IN THE NEWS NET.
Date: 30 November 1919
DORIS KEANE, who played Edward Sheldon's "Romance" two years in this country and three in London, is to appear in a screen version of the play under the direction of D.W. Griffith.
Георги Минев Николов с псевдоним „Чапай“ е участник в Съпротивителното движение в България по време на Втората световна война. Български офицер (генерал-лейтенант) и военен деец.
Прочетете повече...30 ноември 1919 г. беше неделя под звездния знак на ♐. Беше 333 ден от годината. Президент на Съединените щати беше Woodrow Wilson.
Ако сте родени на този ден, вие сте на 105 години. Последният ви рожден ден беше на събота, 30 ноември 2024 г., преди 314 дни. Следващият ви рожден ден е на неделя, 30 ноември 2025 г., след 50 дни. Живял си за 38 666 дни, или около 927 985 часа, или около 55 679 133 минути, или около 3 340 747 980 секунди.
Date: 30 November 1919
DORIS KEANE, who played Edward Sheldon's "Romance" two years in this country and three in London, is to appear in a screen version of the play under the direction of D.W. Griffith.
Date: 30 November 1919
GIVING the Public What It Wants" is probably as good a title as any for this transcript of a telephone conversion with the box-office man of a theatre housing one of the big hits. The time was last week:
Date: 30 November 1919
H.R. Bettinson has sold his property, 118 Wildwood Avenue, plot 50 by 232 feet, to F.D. Bradly of Philadelphia. The property was valued at $7,500, and the sale was negotiated by the Frank Hughes Taylor Company. The same brokers have sold for Edward C. O'Neill
Date: 30 November 1919
Ithaca Journal and The Ithaca Daily News consolidated to form The Journal-News, to reduce publishing costs
Date: 30 November 1919
By Charles Whiting Baker, Consulting Engineer and Consulting Editor Engineering News-Record
Charles Baker
suggests public corporations for rys as solution of ownership problem on which capital and labor can agree
Date: 01 December 1919
Apparently Mary Pickford is facing the realization that she cannot go on forever as the sweet, cute, and kittenish little darling of the screen, for her latest motion picture, "Heart o' the Hills," which is at the Strand this week, shows her in more serious moods and with more mature manners than her previous productions. She is still, at times, the hopskip-and-jumping young thing she used to be all of the time, but in a number of scenes she makes real emotional efforts, and throughout the photoplay attempts to portray a character of interest to others besides children and adults feeling childish. And it will be good news to the many Pickford fans, as well as to those who believe she "could do something else if she would only try," that she is adequate in every scene. She attempts nothing very exacting, but she does enough to give promise of more, and her progress from juvenility to complete maturity will undoubtedly be watched with universal interest."Heart o' the Hills" is an adaptation of the novel by John Fox, Jr., and is faithfully John-Foxy, employing all of the intriguing ingredients of romance, sentimentality, adventure, and atmosphere so successfully compounded into stories of the Kentucky and North Carolina mountains. Despite its unreality of plot and action, however, it approaches the genuine in its characters, the most important of which are delightfully impersonated by Miss Pickford as an untamed mountain girl, Harold Goodwin as her boy companion. Claire McDowell as one of the pathetic clods in every mountain cabin, Fred W. Huntley as the ancient but still active head of his clan, and Sam De Grasse as the scheming traitor to his people.The picture was directed by Sidney A. Franklin, who brought some of the mountain scenery effectively into it, but not as much as could have been used to advantage. He left little to be desired, however, in costuming and interior settings.The Strand Topical Review is unusually rich this week, because it contains, in addition to its news pictures, one of Max Fleisher's "Out of the Inkwell" drawings and Pathécolor views of provincial France. Mr. Fleisher's work, by its wit of conception and skill of execution, makes the general run of animated cartoons seem dull and crude, and the colors in the Pathe scenics are pleasing to the eye and remarkably true to actuality.The comedy at the Strand is a Harold Lloyd piece of foolishness entitled "Captain Kidd's Kids.""Eyes of Youth" is the kind of play that is dear to the hearts of many actresses and a large number of the public. It offers such a variety and intensity of histrionic moments to its actress and is so steeped in "heart interest" and "sob stuff," sweetened by assurance of a happy ending, that it is simply irresistible. It was on a Broadway stage for numerous weeks, and now it has come to the screen. It is at the Rivoli, and Clara Kimball Young, an infrequent visitor this year, is in the leading rôle.Miss Young has been missed, and if her next picture is as far away from the present as her last she will be missed the more because of her performance in "Eyes of Youth." When she undertook her latest work she promised to do something better than she had done for a long time, and she has fulfilled her promise. Although one may be unmoved by the story, he is bound to feel the force of her performance in the multiple rôle of the girl who images her future along three of the four roads open to her and finally takes, with happy confidence, the one she doesn't investigate. At least, she knows that it cannot be as bad as the other three.Miss Young does not give much of opportunity to her supporting company, or its members do not take advantage of their chances, despite the fact that many of them are well known. They are Gareth Hughes, Pauline Starke, Sam Sothern, Milton Sills, Ralph Lewis, Edmund Lowe, William Courtleigh, and Vincent Serrano.Pictorial effects and characterizations by Lon Chaney, Priscilla Dean, and William Stowell give most of whatever entertainment value there is to "Paid in Advance," at the Capitol this week. The picture comes to life in the scenes in which they appear. William Burress also should not be overlooked. The titular star of the production is Dorothy Phillips, who, although equal to some of her scenes, for the most part is too camera-conscious to be convincing. The picture was directed by Allen Holubar and was derived from a story by James Oliver Curwood. It deals with the miraculous escape of a pure young girl from barbaric men of the American Northwest and Alaska.On the Capitol program are "Such Is Life in Greenwich Village," one of Hy Mayer's Travel-Laughs, and "Speed," a comedy, with Al St. John, Roscoe Arbuckle's former associate."The Bandbox," with Doris Kenyon, is at B. S. Moss's Broadway this week, and Cecil B. De Mille's "Male and Female" has moved from the Rivoli to the Rialto.The Third Newman Travel-Talk, "Belgium Restored," was delivered at Carnegie Hall last night and will be repeated this afternoon.