o— I WM POWELL, AS CONDEMNED i MURDERER IN "ONE WAY j PASSAGE" ! Whether he plays a crook or a i club-man a detective or a crimj inal, William Powell is invari. ! ably the punctilious, perfectlyI mannered gentleman, the menace j with a smile and charm. What. ; ever his record in the eyes of the | police his standing in the draw. j ing room is perfect. This is strikingly demonstrated in "One Way \ Passage," the Warner Bros, proi duction. at the King's Theatre. | with Kay Francis again teamed j with. William Powell. j Not only is Powell a lawbreaker J and a fugitive from justice in this I romantic drama sharing the stellar I honours' with Kay Francis, but the j crime of murder has crowned his mis- ! deeds and ho is in headlong flight around the world in an effort to e.s, cape the noose. "One Way Passage" is the sixth picture in which Powell and Kay Francis have played together, the most repent of their joint appearances being "Jewel Robbery."
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume II, Issue 453, 5 January 1934, Page 8
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172Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 Stratford Evening Post, Volume II, Issue 453, 5 January 1934, Page 8
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