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TIME, SEPT. 22, IS UNFAIR AND UNTRUE WHEN IT INSINUATES THAT "LOUELLA PARSONS DAY" IN DIXON, ILL. WAS USED TO EMBARRASS CINEMA STARS ALREADY DATED UP FOR THE LEGION CONVENTION IN MILWAUKEE OR THAT "RIVALRY RUINED THE REVELRY "TRUE, MISS PARSONS, AT DIXON'S REQUEST, INVITED CINEMA CELEBRITIES TO COME HERE AND THEY DID, TO HELP MAKE THE GREATEST CELEBRATION OF ITS KIND EVER IN DOWNSTATE ILLINOIS BUT THEY WERE DIXON'S INVITATIONS AND DIXON SET THE DATE MANY MONTHS AGO AND WITH NO INKLING THAT IT INTERFERED WITH THE MILWAUKEE CONVENTION. SO FAR AS DIXON IS CONCERNED...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Oct. 13, 1941 | 10/13/1941 | See Source »

Will Hays lay ill of overwork in a Chicago hospital, where it turned out he had been for more than seven weeks. Assistant Joe Breen went to his bedside, Columnist Louella Parsons rumored his retirement. ∙∙ Gloria Swanson finished a picture she hoped meant a comeback. ∙∙ Oldtime Comedian Raymond Hatton got a new part, had the same hope. ∙∙Mrs. Douglas Fairbanks No. 2 (Mary Pickford) and Mrs. Douglas Fairbanks No. 3 (Lady Sylvia Ashley) flew to New York together, along with Norma Shearer, whom Ronald Balcom has been escorting when he wasn't with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Hollywood | 6/16/1941 | See Source »

...that Fantasound has left Boston forever, as they tell us, the Majestic is continuing to play host to the unusual in entertainment with "Citizen Kane," the much-publicized debut of Orson Welles which has been boycotted by the Hearst papers ever since Louella Parsons noted a likeness between the careers of her boss and the protagonist. And the ex-boy genius has done it again, producing a picture the like of which has ne'er been seen before hereabouts...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE MOVIEGOER | 5/22/1941 | See Source »

...release was set by R. K. O. for the picture to be shown to the public, and it seemed very likely that none would ever be. Old Mr. William Randolph Hearst, who had only heard reports of the picture through his cinematic eyes, ears and tongue, Columnist Louella Parsons, thought the life of Kane was too close a parallel to the life of Hearst...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Kane Case | 3/17/1941 | See Source »

...last after marrying Hopper, partly to distinguish herself from her predecessors (Ella, Ida. Edna and Nella), partly to comply with the instructions of a numerologist. Her long connection with the cinema dates back 25 years. Credited with knowing more extramarital yarns about cinemagnates than even the relentless Louella. Hedda was signed up for a Hollywood column three years ago on the recommendation of M. G. M.'s publicity office, soon established herself so firmly that she was inevitably wired for sound. Her radio and newspaper stint brings her an estimated $110,000 annually, over ten times what she made...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Louella's Rival | 12/16/1940 | See Source »

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