Modern Screen (Jan-Dec 1960)

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CONVERSATION WITH A <j0t>l>ES5 continued CRITICISM, INNUENDO, PAIN . . . THIS IS THE PRICE THE YOUNG GODDESS HAS ALREADY PAID FOR HER HEADLONG DASH INTO WOMANHOOD {continued) disappointments and ecstasies has not yet touched her. But already there are the cries of : She's ruining her health in foolish dieting to keep her figure. . . . Extravagance! This girl, little more than a child, is spending every nickel she makes on glamour clothes and living like a movie star earning ten times her salary. . . . Those are a hatful of charges against a youngster who just four years ago at the tender age of fourteen had arrived in Hollywood, well known as a child model in New York, and had clicked big in her screen debut in Until They Sail. I loved Sandra as the "little girl" sister in this war drama starring Jean Simmons and I wrote glowingly of the baby-faced little blonde newcomer in my column. The day the item appeared, I received a bowl of roses from Sandra with a charming hand-written note: "Your kind words made me so happy. A girl really isn't in movies until she's been mentioned in Louella Parsons' (Continued on page 70)