The stars (1962)

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The rivals MAE MURRAY One of the poses typical of the star's eccentric orbit. Even dizzy little Mae Murray found herself a prince to marry — the brother of Negri's nobleman. By the time she did so, however, she had quite convinced herself that she was not of this world, so it would be both unkind and unjust to suggest that careerism or social climbing had anything to do with it. "I've always felt that my life touches another dimension," she sighed on one occasion, and an apparently reputable psychiatrist agreed with her. When the marriage to the prince — who turned out to be a bit of a beast — went bad, the good doctor told her, "You live in a world of your own," and he suggested that she might care to consult Green Mansions to find a literary parallel to her own case. Sure enough, in the enchanted Rima, Mae Murray saw herself. She was a vague, fluttery, seemingly defenseless, oversensitive creature who, despite considerable evidence that she was born Marie Adrienne Koenig in Portsmouth, Virginia, insisted that she had always been Mae Murray and 52