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DON'T forget about these two people because you don't hear much about them. Ginger Rogers and Howard Hughes, quietly playing footie-footie under the table, were gnawing chicken right off the bones at Eaton's the other night. . . . The gaudiest bit of furniture in town is without a doubt Alan Mowbray's grand piano. It's enameled in fire engine red with the autograph of every important person in town scratched into it. . . . They say it's a sight to see Mme. Jeritza, who has become a real farmer on her Hidden Valley ranch, dressed in dungarees and singing Wagner at the top of her voice, while she plows up her garden behind r team of magnificent horses.
Note change of expression on Bette's face as gun goes off, above. Movie stars are supposed to be able to do all things with ease, but firing a gun is hard on them too.
Presenting the Highlights of the Film City's News
By
Weston East
Deanna Durbin's new film, "Spring Parade," has a lot of surprises for her fans. She plays a Hungarian peasant girl of the I890's and wears a period costume for the first time. She has never performed anything but ballroom dances on the screen, but in this picture she does a wild Hunarian folk dance. And, for e first time, Deanna will be eard in a duet, with her leadig man, Robert Cummings.
SOMEONE dubbed it a very clever gag — Richard Greene was the most popular young buck at Ciro's the other night, only he wasn't there. He got a half-dozen telephone calls and was paged all evening. . . , Did you know that at the 20th CenturyFox studio you can't drink beer with your lunch? No liquor is allowed to be served in the commissary. . . . Dorothy Lamour has recently been stopped twice by motorcycle policemen and each time given a ticket. All of her sarong appeal didn't mean a thing to the arm of the law. ... A wag has appropriately dubbed the projection rooms located in the basement of the new Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer office building as "The Whine Cellar."
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