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ent001323-017
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. k?║|||||SHED 1888 PRESS^ttf IN^S|^U 11 i65 e#^P*ee+^^^:Yorki ---?╟≤^??-POST i rSS??a72 583 - ?√ßEBkP Zsci Zsa Gaga Over Rubi?╟÷ George Back Home, Tired* iSf By Earl Wilson Paris, May 29?╟÷The uninhibited Zsa Zsa Gabor doesn't care who knows that she and her husband, George Sanders, have quarreled because there's another man in her life, Porririo Rubirosa. I met her at a party here with the handsome ex-husband of Doris Duke.. * *- i Bitf" W$: "Where's George?" I asked, though maybe I ?·houldn?t. have. "Oh,. the poor darling finished a picture with Rossellini and had to go backi to Hollywood,"] she answered, i "He was tired " J "Of what9" "Maybe marriage." She shrugged eloquently as she drew back the top of her shocking pink Ceil Chapman dress. "George hears about Rubi and me and sends me angry vires and phone calls. Tell me, what do they say at New York about m^ scandale?" I said they were shocked. :- ~*mm "Do they think I am another Ingrid Bergman?" She didn't I look displeased at the prospect. "George should do something about me!" she added. "He should do something forceful." ,.* ^ * * _\-yz&- 0n the other hand, she thought George was .being unreason j able to be critical of her because, she said, he had a romance orj ! two in Rome while she was in Hollywood, before she came t \ Europe to "vork on a film." "Do you think you will go back together "Probably." * ^^^^P^^^t*^ I She explained that in two weeks she comes back to New York} with Fernandel, the great French actor, to "complete their movi- ; and that she tfteh goes to Hollywood. "What does George tell other people about; you and EjuM?'1 I asked, jj . "He just says, 'Oil* she'll ?╟≤>>.'; ??iv?╜*r it/ " .said ZsslZsiw?╟÷"-- ZSA ZSA "What do they say at Kew'YcW* The Midnight Earl in N. Y. MARGARET TRUMAN SMILED?╟÷but didn't deny it this time -when tasked if she'^fpin for Congress from Independence ... Washington's learned of a July meeting between Peron of Argentina -and Vargas of j Brazil. Kathleen Winsor, just divorced, said at Majors Cabin, "This is the'first time in -years -Tve been single and didn't know a singly interested man" . . . Aren't Maxwell <2^piub) Kriendler and beautiful Lala Karr planning to wed any day in London? TODAY'S BRAVOS: Jerry Gray's band at the Paramount; Joey Adams' Joke Book, now in pocket size. Tani (or maybe this one's Drah) Seitz plays .*jgig| of the sexy twins in the Mickey Spitla^ieJnovie, "I, the Jury." ^WI^A I'D SAID THAT: "An optimist Is a g?╜y V^> believes tomorrow's prices won't be higher than today's"?╟÷Ethel Smith. . '. -T-Q-PATS WORST PUN: Tommy Dor- .'3^04$jfe about the new medical discovery, ' frozen'handages?╟÷they're for cold j&gg Taffy TuttlA +-??-> - TAFFY doesn't waste xm- ESTABLISHED 1888 BArclay 7-5371 fJSs^SuPWNG BUREAU lAfehurch Street,-/New York %ALLEJO, CALIF. ?╟≤ f#.WS-CHRONICLE ?fif..;Circ. D. 2#?║K& I alliilali Gets Paid For Acting in Saloon' I LAS VEGAS ?╟÷ (INS) ?╟÷ Las ?√ß Vegas, test city for the A-bomb, ?√ß felt the blast of a new type de- ?√ß molition last night when Tallulah ?√ß Bankhead shimmied into town ?√ß for her debut as a night club ?√ßhot-shot. 1 The audience went wild. 1 And so, almost, did Tallulah 1 "Darlings," she drawled, "I ?√ßhave spent half of my life in j saloons. But this, is the first time {I'm being paid for the pleasure." j After the show, however, she confided huskily to friends: "Paid for the pleasure? I'd have mortgaged my house for the privilege of NOT going on tonight?╟÷I was so scared. I'm still 'scared." MISSJBANKSteAD, considered Jin madtjesthetic %*cles to be one of mf mid-Cent%y finest actress^:, packed the Iplowing frenzies! ihto ber 22-min|ite premiere pple club queef at the fab- uloul Sands'" Hotefe Bumps, grlndV a fllng~at t??" Charleston, three ^K>ngs, a dramatic monologue, ^comedy ^jetch and an ninabashllyeg^)?╜^ in which she proved heP*??legs are just as divine as Dietrichs." She did all this for one of the highest entertainment salaries in history: $20,000 a week for three weeks averaging out to about $66 a minute onstage. Hired by Jack Entratter?╟÷celebrity-lovjed general manager of the lavish new Sands ?╟÷ Miss B. is making slightly mbre than her highest paid predecessor at the hotel, Ezio Pinza. Nervous as_one of this city's heavy losing roulette roues, Tallulah swished onto the stage in a pale blue satin g6wn and a purple organdy coat. THE AUDIENCE, many off whom had not had dinner because waiters were ordered to "Stop serving before the star comes on," applauded for minutes before she could open her famous mouth. When she did, they screamed with laughter. "Darlings," she saidr "Well, I here I am?╟÷shilling for the gambling joints." The crowd warmed even more when, long .hair flying and skirts raised, she danced and sang?╟÷in the voice of a sand-choked, downhearted coyote?╟÷the numbers "I'll Be Seeing You," and "Bye, Bye, Blackbird." ||)ljl?║|0- /'. At the conclusion of the latter, she breezed through a short Charleston, mourning "Look kids, I can do a hot Charleston but this dress weighs me down." HER ONE SERIOUS interlude was a touching interpretation of Dorothy P>arker's monologue, "Telephone Call." Tallulah, who was good, cried at the end of it. The audience, who were astonished, did too. ^'^^^^ The star, a veteran of almost every other form of show business except night clubs, may take nightclub engagements in other parts of the West?╟÷but she isn't saying for certain. ''Not; yet," she says. "We have to wait to see how this goes over." ^R^CUPPING BUREAU Ib^^^rth Street - New York i 5E?·eVeland, OHIO PRESS ll^irc. D. 305,281 --&T MAI Zi I&3 ) ism ratjs*woffii?? ?√ß?√ß?√ß?√ß?√ß?╟≤?╟≤ RiifioJ'KuPirWAPnrAMPRFII im Tallulah Tries Out Nightclub Work iK "5tjipilah Bankhead worked j hyerTBfe> night club job in:&as Vegaf fM&t night. She said vshe ^Liried fe cabaret work because !jsh?║^$ad done everything on stageP^d off of it, for that I matt^.^^Customers at the II Sandj^Hotel\eard her sing, in IwfilFts^scrilfed as a basement I couple of mono- logl^g^^e fun at It^ly-, I wood! "falulah was so nervous beforehand she broke oWyiti. shingles. But, she said, **they told me this would be a new experience. I had given up hope years ago of finding one." She's 1 getting $^000 a ^eek. ;fgy4by RICHARD CAMPBELL