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MAJESTIC THEATRE

"ROSE MARIE.” ' In a production sweeping with song iand scented with romance, Jeanette i MacDonald and Nelson Eddy, those I celebrated co-stars of “Naughty jMariella,'’ appear on the screen of the iMajestic Theatre to-day in their well-known characters of light opera, ; "Rose Marie.” Under their magic I spell the full beauty of "The Indian 'Love Call." "Rose Marie," "Love You," ■ “Song of the Mounties,” and other I classics from the Herbert Stotharli Rudolf Fi’imi score, live again. More charming even than they were in the I record-breaking "Naughty Marietta," | “Rose Marie" is a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer triumph. Filmed almost entirely out-of-doors, in the mountainlike country of the .Sierra Nevadas, the production is a pictorial sensation. Glimmering lakes, towering peaks, dangerous passes, all the beauty of ! nature serves as background for the romantic saga of the Great Northwest. It was given full benefit of Director W. S. Van Dyke's proven talents and magnificently mounted by Producer Hunt Stromberg, the successful collaborators of "Naughty Marietta." “Rose Marie" is the story ol a Canadian grand opera singer who travels incognito into the backwoods regions in search o£ her brother, a criminal from justice. Also searching for the brother is Sergeant Bruce, of the Royal Canadian Mounted Poirce. | They meet and tall in love, until she realises the mission of the other. The crashing climax and poignant ending of the story will be remembered long after most pictures are forgotten. One of the outstanding sequences is the Totem Pole Indian Dance, the grotescue set mounted on a sandspit extending into a broad lake. Peopled by more than a thousand dancers, lavish in costume, with music thrillingly beautiful, it sets a new height for effect photography and spectacular direction. A strong supporting cast assists Miss MacDonald and Eddy in “Rose Marie," among them being James Stewart as the criminal brother, Reginald Owen as the star's manager, Allan Jones who scored so decisively in “A Night at the Opera," George Regas, Robert Greig, Una O'Connor and Lucien Littlefield.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19370607.2.110

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 80, Issue 133, 7 June 1937, Page 9

Word Count
332

MAJESTIC THEATRE Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 80, Issue 133, 7 June 1937, Page 9

MAJESTIC THEATRE Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 80, Issue 133, 7 June 1937, Page 9