Sunnyside Clippings 41/118
Evening World, New York, June 14, 1919.
Joseph Plunkett, directing manager of Mark Strand,
celebrates his sixth year there.
(...) Photo, Exhibitors Trade Review, April 18, 1925
& Strand Theatre, exterior by night,
New York, April 11, 1914, opening night
& MARK STRAND
A National Institution (...)
Direction of Joseph Plunkett
EXCLUSIVE SHOWINGS OF THE WORLD‘S
GREATEST PICTURES
Strand Symphony Orchestra
Carl Edouarde, Conductor
(...) Broadway Brevities, Dec. 1921
& The Strand.
In the same old baggy suit and canal-boat shoes
in which he first achieved fame, Charlie Chaplin,
the greatest laugh producer in the world, comes back
to Broadway after a protracted absence.
„Sunnyside,“ third of the Chaplin „million-dollar“ films,
written and produced by Chaplin himself, is the
attraction at the Strand this week, sharing honors with
Wallace Reid in „You‘re Fired,“ an adaption
of O. Henry‘s „The Halberdier.“ „Sunnyside“ is not up to the
standard of Chaplin‘s last two pictures, but it is very
funny nevertheless.
The story has a delicious pastorale motif. Charlie
is the general assistant of a hotel keeper. He has
hens lay eggs right into the frying pan; he manufactures humor
out of the inefficient way he has of performing his
duties. He goes to pasture with the cows and loses them.
He finds one in the village church and then does
an excellent bareback stunt on the back of one of them,
and so it goes.
(...) MANHATTAN FILMS, Brooklyn Daily Eagle, June 17, 1919
„The Third of His Million Dollar Pictures“
Advertisement. „STRAND“ (...)
„Extraordinary Double Bill
CHARLIE CHAPLIN
in The Third of His Million Dollar Pictures
,SUNNYSIDE‘“
Strand Theatre, B‘way at 47th St., New York.
Sunnyside is released by First National June 15, 1919.
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