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ent001323-118
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ESTABLISHED 1888 BArclay 7-5371 PRESS CLIPPING BUREAU 165 Church Street - New York NEW YORK, N. Y. World-Telegram & The Sun Circ D. 555,017 JP 13 19SH New York?╟÷Day by Day From Posttto Pillow 1 Just iB^en Hollywood folks were begin- nint|(Ptp figure Joanne Drue was coming along fine and outmeasuring the usual bathing suit brigade in many | dimensions, the doll bends over so far to j be different that she's now in perfect position for a kick in the pants. In upcoming Screenland, Joanne blurts that | gals" who haven't kissed Montgomery Clift haven't missed a thing. I'd'rather bp ! kissed by a married man." Now, when the public finishes paddywhacking her for I promoting juvenile delinquency, all Dru has to do to become high priestess of | Hollywood foot-swallowers is get named ; correspondent in anybody's triangle. . . . And, as Guy Lombardo notes, out there | they change partners faster than in square j dances. . . . Vaughn Monroe will stay on i as m.c. of Camel music for CBS, although the Sauter-Finegan boys replace Monroe's i disbanded crew on that time in the fall. ?╟≤p?·C . Ina Kay Hutton's actor-husband, ! Randy Brook, is listening to her music from an LA hospital bunk. . . . Joe E. Lewis is one witness they won't trip in | this case. The accident occurred, tj^e comic* swears, when a drunk saw two lampposts ?╟÷and leaned against the wrong one. Peg Lynch, creator pf NBC's "Ethel & Albert" TV series, writes it, wardrobes and rehearses, it and finally acts in it with ! Alan Bunce. All of which chews up some 70 hours per week. The other day she drew the usual reward for earnest toil I when a model who babbles commercials disdainfully inquired: "Is this the only show you do all wee^t? Chicago's Sarah Siddons Society names Helen Hayes, Nancy Kelly, Judith Anderson, Joan Blondell, Carol Bruce and 30 other leading ladies on its annual ballots for the sesDsoi3^-'*vI!^^^tS^'a%ftl!ttI-~; j^R^B&ia-. ance in 'Chicag$f... The Hotel Ambassador's Jimmy Hart is setting up the first annual statuette as Windy City's answer to Holly- | .wood Oscars and Manhattan's Drama : Critics Circle awards. *^."|A gaunt character actor has JMj^be^s^ich a character By FRANK FARRELL. around the Lambs Club of late that he has been asked to tear up his card and take his bar business elsewhere. . ^ .The singing Barry Sisters, who follow Fran Warren into the Club Elegante, have just applied long division to their dressmaker's addition with startling results., Their new gowns cost $62.50 perounce. ... A swank upstate private school is offering to summer-tutor June-flunkers with: "See us if you can't do a thing with your heir." Don DeFore is glad they've filmed episodes of the Ozzie & Harriet TV series well in advance. For while rhe's here for other video spots, Don's wife and their brood of four can see "the old man" at home once a week anyhow. . . . The pretty cowgal glued to billboards on wild western highways who's pointing to Las Vegas and blurbing no Frank Farrell cowgal. She's thrush Kitty Kallen. . . . Joe Sharkey has two June events for gift-marking. The City Council majority leader's daughter Catherine is slated for graduation from St.-Angela's Hall and his wife Helen gets installed as president of that academy's auxiliary. ... Stanley Melba won't have time to miss a beat this weekend. The Pierre's Cotillion Room closes Sunday night, but Stan and band start tooting in Westchester Country Club the following evening. . . . Maybe amour shouldn't change with the seasons, but lor months to come those lovable three little words will sound more like: "Vacation with pay." Madeleine's bartender is saving something to try on a day off when it's raining and he doesn't have to worry about foldihg on a thick rug. A joker wanders up t$ his brass rail every couple of days d$>wte&A Yucca F^[and_theLresultjsTare, nuclear fissionlike. Consists of a headache fizz tablet in a goblet of champagne and?╟÷ stand back, Mac. Film heiress Gloria Balaban's tragic I demise this week was a source of incon- I solable shock to her legion of friends. She I was so young and pretty. She was rich, J well-educated, a social charmer, yet if I anything, democratic to a fault. Her laugh J was as gay as her sense of humor. She loved life, people and was trailed by a battalion of beaux. ... We all thought Gloria was spoofing months ago when she casually remarked, and frequently repeated since, that she would be married on June 9. To whom, she never specified. That was the night she took sleeping tablets and passed away in Lenox Hill Hospital. Comic Jack Bonny, who doesn't like getting separated from money, will have something to howl about July 4th. On Monday following the holidays he and j Mary Livingston are court-calendared in J Los Angeles to fight a U.S. tax claim. TV doll Peggy O'Hara and I shared I guffaws on Retail Week's golden busride, I wondering what ever happened to some I missing photos. Months ago at a wingding. I in Macy's an eager-beaver CBS lensman I requested us to withdraw from the merri- J ment and pose together. After snapping I a half-dozen shots the Channel 2 camera- I man asked our identities for caption pur- j poses. Looked like a gent shot from am- j bush when Peggy gave her occupation as "Miss Channel 7," screen queen of the rival video net. Gene Sultan, 15-year-old batboy lor the Giants who stages monthly shows for underprivileged borough kids in Brooklyn I Navy Yard, was Gus Steiner as a busy J Broadway body in "As the Girls Go," "All I My Sons" and "Season in the Sun." . . . J Henry Street Settlement heads for the I hills today. Goes bucolic for* its annual J benefit jamboree and dinner-dance on j Echo Hill Farm, its summer camp in j Westchestea^_r^j^j|jy ESTABLISHED 1888 tefelay 7-5371 PRESS (SUPPING BUREAU 165 Churdh Street - New York TOLEDO, OHIO TIMES Circ. D. 48,355 JUN5 1953 Clancy-Pettigrew JUfESTWOOD Methodist f *?? Church in Los Angeles, Calif., was the setting' ?·j>r the recent wedding of Anne Steil Pettigrew, daughter of Mr. and Mfs. Lloyd Steil Pette- grew, Los Angeles, and Robert LeRoy Clancy, son of Mrs. Frank L. Clancy, Toledo. The Rev. Louis E. Durham, pastor^, officiated befor^Hhe' altar, which was decorated with white glatftelj. For her wedding, the bride wore a. ballerina-length gown of white lace and net and finger-tip veil of illusion, . attached to a brocaded cap. She carried a bouquet ofJ white rosesv and orchids. Gail y. Pettigrew, sister of the bride, was her maid of honor. Nicholas McCarty Harrison III was best man. The ushers were Ronald Rice, David Keeler, Phi Gamma Delta fraternity brothers of the bridegroom. Reception Held A RECEPTION was held at -**- 5:30 p;m. in the home of the bride's grandmother, Mrs. ArfhuA*A. Pettigrew, in Los Angeles. ' The-;,rlPming couple- left by automobile for Toledo, stop ping ; 5 he L in Las ___AneF*a -snort trip to New mas ?╟÷ i-fT 1?╟÷ __ ?√ßI York to visit relatives, Mr. I and Mrs. Clancy will live at II 2835 Midwood Ave. TJjy The bride fas graduated from the Westjake School for Girls and attended' the College, of the Pacific. Mr. Clanc^^was graduated from the University of Southern California-and will enter J the University of .Toledo in June to study law. ESTABLISHED 1888 BArclay 7-5371 PRESS CLIPPING BUREAU !6?║|Church Street - New York CHICAGO, ILL. HERALD AMERICAN Circ. D. 548,908 - S. 151,407 i 1953 Louella O. Parsons 1 HvJane Russell Sought for'Gibson Girl' Role jj|J|%;*Br LOUEL.LA O. PARSONS International tfews Service Motion Picture Editor. I HOLLYWOOD, June 11?╟÷At luncheon with Jane Ally- son and Dick Powell at their beautiful new home, I had a chance to talk to Dick about his plans at RKO. He says he's reading scripts like mad to try to find a new story. He's i all excited about "The Gibson Girl" which RKO already owns. ^ He said: "I'd like to put Jane Russell in 'Gibson Girl'?╟÷she'd be perfect." "You'd better put me in that pi<> J ture," June interrupted. "Well, perhaps you can be in it, too," he told-her. Paramount is after June for "Air Force," a picture soon to start. She's had more offers than she can accept, j but I believe shell turn any one of them clown in a minute if Dick gets a story that's right for her. While we were at luncheon, June j told me that Ricky Powell, aged 2%, is going* to be in her picture and play Glenn Miller's little boy. He says one \ word, "baby," and boy, how he says it. j JUNE ALLYSON ^ ^ ^ YESTERDAY I. TOLD YOU Cary Grant was being j sought for both "Sabrina Fair" and Judy Garland's picture, j "A Star Is Born." ?╟÷ jjsfc Now I can tell you Judy gets Cary. Remember how j l^fSjbd he was in "Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer" with Shir- I \H?Θ╝f Temple? Well, I think he and Judy will be excellent, j and I am glad for her. And that reminds me, Judy was at Romanoff's for din- I ner a few nights ago with Sid Luft and she hasn't been as I tfiki in years nor as well. ZSA ZSA GABOR may be among the missing (she hasn't yet shown up in New York) but her sister, Eva, arrived at the Beverly Hills Hotel Tuesday to start "Paris v/3Mfodel" for American Pictures Corporation. Eva isn't volunteering any information about Zsa Zsa and the rumors that Zsa Zsa and Porfiria Rubirosa are made for each other, but she has quite a bit of news about herself. m When Eva finishes "Paris Model" she returns to New ! Yf3rk to start rehearsals in "Sailor's Delight" for the Jlieater Guild. Before it goes into New York it will open at Dennis and Westport. BOB MITCHUM WOULD LIKE to be officially told that l*e?s to play opposite Marilyn Monroe in "River of No Re- He likes the idea of going to Alberta, Canada, on loca- j I tion because there's fishing there, but until he's officially ; | told he refuses to say whether or not he's going to make "^i#?½vie love to Marilyn. I He's not pouting and not objecting to the Monroe pic- t#$e?╟÷he just wants to be told. * * * EVERYONE AROUND the Beverly Hills Hotel is getting a big kick out of the activities of Father James Keller I of the Christopher movement, acting just like a movie di-1 rector shooting scenes ,6sjkjiis coigigg J?Y,sh^w on the ter-J .race.-- SfBS Yesterday Father was putting Charlie Farrell, Harpo j Marx and Pat O'Brien through their acting paces for his I [Tieries called "The Player's the Thing." fpjifr Father Keller got a laugh when he said to his actors: "Now boys, brighten it up. We aren't in church, '.'."'you know." 1111111 !:$|B HLVaELENE DIETRICH IS BACK in Hollywood after; ^m^ing had the time of her life helping Tallulah Bankhead j at her closing show at the JSandjUk Las Vegas, Tallu in- s^pia^saiC sno IP* P?╜V.# *8 a^uaS -e si 3J daais 'o?╟? 'h OOTOA 338MS Kx\% ye ^.reaii Afq,,, -g JLjllmS dno ^uauraiaAoB^^foito^- ,, u. siaiirenpp'eair. aip}. o^eva o% A%l\ -unoo 2^000 jo siauoissnuuioo j jo pj-Bog atft jo sire'id atft I jo 3113d 13 st %i 'uasreq. naA\. st-l - pue apBui tiaAV st ^uiod ^no^. j