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Angie Dickinson Gives Some
Advice On HowTo Hook A Man By Using The Right Wardrobe
(Advance) Clothes make the man, especially if they’re on the woman,
Angie Dickinson declares.
“The roving male hunter’s eye first lights on the hunted female’s attire,’ the shapely actress with the million dollar legs and clothes to match said during the filming of Ernest
Hemingway’s “The Killers,” a Universal Picture, opening..............
“Then he takes it from there,” claims Angie, ‘but to begin with, if the clothes don’t arouse his predatory instinct, he does his shopping elsewhere.
“JT don’t mean,” the actress pointed out, “that a girl should attract a man’s attention in a leopard skin loin-cloth with a live turkey sitting on her head.
“However, any girl can wisely select the right wardrobe to accentuate her most favorable physical features. And every girl, I don’t care who she may be, has certain physical charms to be highlighted.”
Miss Dickinson says that men's
KEEPING HER HEAD
(Current)
Marie Antoinette Shapiro and her husband Harry, married when he was a former GI stationed in France, now in the catering business in Hollywood, serviced the cast and crew of “The Killers” for location sequences on the Universal Picture now at the Theatre. Caught short by a sudden call for more extras, they ran out of dessert.
“A lot of people are screaming that they didn’t get any cake,” snapped the assistant director.
The unperturbed Marie Antoinette, reversing an historic cake crack made by a famous namesake, answered: “‘Let ’em eat bread.”
tastes, when it comes to women, are as varied as the colors in a paint store.
Says she: “You can trap a male animal in anything from slinky mink to eye-lowering formal gowns to seductive shorts to baited sweaters. All of which takes a knowledge of the man’s tastes you're interested in. One man’s meat is another man’s poison dressing.”
So girls, the next time you pick your wardrobe for the ‘“‘target for tonight,” take this parting bit of advice from Miss Dickinson.
“Select them with a preconceived plan—and you'll hook your man.”
THE RIGHT TRACK
(Current)
Ronald Reagan, who co-stars in Ernest Hemingway’s ‘The Killers,” a Universal Picture, currently at the Theatre, was so convinced he’d failed his first screen test back in 1936, he hopped a streamliner out of Hollywood for his hometown in Tampico, Illinois, to resume his job as a radio sportscaster.
But the studio’s “‘come back”’ telegram caught up with him half-way to Chicago, and he had to catch a westbound Superchief in Wyoming.
Today, Reagan loves to tell people he got his early showbusiness training in a pullman car between Cheyenne and Los Angeles.
John Cassavetes, Killers™
Star, Works In Front Of Or Behind A Movie Camera
(Advance) “Would you rather be an actor or a director?” That’s a fair question to put to John Cassavetes, who is
brilliant in both departments.
His answer is ‘“‘both, but not at the same time.” Cassavetes, who co-stars with Lee Marvin and Angie Dick
inson in Ernest Hemingway’s ““The TRATES ECON React ee ecee ee to the ie cp ig oe Theatre, has this comment to make: “I really don’t think a person can direct himself properly.
“By that I mean that each talent takes a terrific amount of concentration and if I’m directing a show it would be impossible for me to concentrate on my lines for the next scene as an actor.
“Although I’m devoted to acting, I think my heart is more inclined toward directing. I seem to get greater satisfaction taking a script and molding it into exciting visual drama.”
Cassavetes first gained public and critical acclaim as a director for his brilliantly conceived film, “Shadows.” Next came “Too Late Blues” with Bobby Darin and most recently, “A Child Is Waiting,” with Burt Lancaster, Judy Garland and John’s wife, Gena Rowlands. 2
“T think I got a bigger kick out of directing Gena than anything else in my life. We worked out an agreement whereby we never argued about a scene once we were on the set. We discussed it all thoroughly the night before at home.
“In other words, the wife was boss at home—as usual—and the husband was boss at the studio.
“That,” says John, “is the secret to happy marriage!”
“The Killers,’ in color, also costars Clu Gulager and Ronald Reagan. It was produced and directed by Donald Siegal.
Mag
John Cassavetes and Angie Dickinson embrace in this torrid romantic scene from Ernest Hemingway’s “The Killers,” explosively new melodrama in color from
Universal. (Stull No. 95008-38 )
Contest Pays Off
(Current)
Angie Dickinson, who co-stars in “The Killers,” a Universal PicTUNE: NOW a tsthe sae sek: Theatre, started her career when college classmates urged her to enter a beauty contest, which she won. A casting director spotted her and she made her show business debut as an extra on a TV comedy show starring Jimmy Durante, with Frank Sinatra as guest star.
Lee Marvin is one of the two stars playing the title role of ‘“The Killers,”? Universal’s explosive melodrama in color based on the short story by Ernest Hemingway.
(Still No. 95008-69 )
Clu Gulager Ready To Give Up Acting
(Current)
“T guess every person in this business of acting has been down on his luck at some time in his career and almost ready to quit,” observes Clu Gulager. ‘Almost, but never did.”
The co-star of Ernest Hemingway’s “The Killers,” a Universal Picture, nowat the....2.2...2.228 Theatre, was sent to London several years ago to attend the famed Old Vic Training School.
“The only thing wrong,’ Clu says, “was that there was no money to cover my scholarship. And I was broke, too!”
At that point, he was almost ready to quit acting.
“Then I decided I had come this far I might as well go a little farther.”
Clu headed for Paris and studied a year under the famous Jean Louis Barrault, supporting himself by guiding American tourists around the city.
Today, Gulager is one of Hollywood’s fastest rising young stars and is under contract to Universal City Studios, in addition to running his own Workshop for actors.
Claude Akins Began Career As Salesman
(Current)
Some people are born to the theatre, but Claude Akins professes that he got into acting by accident.
The big, affable Akins, one of filmland’s perennial ‘‘heavies,” is currently co-starred as a good guy with Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson, John Cassavetes, Clu Gulager, Normal Fell and Ronald Reagan in Ernest Hemingway’s “The Killers; NoOWat thet Theatre.
“The first job I got after graduating from Northwestern University was selling limestone, and that’s what led me into acting,” Claude recalls.
While the statement is correct, it should be expounded to show that although he was a crackerjack salesman for the Indiana Limestone Company in his hometown of Bedford, his cheerful, outgoing personality brought him quickly to the attention of William G. Riley, president of the company.
Riley was active in American Legion affairs and gave Akins the assignment of writing and producing a variety show for the local Legion post. The show was so good that Riley introduced Claude to Robert Porterfield of the famed Barter Theatre in Abingdon, Virginia, and made arrangements for Akins to go on the road with the touring company.
That was in 1950. The next year Akins made his Broadway bow in “The Rose Tatoo” and has been “on-stage” ever since.
Page 3
Lee Marvin One Of ‘Listening Actors
(Advance)
It is often said that an actor is a guy who never listens unless you're talking about him.
However, this doesn’t apply to Lee Marvin. With him, a conversation is a genuine two-way exchange. Not only does he bend an attentive ear to any subject under discussion but, even more rare in some filmland circles, he carefully weighs his own comments and answers to questions.
Marvin, who has chalked up one of Hollywood’s most distinguished careers, has added another role to his long list of notable characterizations with his portrayal of a vicious killer in Ernest Hemingway’s “The Killers,” a Universal Pycture in: COLON GUC cesses: se. Pal buat fl OR Snips amc seal tte na Theatre.
This careful attention to what others say to him as well as how they say it, has helped him immeasurably with his career.
“IT don’t think an actor can really give a believable performance,’ Marvin contends, ‘unless he actually ‘listens’ to his fellowactors as they deliver their dialogue. His own lines become too pat, too ‘stagey’ if he just rattles them off without having really listened.”
Dickinson to force information from her in tracing the story of Ernest Hemingway’s “The Killers,’? a new melodrama from Universal, photographed in color. (Still No. 95008-89 )
Angie Dickinson is able to give full-range to her great dramatic ability as the woman in Ernest Hemingwty’s “The Killers,” a furious melodrama in color from
Universal. (Still No. 95008-88 )
Keeps In Shape
(Current)
Lee Marvin keeps in perfect trim.
In his starring role in Universal’s “The Killers,’ now at the Sy cay ihers Spee Theatre, he made an interesting discovery. The measurements for the suits he wears in the picture are precisely the same, to the eighth-of-an-inch, as those for the naval uniform he wore in “You're in the Navy Now’’—made 13 years ago!
There’s good reason for this. He is an ardent sportsman and spends almost every weekend skin-diving in the blue waters of the Pacific.
Angie Dickinson, Star Of ‘The Killers’, Combines Good
Looks And Acting Talent
(Current)
When you first set eyes on Angie Dickinson, you’ve just got to stare at those beautiful legs. Once you get past them, however, you'll find a lot more that makes up the real Angie. Gandering at the gams is only the beginning.
You'll find one of Hollywood’s most talented as well as most
beautiful young actresses and to prove the point, the Theatre Owners of America recently named her “the film industry’s most exciting new star.”
When she heard the good news, Angie quipped: “It’s the first time any part of me other than my legs has ever been honored.”
Angie considers one of her really big breaks came when producerdirector Don Siegel cast her as the only woman in Ernest Hemingway’s “The Killers,” a Universal Picture, filmed in color, now at the soe aoe Sid Theatre. Not only is Angie the only female, but she is also a wicked one, the first time in her career that she has been given the opportunity to play a villainess.
Starring with Angie are Lee Marvin, John Cassavetes and Ronald Reagan, and co-starring Clu Gulager and Norman Fell.
Although the part gives Miss Dickinson plenty of opportunity to display her talents as an actress, you'll still have a chance to view those gorgeous legs.
But as we said, that’s only the beginning.
Angie, who was discovered by Howard Hawks and starred in her first picture, ‘Rio Bravo,” was last seen as Gregory Peck’s nurse
in Universal’s “Captain Newman, M.D.” Included among the list of the male stars she has appeared opposite are Richard Burton, Peter Finch and Frank Sinatra.
ROR
For the first time in his career in films, Ronald Reagan plays a heavy, leader of a criminal gang, and Angie Dickinson is his woman in Ernest Hemingway’s “The Killers,”” a Universal picture in color.
(Still No. 95008-35 )