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Show jj , v ' , r tf vi ? r i 1 t i r i r' Orpheurn Brings Helen Keller' Aa Stellar Stage, Attraction r J J 1 WTne-glaita- -- According W NewJTork theatrical Journals, Wanda tyon was suddenly l stricken with appendicitis recently and I was hurried to the hospital for an operation. She 1 mid to be recovering nicely 'and wilt soon retura to fcet t work as leading woman in Getting ! Gertie' Garter,' at the Bepublic thea-- 1 J ' - Another move toward getting back basis was taken when it to a pre-w' , was decided by Charles Frohmen, Ine , that the top price' for matinee for t the engagement of William Gillette Ini "The Dream Maker," at the Empire v theatre, New Tork. ehould le $2. heretorore'n "btti been' If W.The .?lAhLlnP-Jtr- i hi believed further reduction In prices t . , will be made before Jong by all the " T leading producers ar Ip r- - SFWJSar wibe2JlH i e riv The death t announced of Fred Hardy (family name, Fred v,ck Per ry), at tha aga of. 71 years He was for many year an actor, ploying with; Fanny Davenport, Kate Claxton and t ether. He air unde at Vtctery Bateman, welt known to local thea- th pairs with plays chosen by the x sited fsw for the (supposed) delectation of th many Would make littis or no progress toward the betterment of our itage or" the idcalixat'on of our drama. A repertoire theatre, wisely administered and alwafa with th mane of th people in consideration, could succeed only te tlat degree tc Which the theatregoing publio supported it John H. Battery in X T. Morning Tt iegraj hr SALT LAKE.' COMEDT the predominating 1 Eaat is W eat" which William Harris, Jr,, will bring to Ball subsidized theatre Lake Theatre Deo ( and t, with Fay Tbe idea 4 with a list of great players, with' a balder ae the alar. There is" a' dramatic story about a little girl who repertoire of uplifting, didactic, even found In China, brought to tha United beautiful plays but with empty seats St a tea. has numerous adrenture In Chinatown, San Francisco adup,Nb the eonstant-angenerous HIP. the residence section. society makes small of the real public, The reaction of .thie jfifl to th new either prsg-- A eonattlon nod , nyl ament . makes for much laughter. "Thoa, while the matism or my love for better art, - In a eornedy be play tt 1 si ctranggTart-ThAthe wealtByr strain, there la enongb dramatic In- , altruistic sup-founder, terwrt to hoia th. auent!on of the philanthropic. porter and "subsidizers" of churches j audience. Miss Ba inter as the little l Chinese girl, Ming Toy. has estab- seldom go toebuFch. it te not appare herself as one of the favorite ent nut the vast funds which they . P)7crg ot the day Her Introduction dedicate to the good cause" go very here will be awaited with particular far In the exaltation or spread of interest. ORPDEVM. genuine , piety, faith or' the practice . - of religion. Its headline attraction on th They may be commended for providing" places of wursh'p for bill opening next Wednesday other people, but nob alt of thstr en- sight th local Orpheont presents dowments will cause those other peo- - Helen Keller, perhaps th most talked of woman in the world: an apostle pie" to attend services or to profit by of cheer and sunshine and a woman th opportunities to praise God along whose amazing story is almost unbesectarian line and after the ritual lievable nntU she is seen in person. Mins Keller heads a vaudeville bill fcf th subsidized churches. full of splendid attractions. ' 1 I like manner, fear, a subsidized. -- Assisted by Anne Bulilvan Mary. tregoer. 4 - . 1 d j T 1 d AS i. J her Ufslong friend and teacher. Mias Keller will tell how, through unbelievable difticuLUae... she learned te peak, to hear with her finger by cultivating their sensitiveness to vibration, and to we" by the same highly developed sense of touch. The ability of Mias Keller seems almost Uncanny when one stop to consider the terrible handicaps unoer which she has labored. . On the same hill are those two Ir- tnber resistible funmakera, George Moran and Charles Mack. They are known ae the Two B,ock Crow" and everywhere they go ar heartily welcomed a depression killers, Sam Adam and J. P. Griffith will offer A Mutlo Lesson" sa their comical contribution to th MU, Both are eminent in comedy, singing and dancDans Fantasise" Is heralded a ing ene of the really fin danoe act in vaudeville. Frederick Easter and Wonder Heads Splendid Vaudeville BUI Opening Next Wednesday 4 Beatrice Squire, principals In the f , Night. gorgeous offering, are true fay two horses bund. th jarriMThttbsed strange dat. keixkr.' artists BchlchtFs Royal Won were book of. th etage for anderettes are the last word In mannidumb, woman, to which not what this act. I know other did kin acta. The puppet actors are won- be seen at tha Orphsum next week In was, and believed that a number ot derful in their character! rushed den?ftIfi?lotf' hee iremarkdle persons had. foe aoma reasonatreet zatlrmk "The Follta Girls are known or tsre from the a The Ginger Bnap Girlies. They ap- victory over human obstacle, recent- in on th as not did I audience. from But sensathe revealed eome novel of the pear In song and dance of th 10th ly experlsnoed while ap- feel the presence of new person on century and present one of the snap- tions sheon has the stare. I decided tt must be furthe vaudeville etage piest of modern day veudeviUe hits pearing that. can One speak rapidly with Miss niture felling of somethin live "East and West" la a novel acrobatic Miss Kellers articulation to slow, for her constant companion. sensation. Fables, Path Kellerr Aesop' the News and Topics of the Day are on Mr Anne Sttlltvan Macy, convey the but it doe not tire her. She give uestione and answers by hand read- impression of great vitality. Bhe had the bill as usuaL lecon the been can Or made conversation be appearing recently ing. PANTAGL& more slowly when Mias Keller places ture platform, but the vaurtei"e singe one finger on her Interviewer's mouth he found vastly different. It seeming l at .Thanksgiving EVERT daythis week another op hi throat. By this to provide her with more mental with a long and method she receives with little diff- stimulation. list of headline vaudeville acts and a iculty any conversation maintained at In her act. Miss Keller displays a an ordinary de'iberate pace. pretty wit. In reply to questions, not pair of exceptional picture featm-smv some senses. of of Infrequently aked by curious mem'and house packed to overflowing at Deprived each performance. Others have developed extraordin- bers of the audience, she has several I shall never for- times come back with a quickness and Headlining the vaudeville bill i arily," she sai the Royal Pekin Troupe of celestial get my sensations upon the occasion good humor that the keenest of experof my first appearance on the stage ienced monologists might well have marvel and wonder worker performand blind, ing feat of magic, strength, mystery some months ago I could tell, before envied This girl, who do- -f course at the and acrobatics. Balancing extraord- I had been on for a minute, that the took regularat waves Radcliffs was I and felt college.audience contortions are starting the large exceptional inary her other features of the'act. Ths Tale of of air made by the breathing and pul- the age -- of 1, .proved hercleverness afresh by acquainting Three Cities' a presented by Slone sation of many persons. and Manning is a song and dance This sense of mine, so keen. 1 al- self with the idea ot vaudeville berevue embellished by beautiful scen- most a disadvantage, a discomfort to fore she entered upon her ery and a bevy of pretty girls. "The me. I fe.t through my feet the career. Edge of the World" to a color fanof Lakers have a treat In store for them Claire Sinclair 'has the qnly other and futuristic elaborate trend tasy d coloring with Mis LaLucy aa The in- - this gifted, beautiful. winsome womans role that a.of a colorful charsquaw, Spirit of Color." Amoros and Jean- young actress. nette hkve a comedy act which to Tiger Hose" tells a story of the acter. part which to essentl 1 to the crowded with laughter and cleverness. picturesque Canadian Northwest, be- unfolding of the swift moving atdry Mr Mack will appeac as Michael Garry Owen to a comedian of a dif- ing set in the Loon River country, ferent sort and to Immensely popular near Vermillion and 259 mile north- - Devlin of the Northwest Mounted with the Pantages patrona Lester east of' Edmonton This country to police, the role he created at the theatre. New Tork- - Verne Lay-to- n and Moore are a pair of agile steppers , famous as the land of the best and will play the role of Brurs. the and furnish much enjoyment along i the worst, the Oxford graduate op hie Ae picture features , homestead claim side by elds with young civil engineer who brings about comedy line Alice Joyce in The Scarab Ring and the renegade American later arrested a complicated situation that threatens famous Christie comedy, balling for murder In the states, the genial his own life and Rose's happiness. th Hudson Bay traders, the Jesuit priests This part to said to give Mr. Layton for Fanny," are very popular. voung girls, better opportunity than any role he Beginning Wednesday the first an- and the has ret played at the Wilkes. Mr. niversary bill will be inaugurated children of the Canadian French. In this atmosphere which has been Feusier has the role of Dr Cualck, with such attractive names a George A rims in Disraeli." the Powell troupe, the scene of so many masterful stories queerly saved by fate from the hands Walters and Walters, Th Revue Pe- of fundamental human emotions un- ot the Mounted police. Mr. Marshall tite" Carltonand Belmont. Mary concealed by the. veneer of eivllization. will have a fine eharaeter giart as Reilly, Paul ydell and many other i the characters of Willard Mack's Herrs, a French Canadian, and Mr. J drama find themselves In msny tense P'yden, who to assisting tn producing features. 1 situath na. . the ptav, will be seen an Mac Collins WILKES culminating at She . Nor.hwest of the Hudson Bay trading post, who barrack of th igary artistic unusually ha adopted his d ghter Mr. presentaUon Mounted police. A-- of the Thebault and Leon thrilling drama which took - Mws Shepard ns Rose ha a won- Msnly aa Father toe short Broadway by storm, the Intense and derful opportunity this being the role duff as a Hi ash complete Rose" to swift and vlv id. r Lenore Ulric vivid drama of the Caosdiaan North- which broupbt Mis west, Tiger Rose," to assured by the greater fame than any other drama. rare combination tn one person of author producer and star, Willard Mack, former Balt Lake matinee idol who has since risen to national recognition as one of America's most versatile and greatest playwright actors, will have charge ot th production of hla own great play. Tiger Wrtttcu For ay New by Alan Dale Rose and will himself appear in th leading role which he created at th EW ;pf course, the husband, the wife and Belasco theatre in New Tork with And yet "The Lenore Ulrich in the role of Rose Man's CITY. Nov. 21. the lover. Nme" never palled Boclon. Just as we had Young Mr. and Mrs Marvin were Another great star of the Ameribegun to think Been In a shack in the Rocky Moun-- i can stage has been brought to Balt which they were Lake as new leading woman to comfor that It was about time tain hlth health. He had inhabiting tuberculosis plete the excellent cast at the Wilkes. trian- end "eternal the for now seemed to he cured Mis Iva Shepard. Paclfio coast favNot gle" to take a len tor away from them was Marshall orite and heralded as a great actress needed vacation, up It Bunn, also visiting the Rockies for and a 'famous beauty, wilt open her Balt Lkq engagement as Rose Boclon pleasure. It waa made known that cropped again In Mrs Marvtir had once been In hto to nger Rose," beginning toR'ght. new play by Eugene employ With Mr. Mack and Miss Shepard it . was she who had obWalter and Marjorie tained the money by means ot which hi the principal role and with such - Chase- i- entitle V eh had- brought her atttmr traeband a poDUtervgtar btrtbc bill, a week to anticipated at the Name." And af-- to the Rock lee. How had she oh- httw ptoy ptog, 1 Rose." on which rehearsals nd to ad- - borrowed It from --he aunt, and that r But-- gradw- etery sssmsj pisuetkle. ftnr immedWciy ttcrurrr Mack's if-- ' mttthsr-Tfteternal came the rip. " rival here. Is a stirring drama of great not feme played out. 'trtangw It was drip- ally power which affords the excellent ping. and intensely Interesting drama ' The man waa at last able to return the money that had bran borcompany at the Wilks a fine oppor- shorn of all aide Issues, of all tore and of all tunity for really great dramatic work. "dogri rowed. He yearned to return tt. The Mr Mack found Miss Bhepsrd ad- relist" In fact, there were but four women hesitated and was lost. Boon he saw her hesitation, and the rest mirably suited to the difficult title characters, of whore one was role of Rose, and declared that Bait ly a Japanese valet. Tba three of the play waa devoted to the clever -- terpal-chore- an Helen ' true-to-U- fe a -- Famous Stage Beauty Comes to Wilkes as New Leading Womaftj two-a-da- y half-bree- Wa-Wa- ." Bet-ae- co 7 light-heart- - Run -- casL-.Tige- ALAN DALE SAYS: t ,) t)) V i ,7 "4 4,1 Ta YORK i; i Ltv record-breaki- TWputor-Pmtwvgrs- hwaeei-Tige- Noted Star, W lo WHI Make Her HrW lts'InWtfwrj, Rose" Mllh W ilUird Mack, bbe MU1 ng r d ld - lake Tiger )s role crented . by Lcnorp C Irk-h- ' ed Appearance rtay Ilose . -- ed -- ! ' PerI,uI w.a ToTltln jlMeZSr II ZVrr? However. ft f undof gaging little Ptoy wlth a great humor This humor wa kindly, delicate. and Nothing was amusing It was all gentle, simhorseplayed ple and alluring Leon Hayne played the leading He role, and played it admirably. Is a subtle and fragliely humorous comed'an. and the various points that he had to make, he made with great success. The company throughout wa fine, and Included Pamela Marie Davenport, Margaret Nvbloc, Betty Linley, Eula Guy and Alfred Shirley. It Is to be hoped that there will he a public for this comedy. It to too good for the mob" but it should nevertheless find enbugh people to make it pecuniarily possible to . gon;,(day thl, ctor wf!, fln(J g hide that will give him full scops. He deserves a fine play with other fins characters In it than that assigned to him. He must realize that, I ikought 1? rxtrenrely good in "Friendly tr Enemies " He has been good tn so many productions He wa even, a v I have said, good in this Hi support Included Louise Beau-- , det, an accomplished actress not able ' to score in this play: Sue McNana-m- Gay-Ihorn- e, y. Helen Lowell, Clarke Kenneth Lee. Hans Hansen, Bllvernail, and John Roche. Fathers and Mothers to Be Entertained by M. I. A. , ' Another English play' has far less (Special to The New ) to recommend It. This to "The Tltls" SMITH FI ELD, Nov. 21 A special by Arnold Bennett. Mr Bennett's Is entertainment In honor the fathers a name to conjure with, but names to and mothers In Smlthfieldof will be givplays do no amount, to very much, en By the M. I. A. Tuesday evening. and possibly if The Tltle" had en- - Nov 2 The First ward Joyed an signature less noteworthy. InIt would pot have seen the light of clude oration, 'Manprogram willHonIt purports to be skit on or, fatherhood, J. w.Highest day her Klrkbrlde; titles in England, and yon must con- reading, Blanche McCann: solo. fess that the topic is not of any parMother Mscree, Leonard Roskeiley; ticular Importance hers Nor are w oration Woman's Highest Honor,4 In the least Interested In the Mrs. Leonard Olson: politics motherhood that make title possible In England March of reading Mothers," Mr Bennett appeared to be quite Lavon C!apooI; address.theTribute of wrought up" about It all, and hurled Love," W A Noble; group of songs, R brands of satire upoit the matter. under direction of Eugene Lundqutot. We were introduced to a husband and refreshments. who did not want the offered title, dancing In the Second and to the wife, who did. They ar- L nion hall, the ward M. I. A. at program Includes, gued, and argued around the topic song Our Fathers and Mothers." until It got to be dull. Junior hoys, oration. "Man's Highest The other characters werfe not much Honor." Mrs. Helen Richfatherhpod more enlivening, aud the play proved ardson: Mother Macro. to be most dln.ictic. Bennett, a the Leonard song, . Hozkelfey; reading author of Milestones' and The Gheen. "Woman' - torV;urtoeTe-- retenuorVl ' "Oitr TribuUof his, will not enhance his Roskeiley; community singing. Of course it was alt wait reputation A rittenva4 danee will follow the program, and forcefully put, but even In refreshments will be served where title occur, I cannot England imagine that this play Would cut much Ice. Perhaps in the English pr winces it might attract some attention. I should think, would be too London, for it. Cod-broil it the It wa acted by Lumsdenwily Hare a h'h,Y repable actor; Robert Harrl-beat thing in tho sn. Shlela Courtenay. Noel Tear,, world lor ricketa. Johnson, Agnes Atherton, Em,ly lorrame end Ernest Cowart. PeP! tried to smile at Mr. Ben- nett thrust they tried hud. But tt RICKETS! 1 er S, - Scotts Eir.::n contains richest cod-lir-e abundant In the vitamine that May rickety oO, -' child - felt-hou- Ifisl ' ' I 7 t af -- I Jo pet-irau- es - .. the ease, ..Ae leadipgjady at t,T JVttlkea.Mls P- -. j Ira Shepard will make faerfirat In tomorrow evening Tiger fpearanee : Rose, In a role which Marred Lenore td to lwr jH f wad wHcft-to eoited to Mis Shepard s abilities. MU Kioto Clement, who ha been leading woman at the Wilkes since the opening this season, goes from Sa't Wilkes company Lake to Join the " ' j Los Angeles. j had lent the money. Why? Weil, as 'will see many other platitude away they put It In the movies she had same ilk. There i no getting la a terrible paid the price." She had paid the j from the ides that money the or somehow but si husband other, thing, pries foe the sake of her health, and because she loved him. statement induces cynical smiles This to cruel nor le not say the time place Only because she loved him.. And Even Misa there was your drama. Should - ha I things about money be an t should there Crothera herself, , her? forgive At first, the character of the hue. j hitch Iti her royalties might concelv-ban- d, admit that and whose life she saved, and who ably change her mind, ever, aesthel was nnrcrthelaas pcrrrlTrd pestering cash 18 Important-Hoher eternally, areroed quite caddish, ilcally. It la always a corral pose But later, we saw his aide of the case, j suggest the contrary, In Everyday" pretty Phyllis Nolan It was all very Ingeniously put. and tha play interested me tremendous- - I returns to her home in the middle 1V U was, so direct, so pungent, nd west" after a long trip abroad with aso concise It was so agreeable toi mysterious person called Miss Emsee, (And, dispense with the perpetual comic re- j pirg" whom we never be-the ONE tief. thst sop to the Alleged require) cussedly, she proved to It j person I wanted to see ) No sooner is ments of the modern audience. side she avoid homtTthan she perceive the the j wits also refreshing to that usually obscure the point tineas of her surroundings.' She i mother and father and- at of most plays, and 1are popular for - aghast necessary for the ornate room in whirh they live, the reason that It 1 n focty-ecertain of those heroines run she length. a Is, in every play to The whom you might accuse of unpardonThe four actor who played 1 Mans Name" were T Tamamoto, able snobbishness. Fell Krembe, Then the play switches to her love Dorothy Shoemaker, ' affair. She is wanted to marry a very and Lowell Sherman. not particuv" rich man to whom she fromore A frolic" with nothing larly partial. But when it la learned licsome to help things along, than that ha has become financially injured . and and that hla reputation la suffering, ginger ale, delicious sarsaparilla, lemthe insidious but unpretentious Am- - she promises to marry- - him. snd-h- er New he relative as people who on soda occurred atop"! sterdam Roof at .midnight under the twill permit anything for the sake ef . They are not a nice lot, and benign Influence of Flo. Ziegfpld It money was in fact, the Ziegfeld Midnight the value -- Of money In their eyes to were hammers made horrible by Miss Crothera. dulv fTollo, ThtLWOodrn You believe; easily that Sfis Croth- on tha table, amid the wincleas 7 same ere means you to hate money. grid ymr-wi- sh and all looked much the a ever-- The place was crowded with yon could oblige her. and may , the even promise to try But a a matter heavily gorgeous people in- ail dome and then oclork of the rainbow of fact you end by hating the people at she introduces into this play, and you and there wa persistent attempt Jollity, some Of Which appeared to let it go at that, later on, perhaps be perfectly natural. But (admit it') you may grow to hate money, but Miss Ills hard to keep up the senTtment Froth ers has nol trHde out Sft IIlufnlTi of exhilaration on ginger ale ating case. However, the entertainment was Tellulah Bankhead; who had the sober excellent. It was quite Interof her Christian name is a courage imAnd very agreeable young actress and she esting, and well staged of the engagement can. if doe all she can with the role of the you agine. what ieZgfeld programmed a "psy- young woman. Luctle Wataon of the Voroe This wa Master chic marvel staccato diction has a role to which who occupied a room off the bal- she does much that to worth while. cony. and received visitors there. He In addittlon, there were Frank Sherdid the popular feat of reading the man, Mary Donnelly, Lon Burroughs minds of those who approached him. and Henry Hull And don t let me to the extent, that he promised to do forget Minnie Dupree whose work a the mother wa Anything that was suggested mentally men- gera. hypochondriacal by some one present. I merely exnot , Is itself which of thts tion it seemed so because Poor Louis Mann. It seemed like traordinary the at the irony of fate to pit him against odd to find anything mental One ooutd understand a leg such a play as "Nature's Nobleman" Frolic reader, or a bare back reader. but 4ra at the Apollo Theatre. Even the title-rath- er mind reader gave one the shtvera. If to dls- Will Rogers was th prize comedian concerting to find any star actor willhi with topics, hi at was to he bet and appear aa "nature s nobleman" ing which for thto occasion- includedcon-a somehow or other Don't-yo- u think monologue on ths disarmament Ry- so? Thto play was the work of Clara Coletta to Mrs. Carl Randall, Louis Mann) ference. LJpman (who Kitand of Samuel Shipman, a relative. It an. Leon Errel, Marie. Stryker. clevof other simply-- - gees that . actors shew to ty Kelly, nd a er people appeared. It was a success-or should stray from their own firesides, accompaniment with are its when for ful Frolic, they looking plays. This was an Impossible affair, cast mineral waters' .At the Punch and Judy Theatre in the CgUklll Mountains, and show- -, the kindliness of the old hotel proIs a genuinely clever 1,U?L Great tng prietor, end hie manner of dealing comedy, quaintly entitled The spon-corwho Broxopp." by A. A. Milne Mr jPLm, with family complications. But such a set of characters! They were all of the very cceeful Pasees By" The new comedy U a th stage most stagey and one not tolerate them tort of kit on advertising although a time. St ait." Theycould acted like thi them la abandoned after stage puppets baa rather than like human hero Broxapp, who ia the beings, and Broxopp therefore th tvolvfd eomething called nobility" of the star which of mean went' for nothing at all. except to let Beans for Bebiea" by Babies, protested many, us see- that Louis Mann to a particuha jrsw-rich- . certainly nsver ate beans. Broxopp, larly fine actor. And we knew that. however Insisted that although this W were not for was true, babies would eat his bean a proof of the factwaiting That Louisanother, Mann in apparently they did. shining succeeded through Th Broxopp had a this Intolerable mass of foolish Incl- up to despise the s a dent, and ridiculous characterisation Beans for Babies.X On the "aas,lh( beyond doubt. But we would have fa?tealo M1" M wow he Framed. i should mUBt bare laughed tTnp&of.tbe beans, and he )mg,ne that see YiiihSeif iSwhen the hart,5r ,n hl sIeev at th rehear-The-n of jbe play They mast have been so amusing! But It to difficult for an audience to appreciate so much that was quite hltdeeirahle for tha sake of one aetorc-Wog- lt like Louise Mann, We all to see him In something worthy oflong his J .7. - jhi -- enjoy- plsy. "Tiger Roe" a play that on the ed a long run in New York ard road. It la expects! that other plays from the pen of Mr. Maek will also be used hero. Ills friend, and he ha roany of them, are hoping this will be r j w Willard Mack to Star in - ,V1 j SEOTON- - THREE, THE DESERET NEWS 8ATUSDAY NOVEMBER 23 1921 PERHAPS lh most discussed' topic In local theatrical circle in tba return to Balt Lake of , ab- After Willard Mack. , once of several year Mr. Mack ha t come back to the town where he made I aoma of Jito early distinctive successes rf-- Tend from which he stepped to Broadway and the limelight a actor and rT playwright.- - Ha wllfbe toaling roan for tha local WITke company and wilt hla can . open Jtrjtl week with onejpf n j Ip eameet.- - equlvocably.-To- u when- - yea Tw aew ... rniar-thtrYa- t UL were qutte eure of it her-ptoy ralted Nlte People. And you cannot doubt In th eaae of her latest comedy, "Everybody," at the Bijou theatre. Thto play appears to be designed to add to the accumulation or literature on the subject of the worthlessness of mere money. Don't you remember at school f . - INDIGESTION LI. r A, 7-- 4 . yr 1 ) . --- 'S wr "T" -t .g - fvTAlwrismaoAow' -- rimii , 1 |