THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, February 25, 1966-33
The dreamers and the schemers . . .
the hustlers and the hopefuls ..
the free-loaders and the phonies .
the fakers and the famous . • •
all fighting for the
highest possible award!
JOSEPH [LEVINE Presents
THE
By HERBERT G. LUFT
(copyright, 1966, JTA, inc.)
HOLLYWOOD - Joseph E.
Levine received the much coveted
Golden Globe from the Hollywood
MOVIE
GUIDE
SCAR
COLOR
Exclusive
DETROIT
Engagement
Hollywood in High Gear with New Movies
ADAMS
MICHIGAN
WO 1-8525
Grand Circus Park
LAST WEEK
WALT DISNEY'S
"UGLY DACHSHUND"
RAMEY AT GRAND RIM • CAW 963-1773
Dean Jones, Suzanne Pleshette
Sun.-Fri. 11:50, 1:57, 4:04, 6:11, 8:18, 10:25
SAT. ONLY-OPENS 9:00 A.M.
Shown 10:20, 12:30, 2:31, 5:32, 6:33, 8:34,
10:35.
- Also -
"WINNIE THE POOH"
at Miller Road
W. Warren81-5
040
5
DEARBORN'S FINEST THEATRE
CAMEL01
"THE GREAT RACE"
Fri., Mon., Tues., Wed., Thur., open 6:15
shown 7:05, 10:00, Short subj. 6:45, 9:35
Sat. & Sun. open 1:00, shown 1:45, 4:40,
7:35, 10:30
FOX . . .
2211 Woodward-WO 1-9494
One of tne most daring Love games
shown. A film by Teenagers
for adults.
ever
"A HOT SUMMER GAME"
James Whitmore in
"BLACK LIKE ME"
"BEAUTIFUL!"
-Th•
Tor1e,
-N
"SEE IT" r71=
"MAGNIFICENT!"
In Dazzling Color
Doors Open 10:45 a.m. Free Parking
LATE SHOW Friday and Saturday
For schedule information call
WO 1-7917
WED. LADIES DAY, 50c
At Grand Circus
Park. WO 1-3240
Open Daily 10:45
GRAND CIRCUS
"STUNNING!"
STUDIO
FREE PARKING NEXT DOOR!
Livernois at Davison WE 3.0070
"OUR MAN FLINT"
Fri., Sat. 11:05, 2:20, 5:35, 8:50, 12:05
Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed., Thur., 12:35,
4:00, 7:20, 10:45
"RETURN OF MR. MOTO"
Fri., Sat., 12:55, 4:10, 7:25, 10:40.
Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed. Thurs., 11:15,
0
2:35, 5:55, 9:2
Wed. Ladies Day 50c till 6:00
MAI KAI
Detroit Premer Wed., March 2nd
"ONE OF YEAR'S 10 BEST'
-Crc.ther,•
N.Y. Times
-Cris', N.Y Herold Tribune
"One does not use the word
'masterpiece' lightly, but it is
A MASTERPIECE
NOT TO BE MISSED!"
-Judith Crist, Herald Trib.
Plymouth Rd. at Farmington Rd.
GA 7-0400 & KE 4-6400
"THE GREAT RACE"
Fri. open 4:45, shown 5:05, 7:45, 10:20
Sat. open 11:30, shown 12:05, 2:45, 5:25,
8:00, 10:45
Sun. open 12:30, shown 1:30, 4:20, 7:15,
10:10
Mon., Tues., Wed., Thur., open 6:15,
shown 7:05, 10:00
MAIN
Royal Oak-Main St. at
11 Mile Rd.
LI 2-0180
Exclusive in Area
"THE PAWNBROKER
"The best picture
of the
year"
Fri., Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs.
Shown 8:50 only. SAT. 7:10, 10:55
SUN. 5:00, 8:45
BEN GAZZARA IN
"THE RAGE TO LIVE"
the vo.ces of
.
sii john giel.ud • irene worth
Studio NORTH
Fri., Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs.
Shown 7:00, 10:45. Sat. 5:30, 9:15
Sun. 6:55, 10:40
VARSITY CINEMA
Woodward at 9•Mile
LI 1.5168
A HAPPY HONEYMOON
GOES TO THE DOGS
•WALT DISNEY
Italian Film Makers
UGLY
ACIIISNUND
THE
Dean
Suzanne
mark
JONES. PLESHETTE. RUGGLES
Screenplay by ALBERT ALEY
Co - producer WINSTON HIBLER
Directed by NORMAN TOKAR
Irresistible! Delightful! Enchanting!
Technicolor
An All-Cartoon
Featurette
13ased on On boon Ionian 6,1A. 1111.NE • 01961 Watt Whey Production
NOW
SHOWING
UN 2-4252
Livernois at McNichols
Sean Connery in
"THE HILL" 7:00, 10:30
"PICNIC ON THE GRASS" 9:00 only
Students $1
Foreign Press Association for the
British picture "Darling," the Best
Foreign Film in the English Lan-
guage, at the annual awards ban-
quet at the Cocoanut Grove of
Hotel Ambassador, Los Angeles,
Jan. 31. The picture co-stars Laur-
ence Harvey with the new screen
discovery Julie Christie, was di-
rected by John Schlessinger from
a scenario by Frederic Raphael,
and is being released by Levine's
Embassy. JTA's Hollywood cor-
respondent, who is chairman of
the international film committee
of HFPA, selected the film for
viewing by the association's mem-
bership. "Darling" also won the
New York Film Critics Award for
"Best Picture;" Schlessinger was
honored as "Best Director" by the
N. Y. Film Critics Circle. Similar
citations were made by the In-
dependent Film Importers and
Distributors of America.
Ruth Gordon, beloved stage act-
ress who made her debut in front
of the footlights more than half
a century ago as a teen-ager op-
posite Maude Adams, on the screen
since 1939, author of the play and
scenario to "The Actress," a work
reflecting her own career, for
many years married to writer-
producer-director Garson Kanin,
now has been honored by the
Hollywood Foreign Press Associa-
tion at the Golden Globe Awards
banquet for her performance in
the current movie, "Inside Daisy
Clover," to which she meanwhile
added another remarkable char-
acterization in the forthcoming
George Axelrod farce, "Lord Love
a Duck."
Otto Preminger has purchased
the movie rights to John Hersey's
novel, "Too Far to Walk," the sole
April selection of the Literary
Guild. The new novel by the author
of "Hiroshima" and "The Wall"
probes deeply into one of the cen-
tral issues of our time - the aim-
lessness, rebellion and search for
truth of today's college students.
"Too Far to Walk" is scheduled
for filming early in 1967 for
Paramount release, following com-
pletion of his current screen epic
"Hurry Sundown," a study of the
racial problem in the South, with
a scenario by Thomas C. Ryan,
ready to go before the cameras on
location in May of 1966.
Sandwiched between the two mo-
tion pictures will be the Preminger
Broadway production of the Nelson
Gidding stage adaptation of Ver-
cor's comedy, "The Tropis." Gid-
ding is also currently preparing
the screenplay to "Too Far to
Walk" from the Hersey novel.
* * *
Gisela Fischer, the wife of con-
tinental actor Pinkas Braun, has
been brought to Hollywood by
Alfred Hitchcock to play a key
role in "Torn Curtain," now before
the Technicolor cameras at Uni-
versal with Paul Newman, Julie
Andrews and Lila Kedrova in
Released by BUENA VISTA Distribution Co_ Inc. 01968 Walt Disney Production*
•44 WEST ADAIVIS::. WQI- 5524
Hours Frac. Underground;
Parking- .-After S' P. M:,
All Day Sunday , and'Holidays
SATURDAY • DOORS OPEN-9:30 A.M. • FIRST SHOW-10:00
Arthur Cohn, the Swiss producer
of the Academy - Award - winning
documentary, "The Sky Above -
The Mud Below," was in Holly-
wood with his wife, a daughter of
Moshe Shapiro, minister of the
interior of Israel, to be introduced
to the press at a reception with
director Vittorio de Sic a and
screenwriter Cesare Zavattini, as
the trio to be responsible for three
new Italian films to be made under
the auspices of Joseph E. Levine's
Embassy Pictures.
First of all, the team will make
"Promise At Dawn," adapted by
Zavattini from the autobiographi-
cal novel by Romain Gary and
based on the some 400 letters
written by Gary's mother before
she perished in V i 1 n a, during
World War II. This picture is being
shot on actual location in Poland
and France and will be made in
En g 1 i s h. Also in English is
"Woman X7," based on an original
story by Zavattini to be filmed in
color in Paris. The third project
currently being developed by Cohn
is "Man 1967," to be shot in Rome
during the spring of 1967.
starring roles. Miss Fischer will be
seen on the screen as an East
German woman doctor who ar-
ranges a Hollywoodish escape for
the Newman-Andrews couple from
Communist - controlled territory.
Three German thespians have been
imported for parts in the film,
Hansjoerg Felmy (from "Aren't
We Wonderful?") Wolfgang Kiel-
ing (from "House in Karp Alley")
and Guenter Strack-the latter a
son-in-law to the former Minister
of Culture of Hesse, the Socialist
Arno Hennig.
* * *
Martin Kosleck, who specialized
in Nazi roles during World War
II; has been signed for a non-
acting assignment as language ad-
viser for Universal's "Tobruk," to
be produced by Gene Corman and
directed by Arthur Hiller, with
George Peppard and Rock Hudson
sharing star laurels. Both Peppard
and co-star Guy Stockwell who
portray officers in Rommel's
Afrika Korps, are required to speak
German in their parts and the
language is spoken throughout the
whole production by those portray-
ing Wehrmacht soldiers. Kosleck
will accompany the cast to its
various locations.
The $6,000,000 epic is currently
shooting in the Yuma, Ariz., desert
where a most daring exploit of the
African campaign is being re-
staged involving the infiltration of
Britain's SIG group into the
defenses of Axis-held Tobruk, cap-
turing its main gun emplacements
and destroying the fuel bunkers of
Rommel's tank battalions. Less
than 90 m e n were in. the
British unit and less than a dozen
survived. The non-fiction story was
written by Leo Gordon.
* * *
Harry Tattleman, producer of
the high-budget Western, "Incident
at Phantom Hill," starring Bob
Fuller, Dan Duryea and Jocelyn
Lane, comes into the feature field
through 300 hours of television
films, including segments of "Mave-
rick," "Cheyenne," "Bourbon Street
Beat," and "Sugar Foot."
Paul Gallico's still unpublished
novel, "The Man Who Was Magic,"
has been acquired by Paramount's
production's chief Howard W. Koch
for a mid-1966 commencement of
photography. Gallico is author of
more than 30 novels and the orig-
inal story to the screen musical
"Lili."
Disturbances at Showing
of 'The Deputy' in Brussels
BRUSSELS (JTA) -- Catholic
high school and uni iersity students
inside and outside a Brussels thea-
ter presenting the controversial
play "The Deputy," about the late
Pope Pius XII, provoked incidents
here which led to police interven-
tion and several arrests. The per-
formance of West German play-
wright Rolf Hochhuth's play was
the first public one in Brussels.
About 100 students inside the
theater engaged in efforts through-
out the performance to drown it
out. 0 t her spectators shouted
"Young Fascists, you are afraid of
the truth." The theme of the play
is that the late pontiff failed to
speak out against the Nazi slaugh-
ter of 6,000,000 European Jews.
Police were called in. When they
were unable to halt the disturb-
ance, they arrested three of the
students.
Around the theater, other Catho-
lic students distributed pamphlets
which asserted that the Pope had
sought to save Jews. They soon
clashed with other persons and
police intervened, wielding trun-
cheons. The police arrested three
more persons.
Lucky Al Schacht
It appears as if Al Schacht, the
"Clown Prince of Baseball," will
have the last laugh. Schacht re-
ceived more than $1,000,000 for
the sale of his New York restau-
rant. He bought the place in 1947
for $110,000.
Everything must have a cause.
-Chinese proverb.