Movie Classic (Sep 1932-Feb 1933)

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Over B y Dorothy Manners left an indelible mark upon the personality of this girl. Gone is all of Jean's old fearlessness and bravado. I think she has learned that Life can be a very bitter antagonist. IT is too bad that the Eleanor Boardman-King Vidor divorce plans have been marked by such sensational charges. Both Eleanor and King are very popular members of the film colony and friends on both sides are sorry that it was necessary to name "another woman" in Eleanor's divorce plea against her directorhusband. Strangely enough, King's latest picture, "Cynara," starring Ronald Colman, is a domestic triangle involving a young married couple and another girl, which King has handled with great sympathy toward (guess ?) . . . the husband and the "other girl." Even more strange, and remarked about by the preview audience of critics who saw the film at the studio, Phyllis Barry bears a startling resemblance to Eleanor Boardman. KATHLEEN BURKE, Paramount's famed "Panther Woman," and studio directors and officials have been having a merry time (not to mention some pretty hot ■v i J i It it s true that boys do like arguments) over how much outdoor girls, they ought time Kathleen's boy-friend, to go for Rosalie Roy in "Clancy of the Mounted" Martha Sleeper — the little girl whose name doesn't fit her — is back on the movie scene again, where brunettes are as rare as chances to support three Barrymores, which Martha does in "Rasputin and the Empress" Glen A. Hardin, can spend on the set while the company is shooting. Kathleen says he can stay there all day if he so desires. But the studio seemed to feel Glen was wearing his welcome a little threadbare. According to the harassed "execs," Hardin, as the "Panther Woman's'' self-appointed manager, was doing more directing than the director. According to Kathleen, Glen, as her adviser, had plenty of ri^ht to stay on hand and make sure she fmr he r shaii of th( rinse -ii ps .1 ml ( he spotlights. Just h\ way <>l settling the argu me in, Ha rd i n packed up his bag When prosperity pops around that corner, Ralph Bellamy is right there to nab it. He gets another big lie-man role in "Destination Unknown" When Clark Gable went over to Paramount lo play in "No Man of Her Own," he lunched willi liis new* est rival, John Davit Lodge and neither got nervous Indigestion. This young Boston lawyer is Hollywood's Latest "find" 25