AMUSEMENT SECTION W Mf trout t&Kb ftfeiuutt? PHOTOPLAY THEATRES t)ANCilsfG MUSIC PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY tiVENim.JVtiE 1 Me. PAVLOWA AT U CtTY TfVV '""'"' "'" ' "' ---x "- -v- &' 1WV KiifeijiySW MiiTrr ii- irwiiiti- f x ,nju:i j ij. . -. v , ,lp f Sfex v lJSKrtBrfl5PfW6'HiB!-"Wlll5iJwtk'' "rj "i t .- i S F I. mai..yJsV.An .mi,, ',, fc.S.Sftl.Ti,,ar,Ji,S.&..X vUi.w iwsSiaAjjaaaS-5ssfisfe!( Thfe famous Russian dancer as She anjjeurs In everyday life. The photo r was taken When raviowa visited universal uity to appear in -me uumo Girl of Fortici, now entering Its second week at tne l orrest. pothern Retiring, Praised by Justin Huntly McCarthy iiAuthor of Sbtherris Last Play, as Vell as One of His Most Popular Productions, Calls Him Our Greatest Romantic Actor BY JUSTIN HUNTLY McCARTHY Thi farewell appeardnce of B. II. W f i ! CT. ' Jttitin Huntley McCarthy's I mwiMuy poena on romantic piay, 'It! Wire King," gives added interest o appreciation by that author of iff. Sothtrn' ni'iinn h.ir, Ifi- Knthnm jtiad thave'd ihe role of Franbols Villon. HAD Heard mUch of the .acting of Mr. FiSolhim before it was ever my good for Ikm to see him. Tdle's came to me from jJwfSa tKo Atlantic at a Itudotf nassehdyl, N Wormed the bright romance of Zeiidd ili tfce high passion of a Master of Itav- .wow and the "gallant liumqr of a Mcr Mo. I hsnrd of a scene with a rose which, f.Ky to be one of the tenderest, mbst iHials)t lave scenes known to the modern1 v'tz I could only hope some day to be" i la time took me to New York, nnd Wof ra fast thoughts Was to satisfy my priMttjr as to the young American actor. ! nooUnccU lb, appear In a pieco 0 ic & t'()"l!t' Gltl." and ? was present . -If "w nignt. i can recall no occasion l.tU tllV ehHn,.,k f ll. -!.,. 1 ..'.IJI..1. ?fMller Interest In what I was dbout "ft i nopeu, i tearcu. my anticipations .Vfmt as I supppse bne dlwayil does! JStota- Th oicaSlons' hb Possible .dls- ."t. Vry .f s.l,1fc0y the suspense i,T,,. , ' wal, tor the appearance h? r.P7- knw that ft dealt with Hi ; ! I ", a,fuelo for Independitice, V '. ? peopled with -wilt-Ken mkn In ladK; ih" Jrlumnh of the declaration Sm ura BUt th? P'aym'feht have Tr h ratich worse or nT,Mi I ,i...i. i... K& ;ld fii ,eAai! i'ttle itnpres. ffH my hiimory. 1 haa come tb see i- v. itajwiMatiij BEfcUj STOftY li Stffe"001 Pittsburgh, a praised and famous actor nnd found he deserved all hid praises and all his fame. t was so fascinated by the player that 1 foun4 It hard to nnalyzo my fascination. Partly, It waa plain, tile bharm ho exercised was duo to his possession of that quality which, for the want of a better word, we call magnetism a quality given now and then to name few statesmen, to some few actors, and which of Ha own force must cchlbbl nttentlbn nnd conquer the specta tor's senses. But Mr. Sothern's natural magnetism was, as I found In pursuing my analysis, allied with nn admiralty mastered method and a reasoned drt. The acting wad lis admirable as if tl'io actor had to combat With nil the resources of his craft nn un appealing" pbrso'nallty Instead of employing them to tiUpport one of the most appealing personalities that I have ever seen upoii the stage, Nothing, that had been said In Ids praise had overpraised him ; rather t found him belter than the best I hoped from enthusiastic testimony. If the elder Sothern .might have been a great romantic actor, the younger South ern is a great romantic actbr. The term "romantic actor" has been much abused. It Is not enbugh for a player to garb him Belt In doublet and hose and to carry a sword as long as that of Captain Spavcnto; tho trapping 6f the raladln sits most un gainly upon many shoulders, and there be raw, modern voices which utter very un fcouthly tho glowing speech of heroes. "Ho who would understand the poet," says; Ooethe. "Must wander In tho poet'a land." Tho true romantic actor must have wan dered In the kingdom of romance, have feeen wjth living eyes tile castles' of en Miantment and have brought back from tils adventuro some of the mago gifts that are only conferred In fairyland. It Is the Evehiiig Ledger Scenario Lessbiis; Secrets of Sudpeiise ana l PuncV Lesson Eifjht Suspense Supreme in Plot Development; Keep the Audience Guess ing Lesson Nine In Your "Punch", Make the Punishment Fit the Grime By HAmtY 0. HOYT Html of Mttrd Pcmritlo bluff. Cdtilfuutd on l'u to Two FROM PITTSBURGH TO OP&RA, BELLE STORY'S STORY From a parsonage near rlttsburgh ta the grand opera stage seems an almost endless Journey, bdt Bella Story had already trav clea ,the greater part of the distance. She has reached so near hr feoai that the rest nf Jho itln should be comparatively easy. Lmuss Story Is Using vaudeville as one of her .stepping Eiones anu la io uo ncaiu B. F. Ke(th'a. Theatre next week In a reper toire of high-class vocal selections, Mies Story Is tho daughter Pt a minister, who jutd her study mdslc wltlr the Intention of rrtablng her a choir singer For a while tho glrj sang In one of the most exclusive churches In Pittsburgh and a(so n select musical circles, It was not long after her musical education had been Aplshed that she. Went tb New York to sing in a concert, and it was then that her vblpe attracted attention, and she was offered o, tour In vaudeville, which she accepted. So favor ably w&b she received In the two-a-day that Chaffed Dillingham sighed her for the prima donna rpta with Jibntgbmery and Stone In their bl musical success, "Chin Chin.1' Laler, wlien Mr. Dillingham assumed ihe management bt toe New York Hippo drome, he transferred Mha Story to that in stitution in a similar capacity. This posi tion is unquestionably one of the hardest Iq fill that any sjnger has ever attempted, owing to the tremendous siie of the place, but Mis Story mad a wonderful success (jf the engagement which she has Just closed. Threuitujflf Iter wo$k, SUS Story has ifctw!i4 wr ookl ii&1 f4 M &mttlttou 6Jt4 purpose vWMlly to, beflnj tk fcrM eM star MOST scenarios wo receive are a string of Incidents. They lend by devious paths to somo tlrttmntlo moment nnd tho strength of the dramatic moment- Is In BUttlcleHt to carry tho drag or weight of the hody of tho story. Tills la caused marly limes by tiG writer cohcelvlng tho climax of his story tlrnt nnd attempting tb Imngltlo a series of events that would logically load to- such n cllihax. Nino times but bf ten tho author takes tho path of lentil resistance and writes the obvious, trite, time-worn themes, lie may show originality In his denouement and ab solutely Mono In the scenes leading up to It. Qlvo your story u body its well ns a head. If you havo a good climax .you must not riish lu nnd grab tho lltst Men tjiat comes lilto yobr mind for developing Clio plot to tho Clllnax. Ask yourself If the Incidents leading to the climax ifcll a story? It should be. Many of our best stories are built with "revfcrso lcngllsh," tb uso a billiard term. Tho Unusual themo la tho best way to go nl It, but tho uhusUnl situation Is Invaluable to tho photoplay.- Given tho unusual ending or unusual climax, you must then deck tho unusual beginning, it Is hero that most authors fall. This Is tile reason screen credit Is so often withheld from tho amateur writer. The director producing tlm plcturo realizes that you have rtn Idea, b'ut that Is all. The rent Is trite and commonplace. The staff writer builds nn original story, nnd In building It Is ninny times obliged to change your climax, probably retaining only the underlying Idea. You do not get tho credit. Personally, wo think you should havo It and most companies will give you the credit today with pel haps some one mentioned ns mak ing the scenario. It (ho truth must bo told, tho man who builds the body or tho story Is deserving of moro credit than you nre. HIS is really tho greater originality, ns your story would not bo Interesting without It. Tho strength of the climax cannot ntono for tho weak story, and tho audlcnco view ing the plcturo will get restless. There will be no mental exhilaration leading up to the denouement, no stimulus to glvo tho plcturo tho "punch." Tho Very unusual climax will fall Hat. Wo have discussed character and ntmos- "Good Plays Die Young" THERE could be no moro fallible method of testing judgment of a play thnn by matching it with that play's success 1 With plays, as with people, so often the good die young! So very Often, the bad survive! To praise the plays that prosper, and slight the others, were- to follow the mob in its every error, to laud tho banal, the obvious and tho commonplace, and to ignore what is too fine or too lofty for general comprehension. It is a reporter's duty to say what pleases tho public, a critic's duty to say what should please thb public. The reviewer does ucst when ho does both. Chamtiilg Pollock in Great Book. ANNOUNCEMENT' milERE will be 20 lessons ih tho EvENlNO Lfebdtat's Course in .Scenario Writing. Thqy will con clude wllh the printing of a model scenario which has been accepted and produced. The lessons began on Saturday, June 3. They will con tinue dally until Sttturday, July 8. Clip nnd save them, for on July 10 will begin the EVENIMO LEDCfcit's Scenario Competltlbn. The condi tions: A Philadelphia locale and Philadelphia characters. The award: A Cash Prize and Production by a wcil-lcnown film Company with nti nll-Phlladclphian cast. plicrt. These give llfo and soUl to your Incidents, hut thcro must bo something else. There mlist bo nomcthlng to glvo llfo and soul to ; there must bo plot. When wo refer to a string of Incidents, ns -wo did In tho opening paragraph of this article, wo reTor to thoso stories which havo but n slight plot. If you pick tho average story up and dissect It the bones rattle. It may havo some llfo and n llttlo soul, but there Is no llcsh and blood. It Is a disjointed crcntura with perhaps n lino head. Continuity of Incident helps cover the obviously thin plot, but cannot disguise the fact that It M merchanlcal after all. Make your plot solid, glvo It BUbstahce nnd let tho climax coma as the strongest link In n strong chain of dramatic Incident. In talking with a scenario writer tho other day, I suggested that ho selzO a. cer tain opportunity to obtain suspense. He replied that ho had suspense In tho de nouement. He h'ad a big "wallop," as he explained. Hero Is another clement, then, that must bo considered. Let us say that this Is the nervous nystcm, to cohtlnuo tho figure wo havo been using. Where shall wo havo suspense-? Must It be only In tho head? Decidedly nbtt Give ypur story tho fleBh and blood of a good plot, without any thing stimulating to tho nerves and you will lack tho perfectly rounded scenario. You may havo life and soul In your char acter nnd atmosphere, but there Is no feel ing at least nothing gripping. You can start suspense with tho feet, or opening, of your scenario and build with It until you finish. It Is necessary. It Is vital In tho highest degree. If you fetnrt your story with a mystery you start with a moment of suspense. As you build you should heighten tho sus pense. Eventually you will arrive at a point whero nothing will Batlsfy except vlolcnco something to relievo tho feelings. Wo nro dealing n a small way With one of tho most dllllcult questions In photoplay writing. What Is suspense? Suspense Is thnt clement in tho story which holds thb attention, curiosity and expectation of tho audience. Other ele ments may hold tho attention of tho au-' dlence, such ns scenic effects, character portrayal, heart Interest, etc. Curiosity may bo held by something odd In the pic ture, but when all three are held, there is n mental response that cftit.only be de scribed with tho word suspense. if a woman Is ribotlt to Bit on h. msh's high silk hat we obtain suspense. If she Bits, oil It the suspense ,ls over. If, she riltompts two or thrco times to sll down on It nnd 03011 time Is unconsciously stopped from doing so, wo have Increased suspense. To complete tho plcturo it Is far mora cffectlvo It sho never bits, down oil It at all. Perhaps tho owner of tho hat arises from a chair nearby nnd gets his hat In lime to prevent Its ruin. Wo havo accom plished tho purpose wo havo created sus pense. The attention, curiosity and expectation of the audience litis been aroused hhd held. Most writers mlstako vlolcnco for sus pense. IH the Bb-callcd "punch" pictures nearly always thb "purich" Is physical. A train of cars plunging through tho open dNuvbrltlgo, a yneht blown up, thb tene ment ho u so tiro nhd the many variations of these Ideas nro physical. It Is violence. The "punch." In Its truest sense, Is men tal. Often we find that tho suspense has worked up to the. point whero It culminates In violence, whero the suspense la relieved by violence, and thcro la n, perfect "punch." The suspense nnd the vlolcnco blend, ns It were, and the two Clements harmonize nnd co-ordlnato. Suspense runs throughout the picture, but the "punch" comes usually at the climax. If you have a big "pdnch" tb start tho pic ture It Is necessary to keep the nctlon rapid with few lapses of time, and tho Interest must never lag to the finish, and In addi tion It Is quite probable thnt you will havo to have a bigger "punch" nt tho end. In a recent picture the director shbwed a very novel method of getting rid of ah undesirable by onb of tho gangs of lower New York's Hast Side. A gunmari was stationed on the roof of an apartment house with a. Bllencor on tho gun. A mem ber of the snmo gang lured tho Victim Into position on tho sidewalk below and across the atrcet, and then asked tho man to wait while he called a fHsntl lnsldo at tho bar. Tho Bconb was set. Tho gunman raised tho gun to shbot. 'From over the gdnmnn's shoulder wo could sco tho victim In tho street bctoiv. AS ho wad about tb pull tho trigger .1 llttlo child broke loose from Its Conllriued on l'nee Three Dramatic Definitions PLAYWRIGHT One who pos sesses tho ability to compress the most interesting episodes in several characters' lifetimes into two unin teresting hours. "Trying It bn thb Dog" A phrase referring to the trying out of a play in the provinces before bringing it into the metropolis. In other wbrds, testing the effect of tho play upon an intelligent com munity to nrcdctbrfninb, by its lack of success there, its subsequent pros perity In New Yorlc. A Reportory Company is a company that acts half a dozen plays badly instead of one play well. A regular company, on the other hand, is a company which acts, a single play badly. George Jean Nathan in Puck. NONE BUT THE BRAVT? So Bharite Wnw fireftt piny of tha m ttt wirt fcf band, fel mx tHai Purvlanfte. $&5 srill be Lfcifnto if hi He MutuM fhbttn it name at the Fa'ace, Victoria, Locust and jUenaantQWtt tfctjltrei Hocasj?, (3 BEtftiflE OR AFTER? ?a v- i- .,." !F- -..,v n g'fJweMwf yWi fiT7TiWBfiTnMirTr lWiii'Jim&maM .. . , -.-sss&ass'M . , v j .iJvgjfjf t : -i Juno Caprice is a Country girl that the Fox people say they can make into a second Mary Plckfoi-d. Thb press ngCnt forfeot to' state Whether this picture is a record of early days or just a photbplay "still." Tne Perfect Press A.gent An Efficiency Product One of the Flock Describes the Problems of the and the Scientific Methods Which Solve Them G ame BY ARTHUR' EDWIN KROWS The following consideration of the art and science of publicity is reprinted from the Dravatla Miror. Its author, Arthur Edictn Krows, . earned his press agency spurs In the service of it'liifiroji tiiics and the New York Lit tle Theatre. lie Is a distinguished riji rMcniuflfe of the newer school of press representative who puts s'cletillflo brains into the p'ro'b'lcm of convincing the publlo that the theatre Is not it did yet. ELEMENTARY advertising In nny lino Is to attract attention to wares offered, bne frequently sees this accbrhpllshed by a quantity of IooSo toy ballbohs, for Instance, being blown about a confectioner's window; a steel ball, suspended apparently lu mid air, in a milliner display; tea pouring ehdlcssly out of a kettle which seems td have no way of being refilled, In a cigar store; a huge bird's-eye view of a popular baseball diamond. In ft hat shop; a set of foilr or Ave hews photographs repeated In the plate-grass frbnts of several miscel laneous shops Within short distance of o)a another, br, perhaps, a huge, garish topical caftboh employed to Insinuate that a pawn broker holds forth within. Indeed, theso examples go a step further than merely attracting nttehtjbn. They hold It, too, But there IS nothing psycholog leal br otherwise, directly to Ilnhr balloons' With confectionery; a steel ball with mil linery; pouring tea with cigars; the bnsebail view with hats; the news photographs with the various shops, pr the political i catfbbn with the sign of thb Medici. Still, thty have Accomplished something In getting the crowd outside. And .file Inoefmost circle of persons. In inost such gatherings, .hides th? detail of the variant of the tartoort, so that others, crowding tn find tha nature of, the WHEN ALICE BRADY DISOBEYED DAD When she was a wee- little lot. Alice Brady wanted to go on tho stage, papa Brady ,very, diplomatically told, hli .Utile Alice that she was designed, by virtue of lier Inherent traits, to become a society belle. That itbbd her off until she got a little older, bu when Alice knew enough to wade' through thb dictionary and iee just what, ''designed by Inherent traits" meant, Blyj .framed up a reply and waited for her father to spring It on her once Just why parenll who liatfe mao" a sue rjsa tn the theatrical profession should be opposed to their children following holf footsteps remains art unsolved ijrob. Urn. The quejllbn has often been asked. but Seldbrn afisweftd. And the, most Inter esting part of It Is that In nearly etefy Instance where a child has Insisted In dis obeying his or her parents In this respect lie or she hafc generally turned out to be & star. Alice tffady. tho talented daughter of William A, Brady, Is a. good example. When She. va Jreparini to. J$vi (ho CbUefce of ,St fclltabeth. In Madison, U. J.. after graduation, she. announced her In tention of adopting the stage, as her life vacation. Mr. Brady had roughed It In the, profession. He knew the hardships she -ioW haye a overcome.! h knew she would be estranged from him a great deal of the time, lm be wanted (6 keep hi llttl family Intact He gave; her fatherly lectures, pointing- out tq her tha many pitfalls, she. would encounter, the rough llfo aM routh Mopfe, Ih traveling and tiirdihlpa- pf tho'tOid. He, brwjht, iul hid CeaUoot4 u ran Twa thing, see tho pawnbroker's direct display alone. However, It Is a long route for Impatient people, to go on transferring attention from one thing to another .quite remote; eVcfl when the link la provided; nnd therefor the thoughtful ndvct-tlslhg man prefers td ebneentrnta his appeal' by attracting attenj tlon, holding It, telling nature of goods and shooting his argument across all In one effort, But that la only modmcatfon of method; tho primary thing Is to ilnd his sales point. In brief, there must be bnb main fsbi nbaUt a plhy that makes it not necessarily different from other plays', but bf decided Interest to as many persona ns may be s certainly to n sufficient number tb InsutS lire-sustaining patronage. To this wl)l ba added bthcr sales points': tilt all 6t them will bo subordinate to the rrialn point tthiph has the great function of closing the deal. These others may recuro attention, hold it, and oven may sell tickets thtmeelvea in being better adapted than thb mriln nrgui ment to personal needs bt particular patrbns. They ore not to be Underestimated, But they always must be pertinent tb thi matter in hand. Nothing could be" closer tb thb object of Increased sales than th prize offer for thb millionth ticket fb "Chin Chin," br thb opening of an all-night box office at "Hip Hip Hobray." When Selwyn & ,Co, bought the Wahihif" attraction 'Twin Beds," Margaret Mayo's dramatization of the novel by Salisbury Field, it wris their general press" represen tative, Charles Hayed, whb made It OnS of the genuinely "smashing1' hjta bf jfi; season, largely by Consistently fbllpwlng. OUt the keynote expressed In the happy catch-line, "Tb!."" u$ thb life." tt Is b, gbofc) Instance bf selecting an efficient point., and sticking to It. Even thb stupendous na tional campaign tor thb Serge do Dlagblleff g.-tllet Itusse, so magnjllcently waged by. dwafd L-, llernayp, had but one dominant Idea, that the bdllet, In being a perfect t'ontlnued oa I'ure Three sr.l- ' - - -i. .. ..- ., 4 mm.e DAD'S PAUGHTER AHca Uniti daughter of th4 tfs atrical sn4 movie pro4ueftaidl $tr f tho photoplay rereisa U "t hi i i.v'S