Movieland. (1950)

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FEBRUARY Screen Guide IS TOPS! READ ABOUT the new ro¬ mance in the life of Rita Hayworth! LORETTA YOUNG opens her heart so that you might understand her better in her own story, "Sincerely Yours"; Read "Liz Comes of Age" for the true story of ELIZABETH TAYLOR. MRS. GLENN FORD tells all about her life with the popular star in "My Ideal Husband." Fascinating stories about EDDIE ALBERT, JUDY GARLAND, DAN DAILEY, MONTGOMERY CLIFT, and thrilling picture stories of CARY GRANT, DORIS DAY, PEGGY ANN GAR¬ NER, SHIRLEY TEMPLE, BARBARA HALE and BILL WILLIAMS, make this an outstanding issue. Buy February SCREEN GUIDE for the latest, most exciting news stories and pictures of the stars. Screen Guide has everything! ON SALE AT YOUR NEWSSTAND JANUARY 14 GROWING PAINS * If you want to know about an actor — ask another actor. That's how we found out about young Claude Jarman, Jr. Claude won’t let Lassie suffer eye strain when they appear in "The Sun Comes Up.” By James M. Stolz ★ Destiny has a way of searching one out, no matter what obscure place one may be. Nashville, Tennessee, is a far cry from Hollywood, California; but in Nashville, Tennessee, some years ago lived a shy, slim, yellow-haired boy, who embodied all the qualities with which Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings had endowed the hero of her Pulitzer Prize-winning novel “The Yearling.” So destiny sought out Claude Jarman, Jr. After his magnificent performance in “The Yearling,” and as a special Academy Award Winner, Hollywood asked them¬ selves, “Is the boy finished? Did he give all he had in this picture so that he will be remembered as ‘Yearling’ Jarman?” To avoid this M-G-M astutely cast him in “High Barbaree” with Van Johnson and June Allyson. And then that same Destiny, that had plucked him out of a fifth-grade class¬ room, once more stepped in, and Claude Jarman was set for another picture, this time by R. K. O. The picture is “Rough¬ shod” and Claude plays opposite Bob Sterling and Gloria Grahame. It’s a virile Western and Claude plays the part of Bob Sterling’s youngest brother. If you really want to find out some¬ thing about an actor — ask another actor and that’s what we did about Claude. Bob Sterling was only too happy to talk about the boy. “He’s a wonderful kid,” he declared enthusiastically. “If I had a son, I’d want him to be exactly like Claude Jarman. Maybe he’s such a regular kid because his father is his manager. They are al¬ ways together and the elder Jarman has made it his business to keep Claude un¬ spoiled, and a simple American boy. When I tell you that Claude gets an allowance like any other kid and has to