OCR Text |
Show VALUE COMES TO RIVOLI IN MUSICAL HIT Music . . . music . . . music! Five lilting love songs from the golden throat of Arnerica's newest idol Rudy Vallee! Saxophone and clarinet solos by the same master of these two instruments! in-struments! A complete colorful orchestral background by the Connecticut Yankees, who, under Valine's leadership, lead-ership, have charmed the world! Such is the extravagant musical festival offered patrons at the Rivoli in "The Vagabond Lover," Sunday, Monday, Tuesday. The songs which will be crooned ifrom the screen by Vallee are, "I Love You, Believe Me, I Love You," "I'll be Reminded of You," "If You Were the Only Girl and 1 Were the Only Boy," "A Little Kiss Each Morning, a Little Kiss Each Night" and "I'm Just a Vagabond Lover." The selections were made by Rudy himself, who inspected more than 200 songs for his screen debut. Marshall Neilan, the director, with a colorful story based on incidents in-cidents in Rudy Vallee's life, has produced one of the most lavish musical shows ever seen on the screen. Six is a magio number for Dorothy Dor-othy Gulliver, who is seen and heard opposite Hugh Trevor in "Night Parade," at the Rivoli theater thea-ter Friday and Satur day. She signed her first film contract con-tract on the sixth of the month. Her birthday is September 6. She was married on the sixth of the month. There are two sixes in her house number and three in her phone number. She began her role in "Night Parade" on Aug. 6. Dorothy came to the films via the beauty contest route. She .won against a big field of Salt Lake City girls in a newspaper competition compe-tition which carried as an award ja six-months contract in pictures. That was some years ago. Except for two Hoot Gibson leads and a special or two with George Lewis, Dorothy has confined her screen efforts to short subjects, making 48 of them. The last dozen were all-talking. Dorothy Gulliver was a Wampas Baby star in 1928. Besides Hugh Trevor and Miss Gulliver, "Night Parade" has in its cast, Ailcen Pringle, Ann Penington, Lloyd In-graham, In-graham, Lee Shumway, Walte; Kane, James Dugan and a numbe; of others. Salt Lake City has three "natives" "na-tives" who helped to make Radio Pictures' all talking drama "Night Parade" at the Rivoli theater. They are Dorothy Gulliver, romantic roman-tic lead, Lee Shumway, cast as the newspaper sports writer, and George O'Hara who helped to prepare pre-pare the story for the screen. Circus, vaudeville and the jury room provide three different backgrounds back-grounds for the story of a clown's engeance, as told in the Tiffany-Stahl Tiffany-Stahl all-talking picture at the Rivoli theater. It is called "Painted "Paint-ed Faces' and its stars that matchless match-less comedian, Joe E. Brown, and gives him the excellent support of Helen Foster, Dorothy Gulliver, Barton Hpburn and Lester Cole in leading roles, and such good actors as Sojin, Walter Perry, Jack Richardson, Rich-ardson, Mabel Julienne Scott, Alma Bennett and Purnell Pratt in minor roles. |