rvv'r.-siil itiu.-li'. l"ni(>n. I'lf iiii.ivcr.s.i.1 ■•' MLaec and liti"iV(M-.s;>l inTcotii A Ihi'.-ili-p ftu; .ilio iipoplc THE UNIVERSAL MAGAZINE ''tlnlvt'r.'<iil iiti-ratur'?. ' A niMgii/.lni' fnr I l\o ' tif "I'lo THE UNIVERSAL NEWSPAPER • ' ' tTn'lvor.sal JournfiliKiii. A n<!\v,si);uHT for Iho . p>'oi)lt.> , THE UNIVERSAL PARTY ■ . T.TnlverSiil i)olltlrs; . -V j'lu'fy fur tlin in-oplc. DAVID StURGtS, FOUNDER GUARANTY TRUST COMPANY, 622 Fifth Avenue, NEW YORIC ■'■.;■ ;ShaW's ;L.6tteris - ■ Shaw has beeix squawking plenty about a batch of letters of his which have been sold . to ^ Gabriel Wells.. He sdys .if ^they; are published he will* bring. :iegal iaption.. He refuses to^ teiV to Vwhbm ! they' ve /been ■written,, hut; denies. they AVere td Ahatol ;irrance.- '/■.-■'.' .;. Fpr the ■literati let's- open up the gates, bf ihdiscrietibn. ; v '.; " '■They 'iv.ere written to. Frank Ha.r- ris ■who has letters from evcrybbdy who- W.ias-: aLriybody - since 1872.- Har- .ris. tried-to sell his letters from the. Irhmortai - clead, ;biit ;, autdgra.ph hdurids. were strongest for Shtiw, "Why that's slll'y,.".; said Harris, "These '..letters frpm Herbert •Spehcdr,---Meredi'th^" Em (ersori,-Hardy and sp::on; can't be duplicated be- Ciause the-men are dead, and i can g;et all the letters I Avant frbm;Shaw by :jus.t writing "to him fdr more." ^ .Cbl|eGtdrs . Ihsisted, nevertheless, that Shaw letters, were bn a rising market. So Harris Sold them. Shaw^ makes it 'plain that he docs not ob- ; ect tb:..th.eir;being soldi but if they sere published he will sue for the rbya.ltles." .', Not a moral matter, you see, .ijuist the principal an.d interest of the thing.; ;.■■•.; Burgtheater management tried to freshen lip the repcrtpry by a bright play by Bernauer and Osterirelcheri who -wrote '!The Garden of Eden" together, called "Money Is Lyihg .in the Street." It Is fairly amusing and would have done well; in any' other hoii.se.; ' Critics stormed at the manage- ment for attempting, a farce that belongs bn "suburban:;stages," and .scores of letters . were , written to editors by old admirbrs of;- the house. Notwithsla.nding, the • show is drawing eodd houses, three tiime^ a Week.-- .- '. '-.'■. "A Cbm;edy of Pearls" is a fairly clever crook play by Bruno Frank. A married couple ; on fairly ;gOdd lermd with each other, but ho:£ so; keen' on marriage. Husband gives -w IXe-a-Btr-ins^^of-blaclt-pearlSf. and .a youthj enaimoured of the: wife, steals into. her bedrijom disguised^ *s a robber, steals the peiai-ls. to prove they are false, therieby proving th.at the husband's love is only sharps he having pre.sented ; the reai , black pearls to his mistress. TrUa love between the youth 'aiid the .wifCi the huflbahd and; his mistress pre vailis; ■without: much dilTicuity; Play bias sbme gpbd lines, but is liot. Imporiaht; .it is. capitally" a.cted at the Dcutsches Vdlksthoater by Ledpbldine KpnBtantih as the wife .Reinliardt Is hririging . Tpli^tdi's "JJving ..Gbrpse'' to the Josopli.stadter ;t))cater for. the - Tolstoi . cvntenary lliS. next novolty is. to be "Irish Linen," -b.y .Stophan Kviniarif". a plaj/. that Ijad .groat .suc(>oss in Berlin last year. ' A -very' '\yeil dd'ivo; if ;;rath'".: tame play.- -• ; ' ' It is' "Vii'toriah; in poriod, a littV in ' the .style , of '■'.>Ill(.'stiincs,'.' by Kriohlo("k, '.\vlvio-h . was .a ^•^ly'(^f•ss in this; pivrt;or the :\v()rld. ' '. Harris's leayihg for America on a lecture; .tpur must mean the bars are dbwri. He is ah American citi- zen, though 'born ih . Ireland, but hl3' aptobloeraphy "My . Life and Ldyeis": ha,d hini' down fOr a :bar in the U,;.;,S. Big. lawyers.' ad.vi.sed against . the trip, but Mrs. Harris saw Eahtdn and" Sumner in New "iTbrk recently and bPth of them said their offices had ho charge.s against the ;72ryear bid rebel. ! The. Talmadges Norma Talmadgb has been visit- ing sis ; Cdnstance during her prp- dubtipn pf"Veniis," In Nice.; Norma was here a year ago last summer, when .the salary decrease gag was sprung in HOllywopd, and she blevv up plenty at that time.; Said then She wanted to do a picture here, but Husband Schenck. wouldh't let her. Apparently he, not only let Connie, but helped arrange the migration. This : "Venus" picture has got td haviB a change of titles. Otherwise fans will :.be thinking it's a reissue of "Venus of Venice," which Cpnnie alsp starred in. .Mlle. Talmadge, Louis Mercantbn, director, and. aides go. to Oran, Al geria, for somte exteriors in a feiv -days,:^-::J.;^::.^/^:.. : ■'; ;:;- ; , ■ ■ -'- ^ Pari.s, Nov. 6. Brighter a-hd lighter weather h^re with plenty of sun.shine.cdn.sidferihg the period bf tli&. y.eai'. ■Temperature .last weeic .; ranged, between 30 ■arid'50;- , ," London, Nov. 6; A recent heavy fog has beeji play, ing haivoc wiih Ipcai .show .;bui)ine88, Randalls Will Double. ; . ' ; London. Nov. 6. " Ma,ripn arid Martinez ilahdall:will open ^.t the Palladium Cvaudc-ville), doubling into' the Kit, Oat . rt^stjaui rant, startirig^Dec. 31; .'■ Chatter in London . ■', • London.. Oct; 24. ■. • Fbilowing"The Beetle"; oiu'Iy in November comes "High ^TroaSdri," written .by Pcrnbei-tpn Eillins', no- tpripus- wartime ppllticlanj to be pro- duced at the; Strand , thtatre. Mur- der df a Prihii d nl i hister; by ah arolii blshdp ■ iS" the big 'jexrcifoniGhi; ■:" " Fpr the .'first time a play" tip t e$pe dally -written fpr the; purpose haa; been . perfprjnifd In . an English church. Setting is St. .Paurs, Covent Garden, "a;nd the play, "Passing of the. Third Floor Back." .. Performances are". to . be given every afterndpn during the winter, and oh Nbv. 11 the play will be "The; Unki\o"Wn Warrior," (?onsidi( erable success has :attehdod tlie.ex- periment. When "So This- Is Ix)ve" reciuires a successor, Stanley; Liipirtd. author and principal .comedian, has another bearing; the title"LOve All." 'He.and Laddie Cliff are likely to be in Joint parthership for some, time.;' Les Cbpela;nd.;has returned from Pa,rls where, he rin a night club.; He Is how leaching jazz dancing to .- a bevy.: of . society ladies. He de^ votes, his ~spare tinie to tak i ng bi'gan lessdns, ; . Owing to the depi-ession in- the- coal industry, 64'cinemas arid halla liave been forced to close in South Wales. ■ - " . T^^5lfpMnTErSronje:T"F.atIier^^ . VLos' A;ngt>l('..s.'Nov; .fi. ■ Josephine Stoho, ; Wife -of .Fred Heor.s,^ eii.'Hing director (>f iM-(!-5t, is . tr.vjng td. kioate Iier fathtM-, who. a number of y.fars a.tra u';is mah- .■igor of the Alcazar thcati.'o in iSan Francl.sco. Mr.< liocrs has not seen Stone since she was four, Slorie Im said to be about 61 and reported to bo in the theatrical b'Jsi'ness some- where In the west. ; ..V:-■-. '■ ■:■ :;-■•■'Convenience' - ■ .Riviera Studibs, whlch housod the Lachman-Putriam cdriiedieSi first American, shoirts to: be miado.wholly abroad,, until Harry Lachman, the prcduccr.; iarid Nina Wilcox^ Putnam the huthpr; bbt.ll went .Jnterriational (he to Britiiih ...and she to Hearst's)" have been' rebuilt and. cnlai-ged, ; . Best small studios .on the Co;o. d*Azur;rio\v, with plenty of shooting space, line portable :dquipriient and own labbratpric.s, .fc'tudios are at St. Andre, ;ibout three nriiles ba;c''k of Nice. - Raymond Guglierl, purchas- ing, agent for Ingran' for several years arid later. Lachmari's prpduc'- tion; ..riianagor, h.^s taken over thci .=itjtgos on a. nine-year loa.so. G.ugli- • eri .talU.s Frt^nch .and English inter-; changealily, knows his racket froni A ■ to v lzzy, ;and plans .t V; specialize in ^ atnro^^i)l)('•ro .stuff and location cquilmient for; Arnorii\ari. iOiiglisli and' Cierniari. "companip.s working anywhere- On the. liiviera or Afrio.'v ^aves thi;se.c'<) nii)ahies from cartinfr TiKTT=?nvvi^=nT?m>ri7fTH^ .the World.. .; Novelty theatre here is iutroduc- :i|ig, a- novelty -for France. Two shows on' Sunday afiernoons. In ordt.-r to l)i'e.ak: the .Frencih into this radical . :ehahge, long ' articles are appearing about how Ami-rican.s run shows'ooniinu;vlly from 10 a. m. to midnight and that, by showing twice on Surid.'iy, afternoon, nothing really will be left out. Matinees in France start at 2:43 and end about 6, due to long Intermi.Hsipn.s. To see a 60- mln.ute feature picture in the eve- ; D; Hay Petriei weH kripwn Shaken spCarian. aCtpr,..n"iarried Muriel Stey- ens, riOn-prdfes.sional,. London, Oc- tober 25. SAILINGS Nov.. 14 (New York to Paris) .Mr., arid Mrs. Billy Arnold (Leviathan). ; Nov. 10 (London to Ne\y Yoi^k) Zelma O'Neal (Berengaria). ; .Nov. 7; .(Harv;e tb New York), LIl-:^ lian Gish,. (lUe de France).; . 'Nov. 7 (Londori to New York). Jerome and Grey (Majestic). . v ''Nov: 3 (Londori to New . York) ' Mprt iSInger and faimily (Aqultania)* ■■;?j: by.:^j!. :(I«dndd:n t o. ;X^ John C. Graham,-Charles; T5eIIppif Cpnnoliyr Anita.LoPs (LCyiathari); Oct. 31 (Sari Francisco to-Society island.s), Kamon' Npvarro, Pciiee. Adoree,- Dorothy ; Janis,; DOnald. Ci-lsp, William S. A'.'in ■i'iyke .(Mati- hanu). nirig you still till midnight. havc td harigjai'ound,: ;, Jeaprie Aubert's Film ■ Jeanne Aiibert's niarriage, to Col, Nelson df Ghicagb came iii handy ; as^.a littie boost for her present Franco' Film picture;: "La l.'o'.sses-. .^idri," " Lconco'' I'errct: .prodiiCtlon from Henri .J3at;iillc'.s novel. M'l«' Aubert is a sweet blonde who. un- derstudied at .Muulih Itouge. ., , •■.: She l-i.atted ; for Mistinguott ^ J" : "I'aris of'thc.Stai's" for .six niontns and took Delysia's role in I-'O"?'?" for . a stretch. She sanv: i'? ".*^^^^" York,: too, . biit none of t h,- iiJ"^:"^^" wo re cal led in from lln'ir nii'iuc w 'put .out tne l>iazc. After that .she r<"'lnriH-<l <" "Possession" is-her first piei'iro. T'arls. The Tiller Dancing Schools 54 of America, Inc. _ WEST 74th ST., NEW YORK MART RBAD. PreslJeni Phone, Endlcott 8216-* Now OtoMe* Now Fonnlof