STATE THEATRE
DOUBLE FEATURE BILL. With the combined appeal of a Harold Bell Wright story and the popularity of Kichard Arlen, "Secret i Valley, 1 ' ^ a new outdoor ad venture arama of the New West, promises a new standard for outdoor screen adventures and screens at the State Theatre to-night. Vugorausly enacted by a capable cast, the Twentieth Century-Fox release is particularly notable for a novel plot which brings hard-riding ranchers into conflict with hard-boiled racketeers, thereby providing a double measure of exc-iteinent and thrills. Cdcely Courtneidge returns to the screen. at the State Theatre in great form in the second feature. Her latest comedy is from Gaumont-British, "Everybody Dance," and is full of ecintillating wit, hilarious sequenees, and bright, tuneful melody. As "Ladv Kate, ' ' a night club queen, Cic'ely finds herself saddled with two Amerdcan children who are unaware of . her notoriety in London circles. She poses as a lady-farmer of impeccable morals, and is made happier by the presence oi ' 1 Wilbur ' ' Ernest Truex, who has been sent to take the children back home.
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Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Issue 135, 24 June 1937, Page 12
Word Count
176STATE THEATRE Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Issue 135, 24 June 1937, Page 12
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