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ICC Carl Laemmle and "Snoo\ums the 1<leui\yu>ed' s baby.
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Any small boy who agrees to match ideas with Doug Fairbanks is just a sap. Doug is overflowing with them. His most recent is to paint the view of a golf course on the wall outside Joe Schenck's office at the remodeled United Artist's Studio.
When the distinguished husband of Norma Tab madge returns from New York, temptation will ever be before him.
— o— Syd Chaplin is tired of making feature comedies in six or seven weeks. His contract with Warner Brothers is at an end and he is going to sign elsewhere after a vacation. .
I was out on the set the last day of his final picture for Warners and he and Chuck Reisner, his director, were worn out. They had been working day and night to finish the film and the air was thick with fatigue.
Syd wants to go1 away for a while before he decides what he does next. He admitted to me, however, that he has had some negotiations with United Artists of which Charlie is a member. Nothing definite has come of them, he declared.
Chuck Reisner also is talking of leaving Warners in a few months. He has directed nearly all of Syd's pictures and before that was assistant to Charlie.
Mary Hay is in Hollywood visiting her daughter, little Mary Hay Barthelmess. Dick is up north working on a picture.
Miss Hay was married on April 9 to Vivian C. Bath, a rubber broker from Singapore. She and Dick were divorced in Paris. (Cont. on page 76)
■C[ ]ason Robards cele' brating Fourth of July with a dummy firecrac\er.
times and denied their engagement twice That took the sting off the announcement.
Naturally the first thought of Samuel Goldwyn, who has Vilma Banky under contract, was to film a picture between the two. Sam has seen what the authentic flame did for "Flesh and the Devil" and he is for it. Loud cheers have also risen, I understand, from the exhibitors.
Seriously, Rod and Vilma make an ideal couple and the film colony is very much pleased that they have decided to marry. I must say I thought it was a publicity stunt at first, but have since been convinced that this is the real thing. Everybody likes Rod, everybody admires Vilma. I hope they have a church wedding. It will be a treat to see the turnout.
] Avonne Taylor one of the pretty buds of the MetroGoldwyn-Mayer lot.
G[ Raymond Griffith and Vera Voronina in "Time to Love".
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