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Flat on Their Bank Accounts
(Continued from page 61) his bank account. At last reports Lana Turner still owed the Internal Revenue gents $160,000. Robert Mitchum, who earns $4,500 a week, tells me he still must borrow every year to meet the March 15 deadline. Van Johnson lives from check to check. Miss Grable’s collateral is controlled by an H — for horses. And if there is anything more unpredictable than a nag, don’t tell me.
As for the new terrific million-dollar movie men, Mario Lanza and Martin and Lewis, when you get an eyeful of their mode of living, you’ll wonder, as I do, whether they possibly will be able to live on the right side of the ledger when the glory and the glamour are just a memory.
Rita Hayworth’s contract at Columbia reads like the dream her marriage to Prince Aly wasn’t. It’s a straight sevenyear deal. The first two years Rita receives $4,500 weekly. Next two years $5,000 every seven days. Two more years at $6,000. The last year, it’s up to Rita to decide how much.
I first learned of Rita’s present impecunious state when she rented a lawyer’s
“To borrow a famous man’s way of saying it, ‘A good speech is like a lady’s dress — just long enough to cover the subject and just short enough to be interesting.’ ”
GEORGE MURPHY
home in Beverly Hills. He wanted to sell it. But Rita didn’t have the down payment. So she agreed to rent at $850 a month, with a vague option to buy. The swank Lincoln car she drives belongs to her studio, who change it for a new car every year, registered in their name. That’s a nice deal, but personally I’d rather own my own car, so I can raise some cash on it when and if things get tough. And they are tough for Rita.
Even the house she did own B. A. (before Aly) was sold by order of Aly through his horse trainer. The $50,000 received for the house was expressed to Lloyds in Geneva, and used, according to a good source, to pay some of Aly’s more pressing gambling debts. Aly, I’m told, is in debt to every bookmaker in England.
While Rita was still living with the supposedly billionaire Moslem Prince, she was sued by her Hollywood business manager of many years, for unpaid salary. I hear that Rita still is in debt. The big ( house, with two nurses and three servants, is expensive to run. And how can Rita save for a future rainy day with an income tax bracket of ninety cents on every dollar?
Frank Sinatra makes between half and h three quarters of a million every year. You and I could be very happy on that. We I might even retire after a year or two or three. But Frankie daren’t stop working i for more than a month. It isn’t so much what he has to pay Nancy — one third of his salary up to $150,000 and 40 per cent on anything over that — it’s the way Frankie has become accustomed to living that cuts the bottom from his money hope chest.
His “shack” at Palm Springs cost him (I $160,000. When he tried to sell the place > recently, $60,000 was the highest bid re i ceived for the white elephant. He decided it would be cheaper for him and Ava to live there. His courtship of Ava meant a big revenue for the airlines — and set him back plenty for transportation. Also that emerald and diamond necklace he bought Ava, didn’t grow on any tree.
If Frankie confined his generosity to his
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