OCR Text |
Show FUN PICTURE AT THE RIVOLI The problems of a private secretary sec-retary are briskly dealt with in Claudctte Colbert's new Columbia, picture, "She Married Her Boss" which will be shown Sunday, Monday Mon-day and Tuesday at the Rivoli. Produced by the same company that gave you Miss Colbert in "It Happened One Night," the new film has the same buoyancy and freshness that made its predecessor predeces-sor a five-way prize-winner. "She Married Her Boss" is undoubtedly undoubted-ly the grandest fun since the falling fall-ing of the walls of Jericho. Miss Colbert herself is delightful; delight-ful; her inherent charm and vivacity viv-acity have never been shown to better advantage. As a very efficient ef-ficient secretary who carelessly falls in love with her boss, she sees to it that he takes time off one day to buy her a wedding ring. That proves a costly mistake, mis-take, for the marriage turns out to be one of the maddest things one can imagine. The fun continues fast and furious, furi-ous, with Miss Colbert as the storm center. Melvyn Douglas does a fine job as the frantic boss, and Michael Martlett, last seen in Grace Moore's "Love Me Forever." is thoroughly engaging as a devil-may-care chap who tries to manage the secretary's affairs for her. |