OCR Text |
Show Harold Lloyd Full of Laughs in Film at Ogden Tonight Those shell-rlmmed, but glassies?. BDSCtai lea thai Harold Llo d wears in all his comedies, are not Just a happ-I happ-I thought. They are the result of stud- of the psychology of laughter. laughter and life are two of the I commonest, simplest things. In iti J purest form, laughter is life. The more life, the more laughter. And In the weaknesses of human nature is io be found the most humor. In life it Is a laughing matter to set a dignified person lose his dignity. BUch as a minister steppng on a banana ba-nana peel. It IS a laughing matter to ceo an efficient person make s mixta k for instance, a deft waiter spill the soup. lb e,io;u at one time shell rimmed glasses were aiia - synonymous with learned people, such as professors or si ipntlMs. thCJ fcCQUirfed a dignity that even their present popularit Cannot entirely dispel. Worn by Harold Lloyd as hia only !i akeup, they make of hlni a serloua-m.i.deu serloua-m.i.deu youth, und accordingly mgg-nli'v mgg-nli'v th humOr to be fouml in any alt-uatio.i alt-uatio.i that impairs his dignity." in 'Number. Please?" at the ug-den ug-den theatre. Harold Lloyd gives an example .f "A Young Mail in Loe." For the unij Girl, io whom he la not the Qnlj Moh, h braves the perils of telephone boothi wrong numbers, roller coasters, mer ry -go-roe nds and Ferris wheels. Mildred is tn.- Olrl and ito Brooks the Rival, with Sunshine Sammy among those present. |