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Show 0 Released by Western Newspaper Union. By VIRGINIA VALE WHEN Mary Pickford was picked by the winning win-ning contestant on the Mutual Mu-tual network's "Queen for a Day" program as the person the "Queen" wanted to have tea with, Mary liked the , idea of the program so much j that she invited the mother of Mer-vyn Mer-vyn LeRoy to hear it broadcast. Mrs. LeRoy enjoyed the broadcast so much that she promptly called her son, and talked so enthusiastically that he decided to make a Technicolor Techni-color picture on the "Queen for a Day" idea of creating 24-hour Cin-derellas. Cin-derellas. Monogram played host to "Queens" on the successive dayi. They watched Peter Cookson, Warren War-ren William and Anne Gwynne work on the "Suspense" set, then visited the night-club set of "Swing Parade." Pa-rade." Susan Hayward has left Para-1 mount, where she got her start, and signed with Walter Wanger for seven years. Her first picture will be the technicolor Western, "Can- I jUlf siii If n ' ' ' ' 1 SUSAN HAYWARD yon Passage," with Dana Andrews and Brian Donlcvy. She'll be working work-ing at Universal, right along with her husband, Jess Barker, who's playing a featured role In "As It "Was Before." There's a fine new radio show scheduled to start September 11. Cornelia Otis Skinner and Roland Young will be heard in more of the delightful "William and Mary" sketches, written by Miss Skinner, which were heard on the air a while ago. Barry Wood will be the sing-ing sing-ing master of ceremonies, and Ray Block's orchestra, a new mixed choral group, and a guest star will complete the program. "A Night In Casablanca" will launih the Marx Brothers as Independent Inde-pendent film producers, and the Alarxes will try it out on a stage tour of Pacific coast theaters and service camps. That Is, they'll do five sketches that have been developed devel-oped from the script, about 400,000 persons will see them, and the material ma-terial that gets by with this critical audience will go Into the picture. Jack Douglas, writer and actor on the Phil Harris radio show, was given giv-en a baby. shower by Harris and the cast when John Douglas Jr. arrived. ar-rived. One gift was a cradle which has rocked the babies of the Ronald Colmans, Ruth Hussey and Constance Moore, respectively. William Goetz, head of International Interna-tional Pictures, Is "agin" long feature fea-ture films, so his "Tomorrow Is Forever," For-ever," starring Claudette Colbert, Orson Welles and George Brent, will reach the screen in less than 10,000 feet will run less than two hours. ' Twentieth Century-Fox plans to remake that lovely story, "Berkeley Square," In which Leslie Howard and Heather Angel originally appeared. ap-peared. But the story will be rewritten, rewrit-ten, and this time Maureen O'llara, Gregory reck and Jeanne Craln will have the leading roles. "The Strange Adventure" has an Academy Award line-up; Clark Gable, Ga-ble, Greer Garson, Thomas Mitchell, Mitch-ell, Director Victor Fleming and Cameraman Joseph Rutcnbcrg have all won their Oscars. The chickens which chase the actors have no Oscars, Os-cars, but they're prize stunt hens. Want to appear on a quiz show? Then take a tip .from Quizmaster Fred Uttal, who selects guest contestants con-testants for the Wednesday night CBS "Detect and Collect" show. Frrd says he looks the audience over and picks those with "the most eager hands." ODDS .4Vf K.VRS-OiJ. MicM I'unmrff is ipendint hit JfWuv iirmigh iMirAini in "A it hi ami lny" at U ar- nrn' IW lirn anil a half yriirn in the C.oat GimrJ, Gig Young rrlurnt In II arnvrt; hp un fnl trrn in "Old Ac-tiiiiiiiMnrr, Ac-tiiiiiiiMnrr, uilh llrttf Ihttit. . . , !lh ( rnlurs hnx hat re-ium' Allyn ln r anttthrr yrar ne's rurrrnth apimring uilh Vv Ann (larnvr in ihr film irrtion "Junior ,Vn". . . . i l.iu. "Itinllihn on th, MIC nfe If ilh Jmy" program, hn titnnl lor fne rolr of llnth Hrthrrl't ton in Ihr .SimJ.iv O.S "I mil's ,V I'ttn". . . . JM) in fi.it e Inn I hums kue l flint-rif flint-rif rimn iiri in l'Wi-4'i. |