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Show 4 . 1J v . t : ' It's love and laughter; and Barry Fitzgerald ever after v w m J v . . V , tmance, "Easy Come, Easy Go," - which arrives soon at the Uinta theatre with Diana Xynn and Sonny Tufts co-starring with the puckish Fitzgerald. .... ... , I'- . Barry is reported to have the mostingaging role of his career as, MarfirfiXf Donovan'TIimseIf.the slyest, most ahif tlesst vyefc most lovable scoundrel - that eVer looched dollar , or -messed nip a omance. As oians Lynn's Trob- em father, he, la more concered vith the two bucks (borrowed, oi otirse) that he has riding on the nose of a slow-traveling nag than u ! with ths 1 1271 tnn: in th Sieart of his long - suffering daughter. v ( Diana runs the boarding-house, their sole means of support, while Barry runs after easy money.' She Sdreams of . marriage and he dreams of long-shot winners and sudden . fortunes. Knowing .' he can't get along without her, Barry Bar-ry plays her two suitors, Tufts and Dick Foran, - against each other, and their bankrolls, on the Jhorses. i Barry's horses, like his ships, iver come in, but the police al-. al-. ays do. Diana, fed up when Suits, her fiance, goes broke and ahem Doth. Many hilarious and Tk s . A a enaer momenu pass oeiore an e reconciled. : . The suporting roles, all linport- nt to the picture, have been tiled with care. Prominently fea- in addition to Foran, are IFrank McHugh, Allen Jenkins, John Litel, ArthuY Shields (Barry itzgerald's reel and real life irother), and? frank Faylen. "Easy Come,Easy Go," was di eted by John Farrow and prod- . J 1 If ..-.iL T c , ' . 3 v i s 112 Sunday, June 22.947- Sunday HERAUiBig Three In Film Billed For Provo Showing Easy Cpme Easy Co Billed at Uinta Soon f $.:-?;-:5;xy'::'-';':: Being Funny Is Ho Laughing Matter HOLLYWOOD It's pretty tough trying to live up to a repu tation as a wise-cracking muai clan,. Hoagy Carmichael said on the "Memory of Love" set. "People expect me to: smart out with jokes 'at a mile-a-minute clip and tell funny stores about composing," said the droll-faced composer, of f'Star Dust" "I don't know how I got this reputation, but it's embarrassing because I don't live up to iV- "Before I began making movies I used to be though of as. a serious, seri-ous, hardworking, musician. Then: all of a sudden, eveTyt?d$y'ihfnks song writing is highly humorous.' It isn't funnytffo 'me.- It's just plain, hard 'work' r - - t - 7 r r r-', Barry Fitsgerald, Diana LynnJ and Sonny Tufts, starred comes to' the Uinta theatre soon. in "Easy ,- I .v:... I II I I I Go" Come, Easy which Academy Award winning star Greer Garson also holds another honor her first award was won because she was the Irish gram-, mar school champion broad jumper. - i - Players Guild Presents "State of " The Union 99 it A Big Broadway Hit" A great jplay. A great cast. Don't miss it. Thurs., FrL, and Sat., June 2627-28 REGULAR BYTJ PRICES College Hall Reserve Tickets at RYU Ticket Office . Starts Monday 3 to 6 P. M. Call 2460 Not One Turtle Appears in 'Voice Of the Turtle' BURBANK, Calif. Irving Rap per is tired of turtles. So is Eleanor Parker, and so is Ronald Reagan. They are all tired of explaining that "The Voice of the Turtle" has nothing to do w'th turtles abso lutely nothing. Rapper, as the director, takes most of the burden of questions from visitors who have never seen the John Van Druten play from which the film is being made "Actually," Rapper explained today for tl.e umpteenth time, "'The voice of the turtle' is a phrase from 'The Songs of Solomon in the Bible. It sym bolizes the beginning of spring and in Jthls case, the flowering of a romance." v At the suggestion of Miss Parker Par-ker and Reagan, the director is considering the possibility of having mimeographed copies made of the scene in the film which explains the title. The scene shows Miss as Sally, and I eagan as Bill, entering en-tering an apartment house. "Well, the weather has changed," Bill says. "The rain is over the winter win-ter is past and the voice of the turtle is heard in our land.'' Sally stops and looks at - him in bewilderment. "What did you say? I was quoting from, the Bible "Oh," she replies, then stops again, staring at him. "But turtles don't have voices, do they?" "Turtle doves," Bill explains patiently. And as Director .clapper tells Lovdovn Chat On Hollywood Folk HOLLYWOOD Dennis Mor-itoo, too!" . . . Frank Sinatra has gan is not a clothes horse, even a small ice box in his dressing though he went to the world! room for the preservation- of 'Shirts Longsf'-llats Sexterf Predicts Successful Hollywood Hat Designer premiere of "Cheyenne" in Cheyenne, Chey-enne, Wyo., with four pieces of luggage. Three of them contained contain-ed fishing equipment, waders and old clothes . . . Sight of the week Hedy Lamarr dining .alone in a popular boulevard cafe. A women's bridge club in the middle west has objected to the torrid "look" Alexis Smith gives Humphrey Bogai : in "The Two Mrs. Carroils," describing it, but delicately, as "Just simply too, Americans Say It Wrong, He Claims HOLLYWOOD Charles Mil ler, 68, who used to drive a stagecoach in Wyoming between Cheyenne and Laramie, avows that millions of Americans are sadly in error when they call Cheyenne "Shy-ann"! - "Cheyenne," he declared, "is the name of an Indian tribe. The redskins pronounced it 'Shy- Parkerenn-a' and they oughta know' Miller, better known as 'Bear Valley Charley," makes his ' liv ing nowadays by acting in west ern films, lately having driven a stagecoach for scenes in "Cheyenne." "But if you think I'm just talkin' to get publicity for that picture, you're a scalped paleface." pale-face." said Miller. "I been fight- in to get Cheyenners to say 'Shy- enn-a' for a good many years!" it, everybody's answer to that one is exactly the same as Sally's. She says, "Ob." candy . . . Where aro they now? Clive Brook, his heroic chin as heroic as ever, is still portraying leading men in British pictures. London critics call him the "everlasting "ever-lasting juvenile". Alan Hale, who frequently stops inventing gadgets long enough to do some fine acting, is now working on what he calls "his greatest boon to humanity." When perfected it will be a bathtub bath-tub with a gate in it! . . . Fred Clark, the screen newcomer you'll see in "The Unsuspected," has a new bug-killer on the market which, according to merchants, is very likely to bring him a fortune! for-tune! Coleen Gray, one of Tyrone Power's three leading ladies in "Nlghmare Alley," used to be a waitress, a clerk in a department store cfnd a switchboard operator. Talk cf the town Mexican shadow sha-dow plant, recently gifted Janis Paige, casts no shadow, even in sunlight! . . . Alan Ladd has been made honorary Cub Master of the Los Angeles Cub Scouts. HOLLYWOOD, (NEA) Walter Florell, the mad milliner of movie stars and New York socialities, shook off a sheared beaver coat, laboriously waved a slim hand weighted down with a 38-carat diamond ring, and predicted pre-dicted that milady's hats will be "sexier" this fallv They have to be, Walter said, because skirts are getting longer. "The men won't, be looking at legs this fall. They'll be looking at hats. And the hats will have to carry all the sex appeal." The Florell contribution to the 47 sex appeal atop milady's head: A croup of Z hats, along: with two score others, which he Introduced to Hollywood., at a fashion show. Florell's subtle name for the. egoup: "Bedtime Stories." His not so subtle individual names for the hats: Henry, Charles. Bill, Walter, Tom, Dick, Harry, . etc. Walter Florell is a character former hailet dancer, he made a fortune designing mad hats priced as high as $350 and spent a good share of his profits on diamonds. The Husband's Shrine The 38-carat boulder he's wearing on this trip to Hollywood Holly-wood is his latest acquisition. It's only two carats less than the famous fa-mous Hope diamond. "It's really nothing." he said. "It's just a little shrine built for me by the husbands of America. They eventually pay for all my hats." But, men, Walter is on our side. He said the price of milady's mi-lady's hats is much too high. Then he ducked behind his 38-carat diamond ring and said, "I've already al-ready cut my prices. My $75 hat is now only $72.50. I just can't design a hat for less than that. I'd rather be a dish washer." Shirley Temple was photographed photo-graphed Vearing a Florell hat for a recent magazine cover. Florell is still chuckling abou that, f "After the photograph was made, the magazine wired me far the name of the hat I looked lit up and almost fainted. The name of the hat was Juvenile Delinquency. Delin-quency. I knew I had to d something some-thing t quick. So I changed the name of the hat to Fragrance." Ten Best Hatless- As usual, Florell is introducing some .new tricks for fair hats. He's using lots of gold trim "to give the ladies a sense of security in these trying- times." He's Duttine fishing flies on sport hats and is eliminating wide brims. He's also making his hats higher, because "skirts are get ting longer and-1 don't want wo men who wear my hats to look like they're walking . on their knees." Although it may be bad for his business, Walter, said there are certain women who should never wear hats. These women, for example, should never wear hats: Ginger Rogers, Claudette Colbert, Kath arine Hepburn, Tallulah Bank head, Annabella, Mrs. Howard Hawks, Elsa Maxwell, Ingrid Bergman, Dorothy Parker and Greta Garbo. "When they wear hats," he said "the results are disastrous." . Zachary Is Alone j In Women s Abode HOLLYWOOD Zachary Scott! is the envy of every jactor in Hollywood. For years the building which houses one studio's feminine stars' has been held strictly exclusive for their use, and no male star; has .ever occupied one of its de luxe suites. , 3 Ann Snthrn; her MTTn?rvvr: Malsie" role completed,, a good friend of the actor and his family.' has turned her star suite over to him "for the time he works in "Cass Timberlane." CANT BEAT REAL LIFE About a month before starting! her role: in "Dream Girl,'! Vir- ginia Field married composer Howard Grode In a simple cere-; mony at Santa Barbara,' Calif, lasting about five minutes. " This week she spent four days getting married to Patrick, Knowles under the direction o Mitchell Leisen. Of the two weddings, Virginia said she much preferred the real ceremony. , i : "Getting married this way Is , much too hard on the nerves. How do you think a real bride would feel if somebody ' kept yelling. 'cut just as her ! husband-to-be , Is about to say, I dor" June Allyson, on the screen in "High Barbaree," will dance the strenuous "Varsity Drag" in "Good News,' yet as a child, after a car accident, was told she'd never walk again. " It's no wonder that Sir Aubrey Smith, at 80, is good at cricket he played the game for years, winning championships both in Australia and Britain. Just What You Have Been Waiting For A Small Frozen Food Locker That Can Be Used For A Refrigerator Iff-1-' 4 i , J-x-" , ,i if' I ' ' t'h$ v iit If' 5 9 V '' I I ' " I f s " J . CJ i 1 t. j. . 9 to Hi 1 4jft,ty i.i - " Cy. 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From th hoort-stirring novol of lh man who first flow in mail... and rtio women ."- who gov wmgt tothoirhoartil s r. r m i M starrihg XAnne BAXTER William HOLDEN Sonny TUFTS William BENDIX Sterling HAYDEN U,urrl niClllfft mi iiii ii iim.iii m JEAN WALLACE EDITH KINO I f ALSO "Vacation Days" with The Teen Agers OPEN t:lS NOW ENDS MONDAY Ishramrr SFENCEt TRACY Cattle baron . . ruthless, KATHAtlNE HEPBURN Fiery .... fascinating gal from ROBERT WALKER Gun-shooting and . gambling fool! MEIVYN DOUGLAS He knew women? Soft words, Softlooksj I u7i ir ' St. Louis! ijrftoTlwKtorEogwloxIws'HotnC EXTRA! "THE LAST BOMB" Filmed In Technicolor COLOR CARTOON LATEST NEWS , ROY ROGERS DALE EVANS TRIGGER SONG OF ARIZONA IJICUT M II!) : 'THRUSH V. -11 i, FOR MURDER. .. ridden election I swindle! froduud by MARTIN MOONEY Oirodotf hy ROKKT WISE Som r ky tAWKNCI OMStf Double Show Value! ADDED , In Color DONALD DUCK CARTOON LATEST NEWS - mmmm '. tHTBBBHBn . GEORGE SAIB l l Directed by J0SEPHL MANKIEWICZ cf x If Produced by FRED KOHLMAR M I 1 STARTS TUESDAY - ll I - ". ' . , - ....... ; 1 , (J) ce; m m a Starting Monday First Run Utah County .1 ltuAV s i r a'"i - - iK l I lllf FVlIf HIT IfflMt r m a" - w ------ a. i Y1 ill imii"' tnts. rifinrrit C. I and I "Spoilers of the North" |