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Show By INEZ GERHARD BOUQUETS to "Juvenile Jury" (MBS, Sunday afternoons) fox making a valuable contribution to international understanding. Lasi January a little English girl wai flown to this country with her mother for a two weeks' stay; this month a French child joins the jury panel. Jack Barry, creator and emcee oi the show, will tap as many countries as possible to make the program international. in-ternational. But no child could be ..mj JJuu.lVlMlM'.'uJM.'J''!''y'v-w-'..'?Jl.ll.l WtAAAmAAASAi ELIZABETH WATSON more enchanting than five-year-old Elizabeth Watson. Although she has just started school, she has quite a vocabulary, is articulate and has a sense of humor important "Juvenile "Juve-nile Jury" requirements. Six persons went to Europe with the Vox Poppers, Parks Johnson and Warren Hull. Mrs. Johnson was among them, but this time she dkin't have to shop for the gifts given to interviewees. Huge parcels of food were taken along. Sandra ("Mitzi") Gould, welcomed wel-comed back to the cast of NBC's "A Date With Judy," revealed during dur-ing rehearsal that she had played her shortest movie role in the interim. in-terim. The part consisted of one line "Who's Madame Muntz?" Rosemary de Camp of the air's "Dr. Christian" show has been signed to play the part of Marilyn Miller's mother in ."Silver Lining," Warner Brothers' picturization of the dancer's life. This will be Rosemary's Rose-mary's first film since the birth of her third daughter last December. June Haver has the starring role, which so many young actresses wanted. Inspired by the success of "To the Ends of the Earth," Columbia announced an-nounced recently that it will follow up with "C. I. D. Agent," a similarly styled semi-documentary film dealing deal-ing with activities of the U. S. criminal crim-inal investigation department, which probes criminal activities within the armed forces. It will be a top budget production. Ralph Staub, producer of "Screen Snapshots," has completed com-pleted "A Day at C.B.S." Among the stars seen are Gene Autry, Harry James, Dinah Shore, Lum and Abner, Jean Hersholt, Arthur Lake and Penny Singleton, and Bob Crosby. The 50 members of Bob Hope's troupe say if they stay with him long enough he's "bound to land them in their home town. Hope does seem bent on covering every town, large or small, in the country. But he's sure he never will play the home town of one of Les Brown's trumpet players, who was born at a "whistle stop" in North Dakota -that is now off the map. If this rumor is true it certainly establishes a precedent. The rumor that Ida Lupino has written an original screen play with Joan Crawford Craw-ford in mind for the starring role, and that Mis3 Crawford, soon to begin be-gin work in "Miss O'Brien," is reading read-ing the script with a favorable eye-First eye-First time on record one star has written a story for another. Odds and Ends . . . ABC's "Stop the Music" planned to use Edgar Bergen's theme Bong as a "mystery tune," bnt suddenly realized they'd be plugging a competitive show playing play-ing the same time slot ... Bruce Bennett claims that his 10-month-old son, Christopher, has been walking alone for three weeks . . . The New York police department has assigned two officers to every performance of "Harvey" since James Stewart returned to the title role of the play . . . Leif Erickson ("Sorry, Wrong Number") photographed a number of the great events of World War II in the Pacific as a navy chief photographer's photog-rapher's mate. Dorothy Lamour will wear a sarong, sar-ong, but not her old one, in "Let' Fall in Love." The new garment will be spangled with diamond and gold sequins, 40,000 in all, and it's to have "the new look," which is old by now. Ray Montgomery, promising young actor, can hardly wait for fame and stardom. His reason is unusual. "I can sign two autographs at once," explains the ambidextrous chap. "One with each hand." |