Motion Picture Herald (Oct-Dec 1956)

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wee l in ictureS SIGNIFYING OPENINGS and screenings in New York's Catskills and Chicago's Loop. MGM's "Teahouse" which also is the New York Radio City Music Hall's holiday feature, drew appropriate crowds. RKO's "Bundle of Joy" at Grossinger's, the resort at which Eddie Fisher began his career and later married, drew appropriate press communicators and entertainment personalities. Below, Eddie and his mother and Jennie Grossinger. AWARDS. Father James Keller gives to Cecil B. DeMille, left, the Christopher Award for "using his God-given talents in a positive and constructive way" ("The Ten Commandments"). Gregory Peck accepts from Mary Pickford, right, the Thomas Alva Edison Award to "Moby Dick," the "film best serving the national interest." Miss Pickford is a trustee of the Edison Foundation, which appraises and rewards worthy national mass media. INTERVIEWS. Y. Frank Freeman, Jr., left, tells newsmen in New York the people want pictures big and wonderful or small and unusual. Producer of Paramount's $3,000,000 "Omar Khayyam," he'll stay "big." T. Koide, right, who represents Japan's Shochiku company, and its producers group is in New York to help prepare a Japanese Film Festival and ascertain public preference, which so far is elusive. The Festival will be January 20-25 at the Museum of Modern Art, and publicity will feature visiting Japanese stars. HERALD picture HERALD picture