GRAND THEATRE
TO-NIGFT. An exceptio-nally colourful backdround, an' appealinjg love theme, and an excellent oast headed by Lew Ayres and Ginger Rogers in Universal's "Don't Bet on Love," opens tonight at the Grand Theatre. Laid largely in the exciting atmosphere of the hor,se racing centres, "Don't Bet on Love" tells the human story of a young gambling "phenom" who knows more about horses than he does women. Ayres, starred in the role, skyrockets to the top as a bettinig sensation, but loses out in h'is romance with the more serious minded Ginger. After a hectic career in which he determines to oppose, with crooked methods, the biggest gambler at the tracks, Ayres stakes his entire fortune on the "big racs" and ■the suspense built up for this thrilling sequence is admirahle. Ayres, more romantic and sympathetic than ever, has a role tailormade for him. You'll like him, as the opening day audience enthusiastically demonstrated. His performance has an appeal that horders on genuine dramatic genius.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/RMPOST19331221.2.6.2
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Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 3, Issue 720, 21 December 1933, Page 3
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165GRAND THEATRE Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 3, Issue 720, 21 December 1933, Page 3
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