CINE World (Jan 1967)

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Another Canadian Gal, Beautiful SUSAN CLARK Is Doing Well In Hollywood By RON RIEDER Hollywood— When it comes to family trees, Susan Clark has roots that run deeper than the famed California redwoods. Susan, talented actress who will make her American movie debut early in 1967 in Universal’s “Banning,” was born in Sarnia, Ontario, but her bloodliness link her with leading families in England, Ireland and United States. Susan’s paternal great grandmother, Lady Eileen Fitzgerald, a relative of the late President John Fitzgerald Kennedy, broke with stolid Irish tradition by marrying a Protestant. However, he wasn’t just the garden variety of Protestant. He was a titled member of the aristocracy, Baron Raymond Clark. Needless to say, baron or no baron, great grandfather Clark was still a Protestant and as such he found his Catholic surroundings somewhat less than cordial. So he packed up his title and his bride and migrated to Ontario, leaving his land and. property in Ireland to eventually revert back to state ownership. In sparsely populated Ontario of his day, Baron Clark’s grand title and documented linage went pretty much unnoticed. Certainly the Indians weren’t the least bit impressed. And when Lady Eileen bore her husband a son, even he was to dismiss his noble heritage with a casual shrug. 5