HUNTERVILLE
ST. JAMES’ THEATRE. “THREE LIVE GHOSTS.” Rollicking comedy with an undertone of impending drama—screen adaptation of a b»*st selling novel and a re-cord-breaking play—with hall a dozen noted, figures in the leading roles—that’s “Three Live Ghosts,” Metro* Goldwyn-. Mayer’s newest contribution to the great art of laughter. It opens on Saturday at the St. James Theatre. Briefly, it’s the story of three devil-may-care young soldiers—one of them goofy from shell-shock—who came back from the war to find themselves officially “dead,” and who decide to stay that way. Their adventures as they move through London as nameless beings provide comedy and drama. Richard Arlen makes his debut in M-G-M pictures as the first of the “Live Ghosts, 7 ’ an American who enlisted in the British forces to escape trouble with his millionaire father.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19360618.2.13
Bibliographic details
Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 79, Issue 143, 18 June 1936, Page 3
Word Count
133HUNTERVILLE Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 79, Issue 143, 18 June 1936, Page 3
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