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Show 3 13 January 20, 1966 REVIEW, Does A Critic Review His Wifes Play?tJSot If Hes Wa Iter Kerr --2 Th'REMW WOMENS PAGE problem maintaining critical objectivity when he reviews the play for his paper? It, was no problem at all for Walter Kerr of the New York Herald Tribune when his wife, Jean Kerr, sat 'with him at, opening night of her play, Mary Mary, now in a ten-drun at the Pioneej- - Memorial He simply sideTheatre. stepped the issue and arranged for his assistant to handle the review. However, Walter Kerrs fellow New York critics were faced with no restrictions, and they hailed Mrs. Kerrs omedy success. uproarious Mary MaryOad a run of more than 1500 performances,. In Salt Lake City Mary Mary has the advantage of a ' director who is thoroughly familiar with all aspects of the Broadway presentation. Robert Hyde Wilson was in NeW York for the original production, and, as a director-observe- r, was present during all phases of its preparation, from the first audition to the final dress rehearsal. The intimate understanding he gained was a great help to the cast in enabling them to achieve the full potential of each part. Cast in the title role is Madelon Thomas, a finalist in the San Francisco auditions of the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. Her husband is played by H. E. D. Redford; Hal Child fills the role of movie star Dirk Winston; Dee Sjoblom is seen as Tiffany and Chester DoWse is cast as Oscar BURGENER gals tried bowling yet? 1 sling a ball a couple of times a week and it really is a lot of fun. If I could turn my golf and bowling scores around, Id be an expert at both. But, I keep trying and maybe one of these days Til get six strikes in a row! I certainly dont expect to get the very elusive 12! Tiree in a row and va gotta turkey and Jhats food, ya know! Now when ya limp back to the ole homestead, youll probably be starved, so how about some 'after -- the -- game eats? Ya! can whip up the foUowing glunck ahead of time, so in case ya threw something other than the ball out, ya still have something good to gnaw on! HAMBURGER AND NOODLE CASSEROLE pkg. (8 oz) egg noodles 2 medium onions, chopped teas, salt 1 oz. pkg. cream cheese cup dairy sour cream 1 lb. ground beef (I prefer ground chuck) 1 Tbs. butter or margarine Cook noodles according to the directions on the package. Add onions to cream cheese and sour cream. Brown the beef in the butter. Add the garlic, salt, pepper, sugar and tomato sauce. Cover and simmer for 15 minutes. Place 13 of the cooked noodles in the bottom of a greased quart casserole, then 13 of the onion mixture and then 13 of the meat-sau- ce mixture. Repeat the layers until ya run out of stuff. Sprinkle with the grated cheese and bake in a 350 oven for 30 minutes. .1 3 1 4 A. tion. medium onion, lb. ground beef 1 1 chopped salt and pepper 2 cups cooked green beans medium potatoes, cooked and drained 12 cup warm milk 1 beaten egg more salt and pepper ye (I ' Chester Dowse, playing the part of die lawyer in Mary Mary at the Pioneer Memorial Theatre, takes a long, amused look at his confused clients. The Jean Kerr comedy opens a ten day run on J inuary 20. 5 a can condensed tomato soup Cook the onion in a little fat until tender but npt brown. Add the meat, sprinkle if with salt and pepper and brown lightly. Add die beans and soup and pour into a 1 12 quart Mash the potatoes, add the milk, egg and casserole. salt and pepper to taste. Spoon potatoes in mounds over the meat and bake in a 350 oven for 30 minutes or until the potatoes are a golden brown. You can substitute instant potatoes if you wish, but be sure to add the beaten egg. 1 the high 12 , . cubes of butter or .. margarine medium onion, chopped Tf cop long grain rice ' 3 cups chicken broth 18 teas, powdered saffron 12 lb. mushrooms, thinly sliced and sauteed in a 1 lb. shrimp, shelled, de-- i. veined and cooked 1 cup diced ham 12 tt.sweet Italian saus age, sliced and sauteed in a little butter 34 cup grated Parmesan or Romano cheese if to-- faction! a Have you noticed how seldom you see spike heeled shoes anymore? Id been there w'jndefing what the reason was always is one you know! Its just our friends across the Atlantic at work again. fashion houses of the world have decreed that low heeled shoes are high fashion and so be it. Leading shoe designers state that nothing dates a woman faster than spike heels worn in the daytime they are relatively rare for even ing also. Now, behind all this I suspected " some Intrigue'' it Is well-knothat French women have always loved die v so it was something very high heel of a major revolution to get them to Sure give up their beloved spikes! there were some mysterious enough, meetings that helped bring the ladies down a bit. European governments surveyed the damage made by little-bitt- y spike heels and soon banned the wearing of them in museums and embassies. The heels (oh, the power they pack per square inch) were ruining valuable old parquet floors. Even at the many grand bails held each year, felt tip heels have been $ ! little butter .Melt the butter in a large casserole over low heat, using asbestos pad if utensil is earthenware. Add the chopped onion to the butter and saute until barely tender. Add the rice and stir until each kernel is coated with the butter and becomes transparent. Steep the saffron in a small amount of the chicken broth and pour over the rice along with the rennining broth. Salt may be added to taste at this point, but it may be unnecessary because of the seasoned chicken broth. Bring to a low boil. Place uncovered casserole in oven which has been preheated to 350 degrees. Bake until all the liqidd is absorbed, about 35 to 40 minutes. Gently stir in the mushrooms, shrimp, ham and sausage. Return to oven and bake until heated through. At the very last, carefully stir in the Serve very hot and pass more grated grated cheese. cheese so it may be sprinkled on the individual servings. This main dish may be conveniently doubled or tripled , . " inch base wiU say, Plant Utah Legacy of Beauty wiU be the theme when the Utah Associated Garden Clubs celebrate their 32nd Birthday Saturday, January 22, in the Utah Garden Center in Sugarhouse Park. Registration will begin at 8:30 a.m. and a Workshop on Conservation featuring Mrs. A. L. Stenburg, state chairman and Miss Virginia Benson, from the U. S. Department of Agriculture, will begin at 10 a.m. Dr. I. B. NcNulty, ity of Utah Department Antiquing ing Effects of Air Pollution on Plants in Utah, followed by an open forum discussion. HFLECT0 Marbelize Committee chairmen include Mrs. Kenneth P. Bur-bidSr.; Mrs. William J. BuUough, Mrs. Betty Fields, Mrs. A. L. Stenburg, Mrs. Roy L. Rider, Mrs. Harley R. Brundage and Mrs. Harold CWood Grain. Rushton, decorations chairman; Mrs. A. L. Stenburg, conservation chairman, in charge of the forum, and Mrs. Bryan P. Leyerich, president. smv v OMN Frl. 111 Save now on ( 4H tun. 1M Corner of & DELIVERIES MURRAY,. GRANGER OL 33rd S. 3 To 5 Tears Old MONTBSRI METHOD Creative Dance Letters-Art-Numb- Spanish ers INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION 1 12 DAILY. SANDT ' PHONE: 355-668- special offer! Our next week ju$t toh& t Ardean Watts will also speak at the symposium on the modern compositions to be featured in concert Tuesday and Wednesday at 8:15 p.m. in Kingsbury Hall by the Utah teut COLLEGE OF BEAUTY Orchestra. Symphony 1205 WILMINGTON AVENUE SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH ' I ncftToimn EXT. 412 OR AREAS 328-053- for.free delivery of all prescriptions leaving Auerbach's at 12 noon and 4 00 P M Daily Use your Auerbach charge account . 5 PHONE 486-936- 7 X S7EHEf$ALE! it 4 A new Scottrecelyer system complete with matching mK.; ., ''X v. . V: ?; i- ' ?i Scott speakers .less than $300 m iy Optional changer of your choice, extra. THE HOLLADAY TO AND KEARNS 11 SAVE 10th EAST PRE-SCHO- DAILY PRESCRIPTION fhl finest permanent wave INCLUDING CUT AND HIGH, STYLING . . . Rushton. MAdlVlAeV MT. JORDON SPECIAL Copeland, ally-known composer, will be the special guest of the Utah Symphony Guild Sympos ium Monday at 1:30 p.m. in the University Union Building. ge, PREPARING FOR a symposium on conservation and the 32nd birthday of the Utah Associated Garden Clubs are Mrs. Harold permanent wave internation- Mrs. Bryan P. Leverich, club president, will preside over the convention and Mrs. James L. Knearem is chairman. jJi ' of wiU be the guest speaker at 1:30 p.m. discuss- Botony, .T I Copeland Aaron Parmesan bread. . up the whole filthy bunen. (No thanks to toe cowardly of the town who are all hiding behind a watering trough.) Our hero triumphs without even losing his tot. Now, Drunken Doctor, who has not had near the mention he deserves in this tale, sobers himself enough to clean up toe mess and spout a few lines of Shakespeare. Clean Cut leaps into his Virginia City saddle and drags Daughter up behind him. (She really needs the ride after the long walk to town). The happy couple ride off into the sunset together, headed for the last round-u- p, soon to be seen on another channel. citizens Guild Slates Garden Clubs Ready Legacy Brown the butter in the bottom of your soup kettle. Add the hamburger and fry until very brown and well separated. Add the sliced onions, consomme, water and boullion cubes and simmer for 30 minutes. Serve with garlic, OLD SURFACES charges into town in his clean Mustachless &ce on his clean horse shooting his. repeating, repeating, repeating rifle and scrubs these 6 1 RIGHT OVER me. ' Mr. Clean Anyway believe We mvst thank influential couturiers like Dior, St. Laurent, Balenciaga and shoe designer Roger Vivier for the exceUent new stylings. The oxford and brogue- type shoes formerly for English nannies and woma over 70 have turned into fashionable Cinderella sUppers. These famed designers have succeeded in convincing can beef consomme or stock 1 cup water 2 beef boullion cubes Tbs. butter lb. hamburger 10 medium onions, slided thin 1 So heel is the cigarette-d- p giving way to the sturdier type with no Mary Poppins brogans HAMBURGER FRENCH ONION SOUP 12 STARK also dpped with piano felt! Lots Well, I atUl like a higher heel, to really feel dressed up. Okay, they are still very in a and 2 12 inch style, but the tips wiU be widened to lessen the punch! Really, they are much better for the legs, more becoming and certainly more comfortal .e. We dont always have to be suffering for bjauty and nothing puts lines on the face quicker than shoes that dont fit or shoes that are just not walkable. we almost never ques Things happen so quietly tion why we buy a different style. It is Just accepted and soon we forget about former fashion. Weve our country, too.nv.you bad; many a floor- - ruiaed-i- n can see what the tiny tip of a high heel does even on so our designers gladly picked up the sidewalks new shoe flag to wave, too. wn if desired. . 34 fast of ladies The-gre- 1 BY LEIGH jnade cumpulsory. the mighty. fading MAN DISH RISOTTO 1 are not . Next appearance on die screen is made by "Whole bossed Big Bunch of Bad Guys secretly by Villainous Saloon Keeper. Riding around on dirty grey horses, wearing mustaches and scraggly sideburns, their only purpose is to bribe sheriffs and shoot up Main Street. Forsooth! Into town comes riding our young Clean Cut Hero Without a Mustache. He is mounted on a newly laundered white horse ladened down with 85 pounds of silver saddle. Ten minutes after arrival he has helped Daughter Without a Mother across a mud puddle. Swaggering into the bar Clean Cut Without a Mustache which he orders a shot of red-emanages to cling to, untasted, for a full twenty minutes before swaggering out again. This episode establishes a public image. He is tough enough to order the hootch but too lily-pu- re to drink it. The Incident also creates a convenient time lor him to come in contact with another notable .member of the cast. She is the Girl in Short Skirts With Feathers in Her Hair. This babe tangs around the saloon day and night with a heart of gold and ,no apparent occupation. Madly in love with our friend Villainous Saloon Keeper, she has been rejected in view of his preference for Daughter Without a Mother. During this brief interlude she develops a healthy respect for our heros manly charm and when Clean Cut gets in a pickle, she turns traitor on old Villainous. Meanwhile back at the ranch Crooked Sheriff is about to foreclose the mortgage and since Drunken Judge Is too stoned to care, he decides to make a pass at Daughter Without a Mpm In toe process of serving the Process. He would have, too! tod not 'Clead Cut chosen this exact moment to make the scene. Quite an accompUshment, considering he was in the saloon ten miles away only five minutes ago. This is the moment for THE FIST FIGHT through which Daughters virtue is preserved at a considerable loss in furniture belonging to the old sot passed-o- ut in the kitchen. His necessary part of the plot achieved, Crooked Sheriff tucks tils horse between his legs and runs. About this time Girl in Short Skirts, Etc. Etc. Etc. discovers the plan to rob the bank cooked up by Villainous Saloon Keeper and bis mustached gang of dirty horsemen. Naturally she rats to Clean Cut, though her heart, if she has one, isnt in it. This is a required line of the story. Otherwise Villainous would have no reason to die with his head in her remorseful lap. And he wiU die . -- HAMBURGER PF FAYE HADLEY The following Is an advance script for any western movie viewed on the late, late, late, late show. Created especially for your convenience to assist in understanding complicated plots. The main characters "include a drunken judge, drunken doctor, crooked sheriff and a villainous saloon keeper who control the town. Do you wonder how the west survived? A regular member of the cast is Daughter Without a Mother, offspring of Drunken Judge." These sweet young things have fathers but there is a lamentable lack ofuMoms in the wild west. The plague that wiped them out was very bad for popula- ay Have you 1 BY What happens when the wife of a New York drama critic writes a play? Does he have a over the stove BY MARGE School Of CORNER 17th So. 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