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B-8 ** THE EVENING STAR, Washington, D. C. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 30, 19*8 The Show O'Neill a Man of Mystery Despite World Renown By Jay Carmody The heirs to his artistic wealth will be a long time settling Jihe estate of Eugene O’Neill who died last week. Between now and then, there will be many a violent critical Donnybrook of the kmd in which O’Neill was a reluctant participant—an oblique one when he could be—all of his adult days. Nevertheless, in the contro versy to come, there will be what the cliche calls areas of agree ment. On two aspect of O'Neill, the Judgment already has been made and accepted. These are that he was great and that he was strange. How great and how strange remain to be dis puted by critics, large and small, who will go searching through the labyrinth of O’Neill’s plays and his life. It may be that one of these will have the genius to under stand the genius of ithe matinee idol’s son who became America’s sole world figure in the drama. ** * 4 The scope this task was out lined as long ago jas 1926 by Stark Young, one jofj the critical first rank, when i hie wrote of "The Great God Brown” that: “I felt a torment of spirit, a groping love of life, a bitter pity and goodness, a warm and cou rageous desire, that make me, like so many other people in America, wish Eugene O’Neill well, wish that it may be granted to him to fulfill his talent and devotion. I admired the passion for fresh and powerful dramatic form in Eugene O’Neill, and I felt like lining myself up in de fense of the audacious integrity of his mood. But, by the play itself as it went on I was enter tained only now and then .... "The writing ... is unequal, sometimes beautiful and keen, I often well chastened toward the ; dramatic point to be expressed, often obvious, sometimes flat, poor poetry, third-rate taste.” When Young wrote this cand idly groping estimate of O’Neill, the body of the latter’s work was incomplete. What came later, some of it clearly greater, merely added to the contradictions that were so spectacular a part of the fascination of O’Neill. ** * * Coming late to the theater— this correspondent to his own surprise has reviewed only one j new O'Neill play, “The Iceman 1 Cometh” in 1946—the private and personal O’Neill seems as j dramatic as the public one. He seems to have been as i much of an enigma in himself i as in his plays. One reads and hears a mass of detail about his experience and his behavior, but j he remains a shadow. He was a schoolboy in Stam-! ford, Conn., who used to swim in the Sound in the dead of winter. He read Dumas, every word. He grew up in a New Eng land whose spirit had withered; saw with the curious eye of a small boy a strange death in life that came back to him as "Desire Under the Elms,” "Mourning Becomes Electra,” etc. He went to Princeton where DINE AT 1925 PRICES Served 4:30 to 8 P.M. Sots. 11 A.M. to 2:30 P.M. One of Each Every Day 65' Pork Chop and Apple Sauce Breaded Veal Cutlet Chicken Pie Calves Liver and Onions Swiss Steak ... 75c Chilled Juice • Mashed Potatoes 10c Vegetable * Hot Bread, Butter 10c Dessert • Coffee or Tea O O Second Cup of Coffee Free o O INVESTMENT CAFETERIA 1521 K ST. N.W. Next Door to Statler Hotel ILjgg/ f TRYR PRIVATE LESSON.J\, TVQAY, $ c 3 *B. WEEKLY DANCE PARTIES m ■■ ' •• : 502 13»h St. N.W. EX. 3-4444 .. 1124 Conn. Ave. RE. 7-1555 w,,,,,. ~.e? e .-..w N.W. NA. 8-8866 COMING _ WEDNESDAY DEC I2TH the 4 harlequin A room . COVER - LARRY CHARGE ORCHESTRA except Sunday SIXTEENTH t K STRtm, NORTHWEST For retervetion. cell MEtropoliten 1-2626, elk for Mr. Hetio. he distinguished himself by hurl ing a beer bottle through Prexy Woodrow Wilson’s residence, left there hastily to go to sea and on a briny binge that left him in 1909 a patient in a tubercu losis sahitorium. He worked briefly as a reporter in New Lon don, and as a columnist, and in his time he wrote bitter plays. These, the antithesis of the romantic bilge that made his father a turn of the century Robert Taylor, enabled him to restore the tragic spirit to the American theater. They also made him a world figure and won for him the highest of humanity’s literary honors. ** * * Yet in spite of the welter of biographical data and the volume of his own articulate work, O’Neill remains a mystery. Did he laugh? More than the one time George Jean Nathan heard him in years of close acquaintance, the first decade of which they were on a ‘Mister” basis? Was he John Loving, the man looking for God, in "Days Without End.” Was he Hickey in “The Iceman Cometh” or any of the heroes in any of a dozen other plays? Was he the gusty drinking man with a taste for low and roistering companions. Or, was he the disdainful teetotaller who later scorned alcohol as one of | mankind’s most overrated escapes , and whose total yearning for companionship was summed up in his third wife, Carlotta? How could he achieve such in dignation over human suffering while having such, if only pass ing, withering scorn for human sufferers? Eugene O’Neill left a multitude of questions unanswered, the most baffling; What makes a great playwright great? Where and When Current Theater Attractions And Time of Showing Stage. National—" The Prescott Proj- I posals”; 8:30 p.m. Sam S. Shubert “Flamel- Out”; 8:30 p.m. Screen. Ambassador “Hondo”; 1:30, 3:30, 5:35, 7:40 and 9:40 p.m. Capitol "Kiss Me Kate”; 11:15 a.m., 1:20, 3:30, 5:35, 7:45 and 9:50 p.m. Columbia “Take the High Ground”: 11:25 a.m., 1:30, 3:35, 5:40, 7:45 and 9:55 p.m. Dupont "Martin Luther”; 11:45 a.m., 1:40, 3:40, 5:35, 7:40 and 9:45 p.m. Keith’s “All the Brothers Were Valiant”: 11:30 a.m., 1:35, 3:40, 5:45, 7:50 and 9:55 p.m. Little—"So Little Time”; 6:15, 8:05 and 10 p.m. MacArthur—"The Cruel Sea”; 6:15 and 9:40 p.m. Sneak pre view: 8:15 p.m. Metropolitan—“ Hondo”; 11:30 a.m., 1:30, 3:35, 5:35, 7:40 and 9:45 pm. Ontario—“ Veils of Bagdad"; i 1. 2:40, 4:25, 6:15, 8 and 9:45 g.m. Palace—“ How to Marry a Mil lionaire”; 11 a.m., 1:10, 3:20, 5:30, 7:40 and 9:50 p.m. pAyhouse— "Roman Holiday”; ! 11:05 a.m., 1:10, 3:15, 5:20, 7:30 and 9:35 p.m. Plaza—“ Little Boy Lost”; 11 a.m., 12:50, 2:40, 4:35, 6:20, 8:05 ana 10:05 p.m. i Silver Spring—“ The Beggar’s Opera”: 8:30 p.m. Trans-Lux “From Here to i Eternity”; 11:10 a.m., 1:15, 3:25, 5:35, 7:50 and 10 p.m. Warner—“ This Is Cinerama”; I 2:30 and 8:40 p.m. \ FKMmJI wW£ Ik ¥ wk m m < • *g§| ... J| Jig ■ life w / ■ w / * - 'pp^ J li Iff /?* / § ir • § :|9| P* * v /" ■ W. H IN BIBLICAL DRAMA—Paulette Goddard portrays the evil priestess in “Sins of Jezebelwhich will be the next attrac tion at the Ontario. Hollywood Diary: Movie Columnist Pays Broadway a Visit By Sheilah Graham HOLLYWOOD. Manhattan meanderings. . . . Joanne Dru and John Ireland pale sftid exhausted, landed in New York from London and headed for Donald Budge’s party to christen his new tennis club. They’ll be returning here in a couple of days. . . . Irene Dunne at “21” with hubby, Dr. Francis Griffin, and she’s planning her own television show. . . . Gussie Moran, in New York now, sign ing for a TV show. But the mar riage with Ed Hand is off. . . . Martha Raye, now completely sold on TV, guests on the Perry Como Colgate Show December 13th. You haven’t lived until you’ve danced with Tony De Marco. He twirled me out on the floor at El Morocco. Now I feel like a professional. ... In a corner at El Morocco—Winnie Gardner with his previous wife, Babs Beckwith. Should be a statement soon from Sonja Henie. Quote from Ruth Cosgrove re. her upcoming marriage, with Milton Berle, “I hope we’ll be as happy afterwards as we’ve been before?’ The lass gets a three-week honeymoon in Mi ami. . . . Anita Loos is writing a play for the three Gabors and Mama Jolie. to open on Broad way in September. Zsa Zsa’s 6-year-old Francesca is insisting on getting into the act. “If any one plays Francesca it’s me,” she ultimatumed to Zsa Zsa. ** * * Clark Gable tells pals in Eu rope, he’s made his last picture for Metro. He comes home by boat December 17, and goes into independent production. . . . Hope Hampton everywhere in Gotham with Sinclair Robinson. They’ve been engaged for years, but no wedding date. . . . Dan Dailey with Gwenn O’Connor at the Stork Club. I found Cesar Romero all alone, at the bar of the Little Club, and he could use a good press agent. I didn’t know until he told me that he does a weekly television show in New York. Says he likes it there—but can’t wait to emanate from Hollywood next fall. Tony Bartley caught up with me at the Donald Budge party. "Deborah (Kerr) and I realized that we were being shot at.” he told me. and he meant their marriage. ‘l read where Debbie was in love with an agent, a mil lionaire and a married actor. So we had a meeting to decide what to do about it. What can you do? Go about strangling people? I guess we’ll just go on being happy together.” ** * * My biggest disappointment in New York —the Mary Martin- Charles Boyer play, ‘Kind Sir.” Nothing but brilliant people con nected with the production. And it adds up to nothing? After the show I found Boyer having dinner all by himself at the Stork Club, and apparently the play will run till May, then Charles rejoins his family in Hollywood. My flight back home was loaded with movie people among them Gloria Grahame, Hoagy Carmichael. Jimmy Woolf from London with Laurence Harvey who reports to Warners for ‘The Talisman.” Gloria who will do an important television show in New York after “The Human Beast” is canned, will be paid off with a fur coat. And she can’t decide between a mink “which is too old for me,” or a seal coat with a mink collar, “which I’m crazy about.” Take the mink, Gloria. ** * * Cy Howard follows Gloria to Hollywood in a day or so. but will have to return to England ! e. morrlson paper coT j 1009 Ptnna Ave N.W ! ( Eor Tout m)\ Stationery & i ®Office Supplier Vv'' Come To ) E. Morrison j' i |Vh * > aper Companv >, < \ 1009 Penn. \ Vk. Ave N.W j Horn, of Cmjmco Products ) or Call NA. 8-2948 fairly soon. He has a deal with Alec Guinness to write and pro- ! duce Jules Verne’s “Around the World .in 80 Days,” with Alec starring Marlon Brando has come back to the companionship of his pet i raccoon His long time palship with actress Movita is on the rocks. But she shouldn’t feel too bad. It was the longest time he had ever dated the satpe girl. ! Whatever happened to Marilyn Maxwell’s engagement to writer Jerry Davis? Jeff Chandler met her at the airport, took her to the Harlequinade for dinner, then to Ciro’s for the Guy Mit chell opening. Wonder why Guy was so nervous’ Perhaps because his “red garters” boss Don Hart man rirtgsided with the Para mount studio gang. Or was he worried about his marriage breakup with Jackie Loughery? ** * * Walter Pidgeon has signed for j the fourth consecutive year to spend the Christmas holidays en tertaining Gls abroad. Incidentally, Jack Benny and Marilyn Monroe are teaming for a series of P.A.’s around the country. And when Phil Harris learned that his oil well had come in, he called Jack Benny and offered him the job of polishing his car and keeping it filled with oil. And speaking of cars, if you happen to be m New York, don’t miss Josephine Hull in '“The Solid Gold Cadillac.” It was worth the bad weather there, just to see this grand performer. (Released by N.A N.A.) Trixie Friganza Is 82 PASADENA, Calif., Nov. 30. UP). Trixie Friganza, the ! “champagne girl” of a genera : tion ago, observed her 82d birth j day yesterday. The retired actress said she received more than 200 birthday cards from her faithful admirers. These in cluded the four young sons of crooner Bing Crosby. AMUSEMENTS. Dnempi mmgm sS, A NEW ■ British picture bring tested lor audience reaction! Plus our regular attraction 's JaeX Hawkins In CC “THE CRUEL SEA” 6hown at 615 8* 9:40 p.m. tpyjii j |§ » SEVEN f£ fYDETOSINS s, f MkMeMOt&AN-fonrlfW tidrtiih !$$ / FfWfc VULARP-VnAmo ROMAMCE ss ™ A Ntw Camadr Orama Wriffaa and Oiracfad by ALAN MOWBRAY fKi VICTOR MATURE 't3Fj Real Countess Gabrielle Dorziat, who plays the mother superior with Bing Crosby in “Little Boy Lost,” is actually the Countess Zogheb and regarded as the social queen of Paris and the Riviera. Mme. Dorziat’s hus band, to whom she has been wed 7 years, is a Danish noble man and internationally famed polo player. AMUSEMENTS, li I§fjl> I i i *|osSitl I , “i" ff" n 1 siujoMre | Hi I CINEMASCOPE SHORTS llt j 1 Wolt Pitney Cortoon I K Technicolor __ ■SBSI I Sm\ ON OUR 'N'Ot SCR “ I 1 mOM M.O-M1 ■ i II 'TAKiTHE l i H 1 HIGH GROUND! 1 ■) 11 I 1 ■ I aii li B I WWWWSSit 1 11 m[^ ] \ LAST DAY A CORING*. kind ol otlietiH* ,ht Vj. jU come* from within.'*** B M>- ••Ill* WWW——————— A iOTH THIATH ———— LAST 4 WEEKS Laurence Olivier Ul SEATS RESERVED. Mill orders tilled. ROTH’S THEATRE 8242 GEORGIA AVENUE JUNIPER 9-1155 AMPLE FREE PARKING Roth’. PLAZA NEW YORK AVE. AT I4TH ST. AMERICAN UNIVERSITY CONCERTS Patrick Hayes. Managing Director IN CONSTITUTION HALL TOMORROW—B:3O p.m. Yehudi Menuhin Violinist, in Recital Program ol works by Corelli. Ravel, Viottl. Bartok. Sarasate and first Washington performances ot sonatas by Mendelssohn and Paul Ben-Halm GOOD SEATS AVAILABLE Tickets: 91.1 Q. gl.Bo, 53.40. *3, *3.60 HAYES CONCERT BUREAU. 1108 G N.W, NA. 8-7151 (Campbell's) Steinway Piano Dancing OFFERS FOX TROT • WAITZ • SWING RUMBA • MAMBO • SAMBA • TANGO 4 PRIVATE OP DANCE LESSONS V Gay Student Dance Parties VICTOR Our Hth Washington Tear 1730 CONN. AVL, AD. 2-4340 AMUSEMENTS. AMUSEMENTS. AMUSEMENTS. SEATS . A . _ HPst. 99 ."T: Jr Mrßlondes % W \ p mm . . ■ % * ncnicMM M *** HwilW rooir Last Today and Today and Today and f ™' ll TMtu moan Day Tomorrow Tomorrow Tomorrow Sjjg® '""I'"™ 1 "! KIHESPA AUfll CHiVERIY KAYWOOD DWVLIN ■ 10 o C m. MKD cusmi » ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■l ■ 10 915 p.m. ■■■ ' —... (Mail orders TVAKHEK ■ i—rtrTiw ACCEPTED 13th ind E Sl». N. W. ■■•■■■■ Phone: MEtroeolittn 1-4415 ~ —lST— feur urnm.. 4lV\ RIP-ROARING loimWMNE A Mm with Improved ghuMee I 1m m mm.mf (X \ Wmmm ©JrS.AfeSiS, 5 C 5M5 AMBASSADOR ft. l v v!U / different Wv| 1 SPICY AS ONLY THE V’ "Incredibly Enlertaining.” * —' _ Carmody. Star I : . GREGORY PECK I I m o*Vw I D-E AUDREY HEPBURN _ I SCREEN NATIONAL-NOW IQlMKiffl FLATHOUSc *'VfV| "AMERICA'S FIRST THEATRE" K visii» a H NW. . ST, 34500 . open io 30l E ™ 8:30 • *»*»• Wed - * 8 »‘- ‘~= 3 ® F,n# odventure IfUNO HAYWARD eremeh ' ...romance* f - Daily N*w<mß| j ymmmm. 1 ItltllQy <r HOWARD LINDSAY RUSSEL CROUSE —SEATS AVAILABLE— ROBERT TAYLOR M ™M£st jrarssr,. stewart grangervjp Films of More Than Routine Merit “GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES”—The Marilyn Monroe type, says this big musical. “MOGAMBO"—Ava Gardner and Clark Gable collide in Africa. “THE MOON IS BLUE”—Captivating screen version of the stage play. ‘MOULIN ROUGE”—Colorful recall of Toulouse-Lautrec and his times. “THE NAKED SPUR”—James Stewart in a superior outdoor drama. “SEVEN DEADLY SINS”— Handily put to rout in comedy and drama. “THE SWORD AND THE ROSE”—Lively “live” swashbuckler Walt Disney. SIDNEY LUST THEATERS Stanley Waraev Theaters —free Parkim -u D AC C XIUIO CO. 5-SAOS. 18th HILLSIDE DRIVE-IN “Hondo," John Wayne. 1:30. 3:30. uiiiuduiii waaiva, in ? . 40 9 . 45 3_ Dlmens , o n. On 6300 Marlboro Pike S.E.. Leas Than our Oiant Screen. In Warnercolor. a Mile From D. C. Line* JO. B*io,o. —— a qajmi "The flword Children Under 13 Free. Open 6:15. AVALON ?La fCZa™. "Pteh«A r\r\TTDT XT' ttitti * rpTT'DTJ’ »• v ftlswH and the Rose, Richard DUUoLiili r JiiAl Urt-Ej Todd. Glynls Johns. 7:10, 0:45; JAMES STEWART JANET LEIGH, "Prowlers of the Everglades.” Dis "THE NAKED SPUR” (Technicolor), ney’s True-Life Adventures. 6:40. at 6:30, 10:15. and RED SKELTON. 9:10. “THE CLOWN.” at 8:36 . Vr >n«Mfx 106. "A ———— — AVL. fallAflll Blueprint for BELTSVILLE DRIVE-IN Murder Joseph Gotten 8 15; _ „ *" “Mighty Joe Young." Terry Moore. Balto. Blvd. WE. B-5800. Open 6:15. e : is, 9:35. MARILYN MONROE. JANE RUSSELL „ LOT.^OOrFreTParkl GENTLEMEN BLVEIILX ing. "Gentlemen Pre •DOTPinro T3T nWTYE’C!” for Blondes.” Marilyn Monroe, Jane “JtvHiJP JCjfC DJUU-LN D£jQ Russell. 6:15. 9:30; “Sea of Lost (Technicolor) at 7. 9:30 Bhlps." John Derek. 8:05. — <■■■ IIPDT WO. 6-3345. Free Park- Hf I Flf MARILYN MONROE. CALVERT mg. "Blowing Wild,” nbliUl JANE RUSSELL, Gary Cooper, 6:15. 8. 9:55. "GENTLEMEN mi THU I ME. 8-38 11. Near Park- DDUDIi’D DT n\TDI?Q n vgsll ■ IMBBs jng. "Wings of the JrrvEjr hire ±SLiUiNDU,O Hawk.” Van Heflin. 13:30, 3:16. (Technicolor) at 7:20, 9:40. 6:15 9:30; "The Glass Wall.” 11, RPTnrvnh marilyn monroe. vmurnvßA. a-eeoo. "Blowing OlsinEiaVft JANE RUSSELL, ALMILIIX wild,” Gary Cooper, "GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES” PENN 'Gentlemen Prefer Blondes,” I (Technicolor) at 6:30. 8. 9:40. Marilyn Monroe, 2:35, 6:05. 9:35; — : "The Gunflghter.” Gregory Peck. rnrvrnv v jane russell, mo. 4:35, 8:os. . villiVlslllsl MARILYN MONROE. niHAU CO. 6-4968. "The Oun “GENTLEMEN aavui fighter,” Gregory Peck, ...... v 6:15. 8:50: "Private Eyes," Bowery PREFER BLONDES Boys. 7:35, 10. (Technicolor) at 7:16. 9:26. SHERIDAN nen Prefer Blondes," I DVITTCVVI ■l* TONY CURTIS. Marilvn Monroe, Jane Russell, 6, nXAI IoVILLL -all - AMERI- 7:55, 9:50. CAN. *at 6:30. 8:05. 9:45. CII IJFB Jl! - Pr ee Pkrklng. ails? liH“g e n t lemen Prefer irxvurnnn MARILYN MONROE. Blondes.” Jane Russell. Marilyn Mon ftAIWUUU JANE RUSSELL. roe, 1:15. 3:20. 5:26. 7:35. 9:40. On "GENTLEMEN 3^43,2: Free r.rk*- PREFER BLONDES” lAHUraA lng . -wings ot the (Technicolor, at 7:10. 9:30. _ VIERS MILL MARKYnSfOE ! TIVOLI p°'( 6 n\ BW rt' “° entle J ,en "GENTLEMEN n r Mo r "' 3:5*0 ne 5*45'. PREFER BLONDES” {^S^nWE-d^r-^ (Technicolor), at 7:20. 9:40. UrIUWN men Prefer Blondes,” UICT , J n .. Dr .- Marilyn Monroe. Jane Russell. Charles MILO v L .y^7nr, U ' Coburn. On Our Gilant Screen Prices llllsV JANE RUSSELL, This Engagement Only: Mat.. Child.. “GF.NTT.RMF.N 25c : Adults. 50c. Eve.. Child.. 30c; VTXhIX AUjCiXYUhIY Adults. 74c. 2:05, 4. 5:50, 7:45. 9:40. PREFER BLONDES” ■ ■ - ■ (Technicolor) at 7:30. 9:25. . — INAttKTIA 1414 Good h °p« w Kb TnrATrnc «nni»uaii« l 0 ~2 42 4 •D IDbAIbDB MARILYN MONROE. JANE RUB - WIDE SCREENS BLONDES.”^ln N,^chnlcolo*, R at * 3»* At APEX, LANGLEY. 3:55. 8:55. 9:55; JOEL McCREA. NAYLOR, FLOWER. EVELYN KEYES In "SHOOT FIRST.'• '— —", ; ■ at 2:30, 5:30, 8:30. APEX 48,3 6 ' 4400 HIGHLAND se in AR "G Y E N N TLE M E E N AN I REm % °^ r » BLONDES" (Technicolor), 1:00. 3:05. PEcSc’ln a Relssue L - u - F M - —__ of "OUNFIOHTER." at 8:00. n own flower Ave ft Piney Br Rd ffIRAI <703 Marlboro Pike, Md. IbUWMI Si , Spa Md JU. 8-1666 JQ B . s i S ,_ Fr „ Parking GARY COOPER. BARBARA STAN- MARILYN MONROE, JANE RUS WYCK. “BLOWING WILD.” 6:30. SELL In "GENTLEMEN PREFER 8:15. 10:00. BLONDES," in Technicolor, at 6:25. — 9:40: JOEL McCREA. EVELYN KEYES HAVI AH JB,h * Ala. Avo S I In "SHOOT FIRST." at 8:00. IMIIiUn IU 2-4000 ATI AHTIF Nicholi Ave a) Atlantic Open 6:00 P.M. 2 Hlt«. MARILYN H1 l*AI« Ilb S| sE - JO. 3-5000 MONROE. JANE RUSSELD ''aEN- On Our Wide Screen.’ MARILYN TLEMEN PREFER BLONDES. in MONROE. JANE RUSSELL In "GEN- Xechnlcolor, 6 : ; 10. 9 :.10; Plus GEORGE TLEMEN PREFER BLONDEB." In MSX ” Technicolor, at 6:26. 9:40; JOEL Mc -ICAN MANHUNT.” 8:10 Only. CREA. EVELYN KEYES in "SHOOT —— FIRST." at 8:00. LANGLEY " " CONGRESS m < Tt**- !I iT.?, c , h “ 1 „ c ? 10 ,? l nn* t D« 20 - 3 ' 2o ' °' 26, "BLOWING WILD." at 6:35, 9:40: 7.30 and 0.30 P.M. GEOROE BRENT In "MEXICAN ~ manhunt." at 8:05. NacARTHUB e , yd E m 2 4400 LAUREL “ laurel. Md I S T NEAK PREVIEW Tonight at 8:15 P.M. A New British FADITfIV Capitol Heights. Md Film Being Tested for Audience Re- vfirii UL ,q g. 4740 p j,“f I .? ur 0 5' g “ la f 2 Big Hits, in Technicolor. VAN xrTA■ J U A £. HEFLIN In "WINOS OF THE HAWKINS. Feature at 6.15 and 9.40. HAWK.” at 6:35. 9:50; FERNANDO — , '' " LAMAS. ARLENE DAHL In "SAN rnv MTV Georgia Ave and Farra OAREE.” at 7:55. vUlelln T gut St. N W RA 3-2200 MICHELE MORGAN. GER AR D 1 ■ 1 ~ PHILIPS.. VIVIENNE ROMANCE. . . r> n r . k v isa miranda. Arlingtou-Falls Church, Vs. “7 DEADLY SINS” j*. 7-4266 The Sensational French-FUm Hit. THF RVRII fVIIFMA Feature at 6:50 and 9:15 P.M. Short# OinU UiniiPUi at 6:30 and 8:56 P.M. to 4 8 Wayne St A Picture You'll Never Forget. ' KATHERINE McLEOD and PHILLIP BOTH THEATRES “rn Always Love You” STANTON Last Day. Doors Open 6:15. "GEN- "V *"" ter Brennan in Sea TLEMEN PREFER BLONDES.” MAR- of Lost Bhlps. ILYN MONROE. JANE RUSSELL: Mlft Edward O. Robinson. "COLUMN SOUTH.” AUDIE MURPHY. ol AIK Paulette Goddard, "Vice nkBV bavonnoh it at >3th it i.E. Bt|U> ?' "A#* . gik oh Ala Ave -O ’ »33 0111 C(|H alenn Ford - Ann Sherl- On Our Magnascope Screen. MARILYN " u " ,wn dan. "Appointment in MONROE. JANE RUSSELL, "GEN- Honduras,” in Technicolor. TLEMEN PREFER BLONDES." Techu “ WATER GLEBE Sme” ° r “ 1 - — 1 BUCKINGHAM Ava Gardner, I j GREENBELT r , “Mogambo.” In Technicolor. ?hows 7 «d 9. wa*it 3 D^lv'. JEFFERSON OLADEB.” Experienced Advertisers Prefer The Star nrrn 1723 King si. ki. 9.3443 t nEtUU Parking Space i QLENN FORD. GLORIA ORAHAME. • " THE Bl< 3 HEAT.” \ VIRGINIA Kr 9.61M Vd * s *' JANE WYMAN. STERLING HAY- S DEN. “SO BIO.” » - ■ rmrnr falrlington Va If Ml Int TE 6 ., 000 fr „ Parkin,. E ROCK HUDSON. MARCIA HEN ; DERSON. "BACK TO GOD S COUN ; TRY.” j SHIBIIHGTOH^”?;™ “ JOHN DEREK. WANDA HENDRIX, "SEA OF LOST SHIPS/ - Alexandria —Arlington, Va. Information. Phone KL 9-9090 DRIVE-IN THEATRES ARC DRIVE-IN THEATRE “Family Khowplace of the Southeast - ’ 7100 Indian Head Hwy.. 3 Miles From the D. C. Cine, a Direct Route Out South Capitol St. S.E. to ABC. Children Under IS Years Free. OPEN « P.M. CO. 7-2560. Ends Tonight. First S.E. Showing. JOEL McCREA in 'SHOOT FIRST.” at 6:30 and 10; Plus "WORLD IN HIS ARMS.” in Color, at 8:30 Only. Tues. "PICK UP ON SOUTH STREET." Also "PONY SOL DIER," in Color. AIRPORT o r» "NAKED SPUR” (Tech. I, JAMES STEWART, at 7:05 and 10:45: Plus “TRADER HORN.” HARRY CAREY. R:55. Cartoon. Located in Arlington on U. S. Route 1. just over the 14th St. Bridge. Branch Drive-In Theater Open Every Week End. Starts FrL. “THE IRON MISTRESS." ALAN LADD. E. M. LOEWS MT. VERNON OPEN AIR Rt. 1, So. of Alexandria. SO. 8-8722. Tonight Thru Wed. At Our Regular Prices. The Top Musical of Them All. In Tech. "GENTLEMEN PRE FER BLONDES." JANE RUSSELL, MARILYN MONROE. 6:35, 9:30: FANGS OF THE ARCTIC." KIRBY GRANT. 8:15. Color Cartoon. Kiddles Free CIINCFT Leesburg Pike Route 7 •)UnOE.l At Baileys X Roads WINTER POLICY— OPEN WEEK ENDS AND HOLIDAYS. SUPER CHIEF DRIVE-IN On the Indian Head Hwy.. via South Capitol SC. (i'4 Miles From D. C. Line. On the Right—No Traffic Hazards! LO. 7-8100. MARILYN MONROE. JANE RUSSELL. “GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES” (In Technicolor) at 6:30. 9:00. Prices for This Engagement Only: Adults, 74c. All Children Under 13 Free. Louis Bernheimer's Theatres THE VILLAGE ' N r&7SBi MARILYN MONROE. JANE RUSSELL. “GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES” (In Technicolor)’ at 6:00. 7:46, 9:32 Prices for This Engagement Only: Adults. 74c: Children. 30c at All Times, Tax Included. NEWTON ,2,b * N,w,or NE . GARY COOPER. BARBARA STAN WYCK in "BLOWING WILD.” at 6:18. 9:36: Also RUTH HUSSEY, DENNIS O'KEEFE in "THE LADY WANTS MINK" (in Technicolor), at 7:_48 VrRNMI 3707 Ml Vornon Avo. VMInUn v „ KI 9.J42K FERNANDO LAMAS. ARLENE TAHL In “SANGAREE” (In Technicolor), at 6, 7:42, 9:22. freer 18th nr. It. I. Avo. N.E. LA 6-3112 "Northeaat’s Art Cinema” Academy Award Winner. JOBE FERRER. ZAZA OABOR In “MOULIN ROUGE” (In Technicolor) at 6:35. B:20; Coffee Served. With Our Compli ments, in the Lounge. rAIRFAY Fairfax. Vo Phone 784 f Him HA Free Pa'king '■ “THE MOON 18 feLUE." WILLIAM j HOLDEN. DAVID NIVEN. HISER BETHESDA ™ On Our Giant Miracle Mirror Screen CORNEL WILDE “THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH” 6:00. 8:55. circle MARILYN MONROE. JANE RUSSELL. CHARLES COBURN in “GENTLEMEN PREFER “BLONDES” fin Technicolor! At 6:00. 7:50, 9:40. j Last Day. GEORGETOWN . “Waxhinfton's Repertory Cinema” LAST DAY! M-O-M's “Glorious" Technicolor Musical “SINGIN’ IN THE RAIN” Co-Starring OENE KELLY. DONALD O'CONNOR. JEAN HAGEN. CYD CHA RIBBF. DEBBIE REYNOLDS. I Tomorrow. BEATRICE LILLE la I I “ON APPROVAL." | Door* Open 6:45 P.M. Feature at 6:00. 8:00. 10-00 P.M. FREE PARKINO.