Filmed in 1927 both in Murray Roth (director); Ray Hughes & Pam

Jack Hazzard, Helen Goodhue & William Halligan After a few years absence, they were revived as "Warner Novelties", consisting mostly of newsreel and earlier recycled footage stretching past the decades. A Nazi submarine is attacked / military recreation at Bougainville / Persian transport of goods to Soviet forces / Merrill's Marauders in Burma / Hollywood entertainers overseas Clips of various silent screen stars: producer: Myron J. Schwartz; director: Paul R. Thoma; music: Murray Roth (director); Douglas Stanbury & the Lyric Quartette with Jack BurnsArthur Hurley (director); Josephine Harmon & Jack KingMurray Roth (director); Lieutenant Clifford Carling Silvers (directors); Dick Henderson Murray Roth (director); March 31, 1929 (Film Daily review)Murray Roth (director); Al Trahan with Yukona Cameron & Helen HawleyMurray Roth (director); Fanny & Kitty Watson https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Vitaphone_Varieties&oldid=978688646Teddy King, Hal Salies, Johnny Ferrara, Andy Hamilton, Harry Nadell, Walter Read & George Coon

Bob Witt & Cy Berg with Vitaphone Symphony Charles Smith (story), John Hyams & Leila McIntire TrioMurray Roth (director); accompanied by Charles Anderson, Joseph Markese, Harry Hill & Al Perry

producer: Blackwood Grant; director: Alan Francis Corby; music: Fred & Fanny Hatton (story); Mayo Method, Katharine Alexander, Roger Pryor, Evelyn Knapp (The Admirals (Norman Bartlett, Jack Armstrong, Henry Durrett & Jack Keyes) Joyzell, Randall Adagio Four & Edward Lankow Al Klein, Frank Leslie & Genevieve Bowman Sally Fields (billed as "America's Greatest Entertainer") Harry Kelly, Cornelius Keefe, Harry Wardell & Walter RodgersEdmund Joseph (director); Betty & Jerry BrowneArthur Hurley (director? Williams & Maginetti

Undersea documentary featuring sharks and octopus Carl McBride (director); Orville Rennie, Elsa Peterson, Gus Reed & Janet Gilmore Murray Roth (director); accompanied by Berth Miller & Billy Smith Listed by Vitaphone number. The Jazz Singer was nominated as a Media and drama good article, but it did not meet the good article criteria at the time. These included comedy acts, a series spotlighting famous songwriters and a number of sports, animal subjects and other human-interest documentary films. Features "A Little Music in the Moonlight"; "I Gotta Get Myself Somebody to Love"; "(The Gang That Sang) Heart of My Heart" Arthur Hurley (director); Billy Lytell & Tom Fant Al Jolson sings in the 1st-ever Talkie "The Jazz Singer" .mpg - Duration: 4:17. Arthur Hurley (director); Eric Dressler & Horace Britt with pianist Ruth M. Connist Murray Roth (director); Eddie Lewis, Tom Miller & Lou MonteLeonard Saxon, Philip Duey, James Waites and Henry Shope Arthur Hurley (director); Walter Connolly, Murray Roth (director); Lorraine Howard & Florence Newton Carl McBride (director); Arthur West with Segments: life on a troopship / rat-catching in the tropical Pacific / the medical corps in action / an Australian rodeo Silk with Fred Sumner The "Vitaphone" trademark was later associated with cartoons and other short subjects that had optical soundtracks and did not use discs. Murray Roth (director); Guy Robertson with Marsh McGurdy (piano) Contents . Reissued as a "Pepper Pot". Pasquale Amato & Lillian Miles (on piano) William McCann (director); Frank Davis & Bernice Elliott Filmed in 1928 in Hollywood unless marked (NYC) Eleanor Shaler, Pauline MacLean & Bob Lynn While there was always a chance that a stage performer could become a household name by appearing in these, his or her act could no longer be repeated on stage, town after town, once one filmed performance appeared in theaters across the country. Murray Roth (director); Edward DuParr (camera); Robert Emmet Keane & Claire Whitney This and subsequent 1944-45 titles were marketed as "Vitaphone Varieties" Although the term "Vitaphone Variety" was still used with some Warner film shorts running under one reel (or 10 minutes) well into the 1950s, the trade periodicals marketed them under different logos after the 1931–32 season: Pepper Pots and Vitaphone Murray Roth (director); Billy "Swede" Hall & Co.Gene Morgan, Clyde Hager & Violet Barlow Murray Roth (director); Sidney Marion & Adele Jason The Jazz Singer By Ron Hutchinson It wasn’t the first talking picture.