THE STUDIO GIRL
The romantic com eel v drama entitled 'The Studio Girl,' Constance Talmadge's latest and saucy performance, is the headliner on the now programme to be screened for the first time to-night at the Octagon Theatre. The story is adapted from tile French by Paul West, and tells of a young girl with an artistic temperament, who linds life with her two maiden aunts in a, simple sea-coast town extremely dull and uninteresting. When an artist from the oity appears for a rest, her life receives a certain stimulus, and whiU he is there she i« happy. 'The maimer in which she forces him to take her away with him, and how finally they are married after the artist di:--f:;)vo.rs the hypocrisy of his fiancee, puts a briskly humorous finish on a pietuie which has entertained from the very start. Constance Talmadg© rises to every situation with a sincerity and ease that is admirable. And so well does she characterise Celia Laird that anything offensive that might have found its way into the picture because of tho risque situations is altogether precluded. Therj will be the usual supports.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 17032, 1 May 1919, Page 6
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190THE STUDIO GIRL Evening Star, Issue 17032, 1 May 1919, Page 6
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