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Show nimiiint; nor appear giumorous In 114 pair of corduroy punts and a cotton cot-ton blouse. When Warners product, the screen version of former Ambassador Ambassa-dor Joseph E. Davis' "Mission to Moscow," the slogan, "Pacts, Not Fiction," will be strictly adhered to. Thirty-four living persons will bo portrayed on the screen, chief among them being the former ambassador, am-bassador, his wife and daughter; the Russian leaders, Litvlnoff and Molotov; the German foreign minister, min-ister, von Ribbentrop, and General Faymonville, the U. S. military attache at-tache in Russia. Mark Sandrich, movie producer, pro-ducer, who had charge of the Hollywood Hol-lywood Victory Caravan during its throe-week cross-country junket, declares that he developed a new respect for the actors in the caravan. cara-van. 'For three weeks we all lived in a goldfish bowl" and despite many hardships, lack of sleep and proper accomodations, "they never grumbled." The caravan earned some $730,000 for the army and navy relief funds. t Shorts i' the IrvinfT Berlin success, Army- " ht to the screen by : W TWs wl enable ,V9r,1r who will be unable to see : ,,lli0',S;, show on the stage, to en- ",e8r"1 production, which critics ; boostcd t0 the Oiies. nere., a new spirit of econ-Hollywood econ-Hollywood that is almost nl'rd of before. Retakes, which m ,n in the old days, are tv of film and "blow-ups" "In .oart of the actors are deep-:nfro deep-:nfro vn dP- Rehearsals before camera starts grinding are now demanded. . NoW that Vera Zorina, the r, has been chosen for the Id roe of Maria opposite Gary COVetr n "For Whom the Bell! to studio has the task of. Not only are Hollywood actors and actresses giving of their time and talent in drives for war relief, re-lief, they are also contributing of their funds. According to Nicholas M. Schenck, a total of $2,088,900 has been collected in the motion i picture industry's drive for army and navy relief. Actress Annabella, wife of Tyrone Ty-rone Power, declared, on being given giv-en her final American citizenship papers, "This is the happiest moment mo-ment of my life." The actress was born Annabella Susan Charpentler in Paris and came to this country in 1937. So enthusiastic was the response re-sponse to Joe E. Brown's request for newspapers for the boys stationed sta-tioned in Alaska, that he is now making another request for musical mu-sical instruments for them. During his recent swing through the military camps, Bob Hope and his company, including Frances Langford and Jerry Colon-na, Colon-na, played two engagements in New Orleans, hopped a plane to play three more in camps around Alexandria five shows in one day, several hundred miles apart. Another time, when delayed by bad weather, they arrived at 11 p. m. at a camp only to find 12,000 guys crammed into a hangar waiting for them. They put on their show, which lasted after 1 a. m. That's the spirit! |