TIVOLI AND EVERYBODY’S
CHANGE ON THURSDAY “Red Lips,” starring Marion Nixon and Charles Rogers, and “Children of the Ritz,” with Dorothy Mackaill and Jack Mulhall, will be shown for the last time this evening at the Tivoli and Everybody’s Theatres. In one of the fastest fun frolics screened in many months, Reginald Denny’s latest comedy will be the chief feature on Thursday. It is “The ISTight Bird.” The story is exceptionally novel and deals with the private life of a prizefighter with enough actual fighting thrown in to thrill the most jaded movie palate. The fighter is shy of all femininity but his manager demands that he attend parties to help the box-office at his fights. He is immediately set upon by two “loye pirates” and befriends a little immigrant girl—whereupon extremely hilarious complications ensue. An attractive little newcomer plays opposite Denny in the person of Betsy Lee, a petite brunette with sparkling brown eyes. The “love pirates” of the Artists* Quarter are played with humorous abandon by Corliss Palmer and Jocelyn Lee. The prize fight manager is portrayed by Sam Hardy with his usual breeziness.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 681, 5 June 1929, Page 16
Word Count
186TIVOLI AND EVERYBODY’S Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 681, 5 June 1929, Page 16
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