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Omeka Image File
The metadata element set that was included in the `files_images` table in previous versions of Omeka. These elements are common to all image files.
Width
722
Height
951
Bit Depth
8
Channels
3
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Milane Theatre Collection
Alternative Title
Milane Collection
Subject
Sanford (Fla.)
Buildings--Florida
Theaters--Florida
Film industry (Motion pictures)
Description
The Milane Theatre was built at 203 South Magnolia Avenue, the former location of the Star Theatre, an abandoned movie house. Scroggs and Ewing, architects from Georgia, prepared the plans for the Milane. The name of the new theater was derived from the combination of the Milane Amusement Company president and vice president: Frank L. Miller and Edward F. Lane, respectively. The Milane opened in July of 1923 and seated 823 patrons.
In 1933, the Milane was sold to Frank and Stella Evans, investors from Lake Mary, Florida. The new owners renamed their business the Ritz Theater and held the property until the 1990s. However, the Ritz struggled financially in the 1960s and closed in 1978 due to failure to compete with the new multiplex theaters. The building remained vacant until 1984, when it reopened as the Showtime Cantina. The Showtime Cantina closed in 1988 and remained vacant and in decay.
In the mid-1990s, Ritz Community Theater Projects, Inc. acquired the property and began rehabilitation in 1998. On May 6, 2000, the theater reopened as the Helen Stairs Theatre in honor of the citizen who led the restoration project, Helen Stairs. The following year, the location was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. In 2008, additional renovations were completed and the theater was renamed the Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center in honor of the Wayne Densch Charitable Trust Fund for contributing to the renovations fund.
Language
eng
Coverage
Opera House, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Star Theatre, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Milane Theatre, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Ritz Theatre, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Showtime Cantina, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Helen Stairs Theatre, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Contributor
Cepero, Laura Lynn
<a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/departments-services/leisure-services/parks-recreation/museum-of-seminole-county-history/" target="_blank">Museum of Seminole County History</a>
<a href="http://thehistorycenter.org/">Orange County Regional History Center</a>
<a href="http://www.sanfordfl.gov/index.aspx?page=456">Sanford Museum</a>
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/16" target="_blank">Sanford Collection</a>, Seminole County Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
External Reference
"<a href="http://www.stageclick.com/venue/457.aspx" target="_blank">Helen Stairs Theatre</a>." StageClick. http://www.stageclick.com/venue/457.aspx.
"<a href="http://www.wdpac.com/footer-menu/theater-history/" target="_blank">Theater History</a>." Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center. http://www.wdpac.com/footer-menu/theater-history/.
"<a href="http://www.wdpac.com/footer-menu/theater-history/" target="_blank">Theater History</a>." Seminole County: Florida's Natural Choice. http://www.visitseminole.com/listingdetail/53/wayne-densch-performing-arts-center.aspx.
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Original Format
1 newspaper sectional
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
This Week in Sanford: Amusement Section (June 21, 1926)
Alternative Title
This Week in Sanford: Amusement Section
Subject
Sanford (Fla.)
Buildings--Florida
Theaters--Florida
Film
Description
Advertisement for the Milane Theatre's feature showing of <em>Just Suppose</em>, for the week of June 21, 1926.<br /><br />The Milane Theatre was built at 203 South Magnolia Avenue, the former location of the Star Theatre, an abandoned movie house. Scroggs and Ewing, architects from Georgia, prepared the plans for the Milane. The name of the new theater was derived from the combination of the presidents of the Milane Amusement Company president and vice president: Frank L. Miller and Edward F. Lane. The Milane opened in July of 1923 and seated 823 patrons.<br /><br />In 1933, the Milane was sold to Frank and Stella Evans, investors from Lake Mary, Florida. The new owners renamed their business the Ritz Theater and held the property until the 1990s. However, the Ritz struggled financially in the 1960s and closed in 1978 due to failure to compete with the new multiplex theaters. The building remained vacant until 1984, when it reopened as the Showtime Cantina. The Showtime Cantina closed in 1988 and remained vacant and in decay.<br /><br />In the mid-1990s, Ritz Community Theater Projects, Inc. acquired the property and began rehabilitation in 1998. On May 6, 2000, the theater reopened as the Helen Stairs Theatre in honor of the citizen who led the restoration project, Helen Stairs. The following year, the location was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. In 2008, additional renovations were completed at the theater was renamed the Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center in honor of the Wayne Densch Charitable Trust Fund for contributing to the renovations fund.
Source
Digital reproduction of original newspaper article: <em>This Week in Sanford</em>, Vol. 01, No. 23, June 21, 1926, page 3: Item number DP0008900. Central Florida Memory. <a href="http://digitalcollections.lib.ucf.edu/u?/CFM,120797" target="_blank">http://digitalcollections.lib.ucf.edu/u?/CFM,120797</a>.
Publisher
Curnick, Arthur R.
Date Created
ca. 1926-06-21
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original newspaper article: <em>This Week in Sanford</em>, Vol. 01, No. 23, June 21, 1926, page 3.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.sanfordfl.gov/index.aspx?page=456" target="_blank">Sanford Museum</a>, Sanford, Florida.
<p><a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/42" target="_blank">Milane Theatre Collection</a>, Sanford Collection, Seminole County Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.</p>
Format
image/jpeg
Extent
192 KB
Medium
1 newspaper sectional
Language
eng
Type
Text
Coverage
Sanford, Florida
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California
Spatial Coverage
28.810527, -81.266859
34.093042, -118.329134
Temporal Coverage
1926-06-21/1933-01-01
Accrual Method
Donation
Mediator
History Teacher
Economics Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Provenance
Originally owned by<em> This Week in Sanford</em>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <em>This Week in Sanford</em> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Contributing Project
<p><a href="http://www.cfmemory.org/" target="_blank">Central Florida Memory</a></p>
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Digital Collection
<p><a href="http://www.cfmemory.org/" target="_blank">Central Florida Memory</a></p>
<p><a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a></p>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.sanfordfl.gov/index.aspx?page=456" target="_blank">Sanford Museum</a>
External Reference
"Helen Stairs Theatre." StageClick. http://www.stageclick.com/venue/457.aspx.
"Theater History." Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center. http://www.wdpac.com/footer-menu/theater-history/.
"Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center." Seminole County: Florida's Natural Choice. http://www.visitseminole.com/things-to-do/general/wayne-densch-performing-arts-center.
External Reference Title
"<a href="http://www.stageclick.com/venue/457.aspx" target="_blank">Helen Stairs Theatre</a>"
"<a class="mceContentBody" href="http://www.wdpac.com/footer-menu/theater-history/" target="_blank">Theater History</a>"
"<a class="mceContentBody" href="http://www.visitseminole.com/things-to-do/general/wayne-densch-performing-arts-center" target="_blank">Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center</a>"
Transcript
AMUSEMENT SECTION
THIS WEEK IN LOCAL THEATERS-NOTES FROM STAGE AND FILM
AGED 16, PLAYS OPPOSITE BARTHELMESS
__________________
Film fans will be interested to see Richard Barthelmess' new leading lady, Lois Moran, who will play opposite him in "Just Suppose," which opens at the Milane Theatre on Thursday.
Little Miss Moran is only sixteen years old. After playing in one or two pictures abroad she made her American screen debut in "Stella Dallas," in which she scored an instantaneous and remarkable success.
In "Just Suppose" she appears as a sweet aristocratic child of the South who falls in love with the very handsome and romantic Prince of "Koronia," played by Richard Barthelmess.
Others in the cast include Geoffrey Kerr, Henry Vibart, Harry Short, Bijou Fernandez and Prince Rokneddine.
HUNTING T.R.'S DOUBLE
________________
Men from many walks of life have been suggested as "living doubles" of Theodore Roosevelt to play the role of the late President in "The Rough Riders," which Paramount is to produce as a super-special this summer. The list includes many humble workmen, as well as men in every professional walk of life, including a former United States Senator.
One aspirant is J.A. Nicholas of Los Angeles, a carpenter, who actually was a member of the Rough Riders Regiment in his youth. Frank Hopper of Los Angeles is a book agent. Peter deJesu is a sailor at the Naval Training Station at Newport, Rhode Island. Dr. Judson Moshelle, a physician of Indianapolis, has been suggested, as has Reverend L. William Hones of Roscoe, New York. A sea captain, O.B. Olson, is another who has been put forward. Professor A. S. Eve is a professor of McGill University, Montreal. Ex-Mayor Davis of Woburn, Mass., represents municipal circles, and Edward Gabori is customs inspector at Christobal, Panama Canal Zone. Dr. A. P. Montague of Mercer University, Macon, Ga., has also been put forward.
An award of $500 has been offered by Paramount through Herman Hagedorn, Roosevelt's biographer, who is writing the screen story of "The Rough Riders," for the first person who sends in the name and photograph of the man finally adjudged best suited to play the part.
WHEN BEERY PARKED
_______________
Newspaper-lined vests were popular with Noah Berry at the time he made his first bid for theatrical fame in New York.
He also showed a marked liking for fresh air, even to the extent of spending nights on park benches and in less conspicuous spots. It was usually while sleeping that he used the news paper lining.
Within a day of his arrival in the big city Noah Berry had pawned everything he owned with the exception of his one suit. It was two years later that he finally got a start on the stage.
"And I have been broke many times since," says the now noted screen actor.
Berry is now playing what Hollywood critics declare is the greatest role of his career, that of Adjutant Lejaune, "the cruelest beast and bravest soldier" in "Beau Geste," Herbert Brenson's production of P.C. Wren's dramatic mystery-story of the French Foreign Legion.
SCREEN NOTES
____________
Studio prop men are supposed to fill in any kind of an emergency during the filming of a motion picture. And they did at the Paramount Long Island studio during the filming of Gilda Gray's first starring picture, "Aloma of the South Seas." A number of scantily clad girls, playing the parts of South Sea Islanders, had to hurry hither and theither serving patrons of a native cafe. They began to pick up splinters in their feet. Prop men carefully picked out each splinter and the feet were treated to a coating of liquid court-plaster.
* * * *
An entire city built for Zane Grey's "Born to the West," which Paramount is filming on the West Coast, was swept away during a terrific rainstorm in Southern California.
* * * *
Forty of the prettiest girls in Hollywood were engaged for a garden-party scene in Allan Dwan's next big Paramount picture, "Padlocked."
* * * *
Fifty-three camels were shipped to Yuma, Arizona, from Los Angeles for use in making Herbert Brenon's "Beau Geste." More than 2000 men were taken to the desert location for battle scenes in his Paramount mystery-romance.
The Milane Theatre
The Lastest and Best in Photo Drama Attractions
WATCH THIS PAGE WEEKLY
For Announcements and Reviews
THE Seminole Printery
Printing that PLeases
Typewriters and Adding Machines
Ninth and French Telephone 404
COME TO
Laney's Drug Store
Service and Curtesy
Whitman's and Nunnally's Candies
Phone 103 Meisch Bldg.
We Appreciate Your Business
Date Copyrighted
1926-06-21
Date Issued
1926-06-21
Has Format
Original newspaper article: <em>This Week in Sanford</em>, Vol. 01, No. 23, June 21, 1926, page 3: <a href="http://www.sanfordfl.gov/index.aspx?page=456" target="_blank">Sanford Museum</a>, Sanford, Florida.
Bathelmess, Richard
Beau Geste
Berry, Noah
Born to the West
Brenson, Herbert
Curnick, Arthur R.
Davis
DeJesu, Peter
Dwan, Allan
Eve, A. S.
Fernandez, Bijou
French Foreign Legion
Gabori, Edward
Gray, Gilda
Grey, Zane
Hagedorn, Herman
Hones, William
Hopper, Frank
Just Suppose
Kerr, Geofrrey
Koronia
Laney's Drug Store
Lejaune, Adjutant
Magnolia Avenue
McGill University
Mercer University
Milane Theatre
Montague, A. P.
Moran, Lois
Moshell, Judson
Naval Training Station
Nicholas, J. A.
Nunnally's Candies
Olson, O. B
Padlocked
Paramount
Rokneddine, Prince
Roosevelt, Theordore
Rough Riders
Rough Riders Regiment
Seminole Printery
Short, Harry
Stella Dallas
The Rough Riders
This Week in Sanford
Vibart, Henry
Whitman's Candies
Wren, P. C.
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/24b1ae5eea9a218d9af958ea7b921635.jpg
e45b5faacc0d57f60719e03d50e3d084
Omeka Image File
The metadata element set that was included in the `files_images` table in previous versions of Omeka. These elements are common to all image files.
Width
723
Height
951
Bit Depth
8
Channels
3
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Milane Theatre Collection
Alternative Title
Milane Collection
Subject
Sanford (Fla.)
Buildings--Florida
Theaters--Florida
Film industry (Motion pictures)
Description
The Milane Theatre was built at 203 South Magnolia Avenue, the former location of the Star Theatre, an abandoned movie house. Scroggs and Ewing, architects from Georgia, prepared the plans for the Milane. The name of the new theater was derived from the combination of the Milane Amusement Company president and vice president: Frank L. Miller and Edward F. Lane, respectively. The Milane opened in July of 1923 and seated 823 patrons.
In 1933, the Milane was sold to Frank and Stella Evans, investors from Lake Mary, Florida. The new owners renamed their business the Ritz Theater and held the property until the 1990s. However, the Ritz struggled financially in the 1960s and closed in 1978 due to failure to compete with the new multiplex theaters. The building remained vacant until 1984, when it reopened as the Showtime Cantina. The Showtime Cantina closed in 1988 and remained vacant and in decay.
In the mid-1990s, Ritz Community Theater Projects, Inc. acquired the property and began rehabilitation in 1998. On May 6, 2000, the theater reopened as the Helen Stairs Theatre in honor of the citizen who led the restoration project, Helen Stairs. The following year, the location was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. In 2008, additional renovations were completed and the theater was renamed the Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center in honor of the Wayne Densch Charitable Trust Fund for contributing to the renovations fund.
Language
eng
Coverage
Opera House, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Star Theatre, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Milane Theatre, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Ritz Theatre, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Showtime Cantina, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Helen Stairs Theatre, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center, Downtown Sanford, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Contributor
Cepero, Laura Lynn
<a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/departments-services/leisure-services/parks-recreation/museum-of-seminole-county-history/" target="_blank">Museum of Seminole County History</a>
<a href="http://thehistorycenter.org/">Orange County Regional History Center</a>
<a href="http://www.sanfordfl.gov/index.aspx?page=456">Sanford Museum</a>
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/16" target="_blank">Sanford Collection</a>, Seminole County Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
External Reference
"<a href="http://www.stageclick.com/venue/457.aspx" target="_blank">Helen Stairs Theatre</a>." StageClick. http://www.stageclick.com/venue/457.aspx.
"<a href="http://www.wdpac.com/footer-menu/theater-history/" target="_blank">Theater History</a>." Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center. http://www.wdpac.com/footer-menu/theater-history/.
"<a href="http://www.wdpac.com/footer-menu/theater-history/" target="_blank">Theater History</a>." Seminole County: Florida's Natural Choice. http://www.visitseminole.com/listingdetail/53/wayne-densch-performing-arts-center.aspx.
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Original Format
Newspaper sectional
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
This Week in Sanford: Amusement Section (June 28, 1926)
Alternative Title
This Week in Sanford
Subject
Sanford (Fla.)
Buildings--Florida
Film
Fashion--Florida
Description
Advertisement for the Milane Theatre's feature showing of The Cave Man, as well as a fashion show called "The Storm" for the week of June 28, 1926. The Milane Theatre was built at 203 South Magnolia Avenue, the former location of the Star Theatre, an abandoned movie house. Scroggs and Ewing, architects from Georgia, prepared the plans for the Milane. The name of the new theater was derived from the combination of the presidents of the Milane Amusement Company president and vice president: Frank L. Miller and Edward F. Lane. The Milane opened in July of 1923 and seated 823 patrons. In 1933, the Milane was sold to Frank and Stella Evans, investors from Lake Mary, Florida. The new owners renamed their business the Ritz Theater and held the property until the 1990s. However, the Ritz struggled financially in the 1960s and closed in 1978 due to failure to compete with the new multiplex theaters. The building remained vacant until 1984, when it reopened as the Showtime Cantina. The Showtime Cantina closed in 1988 and remained vacant and in decay. In the mid-1990s, Ritz Community Theater Projects, Inc. acquired the property and began rehabilitation in 1998. On May 6, 2000, the theater reopened as the Helen Stairs Theatre in honor of the citizen who led the restoration project, Helen Stairs. The following year, the location was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. In 2008, additional renovations were completed at the theater was renamed the Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center in honor of the Wayne Densch Charitable Trust Fund for contributing to the renovations fund.
Source
Original newspaper article: <em>This Week in Sanford</em> Vol. 01, No. 24 (June 28, 1926): 3.
Publisher
Curnick, Arthur R.
Date Created
6/28/1926
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original newspaper photograph on Central Florida Memory, Item DP0008901. http://digitalcollections.lib.ucf.edu/u?/CFM,120810.
Is Part Of
Milane Theater Collection, Sanford Museum.
Format
image/jpeg
Extent
182 KB
Medium
1 newspaper sectional
Language
eng
Type
Text
Coverage
Sanford, Florida
Spatial Coverage
28.810527,-81.266859
Temporal Coverage
1926-06-28/1933-01-01
Accrual Method
Donation
Audience Education Level
SS.K.A.1.2; SS.1.A.1.1; SS.2.A.1.1; SS.3.A.1.1; SS.4.A.1.1; SS.5.A.1.1; SS.6.W.1.3; SS.8.A.1.2; SS.8.A.1.5; SS.8.A.1.7; SS.912.A.1.2; SS.912.A.1.4; SS.912.W.1.3
Mediator
History Teacher
Provenance
Originally owned by the Sanford Museum.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <em>This Week in Sanford</em> and is provided here by RICHES of Central Florida for educational purposes only.
Contributing Project
Central Florida Memory
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Digital Collection
Central Florida Memory
Source Repository
Sanford Museum
External Reference
"Helen Stairs Theatre." <em>StageClick</em>. http://www.stageclick.com/venue/457.aspx.
"Theater History." <em>Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center</em>. http://www.wdpac.com/footer-menu/theater-history/.
"Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center." <em>Seminole County: Florida's Natural Choice</em>. http://www.visitseminole.com/things-to-do/general/wayne-densch-performing-arts-center.
External Reference Title
"<a href="http://www.stageclick.com/venue/457.aspx" target="_blank">Helen Stairs Theatre"</a>
<a class="mceContentBody" href="http://www.wdpac.com/footer-menu/theater-history/" target="_blank">"Theater History"</a>
<a class="mceContentBody" href="http://www.visitseminole.com/things-to-do/general/wayne-densch-performing-arts-center" target="_blank">"Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center</a>"
Transcript
AMUSEMENT SECTION THE WEEK IN LOCAL THEATRES--NOTES FROM STAGE AND FILM
"THE CAVE MAN"--TUESDAY AT THE MILANE __________________
Now then you listen to this. Sit still! it's the Publicity Man talking
"The Cave Man" ; At the Milane Tuesday : Sated by luxury and the frivolity of her set, Myra yearns for something different--something new to thrill her. On the wings of a torn hundred dollar bill comes adventure in the rough, grimy person of Mike Smagg, a handsome coal heaver, whom Myra introduces into society. The "haut monde" is fascinated by Mike's "cave-man" manners and Dolly, a haughty little deb, proposes marriage to him. Faster goes the merry wheel of make-believe until smash! Mike is again only a common laborer. But--he grabs Myra in the face of the world and marries her --a"cave-man" to the end.
Matt Moore and Marie Prevost head the distinguished cast of Warner Bros. production of "The Cave Man," directed by Lewis Milestone from adaption of Gilette Burgess' story by Darryl Francis Zaneck.
As Myra Gaylord, Miss Prevost is seen as one of those dilletante daughters of the too rich and too ridle, whose existence has consisted of a vicarious pursuit of artificial thrills. Her problem has been how to amuse herself and so, at a tender age, she finds her thrill possibilities nearly exhausted. She has tried almost everything but useful, constructive endeavor.
Matt Moore plays Mike Smagg, a burly, tobacco-chewing, red-flanneled coal heaver. His manners are those of Hogan's Alley. He has bumped frequently and none to gently up against a rough and ready world since the day he entered it. His motto has come to be, "What I want I take--unless the other guy's a better man than me." This characterization is said to be so refreshingly different from those that Mr. Moore has up to this time portrayed, that his admirers will experience a distinct thrill of pleasure at his versatility.
The cast also includes Phyllis Haver as Dolly Van Dream, popular favorite of the exclusive social set of which her mother is the leader. She is one of Myra's ilk and becomes a contender for Smagg's attentions until she finds, by his own confession, that his is not an eccentric socialist from London, but an East Side coal heaver. Her mother is portrayed by Hedda Hopper, an authentic creator of grande dame roles.
In the part of the young gentleman of faultless antecedents and many polite accomplishments, the direct antithesis of Mike, the perfect escort, is John Patrick, distinguished for his flaming youth characterizations. Finally, as the sylph-like French maid, there is that slim princess, Myrna Loy.
FASHION SHOW A STORM IN "MLLE. MODISTE" _______________________
An unusually picturesque fashion show furnishes one of the most colorful episode in the film version of "Mlle. Modiste," Corinne Griffith's latest First National starring picture, showing at the Milane Wednesday.
The revue is called "The Storm." By means of gowns and frocks especially designed for the picture the various elements in an April shower are symbolized. Thus the sun is represented by a mannequin attired in a gown of bright pattern while the clouds are represented by models in gowns of sober coloration. Others in the little fashion show play represent the lightning, the sunbeams and the rainbow.
Adrian, noted Parisian designer, created the pageant. Corinne Griffith appears on the scene "after the storm," displaying a number of gorgeous frocks. One in particular, with a black velvet bodice trimmed with white buttons and white monkey fur, is said to be exceptionally attractive.
The most beautiful girls in Hollywood were selected as mannequins for this episode. Lilian Knight, who was crowned Miss Los Angeles, in one of the models.
This picture is an adaptation of the famous Victor Herbert operetta. Robert Z. Leonard directed.
A LITTLE CORNER OF PARIS
__________________
Paris was reproduced--or at least a little corner of it--in California, when Edmund Goulding directed his new Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer production, "Paris," billed to the Milane for Thursday.
Several hundred French girls and men, recruited by the casting office in a canvass of the French population of California, appear in the Apache cafe scenes; many of them could speak no English, and Goulding directed the scenes in French.
Actual reproductions were built, from photographs, of "the Brircage" and other famous haunts of the Paris Apaches. In the case of "The Birdcage," which strangers are never allowed to enter, the pictures were obtained by co-operation of the Paris police prefecture. The place is so dangerous that no gendarme ever invades it unaccompanied. (Editor's Note--How the murdered Joe Petrosino would have
(Continued on Page 10)
The Milane Theatre
The Latest and Best in Photo Drama Attractions
WATCH THIS PAGE WEEKLY
For Announcement Reviews
THE Seminole Printery
Printing that Pleases
Typewriters and Adding Machines
Ninth and French Telephone 404
COME TO
Laney's Drug Store
Service and Courtesy
Whitman's and Nunnally's Candies
Phone 103 Meisch Bldg.
We Appreciate Your Business
Helen Stairs Theatre
Laney's Drug Store
Magnolia Avenue
Milane Theatre
Ritz Theater
Seminole Printery
Showtime Cantina
Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center