Sunnyside Clippings 100/118
Julian Johnson, Photoplay, New York, November 1919.
Kansas Ave. – looking North from 8th Street –
by night, Topeka, Kan., postmark
Nov. 10, 1906, postcard in color, CardCow.com
& Now!
Charlie Chaplin in „Sunnyside“ (...)
Shirley Mason in „The Final Close-Up“
A Double Bill – All Comedy!
Princess Theatre, Topeka, Kansas
– This quarter page ad from
Topeka, Kansas, emphasizes the comedy without
slighting the feature, psychological placing
of the units evening up the appeal of the two offerings.
(...) Exhibitors Herald and Motography, Sept. 20, 1919
Princess Theatre, 834 North Kansas Avenue, Topeka.
& Julian Johnson
(...) Photo, THESE SHOWMEN WORK FOR YOUR THEATRES! Paramount‘s 20th Birthday Jubilee,
Announcement of Product 1931 & 1932
„Their idol had been imposed upon“
Editorial content. „A Review of the New Pictures
The Stage Shadow
By Julian Johnson“ (...)
In a box. „THIS is the year‘s verdict
of the American audience.
Here the ,fan,‘ the real power behind the star‘s
throne, speaks for the first time!“ (...)
PHOTOPLAY has „tabulated the favor or disfavor
shown in more than one hundred thousand
communications received from every quarter of the world.“ (...)
„Charles Chaplin seems invincible as the British Navy.
As in Ray‘s“ Charles Ray „case, the fans think
so much of him that they comment warmly on his plays and
sometimes furiously on the people who play with
him. Their wrath over Sunnyside was quite personal: they
seemed to feel that their idol had been imposed
upon, quite illogically ignoring the fact that Charlie did it
himself. Shoulder Arms is, in the minds of
the many who comment, his supreme achievement.“ (...)
„Speaking of comedians, Harold Lloyd has
come up amazingly, and the public is likewise devoted
to the nonsensicalities of Charlie Murray and Ben
Turpin. These are the three laughmakers – always excepting
Chaplin, and the reliable and rotund Arbuckle, the
small boy‘s idol – that they talk about, ,Smiling Bill‘ Parsons
does not draw any comment.“ (...)
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