CRAVEN

IN EASY-ACCESS' INNER FOIL PACKETS, ALSO IN "TRU-VAC" '50' TINS When we sea) the TRU-VAC airtight TIN the FACTORY. FRESHNESS of CRAVEN "A

the

is securely imprisoned until she wali broken by pulling rubber no cutler: jagged edges,

110

CRAVEN

VIRGINIA RIGARETTES

CRAVEN A

HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1935.

They

Vary!

never

She knows that Craven “A” do not affect her throat and She appreciates that extra touch of QUALITY!

Remember

CRAVENA

ARE MADE SPECIALLY TO PREVENT SORE THROATS MADE IN LONDON, ENGLAND, BY CARRERAS LTD

CA.138

BEHIND THE SCREEN IN HOLLYWOOD

It is an acknowledge fact that (and Disney's comical Walz sometimes iractious) characters Mickey in his which appear Mouse and Sly Symphony pro- ductions are universally recog nized as familiar incarnations of familiar people by the millions of flm fans who see their capers. every year on the screen. Mickey reminds somebody of a schoolboy acouaintance. To somebody else he is very much ke mischievous cousin Ralph. To another he is the embodiment "of his honour. Judge Brown, the "popular city official who year after year car- ries out his duty toward the peo- pie with sympathetic and digni- fied eclat, a public personage who never misses a chance to help to entertain the orphans in the ID- cal hospital, one who has a kind ly eve and a jovial smile when- ever calamity threatens the un- fortunate victim of circumstan- ees who is brought before his tri- bunal

Not long ago, in London, a spe- cial preview of a new Walt Dis- ney p'cture was arranged for a personality of international fame who heretofore had never seen Disney production. Arturo Toscanini--acknowledged to

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the foremost orchestra leader in the whole world..

THE BAND CONCERT: The great man arrived, took his seat, and as a small group of Intimate friends of the musical world of London, Rome and New Kork watched with him, the Ars Mickey Mouse picture in colour, "The Band Concert, was, appro priately enough, flashed on the screen. In this film, Mickey is the leader of a band comprised cf his numerous playmates and during their rendition of the

piece! And that Donald Duck-- hot no he is so funny! And yet

Do you kno such a nuisance.

in my orchestra work-I too have myy Donald Ducks!"

CHATTERTON FLYING HIGH Her successful fight from New York to Los Angeles in her own Stinson plane has not taken the edge off Ruth Chatterton's keen delight in aviation. Every min ute away from Columbia &tud.os. where she is conferring on the cos umes for A Feather in Her Ha which wil, go into produc- tion within a week, is spent in the skies..

11

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46

Miss Chatterton is one of the very few actresses to own pilot's license and the only one who owns her own pane. Het trip from New York to Los Ange- les was made in 20 hours flying lime, but since she travelled in slow stages, stopping for lunch, tea and dinner wherever she wished, she took three days in Crossing the continent.

The first night. was, spent in

St. Louis. Taking off at 10 AM.

Melvyn Douglass, as seen in "Dangerous Corners." "The Blind Road" and "Counsellor at Law." has an outstanding role in the Colbert vehicle, 95 has Jean Dixon, who rose to fame in the stage hit "Once in a Lifetime." Among her screen appearances: are "Mr. Dynamite" and "I*} Love You always," the last for Columbia.

SOTHERN OPTIONED Columbia Pictures to-day eä- ercised its option on the services of Arn. Sothern who has the leading role in "The Girl Friend," now in production at Columbia under the direc.on of Eddie Buz- z.

Miss Sothern was placed under contrae, by Columbia a little over

a year ago. Her first. picture for the sudio, Let's Fall In Love." was a success and since then ber progress has been phenomenal,

to her Columbia In addition plc.ures, "The Party's. Over," "The Hell Cat" and "Blind Date." she was borrowed for Melody in Spring," "Feilles Borgere" and Kid.. Millions." Her first star-

she reached Tulsa, Oklahoma, inring vehicle was "Eight Bella," a

time for lunch and stopped at

Columbia picture recently releas-

El Paso, Texas, for the night.. ed. Lunch the third day was obtain- ed in Tocon, Arizona, and a few minutes after five she set her bright red plane down at the Los Angeles Municipal, Airport and very matter of factly walked into the cafe and ordered tea as if her fight across country

was nothing out of the ordinary.

Alfred Bantell will direct Miss

Chatterton In "A Feather In Her Hat."

HARTLETT WINS LONG-TERMER

Michael Bartlett, as a result of W liam Tell "Overture," Donald his performance in the Co Duck appears, blows a toy whis-lumbia's second Grace Moore tle tries to sell peanuts to the vehicle, has been placed un- musicians and otherwise at der Jong-term contract by tempts to annoy his busy victimna

over, When the picture was Bignor Toscaning and his friends were howling with laughter.do

This Disney is magnificant

were the first he's a gun us," words the great symphony leader saldahin, mork: 18-A master

Columbia Pictures and has been cast opposite Claudette Col bert in "She Married Her Boss, one of the prize week Basign=" ments, of the year The picture goes to production next week under the direction of Gregory La Cara

"THE GIRL FRIEND" Late additions to the cast of The Girl Friend the Columbia picture with Ann Bothern, Jack Haley and Roger Pryor, Include Jack Costello, Fred Mayan, Alleen M Covington, Juanita Field, Anya Taranda Cleo Cullen, Märbeta

Wright Ruth Elley, Beverly Roy de, Jean Joyce, Doris Carlyle and Dee Powell

The screen play of The Dil Friend" is by Gertrude Purd

and Benny Rubio. zel is directing.

"Tidle Bm

making

TWINS MAKE DEBUT The Bletter, twins, -and Selwyn, are siz...

their screen debut in The Black Boom, the Columbia ple starring Boris Karlot, The the sons of John Bić plays the role of Franz Karof vehicle. Roy Wax Hellt is the director,

THE FUTURE OF

COLOUR FILMS

The successful exhibition of has "Becky Sharp" in London had the anticipated effect, and heightened the interest of British Alm producers in the new colour process to such an extent that the announcement of the forma- tion of a British Technicolor company is hourly expected. with laboratories near London, work- ing in association with Alexan- der Korda

and London Films, writes a correspondent.

For the past week dally" con- ference have been held be- tween Korda and his associate company, Gerrard Industries, and Dr. and Mrs. Kalmus, representing American Techni- colour. Dr. Kalmus has been in- vestigating the studio plant both at Isleworth, where Korda's com→ pany is temporarily located, and at Denham where the new studios are to be opened shortly, and,, I understand that the deal actually went through late in the week

at

The situation becomes more: 11-. teresting in view of the fact that, Korda, through Gerrard Indus- tries, already has a colour sys- tem of his own, known as "Hill- man Colourgravure, which one" time he thtended to use as the vehicle for "Lawrence of Arabia." He now COMES out with the frank statement that he will

abandon the Hillman process as such, although » 'cer-. tain of its principles may be in- corporated in the new patenta pool and useď In conjunction with Technicolour.

"PERFECT SYSTEM"

"A

man knows when he 18 beaten," he admits, in speaking of his use of the Hillman system. With regard to Technicolour... he considers that "the system is now practically perfect." It was Intended at first. I understand, to use "Cyrano de Bergerac" as the Arst subject for the new medium, but now the film named for its probable debut is "Eliza beth of England;

The new British Technicolour company is likely to be control- ed by a board of six directors, three representing the interests of American Technicolour, and three from the London Filma- Gerrard Industries side. It s hoped to build a laboratory, or convert an existing plant, on a. scale to employ over 200 people, chemists. dye experts, camera- men, phototechnicians of every klad.

GENE RAYMOND and FRANCES DRAKE.

TRANSIENT LADY"

UNIVERSAL Coming on Thursday at the King's

Theatre.

For the Brst six months Mrs. Natalle Kalmus, wife of the in- ventor of Technicoleur and art director in chief of all the Technicolour product, will over- see the work of the new labora tory.

f

Mrs. Kalmus, who was the blonde heroine of Dr. Kalmus's first colour mm The Gulf Be- tween." In 1921, turned her at tention to the technical side, of the business in Its very early

After an art trainin

Habe ged in a long and ompre

study of optics She has

mad

dziess to costumes, ant

picture.put

the most amclent and

know- ledgeable women connected, with the fillin industry in any capacity to-day.

There isn't a trick of the trade that Mrs. Kalmus doesn't know. and colour photography, she tells me. is full of tricks,

k

COLOUR THAT "KILL"

"You have to learn how one. range of colours will kill an- other," she says: "I don't · mean' kill in the artistic sense, but. literally destroy them. You can't" for instance,. use the strong hard colours along with the pastel shades. The colour in the Waterloo sequence of 'Becky Sharp' had all to to keyed up to the scarlet of the officers' uni- forms, I had to use strong greens, and blues, and reds, whereas in the drawing-room scenes I could-keep my palette down to the softer shades- mauve, and apricot, and dave- grey.

X

"A bright red can kill a pastel tint, if they are used too close together. Sometimes I've done it deliberately for a purpose. "give you a case in point. There was a picture we once made for Metro-Goldwyn that had a swan ballet, girls

costumes in swan dancing around a pool. Well, In Technicolour, as you know, we don't use dead white to get a white effect. "but egg-shell or flesh plak..I was very busy at the time, with two other pictures on my hands, and I left the cos tumes for the swan sequence to my young assistant, who hadn't been with us long. I suggested he used pink. and he did use, pink, but when I came to look at it he'd used the wrong pink. and those swans came cut a lovely shade of apple blossom. Well, there was only one thing to be done, and I did M. I put R border of red roses round the pool and killed the pink

DOZENS OF TRICKS

*

There are dozens of tricks ut that kind that have to be learnt by anybody who wants to work in Technicolour she went on. "It's less a study or art than a study of opties, and I'd always prefer to take a pupil without any of the preconceived art- school ideas of colour -and form. As colour potography develops, too, the tricks of the trade are constantly changing.”

The new Techicolour, used for the first time a year ago by Walt

Disney in his "Silly Symphonies," and breaking into the full fea- Eure

feld with "Becky Sharp,” is now working, according to Mrs. Kalmus, with a ful-colour palette. In the earlier days of Technicolor, at the time of

Whoopee!" and "The King Jazz" the spectrum was merely split in two, with the result that the colours at each end of the spectrum did not get enough light. Now the spectrum is evenly split among the three primary colours, red, green, and used sa yellow with black fourth colour, and every shade, is claimed, gets its full value."

The

deve

VICTOR MC-

LAGLEN

To Play Great Dramatic Role

ال

When you see as you will you're wise RKO Radio's Alm version of Liam O'Flaherty's mighty novel, "The Informer," actor will see a first-rate you performing the greatest role he has yet played.

That the splan is big Victor McLajlen, cursed too long with blistering comedy roles at the "'sex' you" school. Motion picture

fans, therefore, often forget what a realy swell actor Man-Moun-

RADIO

Broadcast by Z.B.W.

on 355 Metres

12.30 to 2.15 pm-European pro

gramme.

12.30 pm.-Recorded music.

1 pm-Local time and weather

report.

1.15 pm--Hong Kong Hotel Or

chestra.

1.30 p.m-Reuter Press Bulletins.

Ruby Press News, etc..... 2.15 p.m. Close down.

4 to 7 pm-Chinese programme."; 6 to 8.15 p.m.-Children's Studio.

"Concert.

7

to 77 p.m.-European

gramme.

tain McLanglen really is-until 7 to 7.17 p.m.-... one of his big performances fair- ly blazes out at them.

Such an occasion came la31 608- son, when he appered as the die- hard British sergeant in that eple of desert gallantry, "The Lost Patrol," made by RKO Ra- dio. Now comes an even greater, hls screen creation of Gype No- lan, a bulking brute who betrays his friend for a fee, and is relent- lessly hounded by his own bitter destiny.

This grim but thrilling story of one foggy Dublin night was film- ed by John Ford, who made "The Lost Patrol," and Big Vic jumpėd at the chance to play Gypo. Ford and McLanglen understand and trust each other. Together, with the help of a remarkable cast, they have" turned out one of the year's most notable dramas,

COLOURFUL LIFE

No man in Hollywood has led a 5.ranger or more colourful" life than Vic McLanglen. The son of a bishop of The Church of Eng- land, he grew up a wanderer in all the world's far places.

He ran away from home and. enllated in the British Army. He became. Prix fighter and fought a no-decision fight with champion Jack Johnson. He tra- veled with medicine shows, acted in vaudeville and played in mo- Lon pictures here and abroad.

A captain in the British army, he served with the expeditionary force in Mesopotamia, and ended the word war as Provost-Marshal of the holy Arabian city of Bag- dad:

.i.

The fullness of time found him in Hollywood--and suddenly, in "The Cock-Eyed Word," he be- came world famous. The team of McLanglen and Edmund Lowe became popular wherever movies ire shown--and while the rough and ready, hard-boiled partner- ship brought him fame and filled his pockets, it hid too long his ability as a crestor of powerful. dramatic screen roles.

From this deadly routine "The Lost Patrol" rescued him last season, and his work in It is still talked about by true fim de- votees. After another 12-months: in mediocre movies, again Mc- Laglen breaks out in a thunder- ous role perfectly suited to his type and talents.

Vie McLaglen was a great and · comical. marine sergeant in his teaming days, surely but his "Lost Patrol" sergeant, and his mighty Gypo Nolan in "The In- former" w' be remembered by the faithful when The Cock- Eyed World" and its endless car- bon copies are long forgotten.

COLMAN AGAIN

For the second time in his film career, Ronald Colman must part with his famous moustache.

Colmán * appeared without moustache in Clive Of India.

been For two weeks he has baring the upper up to the de- sert sun

coddiing, coaxing and cultivating another moustache.

It had reached the sheen and maturity of its former splendor when a telephonic thunderbolt Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios sounded the death war- rant of the new moustache.

from

And now he must sacrifice IL again for this new rate as Sydney Carton in A Tale of Two Cities. Bowing to the dictates of ac curacy, Producer David O. Bell- nick and Director Jack Conway have sent condolences to Coʻman with a compromise permitting him to wear a wig..

pro-

Vocal Genis Ruddigore (Gilbert and Sull

van).

Floradora (Stuart). 7.17 to 7.30 pm.-

A Planoforte Recital by Benno Molsetvitch

1. Grillen (Schumann)."

2. Polonaise in B Mat Major

Chopin, Op. 71, No. 2).

3. Isoldens Liebestod (Liszt). 7.30 to 8 pm.

»

From the Studio "The Revellers." Hong Kong Hotel Dance Orchestra

Playing a programme of Fox Musical Hits from Talkies coming to the King's Theatre shortly.

1. It's an old Southern Custom-

Fox-Trot

From the Fox Picture "George

White's 1935 Scandals."

2. According to the Moonlight.-

Fox-Trot

From the Fox Picture "George

White's 1935 Scandals"

3. Oh, I Didn't Know-Fox-Tro

From the Fox Picture "George

White's 1935 Scandals."

4. Hunkadcla,--Fox-Trot,

From the Fox Picture "George White's 1935 Scandals."

5. Five Little Reasons for Hap-

piness.--Fox-Tròt. ("." From the Fox Educational

Cartoon Five Puplets."

·6. Our Little Girl-Waltz,

From the Fox Picture "Our Little Giri featuring Shir- ley Temple.

8 pm. Local time and weather re-

port,

3.03 to 810 p.m-Banjo Bolos by

Ken Harvel.

8.10 to 8.20 p.--

* From the Studio "What do you talk about?" by

by Garrulous.

0.20 to 8.47 pat

De Groot and his Orchestra

Call"Rose 1. Indian Love

Marie."--Friml

2. Until Sanderson

3. Ay, Ay, Ay, Perez

4. Stanchen.-Strauss.

5. When the Great Red Dawn is

Shining Sharpe

6. Zinetta Geebl

7. Vienna Blood-Waltz-Strauss. & Blue Danube Waltz Strauss. 847 to 8-pm-

-9

Four Songs by Ladenne Boyer (Soprano)

1. Dans

Toi ----Tango

(Scotto)..

B1. Petite (Claret)

Chante

3. Dans la Fumee (Visions i

Sznoke) (Bos).",

4. Parlez-Mid": D'Amour

(Speak

to me of Love) (Lenoir). Va to 9.15 p.m.-A Relay of the Daventry News Bulletin (Copy- right by Reuter).

9.15 to 10 pm

From the Studio

A Variety Concert by Doreen Ma, Ray Remedios, A. W.

Whitehead, The Rhythm Boys". and Ted Castro.

11 pm. Close down-i

BERLIN PROGRAMMET

9 pm-DJQ, DJB Announcement

(Germ, Engl.). S

German Folk Song, ⠀ Programme Forecast (Germ...

9.15 pm-Woman's Programme:

Recital by the Elisabeth' Käyper Women's Choʻri kebyRE "Folk Songs of All Nations./"": 9.30 pm-"The New German. Policy in Art Power, State, and Culture. 9.45pm-News in English on DJC

and in Dutch on DJB.

10 D.Königskinder by E-

gelbert – Humperdinck, ✨ Seleç- tions from the Opera Conduc- tor: Werner Richter Reich- helm

11.15 pm-News in German on ________DJQ and DJB_HEA

11.30 pm - Current Events:

1135 pm Little Wreath of

Roses

Radio Sequence by Johanna Ant

germann

ment, 023. experts

Ket all

hree;

given

for

de which proves my success CUES ---13.15 not depend upon the appearance

de

of my upper lip..

the

comb my hair??

ighed:

midnight Folk Intrument Boloista

News in English and to Dutch

DJQ,DJE

2

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