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THE PALACE THEATRE.

"So Ends Our Night" will have its final showing at the Palace Theatre to-night. To-morrow Don Ameche Betty Grable, and Robert Cummings Head an entertaining team in "Moon Over Miami." Charlotte Greenwood and Jack Haley are the chief funsters. It is filmed in technicolour, sprinkled with hit tunes by Leo Robin and Ralph Rainger. Certain to become popular favourites are "Kindergarten Conga," "Hurrah for To-day," "Miami," "I've Got You All to Myself," "Loveliness and Love," "You Started Something," "Is That Good?" and "Solitary Seminole." Daneed to these numbers are the eye-catching routines by Betty Grable, Dance Director Hermes Pan, The Condos Brothers, and Jack Cole. First Betty and Hermes do a spectacular Conga. Incidentally this is Pan's first appearance, although he's been drilling dancers for years. He created and directed all the dances for Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, and Carmen Miranda. Jack Cole, one of the nation's finest interpretative dancers, brings to life via music and choregraphy, a mythical story of the Seminole Indians in the Everglades. Thirty couples, all ln brilliant costumes, accentuating the Indian motif, provide the background for Cole's sensational dance. For another spectacular routine, Betty teams up with the Condos Brothers, who are to dancing what swing is to music, in a number called "You Started SQmething." The picture just wouldnt be complete without a comedy turn by Charlotte Greenwood and Jack Haley, and the two favourites, who are also featured with Carole Landis and Cobina Wright, Jr., in "Moon Over Miami," do some fast, side-splittlng stepping.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MEX19421022.2.53.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Marlborough Express, Volume LXXVI, Issue 249, 22 October 1942, Page 6

Word count
Tapeke kupu
254

THE PALACE THEATRE. Marlborough Express, Volume LXXVI, Issue 249, 22 October 1942, Page 6

THE PALACE THEATRE. Marlborough Express, Volume LXXVI, Issue 249, 22 October 1942, Page 6

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