MAJESTIC THEATRE
TO-DAY AND TO-NIGHT. A good many of the present day films are adapted from stage suceesses and "Out of the Blue," now showing at the Majestic Theatre, is an excellent example. "Little Tommy Tucker," Gene Gerrard's most recent stage venture, forms the original story of the present film, which is a delightful and amusing production from the point ,of view of dancing, scenery and dialogue. The first part of the story takes place in Knaveston Towers, the home of that impoverished baronet, Sir Jeremy Tucker, and beautiful, country house settings are shown. Later in the story the scene shifts to Biarritz and depicts a most attractive cabaret scene. To Kay Hammond is entrusted the part of a hard-boiled fla]xper, delightfully, but none the less frankly on the make. Her hrisk, "all set" manner is a good foil to the sentimental dreaminess of Miss Matthews' "Tommy," and Kay makes of that very modern young woman, Miss Angela Tucker, an excellent character sketch.
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Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 2, Issue 303, 17 August 1932, Page 3
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163MAJESTIC THEATRE Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 2, Issue 303, 17 August 1932, Page 3
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