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Show ANN SOTHERN: V; 4f r i" ft ' ' ' .' 4 i " f Troubles ! r ,i7 ! 1 r j ' ? " x- - .... :.: .: - ; . : ..;::. . - Illnesses, unhappy marriages, - career probJemsshe has faced them all and learned a lesson: the can have is i f warsLenemy-on- e self-pit- y - "I By PEER J. OPPENHEIMER 3 Ann's lovely teen-ag- e daughter, Patricia Ann ( Tishj made her acting debut in an appearance with Mom on-T- V episode of "The Ann Sothern Show." A nn Sothern is a paradox in courage. Women A admire her and hate her. Men like her but don't love her. She's a lazy woman "who does the ; ' work of three executives. She's a person who loves people and parties but a lonely life in a mansion valued at $250,000 while figuring out how to pay the U.S. nearly $1 million it claims she owes in back taxes. -- She'sawomanljwhowantsnothingmorethan to be married, but at 49, with two divorces, she has given up hope of ever finding another husband. She's a woman who has had more heartbreaks, more ups and downs, more misfortunes than almost any other actress in Holly wood yet has found, the courage to fight back. Each time she has been hit by trouble, she has bounced back smiling. . " Take a spring day in Minneapolis, when she was Harriet Lake and eight years old. She saw a little boy dash across the street and into the path of an oncoming car. Impulsively, she rushed after him , 16 Family Weekly, March 5, 1361 and shoved him away from the screeching wheels in time to save him but not herself. The car ran over .her, and she lost consciousness. . "When I woke up in the hospital," Ann recalls, "I heard me 'Dear' and 'Darling It was wonderful. It was the first time he had ever shown such affection to me." In spite of her injuries, Ann appreciated this --warmth-from a man show much affection, who had hoped for a son but fathered nothing but daughters, whom he raised like sons until he divorced their mother and remarried only to have more daughters! Ann isn't bitter. "He taught me to be a good , businesswoman," she says proudly. Today, they are partners raising black angus cattle in Idaho. With Ann there has always been a new vitality, a new aim, a will to bounce back when things Went wrong. And they never went more wrong than the day she collapsed in Sun Valley, Idaho. my-father- -call 1 It was January, 1950, and Ann was skiing when suddenly she was overcome by a deep feeling of fatigue. Minutes later, two members of the ski patrol were carrying her downhill on a stretcher. AW was too tired to care. She was convinced it was only exhaustion. But it wasn't exhaustion. Ann had been stricken by infectious hepatitis. The illness eventually led -- to athyroidectomy. the-necessity-- for pouR years passed before Ann could return to work. For three of these years, she was in and out of the hospital undergoing treatment, including was twojHuspejUojMp flat on her back; unable to move, caring little " whether she lived or died. Next came cancellation of her movie contract with MGM. Ann insists they parted by mutual agreement. A close friend disagrees. "She was fired after making a big fortune for them with her won- . .. j 1 |