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Show Noted Film Artists To Be Seen Here ! In Feature Films Those humpty-dumpty, hooligan stars of the stage, the radio and the screen, The Four Marx Brothers, Broth-ers, are coming back to Springville Spring-ville next week when their newest Paramount picture, "Duck Soup" opens on Sunday at the Rivoli. The film, directed by Leo Mc-Carey, Mc-Carey, who made 'The' Kid From Spain," has a stellar supporting cast, including Raquel Torres, Louis Calhern and Margaret Du-mont. Du-mont. As all the other pictures these four comedians have made, "Duck Soup" is crammed with delightful music including the now famous "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?" This film, though, has a very definite story. Briefly, it's all about a mythical country, Free-donia, Free-donia, where agitators are working, work-ing, inciting the mobs to revolt against unjust taxation. The country coun-try needs money, but its wealthiest wealthi-est citizen, Miss Dumont, refuses to lend the country anymore unless un-less fighter, Rufus T. Fifely, played play-ed by Groucho, is appointed dic-tator- . ,.A For the first and only time this year Rivoli audiences will be given 'an opportunity to see and hear Ed Wynn on the talking screen when "The Chief" opens Friday at the Rivoli theater, heralded as Wynn's greatest talking picture entertainment. entertain-ment. The infectious giggle, the hilarious hilari-ous "So-o-o-o-o ," the screamingly scream-ingly funny stories that have made Wynn internationally famous as "the silliest man in America" all these will be heard when Wynn steps out of his radio invisibility and appears on the screen. To many, this will be their first glimpse of a personality who ranks with Will Rogers and Marie Dressier as one of America's outstanding out-standing humorists. For a score of years Wynn has been one of the country's premiere funsters. Something brand new under the j filmusical sun, "rhythmic photography," photog-raphy," features the opening of Maurice Chevalier's "The Way to Love," which is coming on Wednesday Wed-nesday and Thursday to the Rivoli theater. For the first five minutes of the first reel, characters, settings, voices and natural aclions, move rhythmically to the lilting tunes of "I'm a Lover of Paree," a song mirroring the discontent of the average person. Not only one of the most widely-read, widely-read, but one of the most widely traveled men in the world is Zane Grey, noted author of Western fiction. Grey, an Easterner by birth, first traveled to the Painted Desert Des-ert and Colorado in search of material. ma-terial. Other trips ave taken him into the Utah canyon country, New Mexico, Arizona, Sonora, Cuba, Yucatan, and Mexico. His "Man of the Forest," twenty-ninth novel to reach the screen, comes to the Rivoli theater Friday Fri-day with Randolph Scott, Harry Carey. Noah Beery, Verna Hillie and Buster Crabbe in the leading-roles. |