10 B THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE : MARCH 14. 1920. John Barrymore a Great "Richard"v By BURNS MANTLE. VTEW YORK. (Special Corre spondence.) Probably there 1 were- not 50 persons in the audience at the Plymouth theater the night John Barrymore made what he terms his "audience plunge" into the classics with "The Tragedy of Richard III" who would recog nize a "great" Richard if they were to meet one. And yet all the talk the next day was of "great" Rich ardj and "good" Richards and of the younger Barrymore's place among ' them. , The answer is simple, He is a great Richard, else he could not have held 1,800 persons in their seats until a quarter before 1 o'clock in the morning to see him play Richard. Not in this day of weekly blizzards, uncertain commutation and little interest in Shakespeare. He is a great Richard, too, in being a new Richard. He probably never saw the part played, and I doubt if he had much coaching from those who offered to help him. He is of a mind these days to do things in hi "own way. Thus he is , un shackled by convention or tradition. He reads the text naturally and not unmusically, as it appeals to him stressing with the enthusiasm of a bo3' who has discovered a new I ghost story the fiendish imaginings of hell's famous conspirator. He plays Richard with the same zest that, as "a young cartoonist, he drew weirdly grotesque and fascin atingly misshapen humans. He ex tracts a certain joy from dragging Jhe shortened leg,' weighted with armor: in favorine the withered arm, and in bending forward, when the situation is right, so the crooked back may add its bulge to the pic rure. Occasionally, when the scene and the speech appeal to him he is apt to forget his deformities and to stand erect, defying all and sundry, not as the envenomed Pantaganet, but as himself, John Barrymore, Richard's most understanding friend. He fairly dotes on the scraggly black wig that changes completely his expression and the lines of his finely chiseled features. He is not a strong Richard, in a physical sense. He could not have been a terror in the field, nor slain reasonably whole groups of his ar mored enemies. He is crafty, sin ister, deceitful, subtle, and is careful to make it plain that from his quar rel with the fate that aent him into the world an ugly and a crippled thing is sprung his passion for power and the satisfaction of being lllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll T-O-D-A-Y Matinee and Eve. and Monday night America's Greatest Colored Show The Smarter Set Headed by the Foremost Comedians SALEM TUTT WHITNEY & J. HOMER TUTT Presenting Their. Latest Musical Creation "The Children of the Sun" By George Well Parker of this city. Prices Evenings, 25c to $1.50; Mat. Tocfay,,25c to $1 Tuesday and Wednesday March 16-17 Matinee Wednesday Snificant Erifemend N0TP3RimDPA&vXMT Direct fdomTpiumpuakt All S&asonPun in Nj , David DeWco in. the supreme success oF kcr brilliant career. Knoblockj i totab play TIGEDITIGEE and Iqui fltrProduxiuatvM under the perioral aWtmof Seats on Sale. Nights 50c to $2.50. Wednesday Matinee 50c to-$2.00. A One Night Only-Next Sunday March 21st Annual Tour of the World's Greatest Minstrel Organization Gus Hill's Big Minstrels The ntost stupendous consolidation of Solo Singers, Star Dancers and Hilarious Comedians ever assembled in one company. March 22-23-24 Matinee Wednesday , ass ki ..- QODERT LGUIS STEVEtJSr.M'c i1 IML I 1 7fl Li ID Mil IfMlS f" Seats Tomorrow. Nights SQ to $2.00. Matinee Wednesday 50c tD $i;50. TihHiiiUimniininumi iiiHHii'"'ifiiiiniiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiit BRANDEIS THEATEri r March 18, At 8slS. THE TUESDAY. , music Al, CLUB, MABEL GARRISO)SiiESENTS JOHN QUINE Soprano, Metropolitan Opern r ,,, r Baritoaa even with God by doing Satan's bidding. In humor he i not lacking and yet in his wooing of the widowed Ann, followm? close tipon his mur der of her husband and her father, which many Richards havep layed with obvious smirks at the audience, he is so earnest and so gentle in his pleading, the success of his suit be comes the more understandable, though the scene is made theatri cally less effective. , He is, not to use more space in saying so, a great Richard in being a fascinating Richard who by daring to be himself gives new life to an old tragedy that only such treat ment could successfully revive for this particular generation of play goers. In the version of the tragedylhat lias been patched together for Mr. Barrymore's use, five scenes are taken from the preceding play of "King Henry VI." They are used as a sort of sketchy prologue, with the hope, no doubt, of clarifying for a modern audience the situation as it affected the houses of Lancaster and York at the moment of Richard's de termination to cleave his way to the throne. Thus a couple of sightly murders (those of Henry and Ed ward) are added to the entertain ment, Edward being slain on the field of Tewkesbury and Henry in an iron cage in the tower. This ver sion also permits the use 4of the lit tle known but informative soliloquy beginning, "Would he (Edward IV) were wasted, marrow bones and all, that from his loins no hopeful branch may spring to cross me from the golden time 1 hope for." In genera!, however, the added scenes complicate with new char acters and obscuring speeches as much as they clear up the" story, and add little that the older acting ver sions, which employed but one, or at most two, of the scenes from "Henry VI." did not contain. After the first act the, tragedy proper is played, the action around Richard exclusively. Let the classicists quar rel as to whether or not they were wisely made. The cast is mostly English and thoroughly competent. It includes j Leslie Palmer as Buckingham, E. J. Ballantir.c as Clarence, Arthur Row as King Henry, Reginald Den ny as Edward, Mrs. Thomas Wise as the Duchess of York, Evelyn Hall as Elizabeth, Helen Robbins as Anne, and Stanley Warm'ington as Catesby. Robert Edmund Jones' settings are impressive in both the simplicity cf the inner scenes and the massiveness of the tower. At the end cf the second act Ethel and Lionel Barrymore and John Drew took their places in an upper box and the happy audience applauded In Percy -Mackaye's "George Washington" we first meet "the man who made us," which is the author's subtitle,- when he was a farmer lad at Mount Vernon and just after he bad completed a par- "OMAHAjS FUN CENTER" ttm tlSttk- Daily Mat. 15-25-60e m9rAiJmV Evng 2S-50-75C. $1 Chat. Waldron Preaents THEBOSTONIARSb. With, the Author-Actor Frank Funny Finney Vs&2r Beauty Cheru of Bean Eatinr Boston Girls LADIES' DIME MATINEE WEEK DAYS - stars X m& ; M S -feeler XiJX j Nettie Miss.Ovandos kfefkii : ; Horenze Jempest ticularly good job of surveying Lord Fairfax's acres. He is then a husky boy of 23 and much inter ested in scientific farming. More interested in farming, in fact, than he is in the girls, who already are beginning to irritate him. To avoid them he slips off and marries the widow Custis and brings her home as Martha Washington. And that is the first act. Next we discover the "Liberty Boys" becoming active. A group of them surround King's (now Colum bia) college, acting much like groups of radicals usually act, and threatening to ride the Tory cooper on a rail to prove their contempt of King George and all his adher ents. Then appears young Alexan der Hamilton to harangue the mob into good humor and take their minds off the defiant' professor long enough to permit him to escape. Jumping back to Mount Vernon, we find the loyal Martha buckling on George's 3word and promising to wait for hirn under the sycamores, or at least to be there when he shall come home from the wars. Next scene we find the general settling a a dispute between ""the Mnssachu chusetts "Johnnies" and the Vir ginia "Jennies" in the first rainbow division to gather in these states. Then we have an impressive pic ture of Washington reading a para graph from the declaration of inde pendence (accepted locally as a timely protest against the eighteenth amendment) and proceed thence to the shores of the Dela ware with Tom Paine and Alexan der Hamilton exchanging greetings and philosophies in the foreground and Washington pacing the back ground, depressed and heart-broken because none of his division is ready to risk the crossing with him at dawn. Thirdly, we are at Valley Forge, where, thanks to one of those muddling congresses from which many citizens still are forced to ac cept their ancestors and pretend to '( - . ill l ) ) l7f v IV- 31 ti I Jr. J I I 1 17 I 1 la) "X IW VI ASS V Jo- A V o I X F I 1 TiJ I AJ 1 JJ VKFl u PERSONAL DIRECTION OF VV.LE0OUX-Afr(LIATE0 WITH WESTERN VAUOEVILLE MAfVACCRS ASSOCIATION-B.F.KEITHS AND ORPHEUS CIRCUITS - ANO PLAYING ONLY BIG TIME" STANDARD ACTS -LL SHOWS ARC CHOSETV FOR THElfiENTERTAcNIIVG; OUALCTitS f OrvnOTO 0 ,sVnd instrumental "M ff I rvv S'-'t" TIIECOP"1 1 inonC acy 0 IpIathe WEEKLY i It's the Cook That Has the Heart Appeal FRANCES STARR who playi the part of Sally, the engaging cook, in capt. toward Knob lock s rem.irkahti. v Ar,m "Tiger! Tiger 1" which will be seen at the tsrandeis this week, has opinions quue as convincing as Meredith who long ago avowed "civilized man can't live without cooks. "In choosing a cook as the here of his piece," the star of the play said recently, "the playwright chose the primitive woman, and the kitchen of today comes nearer be ing the background of such a type than any place in the modern home. In fact it seems to me that the kitchen is, now the one and only pun. in me nome wnere woman is absolutely and always her true self. There she reverts to tvDe and one sees her as she is without any of tne externals that mean so much to a woman only because she thinks they mean so much to man. "The kitchen in a house it seems to me, is somehow its heart its throbbing, beating center of activity. We can live without drawing rooms and libraries, without boudoirs and dressing rooms, even at a pinch we can make-shift somehow for a bed room, but there must be a kitchen if it is to be a home. "There never was a real woman," Frances . Starr continued, "who wasn't at hfart a cook. It is the woman nature to wish to minister to man, and food in this life is the first necessity to man's happi ness and well being. Again it Sally nad been a stenographer, or say a bookkeeper, the play could never have hap pened. Knoblock knew his types He knew the appeal that the healthy and splendid vitality of the country girl made to the blase man of the town. He was sick of mentality. Fed up on theories, and consequently a victim marked for the first all feminine primitive wom an who crossed his path and of course the affair was all the more inevitable when the man in the case met her in the spring moonlight, ne.T- where lilacs were in bloom. "I worked longest on my make up for the part," Miss Starr said. "The Monde hair is not my own 'touched up' as many seem to think. It is a golden wig. It makes me rounder, more mature. And that is my idea of Sally. She is nearest like 'Tess' and she comes from that part of the country. I have tried to create the illusion of a woman, fashioned of Devonshire clotted cream and strawberries, warm with do so with pride, 3,000 of the faith ful troops are left "naked and starv ing" the winter through. But here the light begins to shine with the -irnval of Lafayette and the promise- of aid from overseas, and next scene we are at the edge of Yorktown with Washington, Knox and Colonel Nicola describing the bombardment that finally flashes, white and blue to indicate a victory won. And lastly we are taken back to Mount Vernon, whee the fishtsr who would a-farming go returns, to Martha and the sycamores. It is not on the whole, an im pressive spectacle. .The poet Mac kaye has labored earnestly and broueht forth a masaue for children and patriotic holidays that missea the holding quality of drama. It serves "to humanize and creditably to visualize the father of his coun try and there are moments when it flares with the inspiration of great historical moments. But generally it is crude and choppy and does not compare with John Drinkwater's drama of "Abraham Lincoln." Walter Hampden is a human and at times an eloquent Washington and the snpporting cast is compe tent without being distinguished. George Marion reads the interludes splendidly, but his effort at singing the folk songs is a little painful. sunshine, vivid with life and ready to love and tobeloved The action of the play opens in the luxurious apartments of Clive Couper, member of parliament, bored and lacking interest in the concrete things of life and utterly unmoved by the love of the beautiful daughter of his old friend. Then comes into his life a little servant girl, a cook, whom he pick up in the street, and they enter into an il licit love affair which continues for two years. It is to the unlettered girl of the masses that the awaken ing comes rather than to the cul tured and gifted man of the world. The scene at the close of the third act, when Sally renounces her lover and at last confesses to him and to herself that the end had come, is spoken of by New York critics as the most pojrerful dramatic situa tion ever shown on the English speaking stage, and Miss Starr and Lionel Atwill both rise fully to its, tremendous possibilities. Miss Starr's sunnortinc cant i nit iucui.iv.ai uii&uidi company in tact, exactly as seen on Broadway, including, in addition to Lionel At will, Frederick Lloyd, Wallace Eri kine, VVhitford Kane, Thomas Lou den, Mary Moore. Daisv Belmore and Helen Andrews. Otis Skinner, who comes to the Brandeis iu "Pietro" in a recent conversation regarding the various leeiing actors undergo on first nights, said: 'A first nisht is formidable enough at any time of life. You have all the natural buovancv. the exhilaration of expectancy, which amounts almost to hysteria, to hold in check. Of course, different ac tors take it differently. Some are naturally phlegmatic. Indeed, I can recall occasions, when I was my own producer, stage manager, car penter and leading man, when the whole burden and weight of detail so oppressed tne that on the open ing night I was under my part tamer man over u. i iikc IO go to the theater on tny first night without the faintest consciousness of any stage detail whatsoever, be- V A -.11. .V . - V. lll.b .11 fctiVV things have been intelligently pro vided. Of course, the natural ten dency on first nights is toward an overstraining for effect and too cften one starts out in one's big scenes on such a high key that it is impossible to get it any higher. Still I am not sure that it isn't bet ter to err on the side of hitting your top note too soon than on that of under-expressing your part. For the main thine is to know Tour audience. With the exception of the student, the critic and the artist, the public goes to the theater for sensation which is, after all, the fundamental appeal of all art. The part of Hamlet which really catch the average audience are the ghost scene and the play scene with their suggestions of hysteria. In short, the theater is, in a way, a palace of sensation. "Besides. I love mv work, and there is no keener sense of enjoy ment to me than that which exists in the period from the selection of the olav. through all its prepara tion, to its final performance. There is so much lor the actor to study, so mud) that will develop and round oat hi3 art. To take his calling seriously is no less an essential for an actor than it is for any other professional man or for any other artist. Aviator Smith Plans Flight Around World London. March 13. Sir Ross Smith, who was knighted for his flight to Australia, is considering a flight around the world, says a Mel bourne cable. ,He thinks the trip can be made in 70 days. litliillili!luliiiiil;!i:ililMiiiil!iiiiniiii:iii!ii:i I FREE LECTURE I I V.k -by- . . , I 1 , TPETER W. COLLINS of Boston , , Nationat Lecturer of Knights of Columbus BOLSHEVISM, THE RED MENACE j MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM 1 I Tuesday Evening, March 16, 8 o'CIock I - Admission FreeQuestions Answered The Public Invited s Space Reserved for Veterans of the World War 1ill!liilnli;ll!ll!llllt!lill!IIIWI!llll!ilMlltllllHlnlUI! i y I VA WEEK STARTING SUNDAY, MARCH 14 MATINEE DAILY 2:18 EVERY NIGHT S:1S Stcond Edition of THE 4 MORTONS Sun, Kitty, Martha and "THEN AND NOW" , Homer B. Marguerite MASON i KEELER Praaentinf a One-Act Play "MARRIED" . MACRAE CLEGG The Intruder and "THE QUEEN OF THE WHEEL" FLORENZE TEMPEST in "TUMBLE IN LOVE" 'ttli Alton Allen PREVOST & COULET in A VAUDEVILLE MELANGE LYONS & Y0SC0 Introducinr Their Own Excluaiva Competition RUTH BUDD .The CM With tha Smile TOPICS OF THE PAY KINOGRAMS Nights, lSe to fl.OOt Sunday and Holiday a low nt tl Ms Matino, 15c to 75c (Patroaa Pay War Tax.) rrfaaa Mo Us. mm mim Mnrck JS N War lW ! A