| OCR Text |
Show Shirley Likes Cops -k Shorts for Colonel k Lloyd Antiquities jjy Virginia Vale IT IS reported that Norma Shearer, having won the coveted role of "Scarlett O'Hara" in "Gone With the Wind," now wants the story changed. It's said that she feels that the heroine's character, char-acter, in the last half of the book, is unsympathetic. To do this would be to ruin, the character and spoil the story, of course and the result would be that thousands of motion picture fans who liked the book and have taken real interest in the casting of the picture would be furious. During Shirley Temple's recent visit in New York her mother actually actu-ally dared leave her for a little while. Shirley was at the office of a national magazine, and her mother moth-er was in a smart department store, doing a bit of shopping. f'i ," i , .''' J 1. r tt I SHIRLEY TEMPLE She said that she almost never left Shirley, but that she felt that it was all right to do so just then "The policemen assigned to her are such nice men," said she, "and Shirley is so fond of them." Just in case you've wondered what has happened to Colonel Stoopnaglc, formerly of "Stoop-nagle "Stoop-nagle and Budd," he's making movies. They are shorts, and he's doing it near his Connecticut home, for Educational. The finished product prod-uct will be issued as "Colonel Stoop-nagle's Stoop-nagle's Cavalcade of Stuff." Dorothy Lamour spent part of her vacation with her husband, Herbie Kay, at the resort near Houston, Texas, where he was appearing with his orchestra. She appeared with the orchestra one evening and sang two numbers; she also announced an-nounced that she'd like to be back, singing with the band, but that he wouldn't give her her old job again. And all she wanted was ?30 a week and expenses. She also visited Galveston her career began there six years ago, when she was "Miss New Orleans" in a bathing beauty contest. Harold Lloyd has bought the negatives neg-atives of 114 of his early pictures from Pathe. Partly for sentimental senti-mental reasons, partly because some of those early pictures of his, at which we all shouted with laughter, contain gags that can be used again. Watc h for his new one, just released re-leased "Professor "Profes-sor B e w a r e." There may be some of the nn- Harold Lloyd cient laugh jerkcrs in it. Al Roth, NBC musical director, ran into a lot of surprises and several sev-eral shocks when he began tracing nursury rhymes for his proposed "Children's Symphony." Most of today's simple little songs for children chil-dren were originally hilarious drinking drink-ing songs! ODDS AD KM)Sn hm KUi Cantor suited jar V.uropp Iw took '''" K 0 supply of sfiirucmi from a fVcid J ork tlrlivaicssen store, just to l sure of idiiriK i. kind ho likes '"'" . . . Seven men mid women, dou-tiles dou-tiles for famous movie slurs of (v-Ko.xf, (v-Ko.xf, sailed for l-.nland the other day ' make, a picture there . . . Walter '' played the sherill in the Great Train Hohhery," in film-Wj film-Wj early ,m. will bo seen in Made for Each Other" . . . It's reported re-ported t dnt Simono Simon's rontiaet limit 1, renewed when it expires "Ixmt September first . . . Ceo,ge lianeroft recently celebrated his lY.li 3t in the movies . . . Mad no Evans, yenrninx for experience on the state, s appearing at one of the Utile sum-"T sum-"T theaters near !'cw York . . . Jane I wkens, for the same reason, is doim .V'',' """r Massachusetts ...In ' 'y ru' see Kay Eiancis in a new role-that of the mother of four 'inlihen wrnrin simple frocks instead in-stead of Horteous ones, and icinf . " i"''7'"innc,. n.t if she we,e ynt "'KimiiMK ,., ,.,., (,., w,nd,n up an old one |