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By
CONNIE
CURTIS
■ Good news — Ann Harding is back on the screen!
The lovely, ethereal blond star was never forgotten by her adoring public, who have waited five long years for her return to the films. Now they will have a chance to see her again in M-G-M's Eyes tn the Night.
Today Ann is the same beautiful, stately woman she has always been, but with one important difference. She is more vital, more enthusiastic. She is eager to portray character roles that will allow her to mature gracefully.
"I've always had a horror of trying to look younger than I am," explained Ann. "I'm coming back with an eye toward playing parts that will fit me. No more ingenue roles for me."
Don't get the idea that Ann is a settled, stodgy, middleaged woman. Most young glamour girls couldn't hold a candle to her. Ann simply
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decided five years ago to take a vacation.
"I never really left the screen," she said. "I just took a leave of absence. I knew that if I continued making pictures. I'd forever be cast as the weeping willow. And, frankly, I was bored with those tear jerking roles. Besides, I knew that I'd never get the chance to play parts that were really suited to me. So I went on my vacation.
"These last five years away from the screen have been good for me. They have provided an excellent transition from the parts I had played to the roles I now want to do. I made up my mind that when I did come back, I'd do so in a part that was full of character and one that would let me be my own age. I didn't care about getting a big role for my comeback. I didn't expect that. And I had had offers for important parts in those five years. They were all, however, more suitable to a person who was younger than I. So I turned them down. I wanted something with meat on it. No more sweetness and light."
Ann chose her part in Eyes in the Night because it offered her the chance she'd been waiting for. It isn't exactly the strong character role she had wanted, but it is
After a five year absence, during which Ann Harding toured with her conductor husband, Werner Janssen, she returns to the screen in the M-G-M film, Eyes in the Mght
a step in the right direction. And she doesn't have to suffer and suffer in it.
Ann is really a far cry from these wailing females she has portrayed on the screen. Her sense of humor is like champagne popping all over. Her conversation is epigrammatic. She is, in short, as far removed from the characters she has played on the screen as Mickey Rooney is from Ronald Colman.
"My ambition was to come back in the role of Ma Baxter in The Yearling," Ann announced. "There's a real part!"
She wasn't smiling when she said that. She meant it. There isn't much doubt that she wants to do a complete turn-about in her portrayals.
Another reason for Ann's voluntary vacation was that she fell in love and married Werner Janssen, symphony conductor and musician. From that moment on, she wanted nothing to interfere with her life with her husband.
"I can honestly say that I didn't miss pictures at all," Ann remarked. "I was too busy and too happy. I was living in a different world. We were married in England where I had played on the stage in
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