OCR Text |
Show THE CITIZEN "-- With the First Nighters ... 0 7 UNUSUAL DRAMA IN ing, is well received and is somthing WOMAN ON JURY. BILL out of the ordinary. Dick and Carry Henry in "100 per A First National picture is to be the MinMadame Diibarry in cent Dumb" pull a song, chatter and feature next week at the American utes in Melody land" headlines the dance act which is full of fun and theatre. Within the past year or two Pantages theatre bill this week in one worth while. .this brand of entertainment has provof the mo3t classical selections that Charles and Grace Keating in Hfickle-berr- y ed. the best being made, as. witness has been presented ' here 'for' a long Finn" make a hit with the aud- - such phenomenal successes as Flamtime. The chorus is made up of six Youth. Black Oxen, and many ience. Their .act iss staged along the. ing in efforts and their .I ; r'-- . :; singers operatic others.'! V . f solos, quartets and the entire chorus' .banks of a ..wooded river, depicting jn. this , instance. the picture is ' is greatly appreciated by the audiences outdoor scenery. The dresaes- Woman ou:theJury,' and, it is meeting r OPERA SINGERS FEATURE f't, WEEKS PANTAGES -1 V. . - 1 . : .The-beautfu- - 5an be had. Mark Twains Huckleberry Finn possesses a strong theme and a heart famous juvenile inpersonato; of fampunch that keep the spectators keyed ous characters in Modern 'literature. up with excitement throughput the enThe bashful youth and his awkward tire production. "The Woman ion the Jury, which attempt of love making to a beautful was directed by Harry 0. Hoyt from girl, who is willing, relates an interest-iqBernard K. . Bums' stage play of the act. a in short story sapie name, tells of the story of two Tony Grey, and company present a women and a. man. Both of them darky carried to a hospital for repairs, .have been spurned by him; one of them tries to forget; but the other but after hearing the agonizing groans takes the matter in her own hands, of many patients and seeing the diswith disastrous effect. sected limbs the result of operations, The Woman on the Jury boasts of the colored gentleman entirely forgets his own ailments and gets well. one of the largest and most capable He thought he . had broken legs but casts ever seen in a picture. Headed finds himself able to dance a buck by Sylvia Breamer, it includes Lew and wing dance. Cody, Frank Mayo, Bessie Love, Mary Carr, Myrtle Stedman, Hobart Her-sholThis show closes next Tuesday t, Henry B. Walthall, .Jean. night Ford Sterling, Stanton Heck and many others of equal fame. In this production Miss Breamer has the role of a young bride, spending her honeymoon serving on a. murder trial, most jury, and she is responsible for of the rich, dramatic moments of the , - t. v " ; Oqr champion, Jack Dempsy, is shown on the screen of how he was tempted .to. enter the ring to secure his. sick mother, and which money-fo- r subsequently resulted in his winning the worlds championship. Jack is making good as a screen artist, and manager Diamond 'announces that he has secured a seies of pictures showing the champion in action, which pictures will be interpolated with other feature pictures from time to time. The Metro special "Thy Name is Woman" is a feature picture showing the great love of woman for man and the sacrifice she is willing to make to capture that love. Balmus, Irma and Milo in poses of plastic art, grace and beauty and danc- . . . THIS WEEK 4 a g - Bos-wort- iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiii' film. i DUBARRY SEXTETTE GOLDEN GIVES UP FORTUNE FOR THEATRICAL STAGE. i CHAS. KEATING & CO. An established income of $45,000 a is not a bad return to a theatrical I DICK and CARRIE i HENRY v 1 BALMUS, IRMA and i MILO Thy Name is Woman JACK DEMPSEY In Fight and Win We - t.r Never.. Raise Our Prices. i GREAT I SHOW Tllll!l!lli!llllllllllllllllllllI!l!lllli;illlllllllllllllllllllllllllll ' aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin f.n. . means of familiarizing himself with the business, and seven years later Golden was its vice president and general manager, earning a salary of $45,-00- 0 a year. During all this time, however, den never let up on his work for the theatre, which really wasnt work to him but recreation. He had, in his spare time, been writing verses for such magazines as "Truth,Life, Punch and "Judge, also songs of no mean order some of "his ' best known 'sellers being Poor Butterfly VI Can Dance With Everyone But My You Cant Flay Wife, t In the Band, and Bood-byGirls, Im Through. The musical comedies he wrote, mostly while traveling about the country on business, were The Little Colonel, for Lilliaji Russell; Miss Print-- ' for Marie Dressier, The Hoyden for Elsi Janis, The Candy Shop for Rock and Fulton, Forward March, for William Over Collier, the River, for Eddie and or five Hippodrome four Foy, , - - Every-Instrumen- e shows. Eight years ago he formed ai 'partnership' with Winchell who had already acquired fame Smith, and fortune as the author, either alone or in collaboration, of such plays as The Fortune Hunter, The Only Son, and Officer 666 .Several years ago, during the actors strike. Golden took over the managerial reins, because Smith wanted. to devote his sole attention to writing play-produci- ng year TONY GRAY & CO. (A h, ' PANTAGES and producer these days for the energy brains he expends yearly on his productions, yet John Golden, the producer of "Lightnin," coming to the Salt Lake theatre, for one week, beginning reMonday, August 4th, deliberately signed a position paying him this amount in order to enter the producing field and thereby gratify his love for the theatre. Golden had been an actor in his late teens, and not a very good one, either, in fact, engagements were so few and far between that he was forced to peddle chewing gum as a side, line when not decorating the waiting line in the theatrical agents employment offices. During his gum selling visits to the old Hoffman House in New York he chanced to meet a man named Oakes, president of the Oakes Chemical Co., and he, recognizing Goldens exceptional qualities of salesmanship, convinced him that by employing the same amount of energy required to sell a jar of gum he could dispose of a carload of chemicals, netting ; him one thousand' times as much. Oakes persuaded him to come with the chemical concern, entering the factory as a Who JESSE E. PRINGLE Ma Jones ;in Has Played Lightnin 2,000 Times. |