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Show COMING TO THE GRAND SUNDAY -When a pair of swing trumpet players fall for the same girl, they I not only blow their own horn? they'd like to blow each other's brains out. Lilt when one of the trumpet players can dance, well, that puts him a couple of feet in front of his rival, doesn't it? That's what happens in Para, mount's newest comedy. "Second Chorus." coming Sunday to the Grand theatre, when Fred Astaire. as a trumpet player with frolicsome frolic-some feet, crosses horns with tumpet player Burgess Meredith for the love of beautiful Paillette ' Goddard. Not only are they rivals for Paillette, Paill-ette, but they also are aspirants for places in Artie Shaw's swing band, which is featured in the exuberant ex-uberant story. Shaw, in the picture, pic-ture, introduces a larger and, from all reports, swingier band than he had before his vacation from the jitterbugs. Paillette Goddard and Fred As-aire As-aire do a dance called "Dig It," to the, tune of a swing number called, "I Ain't Hep to That Step But I'll Dig It," which already has the jitterbugs cutting rugs., Other numbers num-bers in the blithesome comedy are a hot concerto composed and played play-ed by Artie Shaw, "Love Of My Life" and "Poor Mr. Chisholm." |