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PRESS CLIPPINGS ?√ß 220 W. 19th St., NEW YORK 11, N.Y. Tel. CHelsea 3-8$60 J Ch. (0 653,252) {S 982,6*1) This Clipping Fror$ NEW YORK, isll JOURNAL-AME^AN ^Jpfywood Highlights^ Financial Woes Plague Oliviers By LOUELLA O. PARSONS, Motion Picture Editor International News Service HOLLYWOOD, May 29. ?╟÷ WHEN JUDY HOLLIDAY SHOWED UP for the first day's shooting on "A | Name For Herself," she had a script under her arm?╟÷but not the Columbia movie! As everybody ogled to see what it was, Judy laughed, "It's the new play l^e accepted for Broadway this Fall?╟÷*My Aunt Daisy,' by AlbertHelperr-and believe it or not?╟÷I'm not a dumb- I bell as I was in 'Born Yesterday'!" As casually, as this did Judy break the big news of her next Broadway plans.; Most stars of her stature on the stage would have put out a pronouncement! Rehearsals start in August in ^^ ^^^^^^ Connecticut and the Broadway tember. ;Judy plays a straight r?√ß-?√ß-?√ß- mmr?Σ≤'---- &r% *-$mmw_&. drama?╟÷a Boston socialite with iflHHfc ?╓¬ ^/ *5 *** IWy domestic problems. * * * I HAD A HUNCH something $as cooking when George Raft . went to the Mocambo with Vir- i ginia and Darryl Zanuck and Bella Darvi?╟÷and I'm not the girl to let a story escape me. This is what I learned; v.7 George ;^p^ts:i%rdb^the;.li.fel:: of Jack Dempsey, featuring h%4&8fc''S classic battle wiffo Jack Kearns, as well as the part l?·e?·rnes played in Jack's life. Darryl is very interested and Is now exploring the possibilities. Jack^life, one of the inost colorfuTin the world (and he's still so very popular), I think would make a good baovie. MY FORMER HOME, th?╜ Algonquin Hotel in New York; where I lived for four years, is being featured in "Tales of -tbp| VIVIEN LEIGH EFSS^" &Y S6rI<W 3 Parting; v,it* Home ^^^e ^fty Boni- face Frank Case, whose fabulous career as. a hotel man is in a I class by itself. That I call good casting. Carroll Case will'-filay , Frank's father. II /Many of the famous people who lived: at the Algonqj^^WiU be featured. Douglas Fairbanks Jr. has already oflererj^pplay4:: his father, and Young John Barrymore Jr. will be inviteatfo play John Barrymore Sr. This could really be a terrific .Tv|&how. :__ ?╟÷^*&_%j__- There are so many pe4pl& who lived at this famous sotel at one time or an??therasS|r'T Selling Homejl WORD FROM ENGLAND that Laurenoe -, ^Ivier Tand Vivien Leigh are selling their famed country home where so many celebrities have been entertained gives credence to a long circulated rumOr. It was whispered that one of the reasons for Vivien's com-... plete collapse was worry over| finances. You ask how thisl could be with both Vivien and' Larry earning big salaries? Well, taxes take a terrific toll and actors live high. I hear that the Oliviers had tried to claim income tax deduction on their home because they used it for rehearsals. But domeikE "dr. ID 7.147J This ClippiW From _DAILY VARIETY ^Jj^V/OOD, CAL. &?╟÷-^T^^hs Satchmo \%Saiiy 5^JE, combo opens I Sanls, L; RTHE ORIGINAL ?╟÷ omeikF PRESS CLIPPINGS ?╟÷ 220 W. 19A St., NEW YORK 11, N.Y. Tel. CHelsea 3-8860 Cir. (D 7,147) This Clipping From DAILY VARIETY HOLLYWOOD, CAL. the British government refused tjheclaim. CHITCHAT: May be a battle bet^rain Jo&i^|S?·ston and Day^dLS.Selznick. when John "c*6mes?#iere' in July with the print,6?·;'-Beat the Devil," which stafs'-^lKjmpniiiey;^ Bogart and Jehnifel^ones. John? has said that if David .f^sTdbwn too ibany of the stiB"pictures of Jennifer for the publicity campaign on the pic- tttre'hewUl build the entire American campaign around 3'Gina Lollobrigidasj' *who is the ^sexiest' actress s$|pe Sylvano f-Mangano. Davi^^till retains ^the right to pass|pL-all of Jen- ?╟≤nifer^MlM^T | .. Mt'C^Tjpdeli^tandable t ha t David wants the best for Jennifer (MrsifjfjM&nick), but I hope he woj|||$??e'' too difficult this tinieiirdSo- many things have changed-iQJ&i: our picture business, arid it can't be run the way it was five or 10 years ago. WHEN I TALKED to Darryl Zanuck today he told me that Dr. Henri Christin, inventor of Cinemascope, will arrive in this country for the-premiere of "The Robe.'\ MGM is already using Cinemascope, and Darryl was in high fettle when he told me that Henry Hathaway is shooting the coronation in London I with this process while he is there for pre-production shots of "Prince Valiant." %>jk$jm "The Robe" has cost a for-. ,ttune, but I wish I had a hundredth of a cent invested in it j^-that's how much money I ^pink it will make. .Snapshots of holly- wood Collected at Random: The newest twosome in town, Myrna Dell and Craig Stevens, Alexis Smith's estranged husband), looking at the sad sea , waves at Jack's at the beach. ! Donald O'Connor's got a ?╟≤travel bee and he's trying to book passage on the Queen Elizabeth next week with Eve Arden and Brooks West. Don I will be a s"ensa|tonmfe^widon Paris, etc., ,3^^' -' ^^%, JeanetteiMacDonald, who wit a hit at fthe Sahara in Las^ Vegas, moltes ovet^kjiJig.Sands, same place^ywell,: there are pleffcof jobs there. That's all wwliy* See you Sundayl ^*>!w SANDS^ Las VWas, May 21.-Jit's not m improbably that many in le audi- ?√ß ence at thalush Copa Roojp. of the ?√ß Sands Hotek Wednesday mght ex- ?· pected the Stage synonym, of an B atom bomb, bid; instead jpe nitery n debut of TalluraJr BanHjfead came ?√ß off as well as tras^jg^ profound 1 optimist could hopeTThe southern J belle of the legit theatre and the m hoyden of southern society un- I corked a 32-minute act that ran ?║ the gamut of song, dramatics and I comedy and was exceptionally as I well as surprisingly entertaining I most of the way. As a result, the Sands Hotel's I gamble?╟÷a big one even for this 1 gambling town?╟÷should pay off i like a hard-way 4. The natural I curiosity regarding Tallulah, plus I ber name value and now the added I plus of undoubted excellent word- I of-mouth, should overwork Nick I Kelly and his efficient Copa Room I staff taking care of the rush of I customers during her three-week 1 run. Tallulah was a hazardous book- 1 ing from many aspects, not the I least of which was her complete I i Tinfamiliarity as a saloon enter- j tainer, although she quickly con- I fesses that she's no stranger to I I saloons. She had no act when the I I Sands bought her at $20,000 a I I week, and after signing the con- I I tract several weeks ago her grow- I J ing nervousness brought on an at- I j tack of shingles that nearly^rep- I 1 dered her hors de Sands the morn- I ing of her opening. Plus this,: Jack 1 Entratter threw on her terrific I publicity heat by flying out news- ?║ men from east and west to cover I her nightclub debut. It could have I been a disaster; instead, iss a 1 bonanza. Thanks to a fine. monolog on | gambling by Wedlock and Snyder; I a five-minute edited,, version of _ I Dorothy Parker's well-known and I 1 highly dramatic fourteen-minute I I "Telephone Call" soliloquy, and I I Gus Schirmer's excellent routining, I I the typically coiffed but well- | 1 gowned Tallulah breezes through I 1 her turn with all the assurance of I I a nightclub floor veteran. Though | ?√ß no nightingale, she even makes j 1 passable and quite acceptable two I songs, "I'll Be Seeing You" and I "Bye, Bye Blackbird," though if || 1 anythii|| is to be eliminated in her i 1 act, it'sEier singing. At best, she \i 1 should do only "Blackbird," in I | which she also throws in some in- I I expert Charleston hoofing, and 1 ?║? leave the more serious singing to | m better suited birds. Without j the B songs, she's a Class A entertainer, ?√ß an ace monologist and a top at- ?√ß traction for any of the better ?√ß bistros in thMcprmtry. DeanvFuller, whom Tallulah in- ?√ß troes as a very promising com- I poser, is her piano accompanist ?√ß and the;,only person, other than ?√ß the orchestra, with her on.Jpiev II stage. 0|?╜Jiteg night, she also paid ?√ß particular credit tojLPeter Lind ?√ß Hayes and Mary Healy, who closed || here the\ previous night, for their ?√ß sympathetic help on her debut: m performance. I Rest of the show Jack Entratter ?√ßframed for the Cop^TKoom is like- ?√ßwise good entertainment and nice- ^ly sets the audience mood for Tal- BArclay 7-5371 PRESS CLIPPING BUREAU 165 Church Street - New York NEW YORK, N.Y. DAILY NEWS Circ. D. 2,402,346 - S. 4,716,807 B MAY a 9 1953 roaduiau By DANTON WALKER Cf Brdadway Roundup The State Dept. already arranging accomodations for Princess! Margaret's post-Coronatiori Visit to the U. S. . '.v_. The honeymooning | Capt. Erling Lorentsens (Grown Princess Ragnhild of Norway) duel over here shortly to reside at Manhattan House. . . . Persistent rumor | that Harry Truman will seek radio and video^time to air a speech re- I viewing* the new Administration. ." . . Senator William Langer of j North Dakota heading a committee which plans an inquiry into juvenile I delinquency. ... A famous Brooklyn jurist mulling a plan whereby I one district attorney in New York City would supersede individual I DA's for each of Gotham's five counties.''. . . City .Hall talk is that ?╟≤_. Third Deputy Commissioner Aaron Frank will succeed to the top post I when -Police Commissioner Monaghan is upped to -the bench. Maxine Jennings Byron Saltonstall, ex-wife of the Massachusetts j Senator (when hefwas Governor), back in New York afte^iiihe years in I California, to ressmip her acting career. ... The Palacem^Kagement I trying to persuade' ^tbel Merman to do a one-womlin, two-a-day show f there along the Judy- Garland-Danny Kaye line this Fall. . . . Sylvia I Fine (Mrs. Danny Kaye) writing the theme song for UN's "The Moonj Is Blue" movie. . . . Dodger batting king Roy CampaneHa, celebrating at the Bandbox after his ninth inning home run defeated the Giants, J confided that the Campanulas' sixth bambino is due late in June. . . JJ The Paul (Polonaise) Pawlowskis rejoicing over the arrival of thefr i first dziecko, John Paul. * t * ' '* . r;-:iml||il Agents for the Maharajah of Baroda pricing the late Al Capone's Star Island home in Miami. . . . Axel Wennfer-Gren conferring with about constructing a monorail train system in Cuba j successfully tried out in Germany, ... Dr. Bruno mory training expert, forgetting about his gall bladder; Mount Sinai Hospital. . . . Agnes DeMille getting an honor- j _, s-~_ of dectoc of ^letters from Russell Sage College at Troy. . . .*' 'udy DiMaggio, cousin of the ballplayer, has taken over management of he Shelburne Caf lin the hotel of that name. ... Gus Shirmer Jr. getting bids to stag! acts since his successful launching of Talloo at the Sjyuis in Las V las. I Best thing abouj New York for those midshipmen fromthe Spanish j gaining ship Juan gfebastion de Elcano was chewing gum. Bought as f&uch of it as they lould afford to carry away from local shops. . . . iipn of the famed Ui S. S. Hornet staging their seventh reunion beach- h%d at the Hotel Cnelsea in Atlantic City June 12-14... . Fire Island's ,1 activities now fate a special column in Variety...; Vincent Lopez go^ back on the aiilvaves June 3 with "Vincent Lopez' Times Square, U. 11 A." (WJZ). Li. Recording; star Lee Wiley joins the* roster of WOJfeTV's "Dinner bate" Monday. . . . It will be Lisa Kirk, not Rose- marymlooney, who a team with Jose Ferrer in "Kiss Me, Kate," at the Daljas^feate Fair, /md. this time in thetitle I'ole. . . '. The American Lyric. TflWj|rer opaning'its second season~ June 17, will premiere a one- act musica^^j^ed "Brandy Is My True Love's Name," by Atra Baer (Bug Baer's daughter) and Martin Kalmanoff. ... Comedienne Alice Pearce, prime favorite of the supper club circuit, will head the cast for Julius Monk's Bermuda" revue, "Stock in Trade," opening July 10. Igor Stravinsky seriously ill. . . . Kansas City's Philharmonic leader Hans Schwieger in New York arranging for a second opera festival for K.C. i; i . Pultizer Prize winner Lamar StHngfield . (composer of "Lost Colony," et<%^3^L^?? *"ie mus??ca^ background for David |Aldrich's production of 'Sodom, Tennessee." . . . Deems Taylor's, biography of Rodgers & Hammersfcein, due this Fall, to be titled "Some Enchanted Evenings.'- ?J[ g?╜ Qufck magazine title sold J\o Walter Annenberg of Philadelphia, whofll b^ing out a new type of book late this Fail. . . . Washington hezirCth&t one segment of the late Evelyn Waish's^riend-" ship mansion ^iy^ch was disposed of in three parts) will become ft ?╟≤ bottle club.^ ."^^j^lSid Caesar and Imogerie; Coca ringsiding at the '1 Riviera nextT:Tff?╜i<i??y: for the opening of Bambi Linn and Rod Alexander (Bamb) and Rod are the only ones besides Sid, and Imogene to be signedefor "Show of Shows" next season). ... If a waiter down I at Bon Soir ih Greenwich Village looks familiar to TV fans, he probably is. He is Bruce Kirby, who doubles, on the "Danger" show but [support his family waiting on tables between jobs. lulah. The Copa Girls, 10 cuties, I Dick Beaver andVirginia Hall, 8 singers, and Bill Damian and Joy I Healey, dancers, are house produc- I tion assets working f efficiently I through the show, with special I music and lyrics by Joan Edwards 1 and Lynn Duddy. Outside acts are Hi Lo Jack and | the Dame, standard quartet who 1 sing well together, look okay and i hold attention with several numbers, and %e Clark Brothers, a I pair of sepia hoofers who indulge I injfcjme amazing rbj^nm dancing I acrobatics. They're showstoppers. I Ray Sinatra's 11-man ork, a well integrated musical crew, plays the ; show and the dancing in excellent j style. Scho.