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KING'S THEATRE.

"River's Endi," not the least important of James Oliver Curwood's literary successes, which, depict life in the Fat North, has been made the subject of a screen story by Marshall Neilan, of the First National, and it heads the new bill at the King's Theatre to-night. The story is described as a particularly strong one, eminently . suitable for the screen, and it has the additional merit of, in some respects, breaking away from the orthodox. It concerns mainly two men, who bear a striking resemblance to each, other; the one a fngitive from the law, the other an officer' of the North-West Mounted. Police. How the outlaw in the uniform of the officer returns to civilisation and "makes good," leads lip to the completion of a rare picture, in which the work of Marjorie Daw and Lewis Stone is stated to play no small part. Noho Told, the possessor of a fine tenor voice, will be heard' in Maori folk songs, and the King's Grand Orchestra ,will also contribute.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19210826.2.13.8

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CII, Issue 49, 26 August 1921, Page 3

Word Count
171

KING'S THEATRE. Evening Post, Volume CII, Issue 49, 26 August 1921, Page 3

KING'S THEATRE. Evening Post, Volume CII, Issue 49, 26 August 1921, Page 3