in Theatrical THEATRE. attractions. Eternal. men. e Law. THEATRE res. ,! 7:00 to 10:00. of program daily. T ETERNAL ller, the Celebrated Actor- ', Discusses the Spectacular Now in Its Fifth Year. sier to produce twenty tnod- as than one play of an xiod, where we must dig into Ad misty past for the correct essential to a perfect per- says Henry Miller, the as- manager, and stage director the big spectacular drama, it Eternal," its initial pre- in New York some five seas- "One anachronism will at- eye quicker than one hun- atical errors in the author's is highly important that il be absolutely correct, and director is entitled to credit oportion to his faithful ob- of the requirements of his gather the necessary infor- the idea of once more utilizing. re- ligious themes had lodged in the dra- matic mind, and in 1894 "Hannele" was first attempted in New York City, though it met with no very gratifying reception. Five years later Ben-Hur burst upon the public ,view with a shaft of light to represent the deity, and about the same time Wilson Bar- ret's "Sign of the Cross" was accepted by a certain class. Then in 1902 "Everyman," sheltered by a sort of educational mantle, gave us the voice of Adonai summoning the hero to the judgment seat. In the same year Mrs. Fiske played "Mary of Magdalen," which was pervaded by a divine omni-' presence. Following this came two plays in which the Savior appeared in disguise and shaped the destiny of those He came in contact with-"The Passing of the Third Floor Back" and "The Servant in the House"-and, though the disguise deceived nobody, remonstrance was somewhat allayed by the fact that the central characters did not bear the title that was in every mind. The voice of Christ was first heard delivering beatitudes in the New Theatre (now the Century) New York City, and a little later He was seen in His own person in Sarah Bernhardt'spresentationof "La Samar- atine." Concurrent with this latter play came a purely American product in the Merle-Miller spectacle, "The Light Eternal," which will be seen at the Whitney theatre, Wednesday, Octo- ber C, matinee and night. "Within the Law" employs the ser- vices of one of the most carefully se- lected and evenly balanced acting or- ganizations gathered in many seasons, and the scenic production provided by the American Play Company, produc- ers of the play is very elaborate. "Within the Law" is a world wide suc- cess, as the play is at present equally popular in E'ngland, Germany and Australia. "STORY OF DREAMS THAT CAME TRUE" Charles rb an, liiventor of Kiiieia.- color, is in Reality an Amnerican Who Ila Lived for Years in Eng. lain 41 Always when something new and beautiful flashes across the vision and consciousness of the public, curiosity is manifested to know all about the Iran who invented it and sent it forth. The latest new and beautiful thing is delighting every audience at the Ma- i(stic theatre. The inventor, then, of animated pic- tures in natural colors, must be an interesting personality. tHe is. Furthermore, he is now in this country cn a short visit, so he may be studied at short range. And before going any further, let us nail the comforting When the writer met Mr. Urban he was giving five minute interviews to a sort of theatrical bread line that stretched from the door of his private office at 48 Street and Broadway, New York, down six flights to the cigar stand in the hall. It was an artistic bread line, to be sure, made up of lecturers, photographers, and other temperamental men, all, however, in- tent on making their fortunes. The five minute stipulation was for- gotten by Mr. Urban when he recount- ed his discouragements and successes to the interviewer. Looking back a dozen years is fascinating work to a man, from Cincinnati or anywhere else, who has reached a position of wealth and fame, and is receiving the hearty co-operation of kings and presi- dents, after being rebuffed by cynical secretaries and doormen. "Fifty years ago," said Mr. Urban, "the actual details of a royal function were witnessed only by the few spec- tators gathered to watch it. Kinema- color camera is a sort of universal eye. Wherever its unerring glance is cast, there remains an unalterable record of all that has passed before it, whether good or ill. It has reduced the globe to the dimensions of an orange, which we can turn about and examine at will." It was in London I came in touch with a Mr."Turner who had been a pupil of Sanger Shepherd, of color-photog- raphy fame. Mr. Turner wanted to in- vestigate the possibility of applying so simple that it would be put into the hands of tens of thousands of opera- tors. This was about four years ago. "For another twelve months we did nothing except think. Then the idea struck us to divide the spectrum in half. The three primary colors being red, blue, and yellow, we divided them in half, using half of the yellow with the blue and making a blue-green, and the other half of the yellow with the red, making a deep orange. "In his 'other experiments, Mr. Smith had made use of stripfilm nega- tives, taken alternately through red, green and blue filters. When he made a positive film from this red light the results were almost colorless, owing to the excessive actinic action of the blue light that had produced the nega- tive record and the correspondingly overpowering effect through the blue filters." The kaleidoscopic play of colors in the long sentence that Mr. Urban had just delivered, made the writer blink involuntarily, and Mr. Urban kindly recognized that a too quick succession of verbal deep blues and oranges might be confusing to an ordinary per- son. So he spoke more slowly, illum- inating his meaning, as follows: "In other words, the exposure neces- sary to get satisfactory green and red records was utterly out of the scale of that required for the blue record. An- other disadvantage of the three-color process was that normal speed of the ordinary kinematograph film, one foot MARIE PAVE v As Jo in "Litte Women." "WITHINTHE, LAW" The American Phy (1oimmpanmmy Presents The Dramatic Senlsition of lthe Year. One of the genuine treats of the local theatrical season is foreshadow- ed in the announcement that "Within the Law," Bayard Veiller's absorbing new play of modern American life and the dramatic sensation of the year in New York and Chicago, is to be presented by the American Play Com- pany at the Whitney theatre on kAednesday, October 15. This deservedly successful drama. which has been critically commended as possessing the most engrossing human interest story given the stage in a decade..has for its central char- acter, a pretty and quick-witted young woman who is falsely accused, and wrongfully convicted of stealing from her employer. She serves three years in prison, comes out determined to "go straight," is betrayed time and time again by the police, and finally is forced to abandon the effort to earn honestly a livelihood, and live by her wits. She prospers by the use of many in- genious devices, outswindles swind- lers, conducts a blackmailing opera- tion on perfectly legal lines, fortifies herself against police int'erference by effective lawful defence and, in short, preys upon society at will as a, law- breaker, but remains herself always "within the law." At last she revenges herself upon the man who sent her unjustly to prison by luring his son into marriage. And then, of course, she falls in love with him. >eachy Chlorus in "The Runaways" at the Whitney Theatre, Thursday nd Friday, October 9 and 10. e "m"TWINS BGOSH" Scene from "Little Women" at the Whitney Theatre, Saturday, October 11, Matin e 'and Night. tion regarding Roman life in the gn of Emperor Diocletian was a k requiring many weeks of re- arch. Many details were very easy, course, as they had previously been tied beyond discussion; but in "The ght Eternal" innumerable small estions came up that were hard to swer-for instance, the matter of iting materials and utensils of the iod. Every one knows the Romans d a parchment scroll, but who can off-hand just what sort of pen or il was in vogue at the beginning of fourth century? Search as I uld through libraries, book stores, I private collections, I could not be 'e of a solution. My best source d me that ink pots and marking eks were in use at the beginning of Christian era, and that the qill s used during the early Renais- ice, but just when the change was de I could not determine. Finally ame across a small volume on the tory of writing and printing, and, suming the information contained rein to be correct, I will not again at sea on a similar question. From s book I learned that a modified m of the marking stick-really a y good imitation of our present lus pen, made of gold, silver, ivory d bone, and highly ornamented with ns-was the thing for our play; and making of half a dozen of these Is was no small item of expense." The development of religious drama probably one of the most striking istrations possible to cite in proof the gradual broadening of the pub- mind. Like all innovations, plays aling with a biblical' theme have led precarious existence on the Ameri- n stage, but seem now to have pass- through the last stage of the stress d opposition that has beset them. out 1890 Henry E. Abbey abandoned plan to present the Passion Play this country because popular dis- proval spoke in no uncertain tone. wever, after a lapse of centuries, ',ITTLE WOMEN" Ann Arbor Will be the First City Out- side of Detroit to See the Stage Ver- sion of Louisa M. Alcott's Celebrat- ed Book,. A stage version of "Little Women," Louisa M. Alcott's immortal story, dramatized by Marian de Forest, magazine writer and dramatic critic of the Buffalo Express, and produced by William A. Brady, will be the at- traction at the Whitney theatre, Sat- urday, October 11, matinee and night. "Little Women," the play, is in real- ity "Little Women," the book, made into a character comedy in four acts and two scenes, telling the familiar story of the March girls. As Miss Alcott and her sisters were the origin- al Jo, Meg, Beth, and Amy, it took eight years of persistent endeavor be- fore the Alcott heirs would consent to have the story made into a play. Per- mission was finally secured by Miss Jessie Bonstelle, and the work of dramatization was given to Miss de Forest. It were idle at this time to recount the difficulties encountered and over- come, the delays, the disappointments, but the reward came when the Alcott family formally accepted the play, and the necessary contracts were signed. Then began the detail work, securing proper stage. effacts and costumes (for "Little Women" will be dressed in the quaint style of the early 'G's), and, above all, finding a company of players to interpret adequately the familiar characters. "Little Women" stands essentially as a character com- edy, and each part is a distinct type. Many of the identical costumes and properties used by the March girls in their famous stage frolics have been preserved by the Alcott family, and will be used in the stage produc- tion. fact at once that Charles Urban-for that is his name-is an American and an Ohioan, albeit he has for the last fifteen or sixteen years made London his home. He was born forty-odd years ago in Cincinnati. He went to London at $125 per month-less by a good deal than Southern Michigan yielded; less, too, than the fur collar on his overcoat costs now. But, sup- pose before we take up the story chronologically, we glance at the man ts he appears today. r '71r I r.. the three color process of photography to kinematography. I supplied Mr. Turner with apparatus and films and money for his experimental work. "After about ten months, when very good results had been shown, we came to the conclusion*that the process was too complicated and expensive for general use. It seemed then that it could not be made a commercial suc- cess. And then Mr. Turner died sud- denly from heart disease. And I didn't know anything more about color photography than a rabbit knows about shaving. "I had sunk a great deal of money so I went to Mrs. Turner, who had several children to care for, and affer- ed to buy all of the notebooks and other data that her husband had got together bearing on his experimental efforts along this line. She was glad. to dispose of them, and when I got them, and tried to make head or tai; of the mass of shorthand memoranda and tables of chemical analyses, and' stray paragraphs about this and that, it was next to impossible to under- stand the first thing about it. "There was a chap named Albert Smith, who had a small place in the country, down Brighton way, who lik- ed to do'photographic' stunts, and was so fixed he could, if he felt like it, give a lot of time to his experiments. Mr. Smith had been employed in black and white photographic work, and had considerable knowledge of chemistry. 1 told him what I was searching for, put him' in charge of experiments, and he and I worked steadily on the propo- sition for several days. "It was the same old story of spend- ing large sums of money and ultimate- ly being forced to the conclusion once, more that it was almost impossible to attain a process that would enable us to take advantage of the existing market. That Is, to obtain a machine a second, hadt to be trebled to give forty-eight exposures instead of six- teen a second, and such an increase of speed involved prohibitive expense and complicated mechanical devices for the manipulation of the films. "The Kinemacolor camera, as final- ly worked out, is similar to that used for black and white work, except that it is built to run at twice the speed- thirty-two instead of sixteen expos- ures a second. Its essential differ- ence is that it has a rotary color filter placed between the lens and the shut- ter. This filter consists of an alumin- um skeleton wheel, having one seg- ment filled in with green dyed gela- tine, and it is so geared that the ex- posures are made through- the two filters alternately. "The negative films consist of im- ages in pairs, one being the record of the red, and the other of the green in the object photographed. In the Kinemacolor projector the two pic- tures are not superimposed on the screen at the same moment, but the picture is projected first through the red and then through. the green filter at the rate of thirty-two pictures a second." But to go back to the story of the process. The idea of dividing the spectrum into half made it necessary that an entirely new equipment of machinery, cameras, and printers be obtained. These matters were worked out by Mr. Uban, while Mr. Smith devoted himself to the chemical as- pects of the investigation. About three years ago the first length, con- sisting of about fifteen feet of films, was successfully shown in color, and three months more of exhaustive ex- perimental work showed that the in- ventors had finally solved, according to Mr. Urban, the problem of produc- ing motion pictures in natural colors, as demonstrated nightly at the Majes- tic theatre. Scene from "The Light Eternal" at the Whitney Theatre, October 8, Matinee and Night,