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• WHAT-HAVE-YOU- Scaventjer’s Paradise Antiqua BUY — RENT — SELL — SWAP USED FURNITURE • MARBLE 3731- 35 CAHÜENGA WEST TR. 7-7945 RUDYS VODKA • 8 " 1 l29al- BEST BUYS IN TOWN LOWEST PRICES WE DELIVER 763-5193 or 877-4192 Let us package a Wine assortment for the special Hostess Gift! CATERING TO STUDIO CAST & CREW PARTIES JßoL anJ 9 Qose JNewtnan RUDYS WINE and SPIRITS CO. 10153 Riversrde Drive North Hollywood Inside track cont. Continued -Publicity director, Don Haley, busy telling the world about Crown’s current product including “The Stepmother,” “Blood of Dracula’s Castle” and “The Naked Countess” among others. WARNER BROTHERS - William C. Davidson has been signed as production manager on “Wednesday Morning,” Batjac production starring John Wayne. Film rolls in Durango on Nov. 13 with Andrew V. McLaglen directing. -Paul Mazursky has rounded up some of the top talent for his “Blume in Love,” including George Segal, Susan Anspach and Kris Kristofferson, Shelly Winters and Marsha Mason. Mazursky himself is functioning as director-writer and producer. —Ned Beatty, who co-stars with Jon Voight and Burt (Body Beautiful) Reynolds in “Deliverance,” just returned from a coast-to-coast tour promoting the hit film. —“Super Fly” has grossed over the million-dollar mark at only two theatres in New York alone. Film stars Ron O’Neal and was directed by Gordon Parks, Jr. — Dick Richards garners two directorial assignments at Warner Bros, with assignments on “The Procane Chronicle” and “W. W. and the Dixie Dancekings.” Richards recently completed “The Culpepper Cattle Company.” — Hope the search for a black beauty to essay the title role in “Cleopatra Jones” doesn’t take as long as AIP’s search for a “Camille.” That search is still going on after a year. Don’t think it will take producer Bill Tennant that long as he is anxious to get “Cleopatra” off the ground. — ‘‘Steelyard Blues,” originally scheduled for release in October, is now being held on the shelf until early 1973. The Jane Fonda - Donald S utherland - Peter Boyle starrer is described as “a very special movie” and calls for “a new marketing strategy.” Wonder what the old strategy involved. LEO'S LAIR — Fred Myrow, an authority on Appalachian music, has been set to compose, arrange and conduct the music for MGM’s “The Lolly Madonna War,” most of which was filmed in the mountains of Eastern Tennessee. Myrow recently completed the score for Howard Jaffe’s first film, “A Reflection of Fear” for Columbia. AROUND AND ABOUT- The Burbank Studios will hold a golf tournament at the Ojai Valley Inn and Country Club on Nov. 18. Entry Charge includes green fee and buffet luncheon. Sid Katz and Al Cavigga are coordinating. -The TBS Bowling League is also underway at the Grand Central Bowl in Glendale. Comprised of employees from Warner Brothers, Columbia and TBS, there are still some openings. Contact Sid Katz at TBS. —Speaking of GFOSB, their annual Angel Ball aboard the Queen Mary in Long Beach was a huge success. Jackie Cooper served as Honorary Dance Chairman, Robert Q. Lewis performed MC chores and entertainment was provided by John Barbour, Linda Carr, Frank D’Rone and Will Pate. Greg Morris presented Cooper with the Angel of the Year Award and Tichi Wilkerson Miles with the Woman of the Year Award. Lee Meriwether and Frank Aletter drew tickets for door prizes. Other celebrities attending included Kay Stevens, Joy Wilkerson and Tony Cardoza. *** The great nostalgia eater cont. and Vivien Leigh walked, the bastile set where Ronald Colman appeared as Sydney Carton in “A Tale of Two Cities,” the Peking Gate for “The Good Earth,” and the streets of Paris for “An American in Paris.” The memories could go on and on. Until “They Only Kill Their Masters” worked on Lot 2, the final scenes done there were for “Wild Rovers,” a William Holden starrer in February 1971. The set used had been put up originally for Robert Taylor’s “Billy the Kid.” The last use of that vast New York Street, where more than 600 movies were made in part over thirty years time, was for the Doris Day comedy, “Where Were You When the Lights Went Out?”. That was 1967. It is ironic that most of the 28 huge sound stages, construction of which was what crowded sets off the south end of Lot 1 to make the Lot 2 boom Start in 1935, now are mostly empty of action. There was talk, several years ago, of moving all studio facilities far out in San Fernando Valley. When, and if, this happens, a lot more ghosts of cinema classics will be doomed to wander homelessly for all time — with no place to haunt. Eat your hearts out, movie nostalgia-lovers. * !|! * 40