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Show THE NEW BILLS SALT LAKE THEATRE Klaw and Erlanger's road production of "The Pink Lady" opens at the Theatre Monday evening for a week's run. Salt Lakers need but few introductory remarks on the play, as it scored sufficiently in New York last year to make it well known, and Hazel Tout's success in the leading feminine role is a matter of history by this time. As given in New York it was one of the best musical shows of the past three seasons, and the score contains, some unusually un-usually pretty music. COLONIAL The week opens Sunday evening for the Colonial with another of Mort Singer's musical shows. This time it is Olive Vail in "Miss Nobody From Starland." The show was originally given at the Princess in Chicago, and is on tour for the first time. Some of the music has already been heard locally. For the last half of the Colonial's week, "Paid in Full" will be the bill. Eugene Walter wrote "Paid in Full" and those who saw it on its former presentation locally will have little difficulty in remembering the play and its graphic pictures of those social conditions with which the theme deals. ORPHEUM The Arkaloff Russian Balalaika orch stra, numbering fifteen pieces, is announced as th j headline feature for the bill which opens Sunday afternoon. The program will include, in addition, Hugh Herbert and company in "The Son of Solomon;" the Alpine troupe, aerialists; Bert Jordan, unique eccentric dancer; Fidler and Shelton, colored comedians who play, dance, sing and impersonate; Dick Gardner and Anne Revere in "a true variety act," and Richardson's posing dogs. GARRICK "Forty Five Minutes From Broadway" Broad-way" is due at the Garrick Sunday evening for a week's stay. The management of the stock house must, at least, be given credit for getting off the beaten parth of endeavor with its players, play-ers, for the production of the popular Cohan musical comedy is a feat seldom attempted in stock. It necessitates the training of a chorus and requires at least four principals who can sing and dance for a few moments in each act. Lessons along these lines have been very much the order of the week among the members of the Garrick's company, and several surprises are promised for the coming week's bill at the Garrick. EMPRESS Ray Dooley and her Metropolitan Minstrels will head next week's Empress program, pro-gram, the company consisting of ,a sextette of sprightly girls who can sing and dance. The Etta Leon troupe of tight and slack wire artists will be seen, and Mary Barley's Bull Dog Music Hall novelty is looked to for something now in canine features. Budd and Clare will offer "Scenes at a London Music Hall." Merlin is a card manipulator and the Todd Nards are physical phys-ical culture experts. |