Modern Screen (Jul-Dec 1945)

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! 5 hanics by writing a script, but his I.Q. wo " can't understand poetry! With producing his aim, he's learning movie mechanics by wrmi ries him. "I belong to book clubs and read till dawn— but I st The new guy walked out on the set, toward Bogey. "Is that drip still around?" The new guy grinned and Bogey grinned back. The new guy felt like a colt, kicking its heels up on a fine spring day. He's no longer the new guy. He's Dane Clark, zooming high on MODERN SCREEN'S poll, playing second lead to Bette Davis in A Stolen Life " When the powers turned thumbs down on his real name, Bernard Zaneville, it was Bogey in a puckish moment who dreamed up Dane Clark Dane's howls of mirth turned to howls of anguish when he found himself stuck with it. As times goes on, he grows hardened-^ubmits to Great Dane and Melancholy Dane without wincing too much, but thinks SayU-DaneSo or Great Day 'n the Morning, is hitting below the belt. He's spent most of his life using his head as a battering ram to get through brick walls. The walls were breached and his head survived not without scars. His hates are as cordial and staunch as his affections He hates the man who promised him a junior law partnership and reneged-thanks heaven it happened but goes right on hating him for breaking his word Hates the fellow who fired him from his first {Continued on page 1*» This scene with DeCamp, Garfield personal preview— 'cause Dane's I A now. 58