MAJESTIC THEATRE.
WARNER BAXTER IN "THE ARIZONA KID." The management of the Majestic Theatre is offering nest week something far off the beaten track in screen entertainment. "The Arizona Kid," a film play specially written for that versatile actor, Warner Baxter, is a talkie which claims no relationship to that multindinous array of stories which are based on either mystery, society, or backstage • drama. It is in a class by itself, neither comedy, nor straight drama, nor sheer romance, nor outdoor action play, but • little of all, so beautifully welded together that it is to be wondered that more pictures of this delightful type are not produced. "The Arizona Kid" presents Warner Baxter once more in that type of character wliioh ho made famous In "In Old Arizona," that bandit' of the old West who was a disarming mixture of bad man and good man. Chico, the Arizona Kid, with a price on his head and a sheriff's posse at his heels, is one of the most real people to flash across the screen. Box plans are now at The Bristol Piano Company. ' "THE THREE SISTERS." With the action in Italy and the southern atmosphere successfully achieved, a stirring dframa of • mother and her three daughters, "The Three Sisters," is showing at the Majestic Theatre this week.
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Press, Volume LXVI, Issue 20025, 5 September 1930, Page 19
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217MAJESTIC THEATRE. Press, Volume LXVI, Issue 20025, 5 September 1930, Page 19
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