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MAORILAND THEATRE.

MtRTH AND LAUGHTER. JOHNNY HINES IN “RAINBOW RILEY.” a Johnny Hines has a world wide reputation as a humorist, which even excels the best comedians now before the public. In “Rainbow Riley,” , Johnny Hines has a part which gives him special opportunities for putting over those eccentricities and thrill comedy scenes which have made such pictures as “The Live Wire, ’ ’ etc., a great success. Johnny Hines in this picture Inis his romance and the course.of true love nfever ran. smooth, but Johnny in his humorous fashion carried out every scene in a tornado of .laughter and. f rom the most absurd situations he seems to carry the girl of his heart by storm. Jojlinny Hines’ action and thrill incidents make you gasp and lauglv immoderately and “Rainbow Riley” is the best Johnny Hines big 8000 ft comedy to date. A good gazette and. a beautiful .scenic; makes this programmes .a most attractive one. The Maoriland Theatre will screen “Rainbow Riley,” on Wednesday next.

TO THOSE ABOUT TO WED,

It is wisest for a young man contemplating matrimony, when making arrangements for his wedding and-honey-moon trip, first to consult the girl; —in fact, to ask her will she marry him. - But Buster Keaton didn’t know this. And because of Buster’s ignorance in ' these matters, we have ‘ ‘ The Navigator,” a Met'ro-Goldwyn feature comedy which comes to the Maoriland Theatre next Wednesday. You see, the girl said to nim what any other girl would say to a fellow who came along and told her that she. was going to get married that evening. So Buster went, off on his honeymoon trip alone. Unfortunately be chose the wrong ship, and went aboard the “Navigator,” which some foreign' agents were preparing to destroy by setting it adrift minus the crew. It happened also that the girl came aboard the ship before the wreckers got to work, quite unknown to Buster. The next day—and for the next few* weeks—there was a ship on the high seas with a captain, a first mate, and there it finished. But what hapens in those few weeks, and later when the ship grounds on a cannibal isle and Buster goes deep sea diving to patch up a leak, just tosses you about helpless in. a surging, seething sea of laughter. , Never before have you laughed as you will laugh at “The Navigator.”'

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SNEWS19261130.2.23

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Shannon News, 30 November 1926, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
394

MAORILAND THEATRE. Shannon News, 30 November 1926, Page 3

MAORILAND THEATRE. Shannon News, 30 November 1926, Page 3

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