Photoplay (Jul-Dec 1950)

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The lillle rabbit who wasn't there — in the stage play — appears as host at studio party on “Harvey” set. Jimmy Stewart, shown with Gloria and her two sons Michael and Ronald, is the star. Harvey, the rabbit, may be visible in the screen version Out to U-I to lunch with Jimmy Stewart and Harvey, the invisible rabbit. “You’ll have to excuse Harvey if he doesn’t talk to us,” said Jim drily. “He went to a stag party last night and drank too much carrot juice.” Next to Cal was a high-backed empty chair, tagged with Harvey’s name. It sits at the lunch table daily. Howard Duff stopped by to say hello. “What’s the matter, Harvey?” he inquired as he addressed the empty chair. “Been behaving like a rabbit again?” Alexis Smith, thrilled over making her first free-lance Western, hopped over to our table. “Hi, Bunny Boy,” she greeted Harvey, as if he were actually there. When Anthony Curtis cracked, “Brother, you sure look like a wild hare,” that did it! Cal struggled dazedly to his feet. “Where ya going?” inquired Jimmy, who plays the inebriated gent who p does see Harvey. “On a lost weekend,” we managed to mutter. A conversation with Shirley Schrift, Bernard Schwartz and Rosetta Jacobs would mean you are actually talking to Shelley Winters, Anthony Curtis and Piper Laurie ... As a kid, Ruth Roman wrote exactly one fan letter and it was to Gary Cooper, with whom she’s now co-starring in “Dallas” . . . Celeste Holm and June Havoc, who are often up for the same role, will never share the same close-up if they can help it, for reasons that date back B.H. (Before Hollywood^) . . . Rod Cameron, who’s supposed to be a wolf in Western clothing, actually gives Bibles as presents to interested young ladies . . . Since she’s bleached her hair for that role opposite Bing Crosby in “Mr. Music,” Ruth now receives mail addressed to “The Blonde Hussey” . . . Rendezvousing in Mexico: Zach Scott and his fourteen-year-old daughter Waverly, who flew all the way from New York to meet her favorite “boy friend.” 10