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THE EXHIBITOR
31
HARRY BRANDT IN HOLLYWOOD; “RISING SUN” BALLY; VISITORS COME EAST
ON A RECENT VISIT TO HOLLYWOOD, Harry Brandt, promi¬ nent New York exhibitor, standing, right, called at the Warner studios and posed with Jesse L. Lasky on the set of Warners’ “Rhapsody In Blue.” Seated on the right is Mrs. Brandt, and on the left is Mrs. Isabel Sattenstein, Brandt’s sister-in-law.
LOOKING OVER THE RECENTLY COMPLETED SCRIPT of “The Hairy Ape,” are Jules Levey, UA producer; William Bendix, who will star, and Howard Estabrook, who wrote the screen play of (he Eugene O’Neill stage play, which Levey will pro¬ duce for United Artists release.
MR. AND MRS. SAMUEL GOLDWYN are pictured on their recent ari’ival in New York being greeted by Danny Kaye. Goldwyn came east to arrange for the dual metro¬ politan premiere of RKO’s “The North Star.”
ANDREW STONE, scheduled to produce “‘Sensations Of 1944” for UA release, arrived recently in New York on vacation.
AMONG 'inOSE ATTENDING the recent premiere of RKO’s “Behind the Rising Sun” at the RKO Palace, New York, were, left to right, RKO’s S. Barret McCormick, Major L. E. Thomp¬ son, Edward L. Alperson, Margo, Robert S. Wolff, Ned E. Depinet.
NED E. DEPINET, RKO president, congratulates Leon Goldberg, former RKO treasurer, upon his recent appointment to studio manager under Charles Koerner. Goldberg has already left for the coast to make his headquarters at the RKO studios.
October 20, 1943
QUIN,