-gr fWta W-T e EYEIOTG liBDaEEPHlCADEIiPHIA', 8ATOBDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 101G flEXT WEEK'S BILLS : THE BALLET RUSSE, THE STAGE SOCIETY, AND "GIRLS WILL BE GIRLS America s First Contribution Synopsis Versus Scenario As An Expert Sees Tkem To the Great Ballet Russe SHAKESPEARE AS A YOUNQ AMERICAN SEES IT r- ' ' ii.1 .1 N-- I . . ....... ,M.t ftert E. Jonca, America's and riw WBC rrora country JLJoy to the rirot Non-Ruflaian Rival of Balwt KriEEtf years ago Robert Edmond VjoflW ft now laniS'""- ;.i.ved th violin tit vlllngo entertain "" V,A nnrbari till Ten years B he nnd ei hl into Harvard. Five years ago no was Instructor in uio n ,........... fe, university. Today n- is mo icre- llHI "" ...1.4 - An.rlra I (h t.aallve scemo """ " -"" " , ,.i,,n to bo called upon for work ttirinvtlte Barker In his New York sea- lh.onIrAmer.cnnu-:r:T.rr: icenlo side or mo Brin oii- Ig&H.n masque of ISit. Antltntr of Caliban" last spring, ... ..Imer of 0O costumes lor it, Ml u" - 'now the on,r non-Russian artist to . wd by the Ballet Itusse, through !U Bakst won his world-fame. Next In NUInsars now uh " - '2 Svii.j.tnhin. will seo tho culmlnn- KSZriL-ao for In a rcmarkablo career ! u a picturesque figure at college. sffM ".?". i.nnrtment. ho spent most S, its energy on such things as "making; tP..f. in tha Harvaril Dramatic 54 .hows and sketching Valcska Surntt Stn. BtoS theater He had no earth y il.lra to be a succosstui pcuaKuK ... ffioui ny too much energy Into nt Msto make posters and cm er designs twines .Ho wanted something with JCtrVweTp and more life to It Hunt MlLhe tried sewing costumes onto women Eridana of vaudollle, and window dress Eifwhen the department stores wouldn't J hint a real chance to malto their wln !Tw, over Into, a flash of beauty, or pay W'ifiV.. A for draping 'comhlnn- toas?or rocking chairs well, there was SSm for It but tho theater and New Kit New York held llttlo for Jones even !?J"iC: n,irnn.iiro ot a theatrical pro- taur'wlth moro artistic Impulio thnn com- Pf resources. Tho "now stagecraft S, lw new for America. Jonc, took 2Jf for Europe. Tor a year he llNed taTaa about Max Ttelnhardt's theaters in it watching, wntchlng. with that rare Sa'erato devotion of tho artist. Tho Stat War drove him back to America a committed to tho new art o making ST...,. nci Its scenery a beautiful, cx- ZZZw? llvlnir nart of tho drama. By the .1 if good luck. Qranvlle Barker, 5;;i7 hi. season at Wnllack's In New .. T..,. n...r Antnln Frnnco Man TO Married a Dumb Wife" from the Now Terk Stage Society and took over with It te!nu which ho hod designed for It Sdirhldvwo saw last winter at the Ade -Jit Jones's fame was made but not his wrBM. . . , T ,..f KCommlMlons camo ' """,.: ,;; one man, uiai BiiiKum.ijr ....n.. ..i.n.ruine vnune manager, Arthur tHmklns, wanted Jones to paint scenery for Urn, But that man gave Jones courngo ?ZT,, .. ,mml,lnn' nnd while th .'.. .wi.t worked on tho problem oi Jiklar realism expressive and beautiful In.rti Devil's Garden" ho found nnd nc- WeoJtttmes for "Caliban " Then this Muan earns "Tho Ilnppy KndlnB." which tiitS wihapplly tor every ono um uu.i, Hood Gracious Annnbelle," a farce pro- k dueUon, and then DIaghllev's Ballet Ilusso. i'sryjEnirland contributes a nne restraint F5M dimity to balance Joncs'B longing for r,I..i, .11. r,, h. hnaf thlnir nbout IttULrian and his work Is tliat ho la no I'iBidiapUt portrait painter or poster HirtM tackling tho problem of painting a Miaji canvas aa big as a back drop j he Is U'atirouna worur in i "iwui .... imrefUtii all His multitudinous aspects 'tteUte art and uses them for the single urijof representing In tho environment oi tha actors the spirit of tho play. His set- WlW act dramas. Even when ho must !rs the problem of realism, as in -a no Diyu'i Garden." ho demonstrates that tho (iolcrcf the wall paper in n third-class hotel as express the passion of a scene enacted tttre juat as well aa the words of tho ttera, To make a play live jonea uses Jjwy means. Ho la not tied to tho big lira, turf ace of the nusslans, as Is Bakst; Itfentei "flats." "plastics." "drapes," ftatats" or "props" as ho needs them. Ho ,Bjot tied to beautiful color or BtrlKlng Wrsnectlve. as Bakst: ho knows that Pct plays the biggest part In the theater's ut. ana some day no is going to maxe a traduction In which" not an Inch of canvas Will hit nnlntail In i..hl,.l ..ftlnvari nntl ijslansd light will do all the work. Jones's fecund Imagination la usually aittut a block ahead of hln last nroductlon. Mka all New York was talking about the tjcorauons of "Tho Man Who Married a Pml) Wife," Jones was talking about a Brtsr production of "Tho Cencl" in an auditorium built like the ringslda of a prize "tat. and exhibiting clay fleurea which rtprtsented the evallltlnnaSif rhnms.flcnirea ptliltjj shpuld surround the principals and :r.T" " "ii-umr eniuouimeni at mo aciion w Proceeded in their midst. JOnfiS'S irenllls for rnlni. nnd lfn la i,n- SUUkably great, but ho has a feeling HUil", "ter aa a creative Instrument, "i en. aanng imagination which are trotter ttllL IIh U nn ntrltra,- fnr mi- MMrelty; but tho democracy of his emo UMtjTteeps him close to tho Immediate do- " impulses ot American lifo today. W "TILL," GERMANY'S PUCK gtag'"""" nyy i' h.j H '' "in ii iim.iiji im ft11 ' ,' ' . t"11 ;t).1" 64h.n fi jflt,Mn -Mtm. rf,.ioT which Niiictky Wll animate In 'Mi Leading Scenic Designer, "1 dont believe there are going to bo any Frat American painters." says Jones. "American Instincts ars against IL There Is too much ragtime and Hula-hula. In us. IH.-iYr "tMtlo development we are Just surging over painting. All our great flow is going Into the theater. We. are rushing ?h??5 .w .,ln9 of the drnmallo. And I think this la a great thing for us. It will keep us young. Do not Imagine that for e gn nrtlsta have oorlooked this. NlJIn sky, who Is certainly one of the greatest Ti?. ..; ta cra,y nbout fogtlmo. Ha thinks It Is wonderful "After the Barker production 1 was ruined 1 never could paint again. 1 saw only thrca sides of a room, with lights Playing and people moving. To think that for j ears t was satisfied to dabblo with paints nnd try to plcturo life In two di mensions' When I compare tho sensation of actually draping cloth, real cloth, over real nrmi nnd legs, -with that of Indicating a fold on enntas, the Idoa of painting Is almost rcpulslo." Horo nro throe o Btrlklng examples of the Bconlc design of Robert E. Jones, tho younsr American cnKnged by tho Hnllct Ilusso to paint tho scenery for tho top is for tho sccno of tho ghost upon tho pnrnpet in "Hamlet. Tho moonlit sky is seen through two finely proportioned oponinK3 in , eilhouctto for a battle sccno and at tho left nn Italian garden in wnrm moonlight. Tho sketch at JUST A BIT ABOUT A COMING PLAYER Heine Davles, who will bo seen In the newest musical comedy, "Qlrls Will Bo Qlrls," at tho Lyrlo Theater Monday oven Ing, ha. had her share of adventure. For several generations tho Davleses have been a, seafaring people, nnd she herself was born down by tho sea where Its rugged shores gavo her the spirit of the venture some aallor. "If you want to hear red-blooded adven ture," aays Miss Davles, "find un old salt ot forty years ago, nnd ho will spin yarns of how ho was thirty days rounding The Horn' or of tho last typhoon when the sea ran over tho ship from sprit to stern, or tho tima when, with cutlass and bludgeon, they beat off tho pirate crew In the China Sea. Theso stories will make red-blooded fiction seem trivial compared with the reality They nro colorful tales, and when one hears them from the cradle they feel the call ot tho sea the samo as those old mariners did before them Dut I was a girl and could not go before the mast, otherwise I would tune been a sailor, too "Nevertheless, tho spirit of travel was my heritage and when a small theatrical company came to our town ono night I made up my mind that I would try tho profession. An opportunity presented Itself In vaude ville and I took advantage of It, playing In tho two-a-day during that and tho follow ing season. I hae had several tempting offers to join the legitimate drama, but It Is too serious for a young girl. To become a grent'dramatlo actress ono must lho the part tho moro human you mako your char actor tho greater your success Hut youth Is too fickle to bo stilted by deep-thlnklng problems, ar-1 I believe that a woman should be on the sunny side of forty before she settles down to serious dramatlo work. At that time of life she has probably ex perienced ltd sunshine as well aa Its sor rows and Joys, and In her work she can express the emotions gained from life ex perience nnd clothe her characters with realism such as no young woman of lesser years can express. "I like musical comedy because It Is full of Hfo and color and It keeps youth youth ful. It comes to us but once and we should keep It as long aa wo can. My greatest ambition Is to-later play In the romantics drama, and when I leave musical comedy I hope to .find oontlnued success In that field." mmm'lMmmmmmf,mim t WHAT "PHIL AND DELPHINE" DID FOR GIL-SPEAR The following letter from Adrian all Spear, winner of. tho Evcnino JEDocn Scenario Contest, speaks very enthusiastic ally for Itself. It arrives Just aa his script, "Phil and Delphlno," Is rapidly assuming celluloid form: 81r Tha Jmmtnftnc of our ot3 friend. 'Thtt and Delphtne'a," tUbut la nnturnl!y soou nwi, rapeclally bo. alncs I now har that llnnclAll Stark, la colnff to ba amonir thoao preterit botilntl tho mecaphona From my acijuatntanca with Mr Hlark. 1 feel that I'M I and Dolphlne nro genutnel lucky to aecure Ills aervlcea at their aptlam and thit their entura ta aaaured an artlatlo aucccaa and a popular ona It would bs more than kind of you If you could nnd ttmo to ktpp ma posted reKardlnff any llttlo "Inalrt Info" of tha production 1 ahould greatly dcalra to ba on tha Job myaelf. but am at tha moment juat a trltla bualer than tho W K. ona armed iMiicrhanur halnif Just finished tltlelnc lha completed 'Uarrler nnd atn doep Into tho socnorlo of Ueach'a next bis; ro leaaa 'Tha Auction lllock " And, by tha way bealda having lho honor to bo Itex lleach'a "oniclaf adaptor I am now worklnc with Ralph Ineo and Hob Warwick, adaptlnc "The Arsyla Case." which will bo Warwick's drat starrlnx ehlcla under tho Selsnlck banner. U occurs to ma, In mentioning tha work I am now doing, that I owe tha Kticmso I.gDoa my most sincere thanks for having been Instru mental In launching ma Into tha game 1 or in,, wlnnlnr fh irntnit I h&Va had tha nlens. ura of finding my original storlea In demand aavarat havo been bought by Vltoiroph. World- llrady and Kamous. OUS J'laiera iiirnv kib n, Itobert Warwick Juat nnlshed ",..Ihmi ' 9n nn one of mine for llrady, called Tha Honor of tha Wayna'a," Kdlth Btory having completed another ono. titled "Tho Counlosa " aoma tlma ago iiotn or tneaa, i near, ura niwut n, o r laased. so mention of them seems In order. . My I mentioned, am now at work on rna Auction lllock." In ten reals, which will shortly ba put In production by Ua Ilex Oeach Days ""hops you will forgive Oils effort to become my own press agent, but I honestly feel that I owe tha Uviiko tigoosa a alncora debt of thanks and Incidentally have a hunch that tho foregoing all of which Is authentic may coma under tho head of "News " You will. 1 hops, convey my bast wishes to Messrs. Htark and Itedwlc and tha merabere of tha cast of 'Phil and Delphlno" Any servlca that I may render them tn thla venture I should ba happy to voUinteer and. bellava me. sincerely, alb Si lMl. Ventnor. N. J., Nov. 1. 1018. THE SPEECHLESS PLAYER Mr, Oslo Satterlee, who will play tho part of the stock broker In "Droadway After Dark" at the "Walnut Street Theater Monday,- Is a dlstlngulshed-looklng stranger, of dignified manner and bearing One striking peculiarity of Mr. Satterlee Is his objection to being known as n member of tho company with which he travels, ow ing to many petty annoyances the players are subjected to, and he Invariably gets array from tho station directly upon the arrival of the train. A few seasons ago he was with a com pany playing a one-night stand In Illinois, and, true to his usual custom, grasped his valise and started out ot the station, as he Intended to walk to the hotel. In an in stant he found himself surrounded by a mob of hackmen who endeavored to force hlra Into a, vehicle. "Cab, sir!" "CarrlageT" Take you to tho CommerclalT" "Qlobe Hoteir "This way, Blr," "Want a cheap room, sir?" "Jump right In here, sir." But still Mr. Satterlee walked right on, looking neither to tha right nor left. At last, one persistent Jehu, after 'receiving no answer to his cries, said, "Deaf and dumb asylum, take you right up for a quarter," And right there was where Mr. Satterlee rode. OUT-POTASHING POTASH Ooorre Ashby, who has won reputation for courtesy and wit at tho Oarrlck box office, nearly lost his nerve the other day. There was a Una of customers at the win dow when & woman, rather stout and middle-aged, reached the bead of the line, "Ilave you two good scats not back further than the eighth row for Thursday night?' she asked. "Yes. madame," replied the courteous Ashby, taking down tho Thursday seats and selecting two. "One of them must bo an end seat You know I am Inclined to ba a llttlo stout" "I wouldn't have noticed It," gallantly replied the (ticket seller. "However, one of these l an end seat," "IIpw much?" "Two dollars each." "Well, you take ray name and leave them for roe. If It don't rain I'll probably come, but I feel that I am catching cold. a? If the weather Is Inclement I'll come round the first clear day and you can change them for me." Thla show will cure your cold, madarae. to don't hesitate on that couftL w had il, man hwa the) other mi mo .4.H.I rSll-WU" Repertory of Ballet Russe Mirrnoror.iTAN nkxt winnr. Thursday 'Taplllon " "Til T5nl- RvenlSg 'ensplegel" (new) "I.a SSTo" si Bpectr- do la Stoea" and ' I'rlnca Igor ' Frldsy "Pelniuchka " "l.es leaning 8 y 1 p ti I d a a" and Nov a "ttchcherniado ' Hiturdar "Bsilko" (new). "Til Afternoon. Tsiileneplegel ' "Car- S'ov ? "3 naval- and "L "ov' 1'rlncessa Knchantea" WHEN "WALLY" WAS A COWBOY BOLD "Can you Imagine a young fellow Juit out of college, with the true college rig ot several years ngo peg-top- trousers, short coat wldo extenslon-soled shoes, comedy hat and noisy socks, getting off a train at Cody, Wyo.T That creation was me," laughed Wallace Held, tho I.asky star, who will be seen at the Stanley Theater the Inst half of next week In "The Yellow Tawn." "I was hunting for my first Job fresh from college knowing everything In the world, I had a letter of Introduction to a ranchman near there, and ho gavo me a Job as a cowboy and v,hat tho other cow bos did to me was aplenty. I was bucked off horses, sent on wild goose chases found snakes In my bed, got Into lights got licked, but there was one thing that I could do, and that v.is imlm Just at that tlmo tho Yellowstone Klver was running at Hood, and I dared everybody to swim It with me. Nobody took It up nnd everjbody said It couldn't bo done. Finally, I Bwam It, and after that tho cowboys knew that I could do something which they could not "I soon quit the ranch, howeer, and got a Job aa night clerk In tho hotel at Cody, but I nearly queered tho hotel for life the first night I was on the Job by appearing in a dinner Jacket However, the hotel recovered from this taint on Its character, and I didn't dress up any more." ROBERT E JONES Whose BcenJc work Is pictured ari ' T CsHsHsK & JiVsflssssalssssssssssssssssiejssilasssssVlfl INTELLIGENCE IN AN INTELLIGENCE BUREAU Thevi are happy days for the followers of tho varieties Moro and moro those who preside over this form of entertainment nro roachlng out nnd bringing tho best talent In other fields within their lists. This tea son a long lino of nrtlsta from tha legitimate, grand opera nnd musical comedy stngo has been recruited to tho rank of nudollIe Ileatrlco Herford, an enter tainer who onco conflnod her distinctive tnlenti to drawing rooms and Individual recltnls gUen In theaters, has found genuine fnor In tho rnnks of the two a-dny artists with her aeries of characterizations of comedy types. "Where do you get your Inspirations for theao fragments of charnctcrlrntlona?" an Intcrvlower nsked hor, knowing as every onn docs, tint sho writes her own storlea before she recites them. "Oh, I get n, hint here, see a funny ex perience there nnd make tho rest up," she replied. "You havo to. Life Is rarely sustalnlngly funny, or sad, or trnglo. The bit I do on tho employment bureau was written before I ever stepped Insldo of one. How did I know? Only from what I read and heard my friends say. But when I finally wmt to one. It was pretty much aa 1 hnd Imagined "At a certain employment bureau where I have bocome known, the ladles looking for servantn not Infrequently edge away when I appear They are loath to have their conversation utilized for matorlnl and regard me very much askance. It was there that I onco had a reverse experience from that on which Is based my tale of tho tried and found-wanting applicant for a servant I occupied tho position of would-bo em ployer I, like the lady of my sketch, had been found lacking by a series of prospoo tho employes. "As I Interviewed tho next one, who wanted exorbitant wages and was obvious ly Impossible, a thought flashed through my tired head. She stood there haughtily, having answered all of my questions "un satisfactorily, though she did not know It "And now,' I snld gently, Met me ask you one more question Do you play tho plnno?' Her eyes opened widely. No, she did not 'Oh, I'm sorry, I replied. 'I'm afraid you won't do I'm nfrnld you won't do. You see, I take singing lessons and my maid must be able to accompany me during tha day. No I couldn't think of hnvlng a maid who couldn't accompany my music I'm sorry When I wont out," she con cluded, "there was a group of girls all waiting to see the lady who must have a girl who could play tho piano, so she could accompany her singing. I fear I- derived considerable satisfaction from that exploit and felt quite repaid for my trying morn ing" HERE, SAYS DRAMA LEAGUE, IS THE MOTHER'S PLAY This Is tho play for the mother, says tho bulletin In which the playgolng com mittee ot the Drama League Indorses "The Harp of Life" at tho Broad She la thirty six years old without any one over noticing It, when suddenly her boy has become a man I A moment or two ago sho was romp ing with him In some skylarking, boyish game; and a moment or two before that sho was desperate over the loss of his baby curls. And now she Is thirty-six long years old, and she Is sitting up all night waiting for her boy to come homo; and when he does come home at daylight he Is no longer her eon. She had spent nineteen years mak ing him Into a man, she said, and with one nod from a notorious fills de Jols she has lost him. That all those years shall not be a hideous waste the mother fights, and In tha end she wins. Mlsa Lauretta Taylor, the mother who will not grow old. Is unquestionably a player of power. She tpuches her bearers with such subtle, unobtrusive art that they mote with her moods; they wait with her during the anxious hours; they are tor turned by her doubts; they suffer with her fears, and their eyes brim with her tears. One becomes for the moment tha eternal, watchful, loving, forgiving mother; and It Is pleasant and healthful transmutation even for a man. J Hartley Manners, the author, has (old a story dealing frankly with the mystery of birth, but he baa done It with simple dig nity The company ot players, which In eludes Philip Merlvale, MUs Lynn Fon tanne. Miss Sara Blala. Mlsa Ffolliot Paget Plon Tltheradge, and frank Kembte Cooper, assist notably In keeping the Illusion ot Korlousnota. u la not by any means a. ope. .JartplaXr rianrjlc'o Mr. Ellis Tells Wliatfl What in Making Sure of a Check From Photoplay Concerns By CARLISLE ELLIS Scenario Editor for Triangle Here, at t moment ichen iht Jtvenlng Ledger 1'rUe Scenario, "rill nnd DelpMne," U being fllmeil, comes an nulftoriloJIve ar ticle on icfiv certain big producers prer Ihe "ivnoptli" to the scenario. It shouM prove ni'dltible to redder who followed Harry O. lloyt't lesaona In photoptow writing published during the jnmmer. TRIANQLE nnd Its studios ask only for the synopsis form, believing that this form is fully adequate to giro all the vital elements of a photoplay, If properly em ployed. The question Is not really one be tween synopsis and continuity, but one ot synopsis construction. It la simple to define a synopsis as a short, running narrative of a photodrama, but the drama contains a well defined theme, tho characterisation of socrnl per rons, the development of a dramntlo story by episodes tho character deelopment that their now ballet, "Till Eulcnspletrel." tho wall. At tho right is a striking GRUMPY'S CREATORS, ACTORS AND AU THORS, TOO Although "The Little Lndy In Blue." which brings rrnncca Starr to tho I road n week from Monday, la tho first play by I lorn co IIodgcH and T. Wlgncy I'orcytnl to reecho a production nt thn lunula of David Bolneco, two of their other plays, namely, 'Grumpy," In which Cyril Mnudo appeared last season nnd "Sunday," which lHhnl Bnrrymoro used several yenrn ago, nro fnmlllnr to American theatergoers Messrs Hodges ond Percy nl nro two actors who havo been Identified with the English stngo for many years They ap peared with tho Into Wilson Barrett in many nf his plays, and canto to this country with tho noted actor on (ho occasion of hla last visit when he played In "Tho Sign of tho Cross." They rcmnlncd with Barrett for a period of fourteen years, appearing In London and tho pnnlnces In virtually every play that ho produced It waa dur ing this time they conceived the Idea of collaborating on plays and turned out "Sun day" us their first Hodges played tho rolo of Lively In tho production both In tho provinces and In London, whore It wna HrBt produced back In 1304. "Grumpy" was their second play, and so popular did It prove In tho hands ot Cyril Maude that when this English actor came to this country In the piece, Hodges organized a company to tour the provinces In It with himself In the rolo of tho eccentrlu old character which Mr. Maude made bo lov able to American theatergoers. "Little Lady In Blue," their Intest effort, wns suggested to them when playing an engagement In Portsmouth, Kng, Tho Im pression they gained of that seaport town during their stay there Influenced their writing of the pleco nnd was responsible for the nnutlcal atmosphere which characterizes tho play. The Vicarious Scene-Painter COMMENTING on tho "Midnight Frolic." tho New York Morning Telegraph says, "As for tho now stage setting, designed, aa hereto fore, by Joseph Urban, who seems bent on providing scenery for the entlro world, Mr. Ziegfcld has out dono himself." Business of Mr. Urban biting his thumb at the press I A BIT OF affifirt - H r --i" ' t-ti- .,'ifr iwnwvv, ..'.. ,; ,,., . . - " i fiin-feaaasBsf Bobert E Jones's grotesque conception of a me41 paB; 1a fM . JuJMJ)legel, tlMi jBll$ Sussa's poveUl $M aWMWsV tne Movie-Struck Writer the culmination of the episodes Involve and nil expressed visually. Tho perfect synopsis would contain all these elements, though all of them might not bo specifically stated. To write an ntlequato synopsis it la eti dent that the drama must first be thought out In dotnll; tho scenes mentally visualised and nrrnnged In sound and effective con tinuity, tho theme clenrty held In mind J characters so well developed that they Bra actually living In tho author's Imagination, and nil seen Then, whether the synopsts Is In 1000 wnrdn or 6000, It will automatically register the visualized drama and In Its readlnjr will awaken to tho ee of the reader a plo turo story rather than a spoken one. The writing of continuity from auoh si nopsls. with tho staff man's knowledge ot hK studio's methods, limitations and per sonalities, will becomo a comparatively simple tnsk nnd may closely reflect the plan nnd Intent of tho author. It Is still true, however, that highly In dlvldunllzcd creative product to be really great must rompleto Itself In the mind of its author. An operatic composer may not conduct his own performance, but he would not dream of turning over tho orchestration of his score to another man. The coming geniuses of tho film will think out their pictures to the minutest detail, and even though they do not actually direct the mak ing of tho picture their thought and vision will be roerenlly studied nnd Interpreted, Tho nrmy ot scenario writers, following the lend ot tho current product, with but llttlo practical training In building either tn pictures or In dlnlogue, rather dazed by tho momentum ot tho new art, ye't limited by tho necessary standardization of a, product mndo to eII widely nnd uniformly tho nrmy of scrnnrio writers Is foeltng Its way rather blindly But the big nnd fatal error of tho ama teurs Is tho belief tint nny story In any form, bo long ns It contains certain stock oxternnla, will mako a picture; and that slnca they aro nsked only for synopses, they do not hno to put constructive thought and Inbor Into their product They have been told "It ti Idoas that oount," and thoy Imnglne nn Idea to consist merely of the framework of an episode something thnt may coma to ono while, wiping tho breakfast dishes and be Jotted down while tho potatoes nro boiling. Not ono sccnnrlo synopsis In one hundred, except thoso written by men who haVe worked on studio staffs, shown thinking out of tho drama In torms of oonsecutlvo pictures, and It Is for this one hundredth that tho editors nre looking. Given that attrihuto the matter of a continuity Is secondary. A to subject, the present demand Is for contemporary dramas ot American life. Tho renl meaning of this demand is that plcturo patrons seem to want to see stories that aro convincingly actual excerpts from a life, they know; that touch their own lives In externals as well as In theme. Characters In costumo ploys, for example, cannot quite bo believed In na real people. Therefore costumo plays, according to ex hibitors, are anathema. Symbolto plays with an clement of fantasy or pure Imagina tion "couldn't bo true." Therefore they do not say anything to a great mass ot plc turo patrons Therefore they havo failed almost Invariably, slnca there Is bo far no specialization of motion plcturo nudlohcos. 'When that comes, there will h a demand for a new nort of picture, that sets Innor truth nhove realism, and a now picture vision will be born. Trlanglo finds, however, that given ft solid and literal realism. Its patrons are) moro nnd moro responslvo to tho newer elements In the shadow drama. These ele ments and this tendency are plain enough. The drama ot merely extornal happenings to more lay figures, tho play of fights and chases and daring deeds and nothing else, li chlng place to the drama of tho human consciousness. Not only must the charac ters of today's photoplay be living people with souls and moods and minds ot various sorts, but theso characters, going through the flres of dramntlo conflict, must change and grow. Character development things going on Insldo of folks Is the big and vital element of tho big, vital picture-drama that Is nhead of uu, aa It la of all real drama, of all real art. This almost predicates that plays must hao a theme. The story must bo not only nbout people ond things; It must bo about something bigger than lndlvlduals,and vital to all or many of them. Theso aro tho elements that Triangle is looking for In the scenarios that come In to it And if they are not at least Indicated In tho synopsis the search Is seldom carried farther. One would not look In the architect's specifications to the contractor to find out whether he was building an Italian Itenalssance postofflce or a Spanish bungalow. So wo beltevo that It Is the synopsis which will becomo the recognized medium of trans ferring photoplay Ideas and plans, but ft rebuilt and Illuminated synopsis, am much a literary product ns a good short story, but quite different from a short stop-, ft skillful and well-packed compendium of colorful fact, carefully constructed to carry continuity of Interest and Indicate the entire) structure and plan of the drama. BIZARRERIE srar -- ihiMii'i h tk Mdtrosohtaa next to - teaalg aa-C4.jaugnaw j