Word: filming
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...speakers and their topics follow: On Monday, March 14, "Introduction to Discussions on the Motion Picture Industry", by J. P. Kennedy '12, President of the Film Booking Offices of America, Inc.; on Tuesday, March 15, "The Motion Picture Industry", by Will H. Hays, President of Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, Inc.; on Thursday, March 17, "Production Management Problems", by Jesse D. Lasky, Vice-President, Famous Players-Lasky Corporation; "Executive Management", by Adolph Zukor, President, Famous Players-Lasky Corporation, on Saturday, March 19; Sidney R. Kent, General Manager, Famous Players-Lasky Corporation will speak on "Distribution", on March...
...lecture will be given in connection with a course on Business Policy which is required of all second year men at the School. In addition to Mr. Hays, Joseph P. Kennedy '12, President of the Film Booking Offices of America has arranged for lectures by such prominent figures in the motion picture industry as, Jesse D. Lasky, Vice-President of Famous Players-Lasky Corporation; Adolph Zukor, President of Famous Players; William Fox, President of the Fox Film Corporation; Marcus Loew, President of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Distributing Corporation and Harry M. Warner, President of Warner Brothers Picture Corporation...
...little while ago Battling Nelson went to the movies, and saw a picture of the fight. When the show was over, he went to steal the film. He had been licked once- that was enough. Nobody was going to have the chance again of seeing him staggering stupidly around a ring with blood dripping out of both eyes...
...musical novelty. It burlesques the cinema in several moderately boisterous skits. It insists upon novelty by presenting a horse that Charlestons, by leading onto the stage a bull with a ring in his soft nose, by allowing trapeze acrobats to fly about overhead (as in the film, Variety). It does all these things forthrightly, evincing honest desire to give the public a Super-Feature Musical Comedy Satire, as advertised. The funniest thing of all is when the hero, protesting his constant affection for the heroine who is about to leave him and home for Hollywood, suddenly ceases his disconsolate farewell...
...guess will do. There is a shred about "Honey" (Josephine Dunn), a sweet maid from the country; a leering villain of the Metropolis; a proud, penniless architect. There is also Love Divine. The director displayed on the screen a facsimile of the story in Liberty Magazine on which the film is based, thus proving conclusively that the thing really has a plot...