CIVIC THEATRE.
It has bees the aim of the management of the Civic Theatre to present programmes of outstanding merit, and this week two splendid pictures and a special musical interlude have been arranged. "The Battls of the Sexes," produced by D. W. Griffith, is a powerful modern play packed with genuine pathos and fine humour. Jean Heraholt has the lead, and those *'ho hsve seen this aotor in any of his previous pictures will agree that in "The Battle of the Sexes" be upholds bis reputation as of the best character-actors on the screen. Playing the part of an unfaithful husband and father, Hersholt gives a perfectly human interpretation. "Steamboat Bill, ■Tun.," the other feature, ia Buster Keaton's latest. A tornado which destroys a Mississippi steamboat and al» most everyone but Buster is a gem of trick photography, and there are some thrilling rescues on a swollen, angry river. The musical side of the programme is something cut of the ordinary.
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Press, Volume LXV, Issue 19669, 12 July 1929, Page 15
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162CIVIC THEATRE. Press, Volume LXV, Issue 19669, 12 July 1929, Page 15
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