Monday, Sep. 20, 1926
In Manhattan
A quantity of new plays having been offered, mid-September found the following plays showing in Manhattan:
Abie's Irish Rose--The oldest.
The Adorable Liar--A romantic girl almost cries "Wolf!" once too often.
At Mrs. Beam's--Bluebeard in a boardinghouse.
The Blonde Sinner--Unflavored theatrical hash.
Cradle Snatchers--Raucous farce in which middle-aged matrons and college youths sojourn on Long Island.
The Donovan Affair--Jewels, murder, detectives, murder, mystery, murder.
The Ghost Train--Snorting mystery on funny lines.
Great God Brown--Eugene O'Neill's tragedy of genius, with masks.
Henry-Behave!--A mild farce about amnesia and an inhibited gentleman.
The Home Towners--A South Bend grumpy misunderstands New York honor and is funny.
Honest Liars--A farce, light to the point of being inconsequential.
House of Ussher--Well acted revival of a dull play on domestic intrigue.
If I Was Rich--Joe Laurie as a well-meaning young man who cannot afford a Long Island house party.
Laff That Off--A rickety vehicle for slang.
Little Spitfire--A working girl marries into Southampton.
Loose Ankles--Funniest wisecracks of the season.
Lulu Belle--Lenore Ulric in an explicit tale of a prostitute who flaunts over the color line.
My Country--Jewish and Italian lambs lie down with old U. S. lions.
One Man's Woman--Sex in Hawaii according to the boxoffice.
Potash and Perlmutter-Detectives--Described by the title.
Service for Two--Agitated husband in the middle bedroom.
Sex--Stupid, coarse.
The Shanghai Gesture--Oriental wickedness.
She Couldn't Say No--A woman can be humorous, can be lawyer.
What Every Woman Knows--Helen Hayes and Sir James Barrie define charm.
Foibles of the flesh, diversions of the eye and ear, are agreeably presented in: lolanthe, Americana, Scandals, Great Temptations, Sunny, The Vagabond King.