1 Greatest Show
Ever Screened
bi "The Great Ziegfeld," coming
to the; Henn Theatre, motion picture:
have picked up the torch where th<
late ?Florenz Ziegfeld laid it dowr
and have succeeded in out-Ziegfelc
himself.
4<1Xhe Great Ziegfeld" has every
thing that a great musical picture
should have. It has, in the life oJ
Ziegfeld, a most gripping and per
feet dramatic story. In its musica
numbers, never before produced or
such a scale of grandeur, it ha:
many of the most dazzling scenes
ever seen in pictures.
i Henn 1
MURPHY, NORTI
I MATINEE
f THURSDAY and F1
p 4
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? \>\ \ ~ / jmrimaimg:
I ? v}\ / "Picture Me With- J
*1 \ I out You"
S A 'He Waa a Dandy"
JX w \ "Hey. What Did
X \VSIV\ The Blue jay Say?'
? \ n?w steps. J
X c? \ too!
I? SATURDA
The Cherol
7"ISLEOF FURY" IS~
I SOUTH SEA DRAMA
COMING TO HENN
I Lovers of primitive melodrama
have a treat in store cn Wed. Jan. 20,
when "Isle of Fury" the brilliant
: Warner Bros, picturization of Soroer5
est Maugham's romance of the South
; Seas, "Three in Eden"?opens at the
1 "Henn Theatre.
i The hero of the thriling story is
Val Stevens a man of primitive in
stincts and a refugee from the clutchi
es of the law, who has built up a prof
fitable pearl fishery on a remote Paci
fic island, but is compelled to do batl
tie for his beautiful young bride,
l against a polished man of the world,
s Eric Bake whom he has rescued from
5 a shipwreck and brought into his
home as a friend.
["heater |
* CAROLINA |
EVERY DAY
RIDAY, January 14-15
i t y
Share her love and
>. : i laughter, tears and j
thrills, trials and ' >
triumphs in the
V grandest hit she's
If
Y
|
|
|
Y, January 16 !
DIM AND AIMIN'T6 PLEASE!.. |
BEffli
(til if th< m?w Viricr Rutins* |
Icee Scout, Murphy, North I
Having prescribed romance for his
tor JEAN HERSHOLT wutches RC
ERT KENT to see that they take I
the Dioime Quintuplets' picture for 7
Quins Employ Own
Tecnnique In Film j
When The Dionne Quins started i
work on their second Twentieth Century-Fox
feature. "Reunion"?the
dramatic home-coming of the Country
Doctor's 3,000 grown-up "babies"
? opening Mon., Jan. 18 at the Henn |
| Theatre, the littlest starlets decided J
to follow the Will Rogers technique
of acting and make up their per|
formance as they went along.
Upon the broad shoulder of Director
Norman Taurog fell the burden of
the natural actions of the babies and
adapting them into the story.
"It's much better all around,"
Taurog said. "I'm sure I'd rather
see the Quins being themselves than
any other way. Of course, some of
their improptu 'business 'was a little
' surprising to their fellow actors, but
I I'm certain the results obtained will!
greatly please theatre-goers.
"The difference between the Quins' |
first picture, 'The Country Doctor' j
and 'Reunion'," Taurog added, "is I
i that in the first one the script was j
, written for the Quins, while in their I
\ new picture the script was 'written |
by the Quins themselves."
In one scene Jean Hersholt laid j
I down a small camera and Cecile pick- j
ed it up. Annette found the combi- !
! ntion and Marie, Emilie and Yvonne I
; helped to undo the catches and pull I
out the film.
j Dan Clark kept the camera motor
running, and it was such excellent
"business" that Taurog immediately:
| changed his scene to make the ex.
traction of the roll of film a part
I of the action.
Another time Taurog looked
! around for his copy of the script on.
; ly to find that is was gone. He glanc>
| ed across the lawn and saw Marie
[ I scurrying toward Cecile, Yvonne,
. i T? tit _ l
canine ami Annette with the script
in her hands. All five grabbed the
scenario and started to tear out pages.
Only the timely intervention of Dr.!
A. K. Dafoe, the famous doctor who
brought them into the world and
who acted as supervisor of their
scenes, saved the script from complete
mutilation.
"They were pretty cagey about
their tearing at that," Taurog said,
"Because they destroyed none of the
pages listing their scenes, confining
their havoc to those of Jean Hersholt,
Rochelle Hudson, Helen Vinson, Robert
Kent, Slim Summerville and
Dorothy Peterson.
I LATE SHOW | j
| Saturday Night j
$ 10:30 ' Jan. 16 | <
:': WILLIAM POWELL and Y *j
? KAY FRANCIS, in? ? li
I "ONE WAY ||
1 PASSAGE" |]
THE PICTURE THAT X j
? MADE THEM FAMOUS ? \
! Admission 10* and 25c v <j
mf?m44?44?44<44m4m [ :
Carolina 1
JmRk i
k v<S I
two favorite patients, Country DocCHELLE
HUDSON and ROBheir
medicine. The scene is from
'wentieth Century-Fox, "Reunion."
2PB
Shirley's Dancing
Amazes Kin or Of Tan !
D ? - - -F
Bill Robinson popularly deemed
the world's greatest tap-dancer, was
drafted by Twentieth Century-Fox to
create four new dance routines for
Shirley Temple whose newest starring
picture, "Dimples", opens Thurs.,
Jan. 14 at the Henn Theatre. The ,
colored dance king was continually
amazed by Shirley's ability to master
long and intricate steps in the brifest ,
possible time ? in three hours the
little star had learned a new tap, a
waltz, and three parts of a softshoe
routine, j feat perhaps never equaled j
by a Hollywood dancer.
Only once did Shirley complain, '
during a particularly difficult bit.
Her right foot achieved the involved
series of taps without trouble, but the
left foot faltered. Shirley frowned, J
and explained apologetically: "My ;
legs aren't long enough.' Needless to
XKKKKK-xkkkkk~XKK~X~X~X~X~>
I HENN Tl
J MONDAY and TUES
Yvonne
I: WEDNESD^
| HE SAVED A MAN'S LIFE...Bi
"hur?day, Jan. 14,1937.
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Bj v ^jBj^Efl
IM* ^ !nJWHp
' ' + ' ^ 3'\v',rf!:^'S
JHSft 4PLM|b- 1 jgjjL
IVub^songiXand fdahcesYZmd,
minstrelsyfSH IRLEYj^TEMPLE
scores\ herfg teateitj/^ lumph^in
"Dimples,'^new Twentieth Century ' 1
Fnv titrhiY* iT)D
- "o
ORIGINAL PLOT
An oustanding cast has been a?sembled
by Darryl F. iianuck. in
charge of production for Twentieth
Century-Fox, for the picture, "Banjo
on My Knee," which opens Thurs.
Jan. 28 at the Henn Theatre. Barbara
Stanwyck and Joel McCiea ate
co-starred.
Dick Foram, the riding, shooting
and singing sensation of the scree
returns as the terror of the bad ,'ands
in "The Song of tbe Saddle", the
First National Western with music
Sat., Jan. 16, at the Henn Theatre.
say, Shirley mastered the routine <411
her next try.
HEATRE |
DAY, January 18-13 V.
Jlllit r.
Mm 1
iie Marie Annciie Eroelie /
I V
ar's most important cost in J $
UNION 7|
HERSKOLT i *?/!
HUDSON HELEN VINSON / / |
JWRVIILE ROBERT KENT J I $
PETERSON JOHN OUAliN. * I 'f
HART ) EDWARD EROMMRG '/ [ ?
HADEN TOM MOORE "fir
* '"""I MONTAGU 10VE w f; I A
* "? / f "I 1
xzxz^ssl |
I
k.Y, Jan. 20
IJT LOST A WOMAN'S LOVE! |