MAJESTIC THEATRE
to-night. The Fox Film presentation of "i Loved You Wlednesday" opens at the Majestic Theatre to-night. The cast selected to portray the leading roles is one of the outstanding aggregations of recent screen releases. It features Warner Baxter, Elissa Landi, Miriam Jordan, Victor Jory and Laura Hope- Crews. The story of the film concerns an exotic ballet artist who becomts the world's most famous dancer. But the plot does not wholly concentrate on her suecess. It dramatises her love affairs and the underlying forces that kcep her fromi the man who adores her. Imposed upidn by a philandering dilettant of her student days, she cherishes this first romantic love as a thing of beauty. Later, when true love comes, the memory of that first affair and the glamorous life she has led .as a great public favourite, combine to shake her confidence in her own judgment. In a climax that is reported as one of tremendous sophistication and dramatic force she finds happiness with the man who loves her for what she is, rather than what she stands for. a novel feature of the screen play is the introduction of the colossal work at Boulder Da-m, -at which thousands of engineering pioneers and works are led by Warner Baxter in raan's struggle for supremacy over nature. Actual pictures of the project are woven into the story of an engineer's love for the dancer. Contrasted with' this is the presentation of the Dance of the Maidens. The seconr1 feature is "No Other Woman." Irene Dunne, Charles Bickford and Gwili Andre form the ettrnal triangle in this drama, which depicts the rise of a steel mill worker to opulence. But for the enterprise and desire of the wife to get awa y from the .grime and glare of th'e steel mill, the husband would never have been anything but a steel worker — the best steel worker in the company, true, hut alwa'ys sweating in the heat of the furnaces.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/RMPOST19331118.2.6.1
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Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 3, Issue 692, 18 November 1933, Page 3
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329MAJESTIC THEATRE Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 3, Issue 692, 18 November 1933, Page 3
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