PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 7. 1919. OH BE JOYFUL, AND SMILE WITH US JUST a pair of happy sunshine girls whose names never get into print, but who nevertheless are representative of a small army of players who,' by looks and form and costume, add not a little to the pleasures and entertainment of cinema patrons through out the land. They are not chorus girls, exactly, because they do not pretend to sing. All they have to do is to do as they are told while a picture is being made to smile and be happy. And they are ambitious to become stars. - Ff Helen Keller Heroine of New Film Life of Wonderful Woman sented on Screen in . Well Acted Story. Pre- KELLER, wlm tlioticu deaf and Wind Jias made her.se'f a per bojj of international fame, in the "heroine" of a photo-drama which depicts her- life utrucRlC The play, which will he seen In Portland in due time. Is entitled "Pe Hverance." and Is reviewed hy I.ouella , O. Parsons In the New York Telegraph, as follown : "Thia picture, with Helen Keller as its herolni its keynote and Its reason for exiatinfft can scarcely be judped as an ! ordinary film. Matters of incorrect pro-I duction are of small moment compared ; , with thS Inspiration and the motive un- ' derlyine the picture. Quite apart from : i the historical and educHtlonal value of Deliverance," it has moments of real i screen trart. i More are some, excep tlonally artistic sceiies. though the pro duction relies more on the popular an- I peal of the story than oh any film tech nique. '"Thor are three parts childhood. maidenhood and womanhood presented 'on the screen in three acts. The first act holds out an appeal by reason of the '.children, and the tender associations of childhood. The child Etna Rogers, the little blind Helen, is one of the best "things in. the entire picture. ACTING IS N ATI" R AL "She never pives the "mpression" of act-1 formng a new production each succes ing. but plays the difficult role of a blind. ;,jve Week. . oea ana uumo cniia wir,n a cnaracteriza tion which a grown person might be proud to give. Edith Lyle, as Ann Sul livan, and Jenny Lind. a black picaninny, are other players who impress them selves upon the audience as giving something more than a stereotyped mo tion picture performance. Ann Mason plays the Heln Keller in Maidenhood, and she has a difficult po sition to keep up the pace pet by little Etna Ross. She Is very sweet and pretty however and at all times convincing. . real Helen Keller, the real Ann Sttlll'-an. her teacher, to whom she says shfl f w-es everything, her mother, Mrs. Kate Keller. app?ar in Womanhood, the last act. After having the struggle of penetrating the darkness visualized, Mtss Keller was received with applause by the audience, some of them who perhaps appreciated for the first time what pa tience, perseverance and untiring cour age was necessary for this woman to find the light. KNEW MARK TiVAIX Her life and her association with such mea as Mark Twain. Joseph Jefferson. Alexander Graham Bell are a bright light in the stony patli and an uphill climb necessary to gain her degree of bachelor of arts at Radoliff. Mark Twain said of her: "There are two treat characters in the . Vilneteenth centry. Napoleon Bonaparte and Helen Keller ; Bnaparte set out to conquer the world with an army and failed. Helen Keller set out to conquer the world with the power of mind and won." The picture Is a trifle long, but all things pale into mstgt if icar.ee compared '.with, the tremendously vital story told. "Deliverance'' may well serve as a. bea con light for parents whose children are .horn with any of the afflictions which I Helen Keller eonqueredv ' Wonderful . .". :-..- m. ,.v.?y .';? v. -it '-vl Bertha Kalich Will Traill Her Whptbpr rr net Mi Kli' iiirluri , "st-v-k" companies in hr rcnrJusion ).rr,-.l m iiw inmwim. .s nm .itar. ....... ( dot i. rRlanil tl.-atre-iOers will rronapiy aia - i with her Kri j i atr-e Bj Zajda tilover. New York. :.it. 6, Bertha K:il,',h. ve think along broad lines, has evolved a new idp;i. She will try it out on hrr f'.Ttho-jm'.nK tour of (the iunt:- v ith her production of "The Riddle: Woman." The plan alms at the training of the young aciurs iinu .niia ' pany. The scheme Is not only murine in HClOrS .Ilia .l l " . theatrical nistor. out u. " . is a SUCCeSS it Will lO.Iline.u ...-ci i". I irener.il adoption by thns? managers who. . like Mme. Kalun. nae oeen searching for a solution for the ever perplexing repertoire problem. Herself a product of the Continental stape, with a technique learned in the leadinK reportoire theatres of Austria Hungarv and her own native Poland. Mme. Kalich has alw;-ys been a firm Mrfvnnnt of that form of training as the best and only thorough training for I the drama. In the repertoire theatre. and there alone can the young actor or talent find adequate opportunity for his hest develonment. The matter, accord ing to the star of "The Riddle : Woman" is not open to argument. There might be developed a method equally good. Mme. - Kalich concedes, there might even be a better method, but thus far nobody has discovered any substitute for the hard,' nerverack- ing. highly intensive training accruni. as it were automatically, from the fnyart noisitv of rehparshiff and ner- A THING OF THE PAST But the repertoire theatre, insofar as concerns America, is, according to Mme. Kalich, a thing of the past. Save 'for a few Isolated examples, notably those of the summer stock companies operat ing in our smaller urban communities, the repertoire theatre is moribund. The repertoire theatre cannot be re stored, declares Mme. Kalich. because the need for such an institution no long er exists. The standards of public taste due to the progress of general education and culture have become so high that it is only the unsophisticated audience that is satisfied today with the neces sarily inadequate productions of the re pertoire theatre. For that Institution while it was an excellent training school for players, left, at the best, much to be desired by the discriminating. And with, good reason. . Naturally no company can, with six days" rehearsal, give such a good per formance of any given piece as that woman that she Is, her life might al- most be a text book for other unfor- tintMtnatn!v nnrt tn thu -oaf th motion picture has established itself as being the completed "ehapter of that text book. ' Proprietor Held ' For Theft of Film New York, Sept. 6. Louis . Savine. proprietor of the moving picture house at One Hundred and Forty-thirrt street and Lenox avenue, was arraigned before Judge William H. Wadhams, in general sessions, on an Indictment charging him with Criminally receiving stolen goods. Has An Idea Own Company s;'me company could render after four intensive and ex- to ix weeks of the .,.,... f,-ai,i,,- ,, i vre under - , , - " , , ' the ni'dern system, hrso : the .best of venei toire .-iii'in.'r.ie to-.h-v must muUe it p-.( ,. fho-vlrii. Indeed asiinst the aver- ;e i -oduction of the resular theatre. rilU.IC Pi-: MA MIS THK BEST Kurtliermore, thanks to the infinite multiplication of theatres in our I'rcre cities and the hlsrhly or-ranized system of di.stiibutiun perfected by the book ing office by which the finest and best nf mptrnnnliian nrort t i r.r, r p .rriH I J ... . .. ' ' ' nt-ct to the most remote centers of i population the public, demanding the best and prowins ever more exacting in its tastes, cannot and will not supprt i anything but the thoroughly finished , i'nd carefully produced attraction. i But. though the need for the repre toire theatre, per so. I. us ci-ased to exist as an institution for public entertain- i ment. the need of it as a training j frround for vnnnp ntavers has ini'raucH . a thourandfold. With its threatened ex- j tiiH't:-M drarnc.tic art faces a serious; problem. For in the absence of such few repertoire theatres as now remain I t,0 us how will it be possible for the ! rising generation of players to g:-t the , equivalent of its hard and exacting training. i ne answer to tins important ques tion ; s voiced by Mme. Kalich is that each individual manager established his own repertoire training school for the benefit of his own particular players. ' and in an effort to prove the practic-' ability of her idea, "The Riddle Woman" company is shortly to enter upon an interesting and novel experi ment. NEW DRAMA EACH WEEK It is Mme. Kalich's plan to have her company trained and rehearsed in a new drama each week they are on tour. The morning of each week day is to be devoted to rehearsal of a new nipPA anil con). Ct.niov u A i . iormai proauction or the same insofar as is possible without requisite seen-j ery. costumes, etc. ! While it is not a part of Mme. Kclich s plan to give any public per formances of the repertoire thus re hearsed in those cities where "The Rid dle : Woman" plays for only one week, she announces her intention of doing so in all "stands" of two weeks or more so that Philadelphia. Boston, San Fran cisco, and later New York, will all have ! an opportunity of seeing her idea put to a practical test, which test will be in the nature of a series of invitation mat inees to members of the profession, students of dramatic schools, and such others generally as may be interested in the development of her experiment : He was held in $2500 bail for trial, i .aTr-a ,ha, . i. j ts cnarSed at, the defendant had in ' his Possession 13,000 feet of film, stolen from the Famous Players-Lasky cor- porauon. irom universal Film company ! and from the Jester Comedies. Thousands of dollars' worth ct films have been stolen in the last year, ac j cording to Assistant District Attorney ! Alfred J. Talley, and shipped to Central and South America and to the Orient. 'Sari-' Next Week Mitzi Hojos' sparkling operetta "Sari." will be presented at the Alcwzar for one week, starting Monday, Sep tember 15. "Sari" is the operetta se lected for the ' benefit for devastated France. ' ' --.-. , - i i 'Soldiers of Fortune A Davis Novel, jnow Being Photographed Arthur S. Karie. president of Realart Pictures corporation, announces thut Hichard Harding l'avis' ptirring ro mance. "Soldier:! of fortune." is now being filmed for release this fall. The p'eture is beln,.; made in California for the Mayflower lo;iiay cr rporation. The director is Alan Dawn, wUo has sup"rvise:l the production of 1 no. t of the recent Dousing Fairbanks tucccs?es and other pictures. "Soldiers of Fortune." probably tne most popular cf "ii hard Harding; Davi3' novels, was written about -0 years aso. and atc idine to the publishers has been in constant demand ever since. The stage play based on the novel ha" b?en j.hown in practically every city of the ,,;,.-.- and still is a standard produc tion of most of the best stock companies. The book was dramatized by Aig:ustus Thomas and the play had its New York Premier theatre at Charles Frohman s Savoy on March 17. 1902, under . the management of Henry B. Harris. It waj in "Soldiers of .Fortune" that Hob- eft Kdeson made his first appearance as a stage star, inner members or tne original cast who are now well known re Dorothy Donnelly. Macey Ilarlam I Thomas W. Ross. Guy Bates Post, Byron Ongley and Wallace Kddinger. Four .Books for One Photoplay For the first time, it is said, in the history of photoplay, four books have been purchased on which to base the story for one picture. Realart Pictures ! corporation has bought the "Anne" books hy L. M. Montgomery to provide Mary Miles Minter with a suitable story. The four. books are "Anne of Green Gables." "Anne of Avonlea," "Chron- of Avonlea." and "Anne of the Island." "Anne of Green Gables" will be the title of the photoplay and the stories told in the series have been J r. T.rl n crl Intr. r.na ntr t i mil Iv hv Frances Marion. Connecticut. Yankee Is to Be Filmed The film rights of Mark Twain's satire, "A Connecticut Yankee at King Arthur's Court," has just been purchased by the Fox Film corporation. The chief role Is to be taken -by Tom Mix and the techni cal and art departments . of the Fox studios are already gathering mem oranda and period data fn an endeavor to make this production one of the most accurate productions ever filmed. "A Connecticut Yankee at King Arthur's Court" tells of the romantic and ad venturous Yankee who awakes to find himself transported back 13 centuries and surrounded by King Arthur and his farrfous "knights of the round table. M.s. Rinehart in South Mary. Roberts Rinehart is , now In California at the , headquarters of the Eminent Authors'. Pictures. Inc. Mrs. Rinehart is -there to consult Rex Beach. who with Samuel Goldwln directs the corporation, about the filming of novels. "The Amasing : Interlude" will be the first novel --of Mrs. Rinehart's to be filmed by the new concern. !" T MURTAGH'S CONCERT ON OUR GIANT $50,000 WURLITZER ORGAN MURTAGH'S CDXCERT PROGRAM. "WAVES OK THE DANUBE" (Waltz) ..Ivanovlct "SERENADE" (Fantasia ) . Moore "IRISH DIAMONDS'" (Fantasia)... .Moore "The Minftrel Boy" "Killarney" "Come Back to Krin" "Garry Owen" ''ALABAMA l.ULLABV De Veil MARCH FROM "TANNHAUSER " Wagner J2:30 TODAY A LLOYD COMEDY ! I . j I la We if V-- . sV'asC ,. In f STARTING SATURDAY CHAS. RAY THE FAVORITE OF ALL DRAMATIC STARS IN EUGENE WALTERS' PLAY OF PICTURESQUE TYPES AND SHARP CONTRASTS SMILES AND FEARS MAKE WOMAN'S YEARS STARTING TODAY AND NEARLY ALL OF THIS WEEK STOPPING FRIDAY AT MIDNIGHT IN "BILL HENRY" A KINOGRAMS A REAL LAUGH