TIVOLI AND EVERYBODY’S
“LONESOME" The villain in a moving picture isn’t always a person. In “Lonesome,” Universal’s mighty human drama, which is now at the Tivoli and Everybody’s Theatres, the villain is lonesomeness, a compelling force of life that drives the characters throughout the story. The picture is acclaimed one of the most beautiful productions seen on the screen. Glenn Tryon, the star, and Barbara Kent, the featured lady, play the only roles of importance. In “Lonesome,” Tryon appears in a role entirely different from any he has ever played and which definitely proves his facile genius. The story concerns the search for happiness of a boy, played by Tryon, and a girl, played by Barbara Kent. Ciiics everywhere have hailed the picture as one of the greatest forward step in screen technique within the last two years. It was directed by the new Hungarian director. Paul Fejos. known as the De Maupassant of the screen. Bright supporting films, including Ken Maynard’s, “The Californian Mail,”
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19290812.2.157.3
Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 739, 12 August 1929, Page 15
Word Count
165TIVOLI AND EVERYBODY’S Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 739, 12 August 1929, Page 15
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