AMUSEMENTS
THE REGENT. “EVENINGS FOR SALE.” “Evenings for Sale,” the Paramount picture which comes to the Regent Theatre to-day, when it wiH be shown at matinee and evening jmmformances, is a Viennese romance, six to the melodies of Strauss. Herbert Marshall, the star of “Trouble in Paradise,” appears as an impoverished nobleman, and Sari Maritza as the very charming daughter of a bourgeois merchant. “Evenings for Sale” tells how Frand and Lela (Marshall and Maritza), meet at a masked ball, and how Franz, who had looked eagerly forward to suicide on the preceding morning, finds that he wants to live so much that he is even willing to accept work as a paid entertainer in a cafe run by his former butler. There he meets Jenny Kent (Mary Bolaad), an American widow in Vienna for a vacation, and quite innocently the simplehearted Jenny becomes the third in a strange triangle. The film is described as a charming and delightful piece of entertainment, distinguished by its I cast and by its brilliant direction at the hand of Stuart Walker. Seats may be reserved at Perry’s, ’phone 2496. COSY THEATRE. DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAMME. Two big features —Zone Grey’s “Wild Horse and “He Learned About Women’’--are included in tbjfr new programme to be screened at Cosy Theatre this evening. Appropriate music will be played! by Miss Mason on the Wurlitzer organ. “Wild Horse Mesa” is based on one of Zane Grey’s most popular stories, dealing with the great wild horse herd of the West, descendants of blooded animals that had escaped from early Spanish explorers. Chane Wevmer, a friend of the Indians on whose territory the last of the great herd sought refuge, deals in these horses legitimately, and fights the barbarous methods of Rawlins and other horse thieves. Randolph Scott, Sally Blane and Fred Kohler are the featured players. In “He Learned About Women,” the principal parts are taken bv Stuart Erwin, Alison Skipworth and Susan Fleming. The story is that of young George Kendall, 111., who, up to the time lie inherits the Kendall fortune of fifty million dollars, has kept his nose buried in a book, and has been innocently unaware of the facts of life. The manner in his education progresses under the structicn of Madame Polidor, ex-actress, played by Alison Skipworth. and others, provides plenty of material for comedy. Seats may be reserved at Perry’s, ’phone 2496.
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Wairarapa Daily Times, 14 June 1933, Page 2
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399AMUSEMENTS Wairarapa Daily Times, 14 June 1933, Page 2
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