Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1959)

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8:30 p.m. Barry Coe escorts Jiidi. “Hold my hand tight, honey,” she says. T? ver have one of those days when, because you want everything to go so right, it goes so wrong? It happened to Judi Meredith the day of the Deb Star Ball, when she was one of thirteen girls nominated as stars of tomorrow. She lost her money purse, then found it in her left hand. Her car ran out of gas; she ran into a closet. She thought of the now-famous girls who had been Debs before her. “Golly,” she’d think, “will it happen to me, too?” Judi had come a long way. Just a short year ago, you knew her only as Natalie Wood’s best friend (“Bob, Did You Know?” in March Photoplay ) . She had still another reason for wanting everything to be perfect — and that was her escort, Barry Coe. Friends are beginning to say that Judi and Barry have “that marriage look.” As to George Burns, whose McCadden Productions sponsored Judi as a Deb, he signed Barry for a TV role opposite Judi, “to save writers’ fees on the love scenes!” When she’d marched down the Deb aisle, Judi was glowing. The day may have been hectic; evening was heaven. IN A DIFFERENT KIND OF ROLE! SWIM TECHNICOLOR ■"n* SAL JEROME PHILIP RAFAEL MINEO * COURTLAND * CAREY* CAMPOS Directed by Screenplay by JOY PAGE. BRITT LOMOND • LEWIS R. FOSTER LEWIS R. FOSTERS LILLIE HAYWARD Based on Ti?5jEi the book "COMANCHE” by DAVID APPEL . Produced by JAMES PRATT WATCH FOR IT AT YOUR FAVORITE THEAtITe! The Drama . . . the Action Behind the West’s Strangest Legend! A NEW 15