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WINDOWS
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go for, and George Abbott's 'Beat the Band' which ran eight weeks. So it goes in the life of an actor. You just chalk it up to experience," Marc added.
After the show closed, Marc and Eleanor were married in New York City Hall, October 18, 1942, a high point in his personal life but a low point in his career. When nothing opened up on Broadway, Marc took a spot in a night club. "Fortunately," he went on, "it only lasted three months when I quit to join the ballet corps of 'Oklahoma ! ' I was there a year, less two weeks, when Columbia bought up my contract."
Marc, Eleanor and Ted live in a small modern stucco house in San Fernando Valley in which he thinks the dining room is the most attractive room. When someone asked him what special features the house had, he answered, "There are lots of boysenberries which, like Topsy, just grow." The Platts live on a strict budget and manage the house themselves. They like to entertain informally, particularly at spaghetti dinners, for a small circle of friends. In the group are the Zachary Scotts, whom they knew in New York where Mrs. Scott was stage manager for "Oklahoma!"
Their young son, Ted, was named after a friend of Marc's who was killed in the Tunisian campaign. He will be a year old, officially, in four years as he was born on February 29. His parents tossed a coin to see whether he'd celebrate his birthday on February 28 or March 1, three years out of four. March 1 won.
Marc likes people, motorcycles, pipes, sunshine, baseball, football and good music. He dislikes Brussell sprouts, all work and no play.
His only hobby is his young son, but he enjoys a hair-raising ride on a motorcycle, swimming and horseback riding. He plans to travel someday to Mexico, the South Pacific and his wife's birthplace, Shanghai. He speaks a smattering of French and can speak English with a Lancashire dialect which he learned for his part in "Tonight and Every Night."
While he made a test for Paramount several years ago, he credits his mother, his wife and Columbia Pictures with getting him to Hollywood. As for seeing his own pictures, he says he'll "try anything once."
Ginny Simms studies the design, apropos of his profession, decorating Harry James' tie.
STARS OF HOLLYWOOD SAY:
F I N I S H » TH I * JOB
OCTOBER 29 • DECEMBER 8
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S C R EE N L A N D