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Show rm' Mm Me n 0 reopjie Mireresiniiiig ve Mefl By GEOFFREY BOCCA . One by one, the other members of the company drifted to bed but not Roz. At two in the morning she was still singing, still dancing, still laugh- ing raucously, still telling stories, and doing everything well. It was the most remarkable piece of sustained animal energy and sheer brilliance I have ever seen. From Roz to as extreme an opposite as one can imagine: Alfred de Makicny, who in 1943 was charged good and the bad the BOTH among the people who interest me most Bur all of them have something in com- mon: toughness, resilience. The weak, the fragile, I am ashamed to Ray, have never moved me. Rascalme when it is carried ity-amuses out with sufficient Energy fascinates me. Independence devil-may-ca- re. with the murder of his attracts me. With no particular order in mind, I begin with the most superb, dy- - r."7 1 Sir Harry Oakes. Sir Harry, a gold-mini- ) if' v Rosalind Russell namic personality in show business,' Rosalind Russell. I particularly recall one evening with Roz In, of all places, Hutchinson, Kans., where she, Bill Holden, and Joshua Logan were on location for the 'movie, "Picnic" The tornado season was at its height, the sky was the color of lint, there was ho air to "breathe, and tempers were at explosion point With a sort of attitude, we decided to have a champagne-and-cavlparty for the whole company. It turned out lively. BUI Holden made a lot of noise, then went unsteadily to bed. I made a lot of noise and, unsteadily, stayed around. But the star of the evening was Rosalind Russell. She sang the entire acort ef 'Wonderful Town," In which aht starred on Broadwsy. She danced, doing high kicks with an incredible Uthenes. She went Into a stream of very funny jokes. She became briefly serious to talk about politics. She became bored and started to sing again. Then she acted some of the trifle scenes from "Mourning Becomes Electra," drink-fortomorrowwe-- father-in-la- w, million- ng aire, had been butchered to death and his body set aflame in his home in the Bahamas. De Marigny, who had been considered something of a playboy, had secretly married Oakes' daughter Nancy. There were furious quarrels between Oakes and de Marigny. But, apart from that, there was no evidence against de Marigny; " indeed, his case was airtight All the same, he was kept in prison for three months before the trial, tried, acquitted, and then deported a scandalous injustice. No one else was ever tried for the crime, and it remains technically unsolved. His wife, who stood by him during the trial, left him. He moved from place to place, from job to job. He settled in Cuba; but after Castro made life Impossible for foreigners, bitter and unhappy by it But he the one person who suffered most is a happy man. He realizes he has to live the rest of his life with the murder, and he accepts it He is preparing for the day when he must tell his own children about his past "Sometimes my wife and I watch tv shows with the kids," he told me, "and often there is a situation in which the hero is put in prison. We point out to the children that innocent people do go to prison sometimes." De Marigny's philosophy of life is summed up in a quotation: "Man is an apprentice, and pain is his master, and no one understands who has not suffered." Another man who has always fascinated me is Ian Fleming. He can do so many things better than write thrillers. He is a wit a leading iauthority on rare books, a -- six-hand- t Ian Fleming cap golfer, a manic gambler who can )": ar play poker like a ringer. When he writes about general subjects, he does so on a noticeably higher intellectual level than when he writes about his thug-herJames Bond. Fleming lives among a small circle of friends who spend long evenings insulting each other freely. "What a dreary fellow your James Bond is," says his friend Noel Coward. The trouble with you, Ian," says another, "it that you put up a smoke screen of energy to hide your lailneiu." Fleming puts another cigarette in his long holder and ssys, The trouble with you fellowt U you haven't the wit to recognite a genuine original tike myself. There are not many of us left" In his 64 years, he has btn a itockbrokrr, foreign corropondent 4n Moscow, and foreign manager of a big English newspaper chain. To me, the most interesting period of his life was during the war, when he rose to the rank of commander in the Royal Navy very rare for a hostilities-onl- y sailor. he ran what was jocknown as ularly Fleming's Private a of band sailors most of Navy, them peacetime professors, golfers, and assorted eccentrics who moved ahead of advancing Allied troops to capture German documents and ciphers. Casualties were heavy. The most impressive part of Ian's contribution is that he remained in London directing the venture. He is an instinctive adventurer and romantic, and he must have longed to be in the fight But he knew that someone had to make the grim decisions at the Admiralty, so he did. It's often harder to decide to do than to die.- Movie stars, I regret to tell you, are rarely very intelligent Roz Russell is very much an exception to the rule and so is Sophia Loren. She is a girl from the slums of Naples who, at 27, made herself not only a great star but a great lady, a girl who also taught herself to speak English and French (and she is amusing in both). I was sitting with Sophia some time ago on the set of a film she was making in Pisa. "You know, Sophia," I said like a fathead, "a movie star has an easy life. The last time we saw each other you were making 'Boy on a Dolphin and we were sit- - After D-D- ay o, Alfred i$ Marigny he had to move again. He asked me if I could find him a place near my own villa on the French Riviera, and I said I could. He is now remarried and has two small sons. What I admire about Fred dt Marigny Is his psychological strength. All the other person Involved In the fantastic Oake drama wart made Sophia Lor en ting around juit like thin." Sophia turned her fantaitic green rye on me, and I thought I detected a mUchievoua gleam, but she laid |