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Show S'N DESERET NEWS page 10 THE , Salt Lake City, Utah Saturday, January 22, 1944 Sinatra Spars With Rodzinski 1 HOLLYWOOD (INS) Redheaded Charlie Bickford, the bad boy, the actor who has run away By Robert Thomas HOLLYWOOD long-haire- d 'J crowd Jjobby-soc- k from more pictures than any other Hollywood player, found one movie that suited him down to the ground. In the past, at any mention of a movie he had made, Charlie had such a pained look reporters always changed the subject. But hell talk about for The . Song of Bernadette hours. He Is proud of that picture and feels Father Peyramale Is his best role. How did you get the part?" I asked. "I read the book," he told me, "and felt I would give anything to play the dean, I liked the man, his character and the way he I But Bernadette. handled couldnt hope that 20th Century-Fo- x ' would consider me. After all, Franz , Werfels book was widely read and there were dozens of actors who probably felt as I did that' it was an actors dream part "When Henry King sent for me and asked now I would like (AP) warfare between group and Open the the r developed today as Conductor Artur Rod- xlnskl of the New York Symphony Orchestra termed boogie woogle one of the greatest causes of delln- " quency among American youth Sinwhich Frank to today"' atra answered bunk. ?Tn an Interview with a newspaper at Camp Kilmer, N. J, e orchestra where his played an engagement last week. Rodzinski said the Jive type of music leads to a "war degeneracy, Nuts, replied the king of ic YOUTHS V8. AGE Elliott Reid and Susan Peters look askance at oldsters Herbert Marshall and Mary Astor in swoon. ' - - I come in contact with thousands of youngsters on the street and through letters they write me, and they are sane, normal human beings," replied Sinatra, here to make a movie. 1 dont know exactly what the causes "of Juvenile delinquency are' but I dont think anyone can prove that popu- lar mustn't One of than. Said Rodzinski- - To Exhibit Art An exhibit of 35 photographic by Cpl. Walter C. Van Buren, formerly of the Buffalo, N. Y., Evening News and now a member of the public relations staff at the S. L. Armv Air Base, will open tomorrow at the USO, 205 E. 1st S. St. prints Devotees of Sinatra are pitiful cases; cant understand why 13 and 14- year-olgirls go wild over him. Girls of the same Z - Sinatra: age were wild about Valentino, Rudv Vallee and others, and Makon" in Crawford and Fred Barriraoa AJoelo. HOLLADAT Sonja Renie in Winter- time with Jack. Oakie and Ceear second Bomhera bit Romero, Moon with George Montgomery and Annabeila. -Bette Davis and Mariam Hop. STUDIO kina in Old Acquaintance with Gig John Loder and Dolores Young, Moran. , CAPITOL Charles Laurhton in The Men From Down Under compamoe hit, Young Ideas. starring Susan Peters. Herbert Marshal and Man. Astor UPTOWN with The North Star Anna Baxter, Dana Andrews and many others alee latest mvi and a Disney color cartoon. . TERRY-- n con-duct- his direction. 1 never enjoyed making a picture so much and you will never hear of me refusing to make a picture for Henry King Charlie-stopp- ed at on his way to the train. He was going on a camp tour, so we didnt have long to talk. I commented on how thm he had grown and he said he had just recovered from the flu. my-hou- 4 WALIEX Hoorn N ttmbrx" "Smart Ban JOIOIPIATT "Mayidae Zxtraordi. BILlTeeBY "Mr five by riv o lfc- JWs GEORGE 4 ULY GARDEN tors I ths Xylophsns Mas ON SCREEN a Horn quo a urin Du Mtulo-Dram- a as mighty as fhs msa whs livsd and lovsd n BARBARA STAHVYCKU JOIl tlcCREA n Above Suspicion; co Kid with William Garvan, Bobby Readrick, and Frank Craven. ARCADE Maureen OHara and Charles Laughton ui Thi Land la Mine " - ale Joe E Brown and Judy Canova - -- ia 'Chatterbox u TOWER starring 'Flying Tiirm, John Wayne co bit, Roy Rogers in ' 'Song ol Texas Barbara- LYRIO Fit stage Stanwyck. Joel McCrea and Walter Brennan in "Banjo on My Knee and Nasty Nuisance CENTRE Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in Girl Craty," with Tommy Dorsey, hie orchestra, ' Rags' Ragland Gil Stratton Guy K Kihbee, Robert E. Stnckland, June Allyaon and Nancy Walker. UTAH with Don Happy Land, Amecfee, Frances Dee and Ann Ru2nd feature etart Billte therford - Burke and Elym Knox in So Tour 'hit (AP) Composer-Con-ducto- r Dimitri Tiomkin, is good for musicians. The Russian-borTiomkin, to play Father Peyramale, the who has uroduced the scores for dean, I must have surprised him a number of action pictures, now with the alacrity with which 1 holds the civilian post of must consented to make the test. cal director for the army special "I am opposed to tests, he services command. After7 the Santa Ana Air Base said. "After 14 years on the screen, directors know what I Symphony Orchestra one of the can da But 1 wouldnt turn down best army musical aggregations any chance to play this character in the country,- Tiomkin said yeswhom I had learned to .know terday: "i attribute the brilliance of and like. the this orchestra largely to , Charles Bickford, who Is martraining and regular physical ried, the father of a boy and a hours life. of army married daughter, has the repuMany 'of its members, hs extation of being difficult to hanplained, played in orchestras hs dle. He savs he isnt temperabefore they were draftmental. He Is just weary of play- directed ed, and have shown marked imsame the old ing gangsters in thd provement since entering ths same old bad pictures. service. I was doing government Maj. Eddie Dunstedter is work, Tie told me, and I decidof the 75 piece orchestra. ed to stay off the screen until I liked came up. When something David Hempstead asked how I would like to play in Mr. Lucky J accepted. I like Cary Grant and was interested in my part. Up to that time I was off the screen a year. After Mr. Lucky I turned down at least six pictures in which I wa to have played dull vllltans. Then The Song of Bernadette came my way. Henry King deserves a lot of credit for VANCE long-hair- Crew GFM Joan Calif. ANA. NOW ON THE STAGE HOME1 "spia Melody - Too Can't Taka It With You WAR with Jean Arthur, Lionel Barrvtnor and James Stewart alo Tahi - Honey," with Simone Simon Deoma OKeele. UARLO Red Skelton, Lucille Ball am Du Bam? Wu A Gena Kelly in t, The City That StopLady ped Hitler." BOUNTIFUL' Northern PureulV with - Errol Flynn: 2nd hit, Wrecking -- It. SANTA The army, says ITS TOPS IN STAGE owl SCBEEH ENTERTAINMENT ENJOY BOTH always be. Rodzinski- There Is no need for swlng muslc as long as there are such beautiful compositions as Strauss waltzes to provide dance tempo. s Sinatra: Why do these always lyiock the popular field? We never knock them, even though Ive heard some prytty awful classical, stuff In mV time. "Im a father. Just like plenty of other men in thl country," "the voice added, and if 'my kids wanted to follow popular music I'd let them. 'After all. I grew up In a Jazz craze and I did all right, IVhal sQoing t 15 to 95 TUI 50c VTHTi d theyll Receive Prclce 3ickford Feels Pride n Work As Dean. WALTER ROMANTIC DRAMA grances Dee and Don Ameche star in film version of MacKinley Kan tors story "Happy the Utahs bill. DREIiriAU Land-toppin- WILD WEST MUSICAL Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland ." whoop it up In "Girl Crazy at ths Centre Theater, BANJO ON MY KNEE UTOTU. Slates MusicaTComedy Revue "Meet Mr. Wolf, musical comwill be presentreview, edy ed Thursday Friday, and Saturday, Jan, 27, 28, and 29, at 813 p.m in Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus The cast is busy polishing off the variety acts in dancs routines, singing, burlesque and satire. The music, specially written for the show, is by Ray Levy. The skits are written by various campus organizations and re In on soldier the nature of take-off- s life, campus activities, and faculty problems. The cast, largest ever featured in a varsity production Includes: Dantzel White. Lavon Clive, Allen Frank, Louis Farr, Eugene Andreason, Joseph By water, ivan Hutson, Walter Welti, Albert Ec-cl- Jr., Joyce Harris. Jayne Broadbent. Ruth Buehner, Mar-Ta- n Foster, Norma Rae Lees, Betty Mae Barton, , Bonnis - Jean Kent, Carolyn Home, Bonnie Howells, Bob Castleton, Albert Les Southwick, Charles Lang, Brown, and Doug Haynes. The scenery and sets are being originated by Joseph Williams CO-HI- T and Vem Adlx, to depict the sa- one at Glen Bros. Music Co., 74 tire In ths college atmosphere. South Main St , and the other Two box offices will be open at Kingsbury Hall on the Uni-- 1 daily starting Monday, Jan. 24, versity campus, f 1 ,War Pictures Need No Soap By Robbia Coons HOLLYWOOD Among Whiskers and sweat paraded the through all the war pictures. minor blessings to anticipate Players In their with the return of peace will be baths the return of cleaner pictures and or presumably took showers, but as soon as and more scrubbed actors. next .on sets the The Hays office takes care of they reported dirt and grime t morning, the cleaning up the screen morally, were plastered on again. but there's nobody to see that acThe trouble Is that DeMille, tors fet to bathe. Blame the war, but the writers are seeing to it the bathtub king, didn't design that theres no great demand for the Jungles. And nobody set up movies soap here. Or razors. Its any barber shops under the , been a very dirty year. palms of Guadalcanal or on the North Africa. Heavy drama seems to have battlefields of called for grimy characters. Humphrey Bogart and his dirty Bataan" and So Proudly We companions in "Passage to Marmors Hall, set in the Philippines, seille encountered no were typical. Nobody looked bubble baths than they did In Gabln clean, the glamor girls of So "Sahara." or than Jean Proudly" looked like coal miners and crew- enjoyed in "The Imand the ggs of "Cry Havoc poster. looked For "Cross of Lorraine" Jean like Tobacco Roaders. n mo-men- ts Pierre Aumont and his fellows not.only .had to look, grimy and unkempt on the screen, they had to look it unkempt at least around the town. The picture HTiftTn now-- " THE MOST you CANT TREMENDOUS TAKE ITiWITHiYOU DRAMA OISOUR TIME! m-!nrc&maTA- MBCNA AMt'AMM AMUU TAHITI nOHEY SlMsae Sines with Desal O'Keefe -- HOSIER SAMUEL GOLDWYNS - THE Mil MX BUU UXTQ BBTW SHIC VUIQ Ml UBM MX wmoj . tuna - Ena fabit ranal OVER 1 cwlIWBMURQNI ' TICKET SALE NOW UtufiWJ U7B KMiX MAT. CAPITOL STAGE Fri., Jan. 28 12:30 TO 5:00 P. M. ANNE NICHOLS RtCORD-MEAKIN- 20.000,000 RADIO O COMEDY LISTENERS t-VtT BROADWAY CAST OF FAVORITES ADDED JOTS Cl Wolf Dtmy "THE FEUCAN NEWS CartMa and th EVENTS SNIPS lUillHbhL'U LAST DAT OVENS AT I F. M. SONJA HEN1E WINTERTIME" with Jock Oolde C tut Bometo - HIT No. 1 'BOMBER'S MOON" with . G. Moatgomanr POPULAR PRICES MATINEE $1.68, $1.12, 85e EVENING $2.24, $1.68, $1.12 Annabolla (Pricss Including Tax) , , CAPITOL STAGE Sat., Feb. 5 MAIL ORDERS NOW! I JOHNC.WlLSONAeAcnfd- - ' Haiti s se p.n Mas Crawford, -- 25 Frd MacMarray la "ABOVE SUSPICION" Willi o GarqoC lobby Boadtek la "HARRIGAN'S KID" BOUNTIfll -rissiI K Errol "NORTHERN Flyaa la lyGBBlfpVOOF MILDREDWJhAIUA natvjickstoddaud ME SPSUT PURSUIT" JND HIT I "WRECKING CREW" With ChMfor Merrl, Jaa Frka " " j f " " isAmA, detox a A A AfoA 4A.A.A AiA.AaBsAi M. 11.91. Enel.. No Fhoa SU Addrmwd Stamp for A.turn 1 Tickttt. EnIopto Now Call Aepfod. Frfo Sab Tax bforoau. 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