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Show f T.T" If rw-- "fr m nr W FP V 'S' Leonard Lyons" 3 Comic Danny Kaye Conducts N.Y. Philharmbnic P NEW YORK Barbrt Streisand and her husband, Elliott Gould, saw Aida at the Met on Sunday night In the Oak Room, later Miss Streisand said she may do Funny Girl in the She has not yet signed a contract lor the movie version. And Shes just started taking when the Royal Ballet comes. W N.Y. shenopes' to study ballet with the troupe. Mas Streisands dream is to do a concert at Carnegie Hall without once opening her mouth. She wondered how much money the Met paid its stars, and guessed it was about $2,000 per performance. I told Ray Stark that we could do Funny , Girl at the Hollywood Bowl. Only two performances a week, but wed gross over $100,000 each time. He thought the Aud ence would be too far from us. For $100,000 a performance, lets give em binocu' lars. ! Robert Schlomm Robert Preston, star of Ben Franklin in' Paris, was in Sardis telling of his early years in Hollywood. Preston, whose family name is Meservey, permitted the producers to give him a screen name. Robert Mitchum also was st .rting a career then, and the producers emissary gave him a list of movie names. f Mitchum studied the list of names, fancy and obviously artificial and roared he wanted none of them. Look, dont yell at me, said the emissary. I like the name Mitchum. Argue with the producer. Hes the one who doesnt like your name. Hes Herman Schlomm. Herman Schlomm doesnt like my name? said Mitchum. Tell him Ill change it to Robert Schlomm. piano-lesson- Britons Tied Up c Jules Styne, the composer, and lyricist E. Y. Marburg went to London for the Theater Guild to cast their new musical, based 6n Arnold Bennetts Buried Alive. They interviewed over 100 performers, and decided to do the casting in New York. All the British stars, from Olivier to Finney, are signed to the national theaters. Britains National Theater, the Royal Shakespeare and the other repertory companies in England permit their stars to do movie work but not outside stage work. This weekend a new rock n roll combo will audition at Grossingers for a summer job. They include two electric-guita- r sons of Doris Warplayers, Quentin and Brian Vidor, teen-ag- e ner Vidor. Their drummer lives in the same Park Avenue Apartment house as they do, and they heard one another practicing. The drummer is Pierre Seydoux, son of the French U.N. -- NEW YORK-Da- nny Kaye, mand, he toyed with the men the conductor, led die New f the orchestra at will, mak-n- g York Philharmonic in the secthem stand and sit repeatond of its two oension-fupedly as he raised and lowered benefit concerts. The occasion, his hands; jesting with his an apparent sellout at a 520 chief stooge, concertmaster top. marked the comedians John Qingliano; and even Philharmonic Hall debut. In many ways, Kay is the ideal conductor. He has a sure beat, grace in his bearing even when he becomes emoinvolved with the tionally work at hand and he cant read a note of music. Anybody knows that by the evening of the concert the conductors job the painstaking preparation of the scores to be presented is done; his appearance in the hall is, largely, an opportunity offered him to bask in the admiration of an audience that, fn turn, is privileged to sit before the great presence. Wed all obviously be better off if, on the big night, Danny Kaye, unencumbered by preconceptions about inner values in the music, were hired to stand in for the other fellow. The entertainer, who appeared in tails in the first half and jacket and slacks in the second, led Strauss, Ravel, Wagner and others with easy assurance and comic invend London production. ? "V i; The Salt Lake Tribune, Friday, April 2, 1965 Barbra Streisand Lays Aim at Carnegie Hall ! ' , Danny Kaye . . Ideal conductor nev ef could 'read music. Heiress to Debut With Musical NEW YORK (UPI) Robin Swanee, facial tissue heiress, will make her show business debut in the forthcoming musical, Broadway Sugar City, for which Duke Ellington did the music. y K-- lie tiveness. Being yg- r- 309 in Offica Canary.". By strolling to one end of the stage during the Boler and, seated on the apron, in-- . dulging in a smoke and chat with thi musician, he demonstrated how unnecessary a conductors presence is. By facing the audience during another work, he showed us what, when his back is to the r . 4 Dnvo Tonight, 8:30 MATINEES SAT. & SUN. IlNlfMAMA 2 p,m. SflUJMEg BEST PICTURE! WHO GAVE YOU "THE GREAT ESCAPE NOW BRINGS YOU BEST ACTRESS! si BE5T IN 11 TOE 0LYI!EUiTE MSPEWSE! envoy. Paul Ford and Maureen OSullivan, who created the stage roles, will do the film version of Never Too Late, with Connie Stevens and Jim Hutton. .... -- Opant Naan FINAL 12 DAYS! .V audience, a conductors tures look like. The opening, Roman Carnival overture, was led by the orchestras assistant con, ductor, young Seiji Ozawa, whose full head of hair caused a woman at a recent Friday, afternoon concert to observe that he resembled a Japanese.' Beatle. com complete Highland - getting the boys in the band to sing in unison during a chorus of Leroy Andersons The Hot JJ 5 The most wonderfuf, the most , i. A uV .1 OTHER CATEGORIES enchanting VI 2121 Ton I metJ SO 485.1341 11th EAST Sot 1pm. Opans 5 13 Shows at 5 20, 7 30r 9 40 entertainment of your life! THE WiRISCH CORPORATION 7th HOWLING WEEK! juxuNuoa ' VMUSI 'HOWTO URDER COLOR Ycua WIFE' PlUS: UNITED ARTISTS TECHNIC0L0RV. tyDdM 6E0RGE MAHARIS0 RICHARD BASEHART0 ANNE FRANCIS THE El D Starring fflNG7 IS BACK WflHTHE 816-SEA- T 53 S PARK Opan 4 30 Shows at 7 p m HEATERS Phono HU U Phan. altar 5, roar af tboatra. Mam FREE IT'S FROM BOUDOIR TO BATTLEFIELD MCwa Guam bean Connery Leslie Caton TaThcr Goose : IrevoR A GIRLS INCRIDIILI ADVENTURI INTERNATIONALS Ferry Cross The Mersey "It is ACTION-PACKE- D ii "CONQUERED NOW SP- Y- COUNTER CITYj ax & o- PLAYING 272 y a x- SUUIH MAIN tL OPEN 12 15 DAILY Stylo- -2 00, 4 20, 1010 Topkooi 12 30, 4 20, S 10 & .vAa Nfc'Swx'S DRIVE-I- - the best play Shaw ever wrote " Alexander Woollcoft ABOVE 0PEN 4 PM Stylo- -7 10 A 11 00 $ HOOll 200 Topkopi 9 00 8-1- 0, ROPtrfI SfFliJiDN TECHNICOLOR V U O Q TREACHER 01944 OWEN-ED WYNN : bufyisTo.rt.cMo Pndtciaa Walt thuwr STEREOPHONIC SOUND Continuous Performances Open at 115pm I I Ad SI 50 'til 5, than SI 75 Child. 75c v m 0 1 JO, 4 19 4 SO, 9 30 tOWEK .a 9 0 , TITLE Sa SONS NOMINATED FOR AN ACADEMY "THE MOST AWARDI IMPORTANT MOTION PICTURE YEARS!" IN TWENTY NEW YORK TIMES BEGINNING EPOCH FILMMAKING!" NEW YORK TIMES "HAS CAUGHT THE PUBLIC THE WAY NO OTHER 8:30 p.m. 12-1- 7, OF A NEW IN CANDIDA April IANCHESTER IN FANCY HAS FILM RECENT YEARS!" NEW YORK TIMES Matinee April 10, 2 p.m. Tickats at box offica, 10 o.m4 p.m., Talaphena tickat roiorvationi UNIVERSITY OF UTAH they hod each experimented with life but and love it hod never seemed to work for either el them until that night . . . and that wild conven. tion in New York Moi.-5o- f. Sure, 1 ... PIONEER MEMORIAL THEATRE "BEST ACTRESS" TICKETS . Monday, . . 2.0 O, S Wadn.doy throuyh Saturday Saturday Matlnaa $1.75, $2.25, 0 0- Tuosday, $3.00 Sophia Loren Joseph E. Levine University Marcello Loren.Mastroianni Orchesis and ASUU Present of ... A u dleaii Eneairtt Utah dance O GLENN FORD and GERALDINE PAGE 65 . Be Sicas gufest choreographer Italian OF FEATURING THE TALENTS FOUR SALT LAKE DANCE PREMIERES LOUIS, R.RIE, JOAN WOODBURY, ARIEL BALLIF, MURRAY MEMBERS HAROliD GOTTFREDSON AND UTAH SYMPHONY w opens tonight 8:30 p.m. kingsbury hall . . UNITED ARTISTS f SHIRLEY .Color PLUS OUTSTANDING RaiuM i anna sokolow SJ Marriage te Embusy Picture! - GARBER lawiMm :Tii "THE NIGHTLY NOMINATION Sittsna - DOTRiCE- ' 322-09- Sophia BADDELEY- as Shaw's ACADEMY AWARD -- - RUTH ROMAN vs SPY MIONE Opan at 4 30 p m. Children Fraa Adults SI 25 SHOWS AT -Satan" 7 15, 11 CO "Farry" 9 30 SI 00 'til 5, than $1 25 Ch 35 Feotures "Marsay" 12 15, 4, I "Satan" 2 00, 3 55, 9 40 p m Y JOHNS GLYNIS fa Now Showing ON A LOST ISIANDI 'banAJi tjueSolplw, DAVID TOMLINSON NOW SHOWING AT TWO THEATRESI Snafu Kowaro DICK VAN DYKE - OpCRAliON TECHNICOLOR PLUS in AMERICAN TAHftiN o .....ifiefftf.. pacemakers JULIE ANDREWS .Pf ti&nmhMMWMi . I hrkin til Jeweh ml) Tickets . Matinee April 3, 2 p.m. at Pionepr Memorial Theater onlyr 322-696- 1 j, Ill Waal North Too, a la Opaa QlCHY Alfred Mtcbceck' 44 Parmorty Avalon Opan 2 WAIT DISNEY FEATURES "MARNIE" "So Dear To My Heart"" "GOLDEN HORSESHOE REVUE" Rovwa 7.15, 9 25 HHoart I 03, 10 15 7,0. , . ItltM "BULLET FOR A BAGMAN" |