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Show JOAN FONTAINE ; X l ' - i I v .y .'.'.- 1 - - t ' ' I i " . 1 s? ' -s . i MEET "JANE EYRE" OF HOLLYWOOD THEY dubbed her wooden-face, but that was away back in 1939. A couple of years later she surprised everyone by running off with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Award for the finest performance by any actress during 1941 for her role in "Suspicion." On their very first meeting, she called her husband-to-be a stick-in-the-mud. He promptly telegraphed her masses of Gardenias. Three weeks later she married the guy! 3 She read "Jane Eyre" fourteen times as a child. Today, she's starring star-ring in the screen version of this favorite Bronte classic. The gal we're talking about is Joa.i Fontaine one of the finest actresses on celluloid today. In Cos- j mopoiitan for November, Lupton A. Wilkinson, who knows his movie stars almost as well as they know thcmr.elves. reveals many Mill. Tlo- ! unknown facts about Olivia do I Havilland's little sister. Joan. No story could bo written about one cf these famous actresses without including- the other. For years. Hollywood has boon trying to build up stories of feiute that supposedly exist bol.vee;i ihose famous sisters and for ye:vs. th-girls th-girls have boon denying thorn, o: at 'least proving in one way tv- nr.-ciliei- that they arc really the 'host ui ir.c'uis. |