CRYSTAL PALACE AND EMPRESS
Gloria Swanson, the well-known screen actress and one with an enviable reputation as a player of dramatic parts, is earning renewed popularity in “The Trespasser,” her first talking picture, which is now to be shown at the Crystal Palace, Mount Eden, and Empress, Newton, Theatres. The picture is a study of pride and prejudice. Miss Swanson appears as a typist, who elopes with the son of one of Chicago’s wealthiest men. The father has the marriage annulled and orders his son to take a bride of his own social status. The typist is befriended by her former employer, and at his death is left living in luxury with her infant son. Then comes her greatest battle—the desire to shield her son, conflicting with the knowledge that the father can best ensure protection.
, Her struggles against convention make an absorbing , and the interest is maintained um T happy climax is reached. W Ames, William Holden and Blanche Frederic! hai e s nl P f‘' ate roles. e subordfc.
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Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 901, 19 February 1930, Page 14
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171CRYSTAL PALACE AND EMPRESS Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 901, 19 February 1930, Page 14
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