Newspaper Page Text
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, August 17,1972
Page 6
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FORMER DANCER Nelle
Adams returns to acting
with role as Burt Reynolds’
deaf-mute wife in “Fuzz.”
She retired from show busi
ness for 11 years while the
wife of actor Steve Mc-
Queen.
SHOWBEAT
' Neile Adams Takes
. 2d Shot at Films
1
By DICK KLEINER
HOLLYWOOD—(NEA)—After 11 years in which she
took off to be Mrs. Steve McQueen, Neile Adams has re
turned to acting. Her first role, as Burt Reynolds’ deaf
mute wife in “Fuzz,” was a small but good one. She’s
raring to do more.
She says there’s no correlation between her divorcing
Steve and resuming her career. “It’s just that the time
had come and I felt a need to do something again.”
Neile believes she looks better than she did 11 years
ago “although, let’s face it, I do look older.” And she
still has the same lithe dancer’s figure she had.
“But I don’t want to dance now,” she says, “because
I used to be very good. I’m not as good as I used to be
and I don’t want to do anything that isn’t great.”
So she’ll concentrate on acting at the point and, with
her exotic features and great sense of humor, she should
do well.
Being the ex-Mrs. McQueen shouldn’t hurt, either. She
says that, since the divorce, she’s had no trouble getting
along in the Hollywood social swim.
“In fact,” she says, “I’m madly in love at the moment.
But I don’t plan to get married again. I don’t want any
more children and, unless you plan to have children, I
don’t see any point in marriage.*’
Her two children are a daughter, Terry, 13, and son,
Chad, 11. She says her only regret is that Terry isn’t in
terested in dancing. Chad, she says, is probably going to
grow up to be a mechanic.
“Both of them,” she says, “have motorcycles, like
their father.”
She doesn’t think the divorce hurt them because she
believes she and Steve were sensible about it. They’re
good friends, even now.
♦ ♦ ♦
Two on the Lyles
The small movie is still a good bet, if your timing
is right. A. C. Lyles, probably Hollywood’s top small
movie producer, says there’s still a big demand for his
product and he times them perfectly.
Mostly, they’re designed for drive-ins, so they come
out in the spring and summer. He just put one out called,
“Night of the Lepus,” with Stuart Whitman and Janet
Leigh. It’s not much of a movie but should pack them
in on the Coke-and-cuddle circuit.
“You go to the small towns,” Lyles says, “and these
movies play the drive-ins over and over. One of my west
erns has already had 10,000 play dates.”
“I have no illusions about myself,” Lyles says. “I sup
pose it would be nice to make a big picture, like Ross
Hunter is doing with ‘Lost Horizon,’ but I honestly like
making the little ones.”
Lyles began, when he was 10 in Jacksonville, Fla., as
page boy in the Jacksonville Paramount Theater —his
association with Paramount was to last around 40 years.
He parlayed a job as interviewer on his junior high school
newspaper into doing interviews for the regular Jack
sonville newspaper, because he had access to visiting
stars.
When he graduated he promoted railroad tickets to
Los Angeles, spending money and even new clothes be
cause he knew Shirley Temple from one of those inter
views and got to Hollywood, where he started in Para
mount’s mailroom. From there, he slowly worked up,
through publicity and into production.
It’s been a happy life—small films, but money-makers.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
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OLYMPIAN SCULPTURES are dotting the shore of
Kiel Bay in Germany, where the sailing events of
Munich’s Summer Olympics are scheduled. This one
is by Swiss artist Werner Witschi. Sun and breeze
make it cast artistically patterned shadows.
Long-distance save
LONDON (UPI)-A father
320 miles away persuaded his
son by telephone not to jump
from his fourth-floor hotel room
window Tuesday.
The son, 21, stood on a
scaffold outside the hotel
window for four hours while
police and firemen tried to talk
i * r 9 K
him down.
He refused, but when his
father in Dumfries, Scotland,
phoned the hotel the call was
put through to an adjoining
room and a policeman handed
the phone out the window to the
son.
After talking to his father,
the man agreed to come down.