KING'S THEATRE.
"For Heaven's Sake," Harold Lloyd's latest comedy, is the cuirent feature at the King's Theatre. The comedy presents the famous comedian in a new role, that of a millionaire clubman's attempt to uplift the inhabitants of the underworld. Lloyd's comedies are always worth seeing, for they are of the clean, wholesome type, and always contain sonie'of the comedian's amazing feats. Good supports are also shown and delightful incidental music is provided by the orchestra.
"Paradise for Two," featuring Richard Dix, will be shown at the XCing s Theatre nest Friday. Dix has an especially strong supporting east in this picture. Betty Brousou is featured as Sally Lane, the pretty little stage-struck girl who poses as his wife to help him collect a legacy of which his uncle Howard (Edmund Breese) is the trustee. Andre Beranger as Maurice, the theatrical producer, lives up to his reputation of comedian de luxe. There aro complications to the plot that form situations to make an audience hold its sides in laughter.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXIII, Issue 138, 15 June 1927, Page 6
Word Count
169KING'S THEATRE. Evening Post, Volume CXIII, Issue 138, 15 June 1927, Page 6
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