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Show J'Ced by WNU Features. 7 plSE GERHARD 5;. ,n HENREID, producer '"CP-jrtar of Eagle-Lion's 3Bo t I Triumph," says that '3 , actors make poor pro-t-J b ecause they can't de- :ce" mselves from their own ! a Sh,. ji at . eet an overall pic-ffrf pic-ffrf .ertpt He tried s .J,!,, by thinking ol his role 8 wl ! Jbv someone else. He had h,6 down several others for it, Mo!Jfti a earned to play a villain, 'hid, i,Isst tad f ' " " ' "10 . I lati; . ' 'liff ittai(; ; - ' :0fM ibout t 'Si'! !v' ' ; . ; Presi. I ' : 'iAiS&''M inking ; ' :" ' !':''' ' " 1 Tote i .: '..'U J sent PAUL HENREID had'1" r-kind of role in which he made his oat "ti in Europe. But in this Dl iwhe has been cast, with one 5er; scepiion, as a suave, sophisticated ,zis rfemar, "I don't mind," he re-. re-. aiked, "but it gets cloying after 20 pi- iihile." iTttl Ceraldine Brooks, who was ele-Mtau ele-Mtau r-'ti from feature player to star- m, opposite Dana Clark in War-eres.;.: War-eres.;.: rs' "Embraceable You," found i role Pre"y soft as victim to t 5 a traffic accident she played half !, "c scenes in bed. But Barbara i gif" igfrck, in Paramount' s "Sorry, p,'t. rong Number," played all her )t2 r am in bed, and said it was the Nest acting job she ever had enots -a- it cac Rosemary DeCamp, of the ilr's "Dr. Christian and the jy ja screen's "Look for the Silver Lining," keeps her three daugh-'Mvi daugh-'Mvi ters quiet at the table by serv-i serv-i gu, in; meals on a glass table, rake through which, fascinated, the - "c'i children can watch their feet. biipn mm'i Alter desiring to be in a Leo Mc-iim Mc-iim "ireJ P'ctuI'e 'or years, Ann Sheri-mrj Sheri-mrj :an realized her wish in "Good , ,-,() 5am." It's being booked for Radio '(., Cit; Music hall, also a break as it inin ii the first time one of her pictures ' ii has been shown there. After Claire Trevor's knees were fj badly hurt in an auto accident Lew-' Lew-' is Foster stayed up all night, writ-aj writ-aj a tall downstairs into the script A "The Lucky Stiff," thus giving 1 Brian Donlevy lines kidding her " ' itoat her limp, art;: . It' Backstage at "We, the People" Jcu tike the show most of the guests, ' j tho never had faced a mike before, tats confldent and relaxed. But r one man sat in a corner, mastering IS'1;, his script. "Hope he doesn't fluff kj of his lines," said one of the tots. "He won't," replied emcee ight Weist. "That man is Thom-ty-y Mitchell, the famous actor." ,cfc Walter Brennan plays tw 1 roles in "Blood on the Moon," " - hit ron mB't recognjze him m 6 e ol them. Made up as an old - JWaw, he squats in front of an .'. ,tdij wigwam while the stars ; thronch the scene. It was "h only chance to appear in a wne with his daughter, Ruth, - ho plays an idian bl jn the 15 Picture. t 0 ?tM feet Waldo, the lead in NBC's f Archer'" Uved ta her Hol- 'Partment for a few months ltk only a television set and an ' MS board in her living room, a ( 7 Dinah Shore and George 31 TtiST delived her new fur-:T fur-:T dl' &!onIytof its kind, spe-Ca. spe-Ca. made from plans she designed f S at their Uule furniture 'i- "Ato? ,,Colonna has presented l le L,t0 rphans at toe Avon" 7, W ldren's hor"e in Ohio. ffsPring 0f EdI Crry Reived from Ralph " ber?" "It's Always Al- ithhi vaudeville shows v l!10" when he was yuns-h yuns-h i was t0 iU to so. he'd )' Ior her Th "d d0 &e show over 5J "at hf' i j1' how he discovered & had dramatic talent. ILu ENDS-Tbe demand Heiit,s talent hunt "l ' Ih" '" ,errif,c lhat U looki " i: mdhH'"r,eT A""1' woiM h uf . . w2mu 10 HUywod Bowl. ' ' wb 19 say$ sh wili ' : '"tt ui "! com$aTativeh young, ' ' ''fovchl hanZ O" ""'' 'he ha Ml f Be" Davil 4 "PbTlPF' "'lin'" her aui- , f I'll li New """Pshire farm I Am"'"' Hou?' this fall. I |