ENTERTAINMENTS.
MAJESTIC THEATRE. Recklessly adventurous rather than romantic, Ronald Colman comes to tho Majestic-Theatre to-night and to-mor-row plight, in "The Unholy Garden. For the first time in two years, Colman is no longer the suave polished English gentleman. Instead, he is an outcast and a renegade, hiding out with a dozen other refugees from the law in a strango outpost at the edge ot the Sahara, Dishevelled and unshaven, hair tcuselled and clothes mussed, he is a sharp contrast to the nnmacu-latelv-groomed hero of "The Devil to Pay,'" "Baffles," and "Bulldog Drummond," his earlier pictures for Goldwyn. Estelle Taylor and Fay AVray have the principal feminine roles. As the wanton voluptuary of the story, Miss Taylor has the biggest part since her memorable appearance in "Cimarron." Miss Wray is the protected daughter of the embezzling recluse, hiding at the inn. An extraordinary fathering of character players appear as "the family," the exiled criminals whoso plottings and schemiugs give such, animation to the yam.
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Bibliographic details
Ashburton Guardian, Volume 54, Issue 193, 29 May 1934, Page 3
Word Count
163ENTERTAINMENTS. Ashburton Guardian, Volume 54, Issue 193, 29 May 1934, Page 3
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