gagrv ^tjJSeSe^ ^usea^e Va&a"V *1z&& \vSS\SS\ 5S3S i «nfc Theatricals Music Features ^ f xg—aBrvgg^gpg^gggx^x^v^gxggXiaiiVMavggxjBgXiiea^gaavaAAgi FOOTLIGHT FLICKERS By ALVIN MOSES FOR ASP Wow York, Feb. 1—Eari Hines, kta wizard of the piano whom ^hfcatfoang add the world at large rate among the first throe expo • wants of “jazz" pianology, captur ed upper New York, Friday af ternoon, “Upper Now York" as this eaaunentaitfOr refers to it, is that sartor Chat houses some half a ■Million folk of African ancestry, tatter known as Harlem. With the Hines aggregation of magical artists came gracious JHAN ELDRIDGE, built along the ssms lines of lovely ETTA MO TEN, and possessor of no little of the stage and e nema star’s sing iag ability. It was “Father's” (that’s what tfcey nicknamed Earl) first appear ance here in a year ,and to say that Apollo theatre patron? took the building apart after he had warmed into his special piano num bers 3 stating the situation mildly. Backstage after all the trumpet ing and dance numbers were for gotten memories, we chatted for 15 pleasant minutes with the girl who has been styled by some a counterpart of Ethel Waters and Maxine Sullivan. When Jean Eld ri4gu talks about “JEAN" she re flects a background that instantly coojures to mind the queenly line «f women in whose ve'ns course the blood of the QUEEN OF SHEBA. Two years in buffalo with our fri end JIMMY PERKINS’ Band, dur ing which nationally known critics rater her “top?” served to be the magnet that caught on with Earl Hines. One need net be a writer «r forecaster to quote unqualifiedly JEAN ELDRIDGH WIL LBE A TOP HEADLINER, JUST AS LONG AS SHE CARES TO CARRY ON AS SHE DID THIS WBEK AT THE FAMOUS APO IjLO theatre. A few seasons &go Hines intro daaed to New Yorkers a dancing team (SONNY & SONNY) which Mu writer then predicted would i-aaa aietfly towards the topmost rtmg of their chosen profesison. itometrmes like the rest of the kmiei family, we’re given to the vw« of superlatives or as our fri ends of Phi Beta Kappa key fame say ‘‘overstatement." After 27 minutes of tap dancing which overshadowed anything t.ieso poor eyes have noted during the past decade of theatre coverage wn’ra prone be state that: “IT MAY BELONG IN THE REALM OF UNDERSTATEMENT to say. SONNY tt SONNY can still dance. The line forms on the right for teams who rate on a par ty with thess two youngster brought into tho dazzling glare of the calcium h(p Mart (Father) Hines, but these two, head the liae. A letter dropped out at our mail pouch from a weekly visitor to tho theatre that houses the nation’s foremost colored stage stars. Lu cille Walker, comely mis a from Phoebu3 Va., now making New York her home, requests a story on PORTER GRAINGER, one of tho greatest arrangers, producers and mus'cal score director, we have produced in the past quarter cen tury- W-9 answer Miss Walker, by stating, he;' order is a big one call ing fa.- much research ind mid nito oil burning', and that we’ll do our best to oblige in our next re leas \ RADIO RAVES By H. J. HOUSER for ANP The Mowing listing is in effect for tho week of Fob. 5 only! All time shown is Eastern Time. Sub tract 1 hour for Central time; 2 hours for Mountain time and 3 hours for West Coast time. ORCHESTRAS, VOCALISTS AND INSTRUMENTALISTS CAB CALLOWAY, CBS—Mon., Thurs., 11:30 P. M. ((Cotton club, NYC) •CHARIOTEERS— NBC blue on1 Tues., 8:15 P. M. NBC Red—Sat. I 10:45 A. M. (Vocal quartet) DEEP RIVER BOYS—CBS— j East and South only! Mon. Tuee.,1 Wdi, Thurs., 8:15 A. M.; CBS (West only) Fri., 11:15 A. M.; CBS —South only. Sunday 10:30 A. M. JIMMY DUDLEY — WTMJ — (620 k) Mon., Wed., Fri., 1:30 P.! M.—eaxaphon© aokriat with tfc© Rhythm Rascals from Milwaukee, WL. JOE GORJDEN—WNEW—(1250 k) Fri.' 1 A. M. Sat., 11 P. M. (Small's Paradise, NYC) ERSKINE HAWKINS—NBC Blue Mon., 12:30 A. M. Thurs., Sat, 5 P. M. (Savoy, NFC) FLETCHER HENDERSON—N BC Red—except West Coast Sun., and Mon., 12:30 A. M.—WENR (870 k) Sun., thru Fri., 11:30 P. M. (WMAQ 670 k) Tues, Fri., 13:30 A. M. Sat 12 midnite (Grand Terrace Cafe Chicago) BOB HOWARD—WEAF—(660 k) Thurs. 11 P. M (pianist and aooalist) LES HITE)—KEHE—-(Loe Aa geles( scattered schedule (Cloh Ot&anoia) JAM SESSION—.WNEW (125k) ' —Wed ,6 P.M. (Famous guest in-1 strumentalists) CHARI IE JOHNSON WAAF— j (920 k) Sat., 1 2noon (Duke of tho like from Chicago) KING COLE JESTERS NBC - blua-- Sunday 8:30 P. M. Instru mental and vocal group. PALMER BROTHERS in ‘Jive at Five" WNEW (1250 k) Tues., I and Thurs., 6 P. M. ERSKINE TATE -WIND (560 k)—Nitely 12:45 A. M. (Walka thon, Coliseum, Chicago) SATURDAY NIGHT SWING CLUB, CBS Sat., 6:30 P. M. (Guest of thu calibre of Roy Elir dge and Duko Ellington are aired weekly. NOBT E SISSIiE—NRC BLUE— Sun. 11 P. M. Tues , 11 P. M. (Dia mond H r'e IT.' e Tar, NYC) VAC YRCNDS—Club matinee— NBC Blue, M >n., thru Sat., 4 P. M. (Vocal quartet) FATS WALLER, WNEW (126 k) Tues., 9:30 P. M.; Wed, 1:30 A M. Thurs.. 11 P. M.“ Yatch Club, NYC) HERMAN WALDER, KCMO— Kansas City, Nitely 11:15 P. M.; NBC Blue, Thurs., 11:30 P. M. Fri. and Sat., 12 midnight, NBC Red Wed. 11:30 P. M. (Park Central, NYC) BILLY WRIGHT — WRBM — (770 k) Sun., thru Thurs., 1 A. U. Fri., 1:15 A. M.; Sat, 2 A M. (Town Club, 'Oicero, 111.) TEDDY WILSON and LIONEL HAMPTON with BENNY GOOD MAN’S ORK—CBS, Tue*., 9:80 P. M INSPIRATIONAL, VARIETY t COMEDY PROGRAMS ALL NATIONS PENTECOS TAL dRUHOH -WCFL (970 k) Sun., midnite to 1 A. It. AMATEUR NITE IN BRONZE VILLE—WIND (660 k) Wed., 9:30 r. M. to 10:30 P, M. (Regal Thea tre, Chicago) AMATEUR NITE IN HARLEM —WMCA— (670 k) Wed. 11 P. M. to 12 midnite (Apollo theatre, NYC) MAJOR BOWLES AMATEUR HOUR—QBS Thursday 9 P. M. RUBY ELZY—Soprano—KEHK, Los Angeles, Tues., 9 P. M. Weat 'Coast time (12 midnite) MAGNOLIA BLOSSOMS—'NBC Blue—Wed.. 9 P. M. (Fisk Jubilee Ohoir. BEGONIA MERRY WEATHER -•WNEW (1250 fc) Mou. thru Sat.,1 9 A. M. (NYC) N EGRO HOU R — K EH B— Los Aleglos Thurs. 1 A M. 10 P. M. on West Coast. ROCHESTER, JACK BENNY’S RADIO VALET—NBC RED, Sun. 7 F. M. (Rebroadcast for West coast, 11:30 P. M. SO UTH ERN AI RES, A VOCAL QUARTET NBC Blue — Sun., u ;30 Thurs. and Fri., 12 noon. TALES FROM HARLEM with JOE BOSTIC- -WNEW (1250 k) Fri . 8:30 P. M. RUDY VALLEE VARIETY HOUR- -NBC Uol, Thurs., 8 P. M. (Prominent colored truest artists arc frequently Heard) VINE STREET VARIETIES WHB (860 k) Snt 4 P. M. Kansas City, Mo.) TAI ES FROM HARLEM with JOE BOSTIC WNEW (1250 k) Fri. 8:30 P. M. WE THE PEOPLE—CBS Tues. 9 F. M. (A parade of real life persons representing every creed and race) WINGS OVER JORDAN—CBS, Sun., 9:30 A. M. (Prominent speak er and choral group) KEY TO ABBREVIATIONS CBS indicates the Columbia Broadcasting System; MBS Mutal Broadcasting System; NBC Red or Blue, National Broadcasting Co. (K) is the abbreviation for kilo cycle. Oonsult your individual local net work atabiom for broadcasts listed •ubtmcting time given, EST, to your own time aone. -«o» An "iron lung”", one of the most dramatic machine* used by modern science, will be demonstrated at (Che 1939 California World’s Fair. ANOTHER MEMBER FOR "GONE WITH THE WIND” Butterfly McQueen, heroine of New York’s Harlem because of her meteoric rise from factory work i to success on the Broadway stajfo, yesterday came to Hollywood to become Scarlett O'Hara’s personal maid, Prissy, in David 0. Selanick’s “Gone with the Wind.” It is Butterfly s first motion picture assignment. Just two years ago, this girl who is still in her 'teens was folding, pressing and packing underwear in a New York factory. But when George Abbott was casting an all colored show, "Brown Sugar," Butterfly whoso actcal name is Thelma, boldly applied for one of the roles and landed it. This led to the role of Jenny, the maid, in "Brother Ra*", and another prominent part in ‘What a Life’ the show »he left so she could play in "Gone with the Wind". Sel7,nick's east for the film v«r i sion of Margaret Mitchell’s novel is headed by Vivien Leigh, as Scarlett O’Harra; Clark Gable as lthctt Butler; Leslie Howard, as AsMey Wilkes, and Olivia DeHav illand r*' Melanie Wilkes. The pic ture to be directed by George Cu ko ■ will be filmed in technicolor. lor her role as a maid, Butter f'y has more than stage exper-! ;once. While she was studying to I p. nurst at the Lincoln Training' School ir .'he Bronx, she worked p d'mestic. After giv'ng tm t’ i idea of nur. ing, Butterfly found, a job in a factory, and on tho side served as a reporter for the Harlem Eagle. She always harbored the idea she could act, so she took part in any amateur theatrical that came along Butterfly was bom in Tampa, Florida, and has lived in Augusta, Georgia; Babylon, Ijong Island and New York City. -o———. SEEKS TO POPULIZE SONGS BY NEGRO COMPOSERS Etta Moten to Feature All-Negro Program in Philadelphia Recital February 18 Philadelphia, Fdb. 1—When Et tp. Moten, famed concert, radio and screen personality, frivos her aong recital at McDowell Memorial 'Community Presbyterian Church, here MonfcJay evening, Feb. 13, ahe will inaugurate something new in major concert presentations by giv ing an all-Negro program. Her renditions will range from j the severest classics by composers like Coleridge Taylor, Harry Bur-j leigh, Nathaniel Dett, William Grant Still and William Danrson,; to compositions by James Weldon Johnson. Mrs. Florence B. Price, J. C. Johnson, Margaret Bonds, Duke Ellington and Eva Jessye. The program will also include Creole Negro melodies and songs by other composers who have used Negro poems or the Negro idiom as well as the traditional sp'ri-1 tuala of which Miss Mo ten is an acknowledged master. “We know too little of the works of our own composers,” said Miss Moten, whose singing of German, French anil Italian has won high praise from leading critics of the nation, “‘and so I am devoting this season to an effort to bring greater recognition to scene of the loveliest song wr'tten which have sprung from the pens of our own composers. “I havo been greatly stimulated she continued, "by the apprecia tioo for this music which depicts the Negro life so fully which hi* been shown by both colored wed white audiences north and south for whom I hare sun# this, year." Mias Moten is appearing here under the auspices of the Ddtowell Community Center, 21st and 0» lumbid Are., Rer. Arthur E. Ran kin, pastor Miss Margaret Bond* noted Chios go pianist, will be Ur accompanist. -sOs-— Tha $1,200,000 Chinese con-er atua at the 1039 World's Fair r« Treasure Island, will cover »e**a acres. Wells Fargo Bank of San Fraa cisco will celebrate its 87th birth day with a historical pageant at the 1939 Cal fornia World’s Fair NEURITIS RELIEVE PAIN IN PEW MINUTES To relieve the torturing pain of Neuritis, Rheumatism, Neuralgia or Lumbago in a few minutes, get the Doctor's formula NURtTO. Dependable—no opiates, no nar cotics. Does the work quickly—must relieve worst pain, to your satisfaction in a few minutes or money back at Druggists. Don't suffer. Use NUKITO ou this guarantee today. IRenfcesvous grille (formerly the Apex Bar) A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF LIQUORS—BEERS AND WINE SPACIOUS DANCE FLOOR — NEWLY DECORATED 1818N.24THST. JA. 9331 20 tm\ Discount on Laundry & Dry Cleaning Cash and Carry Edholm and Sherman Launderers & Dry Cleaners WE 6055 "SMILIN' THROUGH" By Arthur A. Penn BIRTH OF A SONG From ASCAP Files By Joseph R. Fliesler and Paul Carruth . 0‘S* r^.lr ftORftcl laad ee^RUTu M L' 1SS isS-fMvOd^O J—, ARTHUR A. PENN, British bom but • native and citizen of America for nearly four decades, is e descendant of WSiem, the Quaker. Hi* father wee a Fellow of the Royal c_ Arthur «u brought to America by Representative Sol Bloom, and tried to *efl hit “nice” tengt, without tuccett, in thota ragtime days. So ho loft for Son Fran^itco. and itarted a pubtthing boose of hit own, to prove hit taoriot. He failed and had just enough money left to go to Chicago. H wa* twenty year* before he really succeeded a* a aom poter. The inspiration for ''Smilin' Through" came on a roil* way train. An advertising poster suggested the melody, which he wrote on the back of an envelope in twenty minutes. Pub lishers refused the song. (Music Features & PhtJto Syfitficutf* -Rw*. Penn interested the singer, Remold Vv'erren. ath, and it was his rendition that started the song on it» way. Since then the song and title have been used in a play, morion pictures, etc. It v»as performed at President Roose velt's B;ithday Party. » WtoWl Penn, now a resident of New London, Conn., it a metnc <■ of the American Society of Composer*, Authors and puq lishers and continues to write his "nice" songs fo» the repertoire.