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Srips and Snaps... Meditation
Yee 0 MADELEINE LE BEAU — the beautiful French refugee — will be seen in suport of Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman in Warners’ sensational melodramatic romance, ''Casablanca."
Technique
Charles Boyer and Rita Hayworth in 20th Century-Fox’s “Tales of Manhattan,” a tale of a coat which has countless stars to tell it.
By TAP KEYES
“Mrs. Miniver” set a new style in war films. More pictures of the men and women behind the men and women behind the guns are under way. There’s a fine picture in England along those lines called “John Citizen.” Now MGM, which made the Walter Pidgeon-Greer Garson starrer, has purchased a scenario called ‘“Homecoming,’’ which, according to one authority, will salute those “‘who stay behind to see that the things that are won on the battlefield are not lost at home” ... And here’s a curious, human and romantic note about ‘Mrs. Miniver.’”’ Greer Garson, it has been announced, will marry Richard Ney, who plays her son in the film.
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A coming picture, now scheduled for production, should be the merriest thing to reach the ear and eye in a long time. It will be called “Gentlemen, Be Seated” and it will show the history of the minstrel show ... Don’t think army men are too tough to be sensitive. Kay Kyser’s next is “Right About Face,” the story of a prizefighter—but only because the USArmy didn’t like the kind of military fun the picture was going to make... An interesting radio program for fans will be the one which will originate in Toronto shortly under Ken Soble’s direction. It will be a preview of a new picture, with the comments of those gathered going over the air, as well as actual dialogue from scenes in the picture.
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A host of American stars will be heard over the air from CBC stations for the next Victory Loan drive. The stars will visit and broadcast from this side. . . . Hollywood was saddened by the death of J. Walter Ruben, husband of Virginia Bruce. Ruben, a producer, was only 43. . . . You’ll soon be missing double bills whether you like it or not. The American government is expected to issue an order banning double features. This affects Canada because Hollywood will stop making so many pictures. ... That will also kill the “B” picture as such. Of course, many an “A” turns out to be a “B” when shown.
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For the first time in many years Russia will show American films. A buying commission has been authorized to deal with Hollywood studios. The Soviets have thought that certain American customs, such as drinking, etc., were evidence of a kind of life they wouldn’t care to teach the Russians, who were reshaping their Society. So the films will be hand-picked. .. . There'll be no getting away from war films from now on. Somewhere near 300 films made or started in Hollywood since March have war themes. But preparations are being made so that there will be plenty of the other kind also.
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The Germans got up their own newsreels of the Dieppe raid. Since they were caught napping, they didn’t have cameras handy but that didn’t stop them. The newsreels they showed of the raid were so obviously faked that critics in neutral countries, in which they are showing, laughed out loud. . . . W. C. Fields, famed for his drinking capacities, explained to Gene Fowler, the writer, that he drank for his insomnia. “Does drinking put you to sleep?” asked Fowler. “No,” answered old mumble-fumblestumble. “It makes me happy to stay awake.” ... Jimmy Stewart, in the army, is romancing Dinah Shore.
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Eye-Catcher
PRC’s Ann Corio displays some veiled leg art in a scene from “Swamp Woman.”
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