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Jim Tully, Photoplay, New York, January 1925.

Joseph von Sternberg, der Regisseur des ersten Emil

Jannings-Ufaton-Films

      Für das „Film-Magazin“ gezeichnet von Hans Kahan

(...) Film-Magazin, Berlin, Dtl., Sept. 29, 1929

& This tale is being muchly told along the Boulevard

and beyond question, knowing Charlie Chaplin,

it is possible. They do say that Charlie Chaplin, having seen The Salvation Hunters, an extremely odd and drab and

unusual picture, to say the least, and one which I personally

thought quite dreadful, declared that he could put

the picture over by hailing it as a great artistic triumph

(...) Photoplay, Oct. 1925


Several casting directors should resign

Editorial content. „The Three Gamblers

      And such gamblers as Hollywood has never seen before

      By Jim Tully

      IT is a true tale they tell in Hollywood when the sun is down

and the lights are low. It concerns a young Austrian

director with a streak of genius who made a picture called

The Salvation Hunters for forty-five hundred dollars

that bids fair to be the sensation of the year. It also concerns

a young English actor named George Arthur who

plays in pictures as a vocation, but who proved himself

a financial wizard by avocation. He it was who

raised the forty-five hundred dollars. It also concerns Douglas

Fairbanks, as a patron of the arts.“ (...)

      „The Austrian looked about and found a young woman

to play the lead. She had been an extra girl, one

of those footsore and high-hearted and beautiful young

wanderers, in and out of the tinsel of Yessirland.

Her name was Georgia Hale. And she is a very great actress.

She has the beginning and the end of acting at her

finger tips. She does not act at all. She has poise, beauty,

a subdued something, a pathos, that divine flair

that one either has or has not, that evanescent thing known

by the hackneyed word called Soul.

      I watched her work in the picture. Charlie Chaplin and

the wife of a director sat near me. The director‘s wife

said to me, ,She reminds me of Betty Compson.‘ Me rejoinder

was, ,She‘s a thousand times greater than Betty

Compson.‘ Chaplin overheard and said, ,Yes, yes, she‘s very

much greater.‘

      Several casting directors should resign when they are

given the opportunity of seeing Miss Hale‘s work.“ (...)


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