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pressionless. Proper makeup missing.
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Wild Boy of Siberia Conquers Hollywood
[Continued from page 29]
Ital), where a girlhood friend of his mother was li\ing. This woman, ivife of a Florentine atiovney, took (he boy in, and notified his grandfather, Leopold Auer, in New York, who immediately cabled passage money.
Only since Mischa has been in America has he gro\\'n to his present stature of six feet two inches. Because of hardship and malnutrition, he was less than five feet tall when he joined his grandfather, the famed music master who taught Zimbalist, Heifetz and Elman, among others, the art of the \iolin. Exen today, the effects of those early years of strife are plainly evident.
Hollywood first saw this talented Russian when he appeared with Bertha Kalich on the Los Angeles stage in Sudermann's "Magda" some eight years ago. Prior to this, he had shown an early interest in the theatre and played in a number of shows on Broadway.
Returning to the film capital following the completion of his stage tour, Mischa discovered the man who had promised him a contract with a studio had been discharged two days before he arrived— and he had less than two hundred dollars in his pocket. 'SVhen this had gone the way of all funds, he threw pride to the winds and turned extra.
An amusing incident, although at the lime it was far from funny, insofar as Mischa was concerned, occurred during this period of travail. Henry Hatha^vay, then an assistant director, fired him from his first "extra" job because he said Mischa wasn't "the Russian type!" But Frank Tuttle, the director, befriended him and ga\e him work in every picture he made.
To chat with Mischa Auer in his hilltop home, amid the luxurious surroundings he lias provided for his American wife, his n\o-and-one-half-year-old-son, Tony, and himself, one \\'ould never suspect he had ever known anything but an even-tenored existence. His sense of humor is superb and there is not the slightest suggestion that he might be an actor. He rears champion Great Danes— Lars, his pet, weighing only a measure less than a house, stretched at our feet during the entire course of our conversation and occasionally uttered yawning noises that suggested a noontime factorv whistle. Mischa likewise owns up to a fondness for cats. He is looking forward to the lime he can amass sufficient wealth to retire . . . then, he expects to do one of about two dozen things, none of which he kno^vs he will ever attempt. Meanwhile, he teaches his ^vife Russian, and she responds with lessons in draw^ poker.
You're going to see much of Mischa Auer. He's the comedy find of the year and his humor on the screen is so infectious that it will continue to entertain the American public for >ears to come. You'll laugh with him in "That Girl from Paris," Lily Pons' latest picture, in ^vhich he glories in the cognomen of "Butch" Strogoll . . . watch liiin Innlesque Hamlet in Universal's "Top of the Town" in such a manner that even the members of the company roared with delight . . . and the potentialities of his rule in Hal Roach's feature. "Pick a Star." are sufficient to predict a brilliant performance Just as murder . . . comedy xcill out!
T A rclicaisal the other day one of the chorus girls actually showed vp leilh a pink ribbon tied around her slidpety ankle so tliat she could tell lier left foot from her right!
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Silver Screhn