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MAJESTIC THEATRE

“MAISIE” A story of a girl stranded in unfamiliar surroundings is told in "Maisie,” which concludes to-day at the Majestic Theatre, Ann Sothern plays with vivacity and charm and grips her audience from jthe start. It is really Ann Sothern’s i picture, though Robert Young is excellent is Slim, and Ruth Hussey clis- | guises herself as a really bad woman [with success. “The Beachcomber” | "The Beachcomber,” which opens toI morrow at the Majestic Theatre, I marks the highest point in the distinI guished career of the great screen i actor Charles Laughton. Based on a W. Somerset Maugham story, the picture casts Laughton in the role of "Ginger Ted,” a unique and interesting characterisation which he handles with all the adroitness and linish which he lent to the parts of Captain Bligh in "Mutiny on the Bounty" and the title role of "Rembrandt.” At the inception of the action, "Ginger Ted” is disrupting the peace of a tropical Dutch Indies island. English remittance man and beachcomber, he is al odds with the scheme of things on the island. The island’s Dutch eontroleur, a missionary named Miss Jones, and her brother Dr. Jones, have a hard time trying to control him. Yet the eontroleur prefers his company to that of the strict, humourless Miss Jones and her fussy brother. At the same Lime Miss Jones is having a difficult lime keeping "Ginger” away from her native girl students. In the course of the story "Ginger” and Miss Jones are marooned on a reef for a night, along with two native boys. She is frantic with fear. But Laughton ignores her —a fact which brings mingled emotions in her reaction. She decides that it is her duty to bring out the good in his nature. Her method of doing this, and his battle for his freedom, provide interesting and stimulating motivation for the remainder of the drama. Charles Laughton's wife, Elsa Lanchester, delivers a fine performance as Miss Jones. Tyrone Guthrie, in a role of Dr. Jones, and Robert Newton as the eontroleur, are outstanding members of the supporting cast. Erich Pommer produced and directed the picture for Mayflower.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19400222.2.72

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 84, Issue 44, 22 February 1940, Page 7

Word Count
359

MAJESTIC THEATRE Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 84, Issue 44, 22 February 1940, Page 7

MAJESTIC THEATRE Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 84, Issue 44, 22 February 1940, Page 7