Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1952,
No Swealer-Girl
Feud, Says Terry
¥ ¥
| Knew | Was Right
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD—(NEA)— Guys
and Dolls: Skip those reports of
a popping-hot feud between two
of Hollywood’s foremost sweater
girls—Terry Moore and Marilyn
wvonroe. At least there’s no hos
tility on Terry’s side.
Shapely Terry says the rumors
¢ all-out war started when she
nacged the role of a busting
th-health sweater girl away
rrom Marilyn in “Come Back, Lit
{l» Sheba,” and explains:
“My own agent was trying to
i 1 Marilyn for the part. I didn’t
I it one bit and I knew 1 was
ylutely right for the role. So
mearched right down to Para
nt’s casting office myself,
hout my agent, and convinced
n I was the actress to play the
erry on her torrid love scenes
. Richard Jaeckel in the pic
- “¥ery exciting but innocent
two puppy dogs. One cutter
the scenes and said that he
! t sleep all night.”
& & *
The moV ie-stars-are-normal
ople bunk Hollywood is trying
) sell as part of its dignity cam
paign has veteran Director Wil
liam Wellman wincing.
A director since 1920, he’s yell
“ Hollywood is stifling tempera
ment—and -it’s the worst mistake
the studios ever made. . Tempera
ment makes a personality. I once
directed Clara Bow. She was mad
and crazy but WHAT a person
“ Show me a temperamental star
and T'll show you a great person
alitv—and great boxoffice. Movie
ctardom isn’t acting ability—it’s
personality and temperament.”
Day Has No Kicks
Meet a doll with no kicks —
perky Doris Day.
Leaping from a straight dramat
ic role like Mrs. Grover Cleveland
Alexander in “The Winning
Team” to the singing, dancing star
of the new Warner tunefilm,
“April in Paris,” is the kind of a
career leap Doris likes.
“A complete change is wonder
fu! for me,” she confided. “I love
it. That's why I'm getting such a
kick out of my new radio show,
too. It's something I kaven’t done
since T was with Bob Hope. People
give me the lifted eyebrow routine
when T tell them I've been at War
ner Bros. for five years without
a single suspension or a front of
fice fight. .
“But why should I fight? Every
thing has been good for me. I
have no kicks.”
Doris is still ducking live radio,
with her contract specifying an
on-tape show. She wants perfec
tion—and no mike jitters.
% * *
The umpire called a strike-out
on Jim Davis as a leading man in
Bette Davis’® “Winter Meeting,”
but TV film producers are giving
him a second chance on Fireside
Theater and other channel movies.
It's a great opportunity for Jim,
who's been playing heavies on the
screen and recently menaced John
Agar in Republic’s “Minnesota.”
“People walk up to me every
where and tell me they’ve seen me
on TV,” he said. “It’s an audience
of 20 million and that's a heck of
an audience.”
Looking back on his unlucky
first big movie break: :
“I was blamed for everything.
It wasn't as if the role had been
handed to me. I made two tests
for it. But when we shot the pic
ture the director held me back.
My love scenes with Bette came
out brotherly.”
Phyllis In “Danger”
Phyllis Thaxter may have suc
ceeded Myrna Loy as the screen’s
perfect wife, but the casting rut
hasn’t trapped ‘her yet.
s Phyllis in a tight -sweater
with two boy friends—Cornel
Wilde and Steve Cochran—in
“Danger Forward.”
“Um in the French under
ground,” Phyllis said between
scenes, “I'm chasing spies and the
boys are chasing me. It's won
derful.
. x *
Now it's the French version of
Ezio Pinza—graying, 49-year-old
Claude Dauphin—bringing more
mature sex appeal to the screen
whether Italian movie dolls like
1t or not.
Dauphin, French movie and
stace star who clicked on Broad
way in “The Happy Time,” is giv=-
ing out with the Maurice Cheva
ller-type songs and the French
charm at Warner Bros. and con
fessing:
“Thee studios wanted me to dye
my gray ’air. I said, ‘What about
Pinza?’ The studio thought it ovair
and said: ‘Claude, you are right,
You will be thee French Pinza’.”
I’s Dauphin’s singing debut, he
conlesses, but says:
I'm not really a singair, but I
lways say ‘Yes’ when they ask
me to do' somezeeng in a picture.”
In his film debut in “Deported,”
he played an Italian detective
f‘!f-’fé?‘{tmg English with a French
accen
“If T can do that,” he said, “I
can sing.”
__ Eighteen of the 25 players of the
University of Alabama baseball
roster are home state products.
Seven are from Tuscaloosa, site of
the college campus.
——
& .
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