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...such a wonderful friendship that it would be a shame to spoil it with marriage," quoth Actress Joan Fontaine, 45, who has lost three former friends that way: Husbands Brian Aherne, William Dozier and Collier Young. Joan pooh-poohed stories that she was about to marry Cartoonist Charles Addams, 51, the Van Gogh of the ghouls. "Marriage is for people who want babies or to live in villages; since we want neither, we're not interested...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Jan. 25, 1963 | 1/25/1963 | See Source »

...comic strips, features, medical advice, the Gallup poll and assorted odds and ends, with an extensive clientele of 1,786 daily and weekly newspapers. Combined with Field's own Sun-Times-Daily News syndicate, which peddles to 73 papers such wares as Ann Landers. Cartoonist Bill Mauldin, Steve Canyon, and the dispatches of the News's foreign correspondents, the new syndicate made Graham's Post-Times syndication of 35 papers look puny...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Joust | 1/11/1963 | See Source »

Ghettobound. Future workshop shows will include any kind of performance that an eager young pro can get past an audition: pantomime, improvisation, poetry readings, musical recitals, monologues, one-acters, sermons-anything. Philadelphia's second contribution to the series will be the first play written by Cartoonist Jules Feiffer. Distantly echoing Harold Pinter, it is called Crawling Arnold. Arnold is in his 305. but he crawls because he wants to be complex again ("Children are complex, adults are just complicated''). The dialogue is built out of fey remarks about Jews, Negroes and psychiatric social workers who sleep with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Nationwide Workshop | 1/11/1963 | See Source »

...THINK I draw him as a monument, a statue which walks and speaks, something mythical and historical." So says the cartoonist who drew this week's cover of France's President Charles de Gaulle-43-year-old Louis Mitelberg, who calls himself "TIM" simply because an editor once put that name on a cartoon he had neglected to sign. He is France's leading political cartoonist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Dec. 7, 1962 | 12/7/1962 | See Source »

...acid is a conversation piece in French journalism and politics. For TIM works for L'Express, a newspaper that views De Gaulle through beady eyes from the left. It is said that one of TIM's fellow workers has refused to shake his hand ever since the cartoonist shook le grand Charles's hand at a reception. "I think I'm the only one who draws him as if he were seeing himself," says TIM. "If there's humor in it, it's probably due to the complicity of the reader. There is also...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Dec. 7, 1962 | 12/7/1962 | See Source »

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