"THE NUT."
Douglas Fairbanks, who has established, a secure popularity in New Zealand through his work "in "The Three Musketeers" and "Robin' Hood," now offers something .entirely different: from his usual style, but in keeping with the good quality.of his stories. "The Nut." starring at Everybody's Theatre to-mor-row, features the star as a- Greenwich villager, a nut among "nuts," with a passion for eccentric inventions, and with a willingness .to do fool stunts in the hope of winning the hand, of his "nut" sweetheart, who has a plan based on her own theories of reforming the children of the slmns'by having them entertained regularly by members of the."4oo " Marguerite de la Motte and Barbara la Man; are 111 the leading female roles. The aupports_are unusually strong, and com- £?? ;Tw°-Cyl>nder Courtship" (comedy), "The Ogling Ogre" (Tony Lang cartoon), a most interesting Pathe Pic3w\^ £ c > test Pathe Gazetteiverjbody s Popular Orchestra adds further to the enjoyment in a programme of incidental music. ~
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CVI, Issue 16, 19 July 1923, Page 5
Word Count
160"THE NUT." Evening Post, Volume CVI, Issue 16, 19 July 1923, Page 5
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