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Show Flynn, de Havilland Co-Star In Thrill-Packed Film Errol Flynn, that most handsome hand-some of all the swashbuckling screen adventurers, is waving sabers,, sa-bers,, firing pistols, flailing fists and galloping horses again, this time in "Santa Fe Trail," which is to have its local premiere Thursday Thurs-day at the Rivoli. And back of the cameras was the old master of fast action and solecisms, Michael Curtiz, the director di-rector credited with "discovering" Flynn (it was in "Captain Blood") and who has guided Errol through six or seven pictures since that time. Back, too, in Flynn's arms, is Olivia de Havilland, just to make the reunion complete. Starting with that same "Captain Blood" they have been in a half-dozen different pictures together, indicating indi-cating that Warner Bros, consider it a sort of "by public demand" obligations. Fan approval, indicated indi-cated by mail received, long has proved the studio right. But don't get the idea that "Santa Fe Trail" Is following any formula just because Olivia, Errol and Curtiz are together again. The story Is several of the most exciting excit-ing chapters right out of our American Am-erican history books. It is primarily a story of the "bloody" Kansas territory and the "eastern end of the Santa Fe Trail during the days of John Brown and his Abolitionist raiders; days in which the United States cavalry caval-ry had more than plenty to do; days that almost changed a nation's na-tion's destiny. |