TALENT VARIETIES FRANKIE LAZNE TEE UNITED STATES With

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

TALENT VARIETIES FRANKIE LAZNE TEE UNITED STATES With MONDAY AUGUST 29(Cont'd) TOTI/711TIZTIMEZU7117117171VJUITILMEMIIT1111131111 NBC 9:30 The Return of Johnny Burro -(0) by John Cunningham (from Out- ROBERT MONTGOMERY (A) by Milton Gelman; with regulars & Jay Bar- PRESENTS law's Partner), ney, William Johnstone, Wyatt Cooper, KenRenard; Dir by Frank Telford Eddie Cantor WABC-TV 10pm Rudy Vallee(S) STUDIO ONE CBS 10pm A Chance at Love -(0) by Shirley Peterson; with Georgiann SUMMER THEATRE Johnson, Richard Kiley, Gena Rowlands, Bram Nossen, Chris Gampel, Arthur Batanides; Dir by Alan Cooke; Song by Eugene Cines & Carl Sigman, sung by Bernadine Read TUESDAY AUGUST 30 TIIMITX1Mr1711111TUTIIIMMIIIMII1M TALENT VARIETIES ABC 7:30 Vera McNary (M), Pete and Repeat (D), Herb Sheldon(mimic), (Slim Wilson) Fawcett Ross (magic) (FROM SPRINGFIELD) ARTHUR MURRAY PARTYNBC 8:30 Bert Lahr (C), the Fontane Sisters (S) MUSIC '55 CBS 8:30 Alec Templeton(14), Carmen McRae (S) Jane W7man's Fireside NBC 9pm Technical Charge of Homicide -(0) by Cyril Hume; with Jane Theater Wyman, William Ching, Nan Boardman, Argentine Brunetti; (SD) Sidney Lanfield; Prod by Bill Asher(PREMIERE) WEDNESDAY AUGUST 31 FRANKIE LAZNE TEE CBS 8pm Gloria DeHaven (S), Henny Youngman (C), IJort Gunty (C) Father Knows Best NBC 8:30 The Art of Salesmanship -(0) by Roswell Rogers; with regulars (Robert Young) Robert Young, Jane Wyatt, Elinor Donahue, Billy Gray, Lauren Chapin, RalphDUMIZ& Juney Ellis; (SD) by William D. Russell (PRE,IIME) The Millionaire CBS 9pm The Story of Walter Cprter - with Julie Jordan, Rand Brooks KRAFT TELEVISION NBC 9pm The Chess Game -(0) by Robert Howard Lindsay; with Melvyn THEATRE Douglas, Richard Morse, Lin McCarthy, Constance Wilson, Harold Stone, Mary Finney, Kay MacDonald, Aina Niemela; (SD) by Dick Dunlap (REPEAT OF SCRIPT ORIGINALLY DONE 2/4/53) UNITED STATES CBS 10pm Counterfeit -(0) by J. P. Priestley (from Laburnum Grove), STthL HOUR (A) by Ellen Violett; with Boris Karloff, Jessie Royce Land% Sarah Marshall, Murray Matheson,Terence Kilburn, John McGiver, Lucie Lancaster, Ronald Long, Humphrey Davis, Stanley Bell, Harry Gresham; (SD) by Norman Felton Douglas Fairbanks WRCA-TV 10:30 The Sound of Your Voice -(0) by Hugh Mills; with Ian Hunter THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 1 ammammumaml CLIMAX: CBS 8:30 The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn -(00 by Mark Twain; (A) by (Bill Lundisan) DeWitt Bodeen; with Thomas Mitchell, Elizabeth Patterson,John Carradine, Walter Catlett, Minor Watson, Katharine W7,rren Charles Taylor; (SD) by Herbert Swope, Jr. (FROM HOLLYWOOD) STAR TONIGHT ABC 9pm Trifles -(0) by Susan Glaspell,(A) -(SW); with Barbara Joyce, Jane Seymour, Allen Nourse, Roland Wood, Walter Klavun; (SD) by Alan Anderson LUX VIDEO THEATRE NBC lOpm The Last Confession -(0) by Rene Belbenoit (from article in Reader's Digest) -(A)- not listed; with Eduard Franz(H'WOGD) FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 2 mrar I II Science Fiction ThtreWRCA-TV 7pm Barrier of Silence - with Adolph Men,jou; (SW & SD) Schlitz Playhouse CBS 9pm Three Months to Remember -(0) by Frank O'Rourke,(A) by De- Witt Bodeen; with Don Taylor, Sallie Brophy, Diane Jergens, George Neise, Velma Royton, Howard Wendell, Gilmore Bush, George Eldredge; (SD) by William A. Setter The Vise ABC 9:30 Never Let Me Down - with Kay Gallard,Phil Brown, Gordon Tanner ROSS REPORTS - 8/28/55 - Page B TALENT SHOWSHEETPore).
Recommended publications
  • TV Club Newsletter; April 4-10, 1953
    COVERING THE TV BEAT: GOVERNMENT RESTRICTIONS ON COLOR TV ARE BEING LIFTED. How- ever, this doesn't bring color on your screen any closer. Color TV will arrive after extensive four-month field tests of the system recently developed through the pooled research of major set manufacturers; after the FCC studies and ap- proves the new method ; and after the many more months it will take to organize factory production of sets and to in- stall color telecasting equipment. TED MACK AND THE ORIGINAL AMATEUR HOUR RETURN to your TV screen April 25 to be seen each Saturday from 8:30 - 9 p.m. It will replace the second half of THE ALL-STAR REVUE, which goes off. WHAM-TV and WBEN-TV have indicated that they will carry the show. THREE DIMENSIONAL TV is old stuff to the Atomic Energy Commission. Since 1950, a 3D TV system, developed in coop- eration with DuMont, has been in daily use at the AEC's Argonne National Laboratories near Chicago. It allows technicians to watch atomic doings closely without danger from radiation. TV WRESTLERS ARE PACKING THEM IN AT PHILADELPHIA'S MOVIE houses where they are billed as added stage attractions with simulated TV bouts. SET-MAKERS PREDICT that by the end of the year 24-inch sets will constitute 25% of production. FOREIGN INTRIGUE is being released for European TV distri- bution with one version in French and the other with Ger- man subtitles. "I LOVE LUCY", WILL PRESENT "RICKY JR.", the most celebrat- ed TV baby, in its forthcoming series now being filmed in Hollywood.
    [Show full text]
  • Civil Rights, Labor, and Sexual Politics on Screen in Nothing but a Man (1964) Judith E
    University of Massachusetts Boston ScholarWorks at UMass Boston American Studies Faculty Publication Series American Studies Spring 2012 Civil Rights, Labor, and Sexual Politics on Screen in Nothing But a Man (1964) Judith E. Smith University of Massachusetts Boston, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.umb.edu/amst_faculty_pubs Part of the African American Studies Commons, American Film Studies Commons, and the Film and Media Studies Commons Recommended Citation Smith, Judith E., "Civil Rights, Labor, and Sexual Politics on Screen in Nothing But a Man (1964)" (2012). American Studies Faculty Publication Series. Paper 3. http://scholarworks.umb.edu/amst_faculty_pubs/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the American Studies at ScholarWorks at UMass Boston. It has been accepted for inclusion in American Studies Faculty Publication Series by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at UMass Boston. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 1 Civil Rights, Labor, and Sexual Politics on Screen in Nothing But a Man (1964) Judith E. Smith Abstract The independently made 1964 film Nothing But a Man is one of a handful of films whose production coincided with the civil rights insurgency and benefited from input from activists. Commonly listed in 1970s surveys of black film, the film lacks sustained critical attention in film studies or in-depth historical analysis given its significance as a landmark text of the 1960s. Documentary-like, but not a documentary, it offers a complex representation of black life, but it was scripted, directed, and filmed by two white men, Michael Roemer and Robert Young.
    [Show full text]
  • MGM Studio News (January 14, 1939)
    . STUDIO NEWS Eddie Cantor Signed by M-G-M Star in Big Musical Comedy 'PIP ID -J Sf g W To Eddie Cantor will return to the screen under the banner of Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer. A contract just signed assures exhibitors at least Published In the Interests of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Studios one big Cantor musical comedy during 1939 with the star of “Kid VOL. V—CULVER CITY, CALIFORNIA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1939— No. 13 Boots,” “Whoopee,” “The Kid from Spain” and “Roman Scandals.” Although Cantor has not made a picture since “Ali Baba Goes to Town,” devoting Title Is Changed for all his time to radio, his activity on the New Nelson Eddy Film air has kept him closely associated with the As this issue of Studio News goes screen. to press, announcement is made His personal appear- that a new title has been chosen ances have been terrific for “Song of the West,’’ the Metro- successes in the Goldwyn-Mayer production star- and ring Nelson Eddy, with Virginia course of his radio work Bruce and Victor McLaglen. The he has constantly kept picture will be released as “The his audiences picture- Dusty Road.” minded with his screen discoveries. The latest is Cantor Terry Kilburn, the English boy actor who Wallace Beery scored in “Lord Jeff” and “Christmas Carol.” Cantor also was responsible to a Starts Work On great degree for the careers of Deanna Durbin and Bobby Breen. °Sergt. Madden' Detailed plans for Cantor’s first picture under his contract with M-G-M will be With “Stand Up and Fight” on its announced shortly.
    [Show full text]
  • 1001 Classic Commercials 3 DVDS
    1001 classic commercials 3 DVDS. 16 horas de publicidad americana de los años 50, 60 y 70, clasificada por sectores. En total, 1001 spots. A continuación, una relación de los spots que puedes disfrutar: FOOD (191) BEVERAGES (47) 1. Coca-Cola: Arnold Palmer, Willie Mays, etc. (1960s) 2. Coca-Cola: Mary Ann Lynch - Stewardess (1960s) 3. Coca-Cola: 7 cents off – Animated (1960s) 4. Coca-Cola: 7 cents off – Animated (1960s) 5. Coca-Cola: “Everybody Need a Little Sunshine” (1960s) 6. Coca-Cola: Fortunes Jingle (1960s) 7. Coca-Cola: Take 5 – Animated (1960s) 8. Pet Milk: Mother and Child (1960s) 9. 7UP: Wet and Wild (1960s) 10. 7UP: Fresh Up Freddie – Animated (1960s) 11. 7UP: Peter Max-ish (1960s) 12. 7UP: Roller Coaster (1960s) 13. Kool Aid: Bugs Bunny and the Monkees (1967) 14. Kool Aid: Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd Winter Sports (1965) 15. Kool Aid: Mom and kids in backyard singing (1950s) 16. Shasta Orange: Frankenstein parody Narrated by Tom Bosley and starring John Feidler (1960s) 17. Shasta Cola: R. Crumb-ish animation – Narrated by Tom Bosley (1960s) 18. Shasta Cherry Cola: Car Crash (1960s) 19. Nestle’s Quick: Jimmy Nelson, Farfel & Danny O’Day (1950s) 20. Tang: Bugs Bunny & Daffy Duck Shooting Gallery (1960s) 21. Gallo Wine: Grenache Rose (1960s) 22. Tea Council: Ed Roberts (1950s) 23. Evaporated Milk: Ed & Helen Prentiss (1950s) 24. Prune Juice: Olan Soule (1960s) 25. Carnation Instant Breakfast: Outer Space (1960s) 26. Carnation Instant Breakfast: “Really Good Days!” (1960s) 27. Carnation: “Annie Oakley” 28. Carnation: Animated on the Farm (1960s) 29. Carnation: Fresh From the Dairy (1960s) 30.
    [Show full text]
  • 38Th Annual Meeting in Chicago, Illinois, 2010
    SHAKESPEARE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA Program of the 38th annual meeting 1-3 aPril 2010 the hyatt regency chicago 1 The 38th President Annual PauL yaChnin McGill University Meeting of the Vice-President Shakespeare russ MCDonaLD Association of Goldsmiths College, University of London America Immediate Past President CoPPéLia Kahn Executive Director Brown University Lena Cowen orLin Georgetown University Trustees Memberships Manager reBeCCa BushneLL Donna even-Kesef University of Pennsylvania Georgetown University Kent Cartwright University of Maryland Publications Manager BaiLey yeager heather JaMes Georgetown University University of Southern California Lynne Magnusson University of Toronto eriC rasMussen University of Nevada vaLerie wayne University of Hawai’i 1 Program Planning Committee Sponsors of the 38th reBeCCa BushneLL, Chair Annual Meeting University of Pennsylvania LinDa Charnes Loyola University Chicago Indiana University University of Notre Dame anDrew JaMes hartLey University of North Carolina, Charlotte University of Chicago JaMes Kearney University of California, Santa Barbara University of Illinois, Urbana- Champaign Local Arrangements suzanne gossett University of Michigan Loyola University Chicago Northwestern University With the assistance of: DaviD Bevington Wayne State University University of Chicago Northeastern Illinois University John D. Cox Hope College University of Wisconsin BraDLey greenBurg Northeastern Illinois University Hope College Peter hoLLanD University of Notre Dame and Kenneth s. JaCKson Wayne State University Georgetown University CaroL thoMas neeLy University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Curtis Perry University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign riCharD strier University of Chicago vaLerie trauB University of Michigan wenDy waLL Northwestern University MiChaeL witMore University of Wisconsin 1 2010 Program Guide Thursday, 1 April 10:00 a.m. Registration in Regency Foyer 6 Book Exhibits in Regency Foyer 6 Buses Depart for Backstage Tour of the Chicago Shakespeare Theater 6 1:30 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Gloria Swanson
    Gloria Swanson: An Inventory of Her Papers at the Harry Ransom Center Descriptive Summary Creator: Swanson, Gloria, 1899-1983 Title: Gloria Swanson Papers [18--]-1988 (bulk 1920-1983) Dates: [18--]-1988 Extent: 620 boxes, artwork, audio discs, bound volumes, film, galleys, microfilm, posters, and realia (292.5 linear feet) Abstract: The papers of this well-known American actress encompass her long film and theater career, her extensive business interests, and her interest in health and nutrition, as well as personal and family matters. Call Number: Film Collection FI-041 Language English. Access Open for research. Please note that an appointment is required to view items in Series VII. Formats, Subseries I. Realia. Administrative Information Acquisition Purchase (1982) and gift (1983-1988) Processed by Joan Sibley, with assistance from Kerry Bohannon, David Sparks, Steve Mielke, Jimmy Rittenberry, Eve Grauer, 1990-1993 Repository: Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin Swanson, Gloria, 1899-1983 Film Collection FI-041 Biographical Sketch Actress Gloria Swanson was born Gloria May Josephine Swanson on March 27, 1899, in Chicago, the only child of Joseph Theodore and Adelaide Klanowsky Swanson. Her father's position as a civilian supply officer with the army took the family to Key West, FL and San Juan, Puerto Rico, but the majority of Swanson's childhood was spent in Chicago. It was in Chicago at Essanay Studios in 1914 that she began her lifelong association with the motion picture industry. She moved to California where she worked for Sennett/Keystone Studios before rising to stardom at Paramount in such Cecil B.
    [Show full text]
  • Just Stopped by Program:Just Stopped By
    We l c o m e t o Hello, and welcome! Welcome to 2005 at The Old Globe! 2004 Have we mentioned it? Happy New was a banner year for us, featuring some of the Year! And in honor of which, let’s appro- most exciting and ambitious work ever to appear priately offer up the traditional “bang!” on our stages, such as Arthur Miller’s provocative First of all, playing in the flagship Resurrection Blues, Stephen Wadsworth’s stunning Old Globe Theatre, the true prize of the adaptation of Don Juan, the return of Shakespeare 2004 Broadway Season, the Tony in repertory, and, of course, the thrilling world-pre- Award®-winning Take Me Out, virtually recreated here by its miere musical, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, which begins previews on Broadway Tony Award-winning director, Joe Mantello, and proudly in February. Your tremendous support has helped make this past season offered to our subscribers through the creative efforts of sev- an enormous success. eral major theatres, including Seattle Repertory Theatre and We are equally excited about our next slate of productions, which includes the moving new play I Just Stopped by to See the Man, directed by producer Carole Shorenstein Hays at the Curran in San Globe Associate Artist Seret Scott, and the brilliant and bold Tony Francisco. Only with the combined efforts of these major Award-winning Take Me Out, directed by Joe Mantello, who took home forces can we assure our patrons that they are seeing this the Tony in 2003 for his direction of this Pulitzer-nominated play and astonishing, fresh, and witty Richard Greenberg play in the won again in 2004 for the musical Assassins.
    [Show full text]
  • Theseus a Midsummer Night's Dream Columbia
    M A T T H E W R. W I L S O N Theatre Instructor, Scholar, Director, Combat & Movement Specialist, Actor EDUCATION __________________________________________________________________ University of Maryland, College Park Ph.D. Theatre & Performance Studies (anticipated 2017) Dissertation: “Moving from the Archive: Historiography of Commedia dell’Arte’s Past and ‘Authenticity’ in Its Present Performance” (in process) Areas of Specialization: Theatre History and Historical Theatre Architecture with Franklin J. Hildy Dramatic Theory & Criticism with Catherine A. Schuler Performance Studies and Ethnography with Laurie Frederik Meer American Theatre History with Heather S. Nathans Italian Renaissance with Stefano Villani Shakespeare Theatre’s Academy for Classical Acting at The George Washington University M.F.A. Classical Acting Acting with Michael Kahn, Floyd King, Franchelle Stewart Dorn, Ed Gero, Rob Clare Voice and Text with Gary Logan, Ellen O’Brien, Dakin Matthews Movement with Dody DiSanto, Isabelle Anderson, Brad Waller, Roberta Stiehm, Chris Cherry Elizabethan & Jacobean Literature with Leslie Jacobson and Deborah T. Curren-Aquino Columbia University B.A. Philosophy Shakespeare with David Scott Kastan and Edward Tayler Classical Greek Literature and Language with Helene Foley and Gareth Williams PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT____________________________________________________ “Collaboration,” Columbia Graduate School of the Arts (New York, NY) Play Development with Anne Bogart and MFA theatre students (2002-2003) Stage Internazionale di
    [Show full text]
  • Emmy Award Winners
    CATEGORY 2035 2034 2033 2032 Outstanding Drama Title Title Title Title Lead Actor Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Lead Actress—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actor—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actress—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Outstanding Comedy Title Title Title Title Lead Actor—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Lead Actress—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actor—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actress—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Outstanding Limited Series Title Title Title Title Outstanding TV Movie Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Lead Actor—L.Ser./Movie Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Lead Actress—L.Ser./Movie Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actor—L.Ser./Movie Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actress—L.Ser./Movie Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title CATEGORY 2031 2030 2029 2028 Outstanding Drama Title Title Title Title Lead Actor—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Lead Actress—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actor—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actress—Drama Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Outstanding Comedy Title Title Title Title Lead Actor—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Lead Actress—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp. Actor—Comedy Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Name, Title Supp.
    [Show full text]
  • And What It Means
    WASHINGTON ( AP)--Henry A. Kissinger said yesterday Hanoi has balked at President Nixo n's Vietnam peace proposals, presented in a nationwide ele- vision speech Tuesday night, on two counts: the fine print on blueprints for a U.S. wit idrawal and the election of a new Saigon government. Kissinger, w ho was Nixon's clandestine go-between in 12 just-disclosed H IXOH S secret Paris c conferences with key figures from Hanoi, said at a rare news conference he still hopes for a negotiating breakthrough. He called th e Presidents eight-point proposal a flexible one, not a take-it-or-leal ve-it proposition. The Presiden t's far-travelled assistant for national security affairs said Nixon, by publicizing 26 months of secret negotiations in an address peaceto the nation, may spur North Vietnam to resume talks "on a more urgent basis.", Nixon unfold ed a peace offer that includes an Indochina cease-fire, withdrawal of American forces and release of war pris- oners, new elections in South Vietnam with the Viet Cong participating, and resignation of the Saigon government a month before the internationally supervised balloting. proposal. Under the Nixon plan, all these developments would take place within six months of a Washington-Hanoi agreement. The basics of the proposal have ie an in 7hanni's hands since Octoberr, Nixon said, bu t Hanoi has given no response. Radio Hanoi, in a quick response to Nixon's address, said it contained nothing new an d insisted that the U.S. position was "not changed in any way." But the broadcast stopped short of rejecting the Chief Executive's proposals.
    [Show full text]
  • On Television
    ON TELEVISION INCLUDING JANUARY 18-24, 1954 THE TELEVISIONINDEX VOLUME 6 NUMBER 3 PRODUCTION PROGRAMMING TALENT EDITOR: Jerry Leichter 551 RA AV4Mtill Now York 17 ASSOC ED: Alvin Sullen MUrray11 2-5910 WEEKLY REPORT PUBLISHED BY TELEVISION INDEX, INC. THIS WEEK -7 NETWORK DEBUTS & HIGHLIGHTS Wednesday(20) CBS- 10-10:45pm EST; SPECIAL; Mbtorama of 1954;from WCBS-TV(NY), 84 stations live, 2 kine. Sponsor- General Motors Corp (All Divisions)thru Khdner Agency, Inc(NY); Acct Execs- All division acctheads; Agcy Superv- Frank Burns, for program, & Fred Morrissey, for Motoramaentertainment; Prog Anncr- Arthur Godfrey. Pkgr- Kudner Agency, Inc; Prod-Dir- Bob Bleyer(CBS);Music Dir- Jerry Bresler. Arthur Godfrey acts as guide and host fora TV tour through General Motors' annual exhibit ofnew cars at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York. Godfrey is assisted by the cast of the Godfrey and hisFriends program: Janette Davis, Marion Marlowe, Iu Ann Simms, Haleloke,the McGuire Sisters, Frank Parker, The Mariners and Tony Marvin. Harlow H. Curtice, president of GM, willaccompany Godfrey who will use his "scooter" to tour theballroom exhibit area. Saturday(23) ABC- 7-7:30pm EST; NET DEBUT; On YourWay; from WABC-TV(NY), 12 stationslive, 3 kine. Sponsor- Vitamin Corp of America (Rybutol & Juvenal)thru Batten, Barton, Durstine & Osborn,- Inc(NY); Acct Exec-Homer Metzger; Agcy Supery & Comm Superv-Dir- Frank Jacoby; Prog Anncr- JohnReed King; Comm Anncr- King & Kathy Godfrey. Pkgr- Lawrence White(NY); Prod- Bud Collyer;Dir- not announced at press time; Assoc Prod- Sampson Diamond.Quiz program featuring contestants who have urgent reasons to make trips to distantdestinations.
    [Show full text]
  • 1946-05-10, [P ]
    Friday, May W, 1946 THE TOLEDO UNION JOURN AJ, Page Five Paramount’s Picture “Kitty Delightful Film Fare By Burny Zawodny Granddaddv Of Them A Hub! >a Hui .ba Girl Take a combination like Paulette Goddard and Ray Milland, Hewnomor Wins Vote New Acting Honors put them together in a spicy" story of Eighteenth Century vintage and top it all off with Mitchell Leisen at the directorial helm, Makas Movie Debut ? t For Peter Lawford and you have as entertaining a picture as moviegoers could hope HOLLYWOOD. — Douglas to see. Adapted from Rosamond Marshall’s sensational book, Dick, a new Hal Wallis find, HOLLYWOOD — Firmly Paramount’s “Kitty,” which whose discovery is one of those establishing him as one of the opened at the Paramount The- stories that makes Hollywood leading young actors of the 4re to an enthusiastic audience, Midgets Are the fabulous place that it is, has year. Peter Lawford has been is the kind of been handed a prize role in signed for a featured role in the film t h ■ t i “The Searching Wind,” the new Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer musical, breezes merri­ Real Live Wallis production at Paramount, “It Happened in Brooklyn,” co- ly along from with Robert Young, Sylvia Sid­ starring Frank Sinatra and start to finish '• ney and Ann Richards. Kathryn Grayson. with never a ^g Pixies To Star The sandy-haired youth !n his Young Lawford won the role dull moment, on the strength of his outstand­ An excellent early twenties, who has had no previous ew York or screen ex­ ing performance in the musical, supporting cast HOLLYWOOD (Special) — “Two Sisters From Boston,” includes Patrie perience, has been signed to play The life of a midget, in Holly­ Sam, the soldier-son and one of and his recent work in “My Knowles, Reg­ wood or anywhere else for that Brother Who Talked to Horses.” inald Owen, the five principals in the picturi- Cecil Kella- matter, has its advantages to­ zation o fthe Lillian Hellman “It Happened in Brooklyn,” is Burny Zawudtiy way, Constance gether with its probles.
    [Show full text]