Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1960)

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MOVIES Continued CASTS OF CURRENT PICTURES BRAMBLE BUSH, THE — Warners. Directed by Daniel Petrie: Guy, Richard Burton; Mar, Barbara Rush; Bert, Jack Carson; Fran, Angie Dickinson; Stew Schaeffer, James Dunn; Parker Welk, Henry Jones; Larry, Tom Drake; Dr. Kelsey, Frank Conroy; Sam McFic, Carl Benton Reid. BRIDAL PATH, THE — Kingsley-Union. Directed by Frank Launder: Ewan McEwan, Bill Travers; Katie, Fiona Clyne; Siona, Bernadette O’ Farrell; Isobel, Dilys Laye; Sergeant Bruce, George Cole; Constable Alec, Gordon Jackson; Neil, Vincent Winter; Kirsty, Elizabeth Campbell. CAS FI McCALL — Warners. Directed by Joseph Pevney: Cash McCall, James Garner; Lory Austen, Natalie Wood; Maude 'Kcnnard, Nina Foch; Grant Austen, Dean Jagger; Winston Conzvay, E. G. Marshall; Gil Clark, Henry Jones; Will Atherson, Otto Kruger; General Danvers, Roland Winters; Harrison Glenn, Edward C. Platt. GAZEBO, THE — M-G-M. Directed by George Marshall: Elliott Nash, Glenn Ford; Nell Nash, Debbie Reynolds; Harlow Edison, Carl Reiner; Matilda, Doro Merande; Mr. Thorpe, John McGiver; Mrs. Chandler, Mabel Albertson. GENE KRUPA STORY, THE— Columbia. Directed by Don Weis: Gene Krupa, Sal Mineo; Eddie Sirota, James Darren; Ethel Maguire, Susan Kohner; Gloria Corregio, Yvonne Craig; Dorissa Dinell, Susan Oliver; Gene’s Father, John Bleifer; Gene’s Mother, Celia Lovsky; Red Nichols, Himself; Tommy Dorsey, Bobby Troup. JACK THE RIPPER — Paramount. Directed by Robert Baker and Monty Berman: Sam Lowry, Lee Patterson; Inspector O’Neill, Eddie Byrne; Anne Ford, Betty McDowall; Sir David Rogers, Ewen Solon; Dr. Tranter, John leMesurier; Kitty Knoivles, Barbara Burke. JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH — 20th. Directed by Henry Levin: Sir Oliver Lindenbrook, James Mason; Alec McEzven, Pat Boone; Jenny, Diane Baker; Mrs. Goeteborg , Arlene Dahl; Hans, Peter Ronson; Count Saknussem, Thayer David; Prof. Goeteborg, Ivan Triesault; Saknussem’ s Groom, Robert Adler. NEVER SO FEW — M-G-M. Directed bv John Sturges: Capt. Tom Reynolds, Frank Sinatra; Carla Vesari, Gina Lollobrigida; Capt. Grey Travis, Peter Lawford; Bill Ringa, Steve McQueen; Capt. Danny De Mortimer. Richard Johnson; Nikko Regas, Paul Henreid; Gen. Sloan, Brian Donlevy; Sgt. Jim Norby, Dean Jones; Sgt. John Danforth, Charles Bronson; Nautaung, Philip Ahn; Col. Fred Parkson, Robert Bray; Margaret Fitch, Kipp Hamilton; Col. Reed, John Hoyt; Capt. Alofson, Whit Bissell; Mike Island, Richard Lupino; Billingsly, Aki Aleong. OUR MAN IN HAVANA — Columbia. Directed by Carol Reed: James Wormold, Alec Guinness; Milly, Jo Morrow; Hawthorne, Noel Coward; Dr. Hasselbacher , Burl Ives; Captain Segura, Ernie Kovacs; “C,” Ralph Richardson; Beatrice, Maureen O’Hara. SOLOMON AND SHEBA— U. A. Directed by King Vidor: Solomon, Yul Brynner; Magda, Queen of Sheba, Gina Lollobrigida; Adonijah, George Sanders; Abishag, Marisa Pavan. STORY ON PAGE ONE, THE— 20th. Directed by Clifford Odets: Jo Morris, Rita Hayworth; Larry Ellis, Gig Young; Victor Santini, Anthony Franciosa; Edward Ritter, Biff Elliot; Mrs. Brown, Katherine Squire; Mrs. Ellis, Mildred Dunnock; Mike Morris. A1 Ryder; Avis, Carol Seflinger; Stanley, Sanford Meisner; Nordau, Robert Burton; Alice, Myrna Fahey; Judge Carey, Raymond Greenleaf; Judge Neilsen, Hugh Griffith; Detective Kelly, Tom Greenway; Morrie Goetz, Leo Penn. SUDDENLY, LAST SUMMER— M-G-M. Directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz: Catherine FI oily, Elizabeth Taylor; Mrs. Venable, Katharine Hepburn; Dr. Cukrowicz, Montgomery Clift; Dr. Hockstader, Albert Dekker; Mrs. Holly, Mercedes McCambridge; George Holly, Gary Raymond. TIGER BAY — Continental. Directed by J. Lee Thompson: S uperintendent Graham, John Mills; Korcliinsky , Horst Buchholz; Gillie, Hayley Mills; Anya, Yvonne Mitchell; Mrs. Philips, Megs Jenkins; Christine, Shari. WHO WAS THAT LADY?— Columbia. Directed by George Sidney: David Wilson, Tony Curtis; Michael Haney, Dean Martin; Ann Wilson, Janet Leigh; Harry Powell, James Whitmore; Bob Doyle, John Mclntire; Gloria Coogle, Barbara Nichols; Parker, Larry Keating; Orenov, Larry Storch; Bclka, Simon Oakland; Florence Coogle, Joi Lansing; Tattoo Artist, Snub Pollard. ened by the dead blackmailer. And it’s her idea to put the little pavilion (yep, that's the gazebo ) in the backyard. The story was on the stage first, so you might find it a little gabby, but it’s good for a bunch of laughs, too. family Tiger Hay continental When it comes to suspense, nobody can beat the British, if they really set their minds to it. So, go out of your way to see this tingling item. Hayley Mills is completely unself-conscious and utterly charming as the eleven-year-old tomboy of Tiger Bay, a waterfront slum section in Wales. Through tricky hut still believable plot twists, she becomes the loyal friend of a wanted murderer. He’s Horst Buchholz, brooding and intense in the Brando-Newman-Dean manner, but handsomer than all three. As a baffled police superintendent, John Mills has an awful time wringing the truth out of his real-life daughter. family 20th * The Story on Page One cinemascope Realistic writing (by Clifford Odets, who doubles as director ) and several good performances make this a rousing courtroom drama. Rita Hayworth, who's forgotten all about being exotic, is fine as a housewife accused of killing her husband. Gig Young cuts out his usual comedy to do a sympathetic job as Rita’s lover and co-defendant, and Anthony Franciosa’s the young lawyer who takes on their seemingly hopeless case. But the character you’ll remember (and enjoy hating) is Mildred Dunnock, as Gig’s mother. Like Katharine Hepburn in “Suddenly, Last Summer,” she acts very genteel and devoted, yet Tony describes her quite accurately as a “mon ster.” ADULT c r> M-G-M ; CINEMA IMever so tew scope, metrocolor In spite of some grim details, Frank Sinatra gives us a pretty romantic picture of modern warfare, while he’s swashbuckling around the Burma jungle with a lot of colorful pals, including (below, left) Gina Lollobrigida, who doesn’t exactly seem to be a very good girl. Frank’s the tough commander of an American-British-Burmese guerrilla force that’s outnumbered by the betterequipped Japanese. Taking time out from his TVwestern chores, Steve McQueen makes a nice impression as a sassy jeep-driver who thinks the army’s a breeze after life in Brooklyn. And Dean Jones, when he’s not hiding behind specs, is downright handsome, adult Cash McCall WARNERS; TECHNICOLOR Maybe it seems a long way from the Old West to Wall Street, but James Garner makes the jump with no trouble at all. ’To average moviegoers, big business deals and stock-juggling might get kind of dull, so Jim and the movie-makers have shrewdly tried to play it light. In fact, Cash looks remarkably like a modern-dress Brett Maverick, aiming to get rich without working. Decorative Natalie Wood gives Jim (below, right) an extra incentive for his schemes, but jealous Nina Foch isn’t going to let romance bloom. She has designs of her own on the famous young tycoon, family 78