HIS MAJESTY'S THEATRE.
The new revue at His Majesty's Theatre, "The Gramophone Girls,' 1 presented by the Harry Burgess Company,- pro* vides good fun for an hour and a-half. There is a mere suggestion of a plot in the revue, but there is sufficient to introduce a- round' dozen of musical numbers, dances, and nbvelty turns in a connected manner. Harry Burgess appears as an old-time American sheriff, Gus Franks is a success as a Jewish plumber, and Les Warton, Miss Ivy .Moore, Miss Linda Dale, and Mies Lola Hunt have suitable roles allotted them. Pagden and Stanley^ who head the vaudeville section of the new bill, are newcomers to Wellington. Their patter and song «furn is a string of laughs. Other artists appearing are Miss Maggie Foster, violinist; Jack and Cora Williams, in a specialty act; Pollard and Jackson, operatic singers; and Princess Mysteria, a mind reader. The programme will be repeated each evening during the week.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume XCIX, Issue 123, 25 May 1920, Page 3
Word Count
158HIS MAJESTY'S THEATRE. Evening Post, Volume XCIX, Issue 123, 25 May 1920, Page 3
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