EVERYBODY’S
“BRED IN OLD KENTUCKY” A double delight is afforded picture fans at Everybody’s Theatre wita & combination of the one and only Viola Dana and a swift and exciting racehorse lilm that is refreshingly different from the usual type of such productions. “Bred in Old Kentucky" is the title, and it is an appropriate one for a story that so adequately brings out the romance of the turf and the racing >onies. As the little Irish girl rho )ses every cent she owns through the nanipulations of a crooked gang of gamblers, and who bravely starts out to rebuild her life and fortunes. Miss Dana has a role that fits her to perfection. Her characterisation of the part is easily among the test things she-, lias ever done, and is winning her a new host of admirers the counfty ovit. The supporting cast is well 9 to the standard set by the star, including such players as Jerry Miley, Jed Proutj’. James Mason. Roy Laidlaw and Josephine Crowell. ‘ The Merry Widow,” said to be one of the finest pictures ever produouL is at last definitely booked to release in New Zealand. The cast is headed by John Gilbert, Mae Murray, and Roy D’Arcy. “The Merry Widow" has won world-wide fame . It will have its first screening in Auckland shortly.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19271007.2.157.5
Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 169, 7 October 1927, Page 14
Word Count
219EVERYBODY’S Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 169, 7 October 1927, Page 14
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