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Show By INEZ GERHARD DOROTHY LAMOUR, Para-mount's Para-mount's "Road" girl, who landed in a circus when Cecil B. ' DeMille picked her to play the worldly wise "iron jaw girl" in "The Greatest Show on Earth", will always be associated with the sarong that she made famous. Yet she has worn it in only 12 of her many films. But it made her famous fa-mous a year and a half after she broke into films, following three years as vocalist with Herbie Kay's band and a short career as a radio singer. She probably has more f t DOROTHY LAMOTJR friends among the studio "little people" than any other star; she says they're the ones who have made it possible for her to get ahead. Gene Tierney, one of Hollywood's i best dressed women, says she al ways gets caught in slacks and a sweater on Beverly Drive, in Beverly Bev-erly Hills, where she does most of her shopping. Just as sure as she dashes out in a hurry to make some purchases "There I am in my slacks, and I meet somebody like Joan Crawford looking like a movie queen." Jean Simmons, the little English actress under contract to RKO, who will have the starring role in "Pilate's Wife", has had a spectacular spec-tacular career. Her "Ophelia" in Olivier's "Hamlet" made her famous, fa-mous, and she ranks fourth in Fame's poll of international film favorites. fa-vorites. She is currently before the cameras in "Androcles and the Lion". |