Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Jan. 15, 1951, edition 1 / Page 5
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J3j- Atieruooa, January 13, 1951 tArden Is Termed As 'Dependable Good Egg' rS2 TTATIE v KCTJIvTAi ceil 71 By CEXE HANDSAKEH (p New sfeatui'. s) IlLYWOOD You relax when Lden appears on the M..eu. . dependaDie ,-,1HK, lnc llt.-s pat, v J" i usuallv, to neany every ouay ' story Surprisingly, the real ve is shy. Any smart crack i likely to be at her txoense.' And she hates being L ever body's buaay. f . hwn so many people's l it's beginning to sour me," Lu blue-eved blonde reneciea. Like to do something despic- Lr change." A most enjoy playing "ine of female I really am the . 1 Lnnmine tn u victim ,chievous fate " Eve declared mtiP heckling things" con- ly beset her. She is frequent- b for appointments; sne s L nn the run. Her fan mail tiled up in closets and dresser .re She keeps promising her- o get at answering it but nev- ts started. "can't stand" her looks on reen. She hasn't seen one of pictures since "Mildred . in which she was Joan Quedens in Mill Valley, north of Crawford's friend. Born Eunice San Francisco, she grew up in the shadow of her mother's perfect beauty. "Mother used to tell me to shape my nose by rubbing it," Eve mourned, "but it just got flatter." After triumphing in a high school play. Eve was dumped by some friends one day in front of San Francisco theater and told to ask for a lob. Her first part was a walk-on. Rehearsing subsequent tougher roles with a stern director, the worried beginner used to tele phone her mother at lunchtime. "I'd just stand there in the booth, sobbing," Eve recalled. She thought up the stage name, Eve Arden, in a New York pro ducer's office. She came to Holly wood from Broadway 12 years ago and alternated between stage and screen for several years. "I wish I'd concentrated on the theater," Eve admitted. Her first picture, "Stage Door," in which she was the boarding-house chum of Ginger Rogers, Katharine Hepburn, and Andrea Leeds, branded her as "just the pal type." She thinks comedy could be used in world affairs. "Statesmen are so pompous. If they kidded a bit, more OU'RE TELLING ME! By WILLIAM RITT- Ctntril Press Writer NDREI VISHINSKY, Soviet ngn minister, admitted at a meeting that he is an acted 1 myopic vision. This should fcikel-dokel with his Kremlin whose policy has been usu- short-sighted. hat burglar who climbed a ti kdge of a Chicago club cer- Jiy has risen since he started as a second-story man. til tt-lntani, oyt an archtolo- turntd bon into jtwtli. lids likt a gtm of an idea. iii iaml. Fla., claims to have je restaurants per capita than any other city in the U. S, To a California press agent, that's food for thought. Reports of two Monoglian car airy divisions in the Korean tear indicates to Aitch Kay that the Chinese Reds arc horse de combat. ; i ; Wo ihould Uarn lo slouch, ac cording to a medico. Jutt at though there isn't enough biat In this old world. ! ! ! Now that the soap operas have made their daylight television bow Grandpappy Jenkins fears that his shirts and socks will never get washed. Strand Wednesday and Thursday r A X fvv 'a i Humphrey Bogart Making Own Pictures; Is Boss Bull Rallibone (L), Randolph Scott and Eliaahrlh Brrgner in Real rt' thrilling motion picture "Paris Bombshell", dramatic thockrr . T", liich alto tar Lee J. Cobb. Randold Scott starring in "Paris Bombshell," the blazing story of men who never give up . Coming to the Strand Tlieaire Wed nesday and Thursday. Gary Cooper. Ex - Cowboy Wonders If He Really Is An Actor, But Can't Quit By GENE HANDSAKER HOLLYWOOD (API Is Gary Cooper an actor or just an inter esting personality? Gar himself doesn't know. "I like to consider myself an actor," he confided, "but I don't know whether 1 am." The lanky one-time Montana cowboy has been in the movies 25 years. "I often wonder how I could have learned so little," he said. "Maybe I just forgot a lot. I guess I'd rather see 'most anybody else than myself on the screen and I'm not trying to be falsely modest." Yet Coop doesn't know how else could be tione, 'Ninotchka' did more to deflate Communism than any speech could." he could have made a living. Ranch ing, maybe. "That's more fun in the movies. You don't have to get out ,,1K' fpd five or six hundred head of cattle when it's 45 below Zero." He did that as a youth of 10 on his father's ranch. In Hollywood he was a $10-a-il;iy extra. One day he earned $40 by also doing two $15 falls from a horse as Tom Mix's double. It was the era of handsome heroes Rar thelmess, Dlx, Valentino. Coop saw himself in pictures as, if anything, a lean type of heavy. "From my own experience," he says now, "1 don't think looks are important to a movie career." But roles in "The Winning of Barbara Worth" and "Wings" tabbed him as a leadini! TO OUR CUSTOMS Believe us, not because it is the style to increase prices, but instead a necessity , we are forced to make the announce ment that effective Monday, January 15, 1951, all Dry Clean ing prices will be increased.- . The Dover Waynesville Laundry Dry Cleaning Service Hazelwood Cleaners Central Cleaners Harrell's Cleaners Industrial Cleaners Home Laundry By GENE HANDSAKER HOLLYWOOD Humphrey Bo gart, who lias never liked the word "boss," is iu his third J ear as a boss liinisi'lf. I dropped around to see hosv he likes independent mo vie production by now." "Ytry much," said the tough looking president of Santana Pro ductions, interrupting a chess game in his auto-trailer . dressing room. "I don't know what it will be like with the new taxes, but up to now it's been a lot of fun. "It's difficult to get good mate rial when you're bidding against the big studios. We went after a New York play. The producers wanted $350,000 for the screen rights. That would murder us. It's a bit difficult getting players, too. Most leading ladies are signed at the ma.ior studios. Sometimes they'll lend, sometimes they won't." Bogey said he and his wife, Lauren Hat-all. had been consider ing doing a picture, together. "But it's not as easy as you think, find ing the riihl story. You can get a lot of junk, but you don't want to do that. We have a certain pride in wliiit we do," "Sirocco" is he fifth Santana production Ulie company is named for Bogart's -yacht, which had that man. It hurl his ego when direc tors said his love scenes were all wrong. Eventually, despite his shy ness, he found them "one of the pleasanler phases of the business", ('imp is playing (he skipper of an experimental sub-chaser In "U.S.S. Teakettle". It's around his 80th picture. What's kept him on top so long? Gary dug bis spoon thought fully into the sugar bowl on our lunch table, tike a miner probing gravel. "A series of lucky breaks," he said, adding impersonally: "Story material that's right for you. A director who knows what to do with you. The right producer. To get the right pictures you've got to do a few turkeys along with 'em." His Oscar for 194 I s "Sergeant York" is "another example of good luck. Good story, good director." : Coop confessed an acting weak ness: "You develop mannerisms, reactions to certain situations, tricks that may have been good one time. It's a deadly thing. Manner isms keep sneakln' up on you. You're not always entirely respons ible. Some directors want, you to overplay a bit. You ilnd yourself not being real, nol being sincere." Now 4!), he doesn't know how much longer he'll be in pictures. "1 can't quit," he said, grinning. "I gotta keep eatin'." name when he bought It from Er rol Flynnt. The others were "Knock On Any Door," twhich in troduced John , Derek). "Tokvo Joe," "And Baby Makes Three" (in which Bogey did nol appear), and "In a Lonely Place". In this last film, Bogart tried get ting away from gunman roles. It didn't do as well at the boxoffice as studio sales experts thought it should. "People like to see me with a gun in my hand," Bogey said re signedly. "The public keens you In pretty much the same groove." As"prei" of Santana, as he pro nounces it, Bogart leaves business details to his associates. These in elude Producer Bob Lord, the "vice-prei"; Morgan Maree, "sec and trel" and Bogey's business manager, and Hank Kesler. produc tion supervisor. The star does coa ccrn himself, however, with story and co-star selection. "Some leading women are such dogs they don't give you anything, he reasoned. "It's like tennis. If ou have a bad opponent you won't play half as well as If you have good you." one who throws 'em back at At The Park Thurs. and Fri. I) Ht - N f 1 Bette Davis and Gary Merrill in a dramatic scene (roa "Ail About Eve," which also start Ann Baxttr and George Sanders. Mrs. Grimsley To Give 16 Talks In Haywood Mrs. Corlnne Grimsley, popular N. C. State College Extension fam ily relations specialist, will open a series of HI discussions before Hay wood County civic and rural or ganizations January 3.2. The County Extension Service office announced the complete schedule of Mrs. Grlinslcy's talks today. Her lecture tour, similar to the one she held last winter, will con tinue through February 2, closing on that date with her talk to the North Clyde Community Develop ment Program organization. The date, place and audience for Mrs. Grimxley's lectures: Jan. 22 Fines Creek commun ity. Fines Creek School, 7:30 p.m.; Jan. 23 Canton Lions Club, 7 p.m.; Heaverdam, Thlckety, and Hom iny communities, Iteaverdam School, 8 p.m.; Jan. 24 Cecil community, Cecil School, 7:110 p.m.; Jan, 25 Canton Clvltan Club, 1 p.m.; Waynesville Lions Club, 7 p.m.; Upper and Lower Crabtree communities, Crabtree - Iron Duff School, 8 p.m.; Jan. 20 Waynesville Rotary Club, 1 p.m.; Clyde Lions Club, 6:30 p.m.; Lake Junaluska Com munity, Lake Junaluska School, 8 p.m.; Jan. 27 White Oak community, Community House, 7:30 p.m.; Jan. 29 Cruso Community, Cru so School; - Jan. 30 Panther Creek Commu nity, Panther Creek Church, 7:30 P.m.; Jan, 31 Iron Duff community, Davis Chapel, 7:30 p.m.; Feb. 1 lva.st and West Pigeon communities, Bethel School, 7:30 p.m.; Feb. 2 North- Clyde community, Clyde. School, 7:30 p.m. PARE! THEATRE Matinee Sunday 2 & 4 P. M. Saturday Continuous Shows from 11 A. M. Nislils Sunday 8:30 M. Weekdays 7 & 9 P. M. PROGRAM MONDAY, JAN. 15 GREER ITI 1 - fte SPIDGEOM 'Xid&yt- A-Aikl fefzMJ mil "jW'K -aiJQHN HODIAK CATHY O'DONNELt TUES. & WED., JAN. 10 & 17 M Hew JUNGLE L0VE...ADVENTURE ti .... O ' THURS. & FRI.-, JAN. 18 & 19 BETTE DAVIS ANNE - BAXTER celesteHOLM FPn 7 rr, about Vl'Ii ft K ...AND IHEIR if I I : IT'S ALL WStauiamsumi f ( JANUARY 11-11 The soles on shoes support 18 separate muscles in the soles of each toot, grouped in four muscle layers. SOME ROCKS FORMED BY FROZEN LIQUIDS M LOS ANGF.LF.S (AP)-Certaln rocks were formed through the "freezing" of molten liquids, says Dr. George 'Junell, University of California professor. "Laboratory geoologists are rep roducing some of the processes which created minerals in the earth many years ago. but Informa tion thus uncovered has not yet been put to its full use,", he says.. Dr. Tuncll says that leading field geologists working with metal ores have stated that in order., to learn the nature of hot solutioni.through which many metal ores have been deposited, the cooperation, of both field and laboratory workers Is needed. Discovery of ore deposits depends tn the long run, he said, on how they were formed. WAYNESVILLE DRIVE-IN THEATRE - i.: A Good Show Every Night PHONE 1033-J Two Shows Dally Monday throuch Friday 7 & 9 P.Mt Saturday: Continuous Showlnn from 11 A.M. Sunday: 3 Shows,' 2, 4 and 8:30 P. M. - ( PROGRAM TODAY and TUESDAY, JAN. 15-16 mo:.. The Tennessee Williams won the Critics Award will win a prize place in your memory ams play that WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY, JAN. 17-18 Blazing story of men who never give up..?r ? ij . L J iL r il ..i . men wno aare ror ine sane or ine ruiuroi Ai 6 n '.IM, Sg-v-te: I .eii iniHHVf I I IHUi"""'..l I . mn ' I II tnuicumui ALSO CARTOON O WORLD NEWS BE WISE GET STRAND WISE
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Jan. 15, 1951, edition 1
5
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