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STATE THEATRE

LAST NIGHT OF BOBBY BREEN. The outstanding programme at the State Theatre, headed by Bobby Breen in "Fisherman’s Wharf," will be finally shown tonight. "TWELVE CROWDED HOURS." Marking his first portrayal of a newspaper reporter since the immortal "Cimarron,” Richard Dix again scored in “Twelve Crowded Hours,” an exciting screen drama which comes to the State Theatre tomorrow night. Lucille Ball has the feminine lead opposite the popular star. The story deals with the activities of an enterprising reporter who bitterly attacks the city's underworld through his columns. One of his articles backfires, however, and inadvertently brings about the unjust conviction of his sweetheart’s brother. When the city editor and two other men are killed by the organised ring, the news hound decides to take to the trail himself and do what he can to smash the gang. His efforts along this line involve himself, his girl and her brother in a web of underworld intrigue, their narrow escapes heightening the suspense of the exciting story. One of the highlights of the picture is the unique manner in which the racketeer’s enemies are "rubbed out.” A specially reinforced 10-ton truck is used to wreck automobiles in which the luckless victims are riding. In addition to Richard Dix and Lucille Ball, the cast in "Twelve Crowded Hours” includes Allan Lane, John Arledge, Cy Kendall, Donald Macßride, Granville Bates and Dorothy Lee. The determined efforts of a young cattleman to clear the father of the girl he loves from an unfounded charge of robbery and murder, and his brilliant expose of the real criminals, comprise the dual theme of George O'Brien’s new western, “Trouble in Sundown,’ the other attraction. O’Brien is cast as the rancher who comes to the assistance of his sweetheart’s father, a banker, accused of stealing 90,000 dollars from his own bank, and murdering the night watchman. The capture of the banker by the sheriff, the efforts of a certain faction of citizens to lynch him, the heated trial, and O'Brien’s sensational discovery of the actual robbers and their unique device for cracking the bank safe, all lead to the action-crammed climax. Rosalind Keith portrays the banker’s daughter, while Ray Whitley, Chill Wills, Ward Bond, Cyrus W. Kendall and Howard Hickman have other important roles.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAITA19390807.2.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Times-Age, 7 August 1939, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
378

STATE THEATRE Wairarapa Times-Age, 7 August 1939, Page 2

STATE THEATRE Wairarapa Times-Age, 7 August 1939, Page 2

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